Mercy (Atlee Pine #4)

“Yes. Joe apparently was going to let you go. Desiree was having none of that. She stabbed him and ran for it. Len and Wanda helped her get away.”

Mercy shook her head. “So now I know I have a twin sister and we come close to finding each other and now she’s been taken. Just like I was all those years ago. How messed up is that?”

“Very,” said Blum quietly.

Mercy glanced up. “Do . . . do I look like her?”

“You’re a couple of inches taller, and she has long dark hair. But in the face and eyes, I can most definitely see it. Absolutely.”

Mercy nodded and looked down again. “How do we find her?”

“I’m not sure.”

“If Desiree is connected to this, she might know who took her.”

“Yes, but she’s in jail.”

“Then let’s go talk to her there. I’ve been meaning to talk to Desiree for a lot of years now.” She glanced up at Blum. “And we have nothing to lose, right?”

“Right.” Blum attempted a smile, but it never reached her eyes because she obviously did not like this idea at all.

Mercy rose, and her big hands curled into fists. “Then let’s go.”





CHAPTER





48


IS THIS YOUR CAR?” asked Mercy as they climbed into the Porsche SUV. Blum had taken the keys from Pine’s room.

Mercy had changed into jeans and another hoodie, and checked out of the hotel; she had put her duffel in the back seat.

“Good Lord, no. I can’t afford this.”

“Then it’s Lee’s?”

“No, she can’t afford it, either. It . . . it belongs to a man named Jack Lineberry. He’s very wealthy, and he let us use it.”

“And what’s his connection to all this? Why did he let you borrow his wheels?”

Blum put the key in the ignition and started the engine. “I suppose you have to know this, and now is as good a time as any.”

“Know what?”

“Jack Lineberry is your biological father.”

Mercy took this calmly. She nodded and glanced out the window. “So our mom was quite the guy magnet?”

“I don’t think it was like that at all. He was her handler when she was working undercover to bring down some Mafia families. They . . . they had feelings for each other. Or something like that, and your mother became pregnant with you and your sister.”

“So how did she end up with this Tim guy?”

“They fell in love. Jack is quite a bit older than your mother, and their . . . relationship might have had more to do with the work they were doing, at least for your mother. I have to say that Jack Lineberry was very much in love with your mother, and probably still is.”

“And where is our mother?”

“With Tim, presumably.”

“And Lee? Where is she in all this?”

“When your sister was in college, your mother left her without any real explanation. She doesn’t know where your mother is.” Blum studied her closely. “You’re taking all this quite calmly.”

“Well, it’s no more earth-shattering than anything else you’ve already told me in the last ten minutes.”

This blunt statement made Blum smile. “You are more like your sister than you know.”

“Am I?” Mercy said dubiously. “My life has been very different from hers, apparently.”

“I know some of what you went through with Desiree.”

“I dreamed of killing her a thousand times.”

“I’m sure you have.”

“I came here to kill her.”

“Yes, Agent Pine assumed that.”

“Agent Pine, huh? FBI and everything? Didn’t know they had many gals doing that.”

“She’s an excellent agent, one of the very best.” Blum pulled out of the parking lot and headed toward the street.

“Good for her,” said Mercy, but the voiced compliment rang hollow. “And you’ve been looking for me for a while now?”

“Yes. It’s been quite the journey, with a lot of twists and turns.”

“Yeah, I bet.”

Blum glanced at her.

“What have you been doing all this time, Mercy?”

“Just surviving. Like everybody else.”

“It will be difficult for you to see Desiree, won’t it?”

“It may be more difficult for her than me.”

Blum said sharply. “You didn’t escape from that awful woman just so she could put you back in prison, did you?”

“I feel like I have every right to kill her.”

“But if you do, she wins. And I know you’re smart enough to know that. But if you can’t promise me you won’t attack her, then we’re not going to see Desiree.”

“She may be the only lead to find your boss.”

“And your sister. So unless you’re prepared to hold back your natural anger, we’re not going to be able to find Agent Pine, which means she’ll probably die.”

“I should have more feelings for her,” said Mercy, perhaps with a degree of honesty that startled even her. “But it’s been a long time. And a lot of shit happened in between. And she got to stay home. I lost the rhyme. I got pitched into the nightmare.”

Blum pursed her lips. “Ito Vincenzo, the man who kidnapped you, also cracked your sister’s skull that night. She lay there all night with her brain bleeding. It was only a miracle that she lived after a long time in the hospital. That night destroyed your family. Your sister later thought Tim killed himself, but your mother lied about that. Then she left to join Tim, as I said, leaving your sister all alone. It seems that Vincenzo apparently thought he was taking you to a good situation, where you would be taken care of. He knew nothing about Desiree. So I think, at least in his mind, that you were the winner of the rhyme and your sister was the loser.”

Blum looked over at Mercy to find her glowering at her.

“I wasn’t a winner in any way, shape, or form.”

Blum said hastily, “Of course you weren’t. I’m only saying that Vincenzo meant to kill your sister, not you.”

Mercy settled back in her seat and glanced out the window.

Blum said, “And, unlike you, Agent Pine has very firm memories of you. She’s lived with that loss for the last thirty years.”

Mercy said in a far calmer tone, “Desiree managed to beat those memories out of me. I remember snatches here and there. The name Lee. The fact that somebody else was there, you know?”

“Yes, I can understand that.”

“But it’s not the same as having memories. It’s just shit in your head you can’t make sense of. Like somebody gave you a book to read but first smeared all the words so badly that you can only make a couple out. It’s . . . a hard thing to live with, knowing it’s there somewhere, but never being able to find it.” She looked over at Blum. “Sorry if how I talk doesn’t measure up. You said your boss went to college and everything. I may sound dumb, but I’m mostly not. I read a lot. Books got me through a bunch’a shit.”

“You sound just fine to me. And I think given what happened to you, it’s a miracle you’re even alive.”

“I don’t give up. I never have. You hurt me, I just try harder.”

“That is exactly who your sister is.”

Mercy nodded but didn’t comment.

“And Desiree?” asked Blum nervously.

Mercy didn’t answer right away. “I won’t lay a hand on her.”

“And why is that?”

“Because you’re right. I don’t want to lose, especially to that bitch.” A moment of quiet passed and then she added, “And maybe I’d like a shot at meeting my sister. Alive.”





CHAPTER





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