41
The windshield wipers swept across the glass at a frenetic rate, and angel wings of water flapped from the tires as the SUV soared down the dark street.
Checking over his shoulder to confirm no one followed—yet—Anthony drew deep breaths, and finally slowed his racing pulse. He picked up the .45 off the seat, and examined the weapon; it was in usable condition, with only a nick on the barrel from the rifle round.
“I found it in the front yard,” Lisa said. “I thought you might want it.”
Rain had plastered her hair against her face and soaked through her velour suit, giving her the appearance of a survivor from a shipwreck. But she had never looked more beautiful to him.
“All I have to say is, I married well,” he said.
She gave a brief smile. “I felt nervous waiting in the house. Not long after you left, I loaded the jeep with our stuff.”
He glanced in the backseat, saw their belongings. “When did you leave?”
“After I packed up, I kept an eye on Mike’s rental. I saw that nut go inside, the guy, and I had a feeling that you were in there. I thought we might need to get away from them again when you came out, so I decided to take some initiative and park around the corner, where he couldn’t take aim at us again with his sniper rifle.”
“For a second there, you lost me.”
“But you figured it out fast. Married folks’ telepathy.”
“I heard that.”
They were on a residential road flanked with rain-battered elms and maples. Several blocks ahead, he spotted a traffic light, and vehicles traveling back and forth. The prospect of entering a populated area promised no security, however—the fanatics clearly cared nothing for laws and public safety.
“Is that blood on your wrist?” she asked.
“I was bitten.”
“Bitten? By a dog?”
“Sure felt like it.” He reached behind him and grabbed the strap of his duffel bag. “The woman who mistook me for a steak—her name is Maria Valdez, by the way. Her partner’s name is Noah Cutty.”
“How’d you find that out?”
“She was in the house. I stole up on her and put a gun to her head. That tends to make people talk—and bite back.”
“Jesus.”
“It was necessary. I needed answers.”
“How did she end up biting you?”
“She was one tough bitch,” he said. He massaged his battered face. “I’m lucky she didn’t kill me.”
“We’ll have to get the wound disinfected. The human mouth carries a lot of bacteria.”
“We’ll get to that later.” He dragged the duffel onto his lap, dug through it. “Where’s the cell phone?”
She handed him her purse. He unzipped it and found the phone buried beneath the gun and the Bible. He powered it on, and the display brightened.
“Finally, we’ve got service,” he said.
“Are you going to call Mike and make sure he’s okay?” Lines of worry threaded her face.
“That’s exactly what I’m going to do.” He punched in the number for Mike’s cell phone.
On the first ring, Mike answered. He sounded wide awake.
“Yo, man, where the hell are you?” Mike asked. “I’ve been going nuts here!”
Anthony nodded at Lisa to let her know Mike was fine, and then said, “We’re on the move again. The goons found your rental house, and some way, knew we’d holed up in that new crib a few doors down that you’d put a contract on.”
“You went there? Smart.”
“I thought so, too, until the loony rifleman almost sniped me when I came around the corner,” Anthony said. “Where are you?”
“I’m at home, man. They came here—I watched ‘em from next door. They tossed the place a bit, but took the keys to all my properties.”
“And the key to the Roswell house was the only one missing, wasn’t it?”
“Sure was. Why?”
“They must’ve pulled up a listing of the houses you own. That’s how they tracked us—part of it, anyway.”
“This is freakin’ crazy,” Mike said. “You know who these goons are working for yet?”
“New Kingdom Church, in Austell,” Anthony said. “I’m about ninety-nine percent certain of it.”
“That’s the church with the big time pastor? Prince or something?”
“Bishop Prince. You’ve heard of him?”
“He’s on TV all the time. I see him when I’m channel surfin’ late at night.”
“I guess I need to watch more TV,” Anthony said.
“You get a good look at the lady goon? She looked like a dime piece.”
“I got more than a good look at her—I almost got an ass-kicking from her. She’d chew you up and spit you out, Mike, seriously.”
“No shit?” He sounded awestruck.
“Hey, she’s playing for the wrong team, remember?”
“Right.” Mike cleared his throat. “Anyway, I sent you an e-mail on Jarhead. About Kelley Marrow. You need to check it out.”
“It might be a while before I can get online. Anything earth-shattering?”
“It’s an obituary,” Mike said. “From about a month ago. She was a teenager, looks like. Pretty sad.”
“How’d she die?”
“No idea. It didn’t say.”
“Thanks for doing the legwork. As soon as we get somewhere I can log on, I’ll check it out.”
“Where you headed to next?” Mike asked.
“Not sure yet. They’re tracking us and I can’t figure out how. Do you have GPS on this bucket? Or a Lo-jack, or any other kind of satellite hook-up?”
“All I got on there is satellite radio.”
Anthony glanced at the radio console, which was currently turned off.
“Okay,” he said. “We’ve gotta shake these assholes. I’ll call you later—you need anything in the meantime, this is our new cell phone number.”
“Got it. Be safe.”
Anthony ended the call. Lisa had steered onto a brightly lit, four-lane thoroughfare, the road lined with shuttered restaurants, gas stations, and strip malls that seemed to be dissolving in the rainfall, like images of a dream.
“We’ve gotta ditch this ride,” he said.
“How can they be tracking us in this? It doesn’t have GPS, does it?”
“No, but they knew which house we were in.” He tapped the radio interface. “I think it has something to do with this.”
“The satellite radio? Can they do that?”
“I’ve never heard of it, but why not? The receiver in here gets signals from a satellite and decodes them into music or whatever. I remember when we got your Beemer with satellite radio, and in order for them to bill us for the monthly subscription, they had to use some kind of ID code in the receiver.”
“I remember.” She was shaking her head. “Does it ever end?”
“Maybe they’ve gotta sync up the signals with other GPS satellites to make it happen. I don’t know. But they knew exactly where we’d gone, Lisa, and I’m sure that so long as we’re driving this ride, they’re gonna keep following us.”
“So why not just remove the radio? Why do we have to find another car?”
“They already know what we’re driving. Ripping out the radio would buy us only a little time. We need something clean.”
She braked for a red light. White signs pointing toward entrance ramps for Georgia Highway 400 North and South were posted ahead.
He looked in the side mirror. There was one pair of headlights behind them, and they belonged to a compact-size vehicle, not a Suburban.
Not yet.
“Where to, then?” she asked.
“South,” he said.
“South to where?”
“Somewhere we can get another car.”