take her straight to the hospital? Or the police station?”
“Because I noticed who threw her overboard,” he says seriously.
I wait.
“It was her own brother. The face clicked for me this morning when I did some heavy searching on her family.”
My gut clenches as I stare at Cash. “Her own fucking brother? You’re sure?”
“It was him. I didn’t have to look hard. Ray Gerard’s picture has been in the newspapers often enough. Just about anyone would recognize him in these parts. I saw the tattoo on the back of the hand of the other guy.”
Shit.
I know what type of tattoo he’s referring to. We’d seen it plenty when we were captives in one of Cornaro’s compounds years ago. A big C with thorns and regal flourishes around it. A sick fuck pretending at being royalty.
It’s a sign of making it to the Outfit’s senior level.
“I had to get her as far away as I could, so what better place than here with you? They won’t look for her body on this side of the island,” he says. “But they are scanning the shores on the other side, knowing it’ll wash up. I heard it earlier from the guy down there renting out surfing gear.”
“Bodies don’t always resurface,” I say.
“That’s why they’re checking, to make sure they’re the ones to find what washes up before anyone else does. They won’t worry after a couple days. They’ll figure she became turtle food.” He shakes his head. “I don’t know how the hell she lived, or the cat, honestly. Nothing but confetti left of that boat.”
A chill winds up my spine. There’s no reason for Cash to lie, to make any of this up, to even embellish it.
We barely survived the Cornaro Outfit once. We knew people who weren’t as lucky, who were killed. Murdered.
Law enforcement agencies have been after the syndicate for years, but Cornaro is slick, taught by generations before him and flush with resources. No one’s ever been able to take him down.
Could this shit finally be it? The way to nail them to the wall?
I don’t know, but Cash is right.
I have to keep her here, like it or lump it. And yeah, I guess go along with this pretend husband bullshit.
She’d looked utterly bewildered earlier asking me about that as I’d helped her into the bathroom. I’d put her off, saying we’ll talk after she’s cleaned up and had something to eat.
Cash almost reads my mind, pointing to two big shopping bags near the back door. “I guessed at her sizes, but think I remembered everything she might need.”
“She’ll notice they’re new,” I say. “Chicks are good at that sort of thing.”
Cash shrugs. “Cut the tags off, genius.”
I shake my head. “Tags or no tags, a woman knows new clothes. Leave them in the laundry room. I’ll wash them first.”
With a nod, he walks over and picks up the bags. “I’ll go check on the cat while you finish breakfast.”
He leaves the room through the door to the breezeway that leads to the laundry room.
Hell, my insides are still cringing. There are a lot of things she’ll notice that don’t add up.
Thanks, Cash.
I’ll have to think about this, how I can pull this wife thing off. At least until she gets her memory back. I can’t have her escaping.
The island isn’t that big, and she’s from a rich family. She’ll be recognized wherever she goes.
I hate to admit it, but a thrill crackles through my blood. Maybe I have been bored, and nailing Cornaro to the wall, with railroad spikes, is too good an opportunity to pass up.
“Something smells good!”
I twist toward the door leading to the hall and damn near drop my spatula. There’s a rocking body too close for comfort.
Valerie Gerard is a pretty woman. Slender, with subtle curves and long tanned legs. Her hair hangs halfway down her back, a chocolate mixture of layered browns, but it’s her eyes that draw me in.
They’re this unique hazel color that looks almost gold. Her face is exceptional, too, round with high cheekbones and pouty lips. The kind that turns heads for miles around when they curve into a smile.
She takes a hesitant step into the room.
I put down the spatula. “How you holding up?”
“Better now. The bath helped.”
“Sweet. Cash knows his stuff once in a while.” I suck in a breath and try not to lose my eyesight in how pretty she is with her hair no longer matted and stuck to the side of her head.
“I still