boyfriends for every day you cause me trouble. And if you run”—his voice dropped to a dangerous hiss—“they’ll have matching bullets in their skulls before you make it up the cliff. Am I understood?”
I swallowed hard. Tears beat on my eyes, but I held them back. Crying would not move him. Pleas wouldn’t sway him. I couldn’t appeal to the humanity of a monster. I had no choice.
“I understand,” I rasped. “I won’t run. I’ll be good.”
“Good.”
Mal’s mouth crashed on mine. My resolve not to cry broke as he forced his tongue past my lips.
“Very good,” he said, high on triumph. “There are some more things I have to take care of, so I’m going out. I’ll be back in a few hours.”
I prayed that was the end of it.
Mal picked me up again and carried me into the lone bedroom. Efforts were made to transform this space as well. A television sat atop a gleaming white credenza. Warm, blue cotton sheets covered the single queen bed. And the restraints over the bedpost were a new addition.
Mal set me on the bed and chained my hands over my head. I didn’t fight him.
I didn’t scream.
I didn’t do anything at all.
He kissed my cheek. “I’ll be back by lunch, and you’ll be here. With me. Where you belong.”
The door shut with a soft click that reverberated inside of me.
It was over.
Mal had finally won.
PRESTON
“We’re doing everything we can, Mr. and Mrs. Adler,” Ortiz said. “We’re a small island. Our force is made up of two detectives, four officers, and our captain. This is our first priority.”
“Can we request more officers come in from the mainland?” Mrs. Lewis-Adler’s red and puffy eyes came from hours of crying. “What about the FBI? Have you contacted them? Malcolm Byrne is a known mobster and murderer.”
“We’ve done both of those things.”
Twenty hours since I was released from the hospital.
Twenty-two hours since they told me Belle was taken.
Twenty-fours since he got away with her.
Eighteen hours since Belle’s parents flew in.
Ten minutes since the detectives showed up at our door and asked us into the living room. That would make it twenty-two hours, ten minutes, and thirty-seconds I’d been waiting for someone to tell me she was okay.
Still counting.
Ortiz laid a soothing hand on Cecilia’s arm. “Mr. Knight has made the situation clear. We sent officers to the airports and docks, and that’s why we’re here. I preface this by saying we haven’t confirmed that this is the man we’re looking for.”
Nathan, Carter, and I sat up straighter.
“One of the airport employees reports a man fitting Malcolm Byrne’s description coming in a few days ago. Apparently, Mr. Prince was correct about him having a memorable face. She says he asked him if he could charter a private plane out of the main airport, and she told him no and that he had to go to Jansen Airfield.”
I bolted off the seat, causing a spike of pain through my head that I ignored. “Private plane? You mean he’s already gone?!”
Ortiz put up his hands. “We have no evidence of that. Hanson interviewed the staff this morning and they say no planes have taken off from there in the last week. Neither has a man fitting his description been to the Airfield. They refuse to hand over their security tapes, so we’re in the process of serving a subpoena. We will find her, Mrs. Adler.”
He reached for her again. Cecilia stepped out of reach.
“Call us the minute you have news,” she said. “We’re going back out to look for her.”
“Ma’am, the best thing you can do is remain here. While Byrne is our most likely suspect, we haven’t ruled out other possibilities. If she was taken by kidnappers, the ransom call would come here.”
“She was not taken by random kidnappers,” Tobias snapped. “There were two people on that porch, and I can assure you, even a criminal who is only mildly proficient at Google would know the Du Pont-Desai heir would fetch a higher price than the Adler’s.”
I winced.
“He took Belle for a reason and we know what that reason is,” he said. “We can’t just sit here. Belle needs us.”
“You’re not sitting here,” Ortiz said. “You’re allowing people with the means and experience to bring your daughter home safely.”
“All seven of you,” Nathan bit out.
“More are coming. They fly in tonight and tomorrow morning. The only people allowed on or off this island. Trust us,” he said. “Belle will be okay.”
Cecilia sniffed. “Your placations would go down easier