have to say.â
He stepped into her face, and she felt the Beretta pressing against her breast.
He whispered against her cheek, âYouâre lying, you traitorous bitch.â
He dragged her from the bathroom, his arm around her neck, the Beretta against her temple now, and pulled her down the hall. She jerked at his arm, and he let her suck in a breath, then squeezed hard again.
She saw her uncleâs face, knew he would grieve for her, and heâd know in his heart sheâd screwed up. She was facing death alone. Alone. She shut her eyes, stopped struggling, and the pressure released. Matthew threw her onto the floor and she rolled, smashing into the corner of the sofa. She heard Ian shouting, heard Andy talking fast and crazy, nothing new in that.
Ian shouted, âWhat is going on here, Matthew? Donât hurt her, you bastard.â
Matthew said nothing, merely stood over her, the Beretta aimed squarely at her heart, and tossed Ian the phone.
âWhat is this? Iâve never seen this before. Is this her phone?â
Ian paused, looked down at Vanessa, sodden, huddled in on herself. âIs this your phone, Van? Really, itâs your phone?â She heardthe horror in his voice, but also heard the acceptance that she was guilty.
âYou think weâve got a traitor here, Matthew?â Andy asked, and jerked the phone out of Ianâs hand. âLet me see it, weâll know soon enough.â
âIan, Andy, it isnât mine. I already told Matthew that it wasnât, that I found it in a drawer when I was cleaning them out to pack. Is it yours, Ian? Andy? Itâs not mine, I swear it. But Matthew doesnât believe me. Tell him it canât be mine, Ian. Tell him.â
Ian wouldnât meet her eyes. Andy was staring down at the tiny phone in his palm, ignoring all of them. âTell me your secrets, little phone,â he said, his voice almost a croon. Crazy, crazy Andy, even more twisted than Matthew was now, and that was saying something. âWhere did you come from, little beauty? So tiny you are. Tell Andy your secrets.â
Matthew said, âAndy, quit screwing around. Whoâs she been calling?â
Andy finally looked up. âSorry, dude, thereâs no history, everythingâs been wiped.â
Without a word, Matthew hauled her up and threw her into the wall. His fist moved so quickly she almost didnât see it coming. But he didnât hit her; instead, his fist slammed into the paneling behind her head, cracking the wood. He stuck the Beretta into her cheek.
Soft, his voice was so soft, cajoling. âTell me who you really are, Vanessa. Tell me right now or I will shoot you dead.â She felt the rage pouring off him, even as his face remained emotionless, as if they were talking about what to have for dinner.
âPlease, Matthew,â she whispered, voice shaking, a little girlâs terrified voice, âplease donât kill me, I didnât do anything. Youâve got to believe me. It was probably Andy, you know how crazy he is,havenât you always told me how nuts he is? I mean, give him a match and heâd set the world on fire, and heâs always playing with that Zippo. But not me, how could it be me? You know Iâve wanted you, I was proving it to you in the bathroom. It isnât my phone, Matthew, really, it isnât my phone.â
He grabbed her wet hair, jerked her head forward. His voice remained soft, even soothing, comforting.
âVanessa, I will let Andy set fire to your hair if you donât start talking. Now.â
Vanessa knew he was ready to kill her with his bare hands. She had to find the right words. âListen, Matthew, you hired me to make you bombs, and Iâve done my job well. Iâve stuck with you, helped you.â She raised her hand to touch his face. He froze. âDonât you know I love you, that Iâve loved you since the moment Ian introduced us in