“But you’re such a piece of shit, Bill, that even your own wife won’t tell you where her sister is.”
“She doesn’t tell me anything.”
“But you must know how they communicate?”
“Phone, I guess.”
“Where are your phone records?”
“In the cabinet by the TV. There’s a file. But she never uses the house phone. I’ve looked.”
“Does she receive mail?”
“Yes.”
“Where does she keep it?”
“In a locked box in the bottom drawer of her nightstand.”
Moloch nodded at Willard, and the boy went into the bedroom to search for the box.
As he left the room, car headlights brightened the hallway, briefly illuminating their faces and casting fleeting shadows across the room. Leonie pressed the gun against Bill’s teeth, forcing him to open his mouth, then shoved the barrel inside.
“Suck it,” she whispered. “I see your lips move from it and I’ll pull the trigger.”
From the bedroom came the sound of sudden movement: Jenna was trying to make for the window to raise the alarm, Moloch guessed. Willard was too quick for her, and the movement ceased. Moloch heard the car door closing; footsteps on the path; the placing of the key in the lock; the door opening, then shutting again; the approach of the woman.
She stepped into the living room. She was older than he remembered her as being, but then it had been more than five years since they had last met. In the interim, Moloch had been betrayed and they had run, scattering themselves to the four winds, inventing new lives for themselves. Even with Moloch behind bars, they remained fearful of reprisals.
Patricia had long, lush hair like her younger sister’s, but there was more gray in it. She wasn’t as pretty, either, and had always looked kind of worn down, but that was probably a consequence of being married to an asshole like Bill. Moloch, who didn’t care much either way, still wondered why she had stayed with him. Maybe, after all the fear, she needed someone even semireliable to stand beside her.
Patricia took in her husband, huddled on the floor, the woman’s gun in his mouth; Dexter, his shirt still untucked; Braun, an open magazine on his lap.
And Moloch, smiling at her from an armchair.
“Hi, honey,” he said. “I’m home.”
All was quiet. Even Bill had stopped sobbing and now simply cradled his damaged hand as he watched his wife. She stood before Moloch, her head cast down. Her left cheek was red from the first slap, and her upper lip was split.
“Look at me,” he said.
She did not move and he struck her again. It was a light slap, but the humiliation of it was greater than if he had propelled her across the room with the force of the blow. She felt the tears roll down her cheeks and hated herself for showing weakness before him.
“I’ll let you live,” said Moloch. “If you help me, I’ll let you and Bill live. Someone will stay here with you, just to make sure you don’t do anything stupid, but you will be allowed to live. I won’t kill her. I just want my money. I don’t even want the boy. Do you understand?”
Her mouth turned down at the edges as she tried to keep herself from sobbing aloud. She found herself looking at her husband. She wanted him to stand by her, to be strong for her, stronger than he had ever been. She wanted him to defy Moloch, to defy the woman with the gun, to follow her even unto death. Yet he had never shown that strength before. He had always failed her, and she believed that even now, when she needed him most, he would fail her again.
Moloch knew that too. He was watching what passed between them, taking it in. There might be something there he could use, if only-
Willard came out of the bedroom. There was blood on his hands and shirt. A spray of red had drawn a line across his features, bisecting his face. Life was gradually seeping back into his eyes. He was like a man waking from a dream, a dream in which he had torn apart a woman whose name he had barely registered, and whose face he could no longer remember.
Bill screamed the name of the dead woman in the bedroom, and his wife knew at last that all she had suspected and feared was true.
“No, Bill,” was all that she said.
And something happened then. They looked at each other and there was a moment of deep understanding between them, this betrayed woman and her pathetic husband, whose weaknesses had led these men to their door.
“I’m sorry,” he said. “I’m sorry for it all. Tell him nothing.”
Bill smiled, and although there was a touch of madness to it, it was, in its way, an extraordinary thing, like a bloom in a wasteland, and in the midst of her hurt and fear, she found it in her to smile back at him with more love and warmth than she thought she would ever again feel for him. Everything was about to be taken from them, or what little they had left, but for these final moments they would stand together at last.
She turned and stared Moloch in the eye.
“How could I live if I sold out my sister and my nephew to you?” she whispered.
Moloch’s shoulders sagged. “Dexter,” he said, “make her tell us what she knows.”