Hush Hush Erik Carter (read any book txt) đ
- Author: Erik Carter
Book online «Hush Hush Erik Carter (read any book txt) đ». Author Erik Carter
âMe too,â Gavin said. âPart-time, anyway.â
âWeasel. You know him?â
Silence heard Jonah sigh.
Gavin cocked his head. âBeg your pardon?â
Silence took his PenPal notebook from his pocket. PenPalsâ plastic covers came in a variety of bold colors. This one was red. He flipped it open, removed Amberâs sticky note, and handed the note to Gavin, who gave it a puzzled twist of the lips.
âWhat is this?â
âItâs Amberâs,â Silence said.
Now that he realized what he was holding, Gavin held the note like a fragile artifact, a religious relic. His mouth fell open. âWhere did you get it?â
âOur apartment,â Jonah said. âCops overlooked it.â
Gavin nodded slowly, staring at the note. âYeah, I know the Weasel.â
An endorphin rush of potential fluttered through Silence.
Gavin finally looked up from the note, to Jonah. âRay Beasley.â
Jonahâs eyes widened.
Gavin turned to Silence. âHe was a cop, in C11 with Carlton. Got kicked off the force for heroin use. But before that, when Amber was a kid, he was a big part of her life. A surrogate uncle. She called me and Ray her âtwo uncles.ââ He paused. âAnd then she lost both of us. Within a few years of each other. Ray went nuts with drugs, and Carlton excommunicated me from her life.â
He looked back through the open side of the parking garage toward the headquarters complex. Silence let him be, allowed the moment to breathe.
Gavin turned back around, and Silence held out his hand for the sticky note.
Jonah stepped toward Gavin, took the VHS tape from the front pocket of his jacket, handed it to him.
Gavin looked it over, raised an eyebrow.
âA video for me. From Amber,â Jonah said. âI ⊠canât watch it. Hold on to it for me?â
Gavin nodded, looked deep into Jonah, his jaw set. âYou think her disappearance is related to C11, donât you? Some shit my brother got involved in, someone he pissed off getting revenge, taking it out on his daughter.â
âYou know I do.â
They looked at each other.
Gavin set his jaw. âAnd you think sheâs dead. I can see it in your eyes.â
A pause from Jonah.
âYes, I do.â
Gavin looked from Jonah to Silence, back to Jonah.
âSheâs alive.â
He stepped back to the Grand Cherokee, climbed inside, and slammed the door.
Chapter Nine
Jonah followed Brett up the stairs, back to the third floor where theyâd grabbed one of the last remaining spots to park his Fiero.
When theyâd first arrived, Jonah had noted that the parking garage was on the nicer side. Not a big, squarish, gray thing like so many of them. This one had rounded corners, contrasting brick and concrete, green accentsâa dark, bluish, copper-patina type of green.
The builders hadnât skimped on the stairwell. Its outfacing side was covered in similar green glass, giving the outside views a surreal quality. The concrete was smooth and clean. And there were trash cans and large concrete planters with a few spiky plants at the ground floor and on each landing.
By the time theyâd finished the conversation with Gavin, the crowd had disappeared, and so they were the only ones in the stairwell, their footsteps echoing.
Sheâs alive, Gavin had said.
Heâd been so demonstrative. Such fire in his eyes. But he hadnât been certain. His words had come out with the ferocity of deep determination, sadly biased denial.
Jonah was being more pragmatic. As much of a goof-off as people thought him to be, he still knew that when push came to shove, logic, not emotion, was what got a person through life. And logic told him that Amber was dead. Jonahâs preemptive grieving had been an act of pragmatism.
And yet, every time he heard someone like Gavin say, with such passion, such clarity, that Amber was alive, something sparked inside Jonah.
MaybeâŠ
One notion that hadnât wavered in his mind, however, was that Amber hadnât run off to âfind herself,â as Carlton and so many others had said. She and Jonah had made great strides with Dr. Nogulich, and by the time they left, handing each other the VHS tapes, Jonah knew things were going to be all right. Heâd seen it. In her perfect blue eyes. He knew.
Amber wasnât the most intelligent of individualsâas her father was always so quick to point outâbut she was very wise and more than self-aware enough to realize her naĂŻvetĂ© made her a an easy target in the harsh wide world. No, she wasnât out there somewhere off the grid. She wasnât living in a tent in the middle of a national park. She hadnât skipped the country to sip ayahuasca and meditate with a shaman somewhere in South America.
Something had happened to her.
District C11.
An old grudge. A gang leader who hadnât received a promised favor twenty years ago. A recently released ex-con who felt he should have been slid under the table like so many others.
Amber was gone because of something connected to those bastards. Jonah was certain of it.
It must have been this certainty that had led Jonah here, to this stairwell, following this tall man with the Frankenstein voice who refused to give his proper name.
Jonah watched the man as he ascended the stairs. The small muscles in the back of Brettâs neck twitched with his steps. It wasnât a massive neck, nothing about him screamed bodybuilder, but everything was just ⊠strong. His power exuded from him, and he tamed it with a layer of classy-chic clothing.
Brett looked back, over his shoulder, not making eye contact with Jonah, rather looking behind them, down the steps. Heâd been like this all morningâalways a watchful eye, careful monitoring of his surroundings.
They reached the landing between the second and third floors, pivoted. And as they continued up to the final landing, Brett slowed slightly, looked over his shoulder again, eyes squinted, as though listening.
At the third-floor landing, he quickly, silently pulled to the side, along the edge of the wall. He held a finger to his mouth in a shushing motion, and swiped his other hand to the
Comments (0)