Cross the Line (Boston Love Story #2)

…body at the marsh….

None of that sounds good. In fact, all of that sounds pretty fucking terrible. I can’t make out Mac’s words, but a few seconds later I hear the sound of footsteps. My ass is barely back in my seat when the door swings open and Cormack steps into the room.

His smile gleams as darkly as the gun in his hand. “Just you and me now, Phoebe.”

I gulp.

Somehow, I felt safer with the mob boss.

***

“Where are you taking me?” I ask for the twentieth time.

Cormack doesn’t answer as he pushes me through the empty warehouse, using the barrel of his gun like a cattle prod whenever I’m not moving fast enough for his liking.

“Where’s Mac?”

“Why? You think he’s gonna save you?” Cormack snorts. “He’s the one who ordered the hit.”

The hit? As in….

Crap on ciabatta loaf.

“You can’t kill me.” I swallow. “You need me.”

“Apparently not anymore.” His voice is casual, like we’re discussing the weather. “Your father surprised us. Didn’t think he had the balls to go to the FBI about Mac, but we just got word he flipped.”

Dad went to the FBI?

Cormack’s feeling chatty. “He must love you. Thought it’d save you, probably. That the boys in blue would find you in time.” He laughs, like he’s told a great joke. “Stupid of him, really.”

My heart clenches.

We reach the end of one hallway and turn down another. I see a doorway up ahead, light shining in around its edges, illuminating dust motes in the stale air. We’re headed outside.

Cormack’s still taunting me as his gun barrel presses between my shoulder blades. “Not only will he fail to help you, he’ll go to jail for his trouble. The amount of shit Milo West has done — collusion, blackmail, extortion — even a testimony won’t get him off scot-free.” I can hear the smirk in his voice. “Still, we can get to him. Mac’s reach extends far. Even to federal security prisons. Your daddy’s days are numbered, whether he walks or does time.”

I clench my hands so tight, my fingernails cut into my palms like knives.

“All for nothing, too. They won’t be able to make any of the charges against Mac stick. Never do.” He chuckles. “Witnesses have a way of… disappearing.”

“You don’t have to kill me,” I say, breathing too hard. “I don’t have anything to do with this. My father will go to jail, you just said that. His life is over. So, you already have your revenge. Please… you don’t need to hurt me, too.”

We reach the door. Cormack steps around me to haul it open with his free hand. He uses his gun to gesture me outside.

I squint against the sudden brightness. It’s around noon, judging by the sun’s position straight overhead, and after my eyes adjust I see nothing but swamp. Dried mud and tall grass form a bog for at least a mile in every direction. My heels sink in with each step.

I know immediately that we’re somewhere far outside the city limits — an old abandoned mill or factory, somewhere long-forgotten by everyone except Mac and his boys. There are no other buildings anywhere in sight. The tan sedan is the only car left parked beside the warehouse.

“Keep walking,” Cormack orders, eyes cold. “Toward the marsh.”

With his accent it sounds like he’s saying toad tha mash.

I turn to look at him. “Please don’t do this.”

He takes a step closer and his voice gets even harsher. “Walk toward the marsh and get on your fucking knees.”

I swallow. “No.”

He smiles a scary smile. “No?”

“If you want to kill me, you’re going to have to do it looking into my eyes, you bastard.”

He raises the gun toward my head. “Fine by me.”

My eyes press closed when the shot goes off.





Chapter Thirty


If I have a heart attack by age thirty, tell the

coroner it was the Louboutins that did me in.



Nathaniel Knox, predicting his own cause-of-death.



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