“You never know. Maybe her ghost could be helpful. Maybe she saw something no one else did.” He turned then and hurried up to his room. When he reached it, he found that the door was open. He walked in and looked around. The decor was masculine and nautical. A heavy wooden cabinet complemented the antique captain’s bed. A ship’s wheel decorated one wall, along with various flags and paintings of sailing ships at sea.
He checked out the bathroom. It was small but had been updated in the not too distant past. Returning to the bedroom, he sat on the bed.
He wasn’t really sure what he was doing. He hadn’t intended to take a room here when he had headed with her to visit her next-door neighbor.
But watching her...
She knew too much. He didn’t know how, but she did. And that meant she might put everything together and come up with answers that were too close to home.
And someone else—like a killer—just might realize that.
*
Machete hid in the hedges and carefully watched the Siren of the Sea.
The house was quiet. He’d seen the man and the woman enter the house. He knew them, of course. Well, knew that the tall sandy-haired man was an agent. And Hannah was a local; everyone knew her. So pretty and blonde. So full of life—at least for now.
He felt his phone vibrate and answered it. He’d been expecting the call. It was the Wolf.
“So?” came a single sharp word.
“The Fed went inside with her. He didn’t come back out.”
“When he leaves, make your move.”
Machete said, “Her tour customers will start arriving in a few hours.”
“Get in there when they’re gone. Find the key.”
Find the key? Search an entire house in a few hours and find something as small as a key?
“It’s not going to be easy.”
“Of course it won’t. Someone would have found it by now if it were obvious. Check the attic. It’s probably up there somewhere.”
“I can’t promise—”
“Oh, yes, you can. The place is empty. No guests. Stay in there until you get me that key.”
“But she could catch me!”
“I doubt she wanders around her attic at night, but if she does catch you,” the Wolf said softly, “you know what to do.”
Machete had never argued with the Wolf before. Never questioned him. Until now.
“I think going in now is a mistake. The key will still be there, and she’s not a threat to us. She knows nothing. She saw nothing. She came out when it was over. But if something happens to this woman now, when the police are already looking for a killer, they will rip the city apart—and we’ll never get in there to find the key.”
There was silence at the other end of the line. Machete didn’t dare breathe. The Wolf had eyes everywhere, and he had assassins everywhere, too. Machete didn’t know who the Wolf was—no one did. And no one who didn’t need to know had any idea of Machete’s real name, either. Everything in Los Lobos was on a need-to-know basis.
Most of all, no one argued with the Wolf.
But the thought of killing her...
For a moment, Machete thought his infatuation with Hannah O’Brien might have been his undoing. He wished he could take back his words. The silence from the other end of the line stretched for what seemed like hours.
“I just don’t want to lose this opportunity,” he finally said quickly—desperately. “It could take time for me to find the key, and if something happens to her before I do, it would draw attention to the house. The Siren of the Sea could be closed down, and it would certainly be swarming with police. I would never be able to get inside then. I need to be able to go in and out safely until I find what we’re looking for.”
Again his words were met with silence. He felt sweat bead his brow and drench his shirt.
At last the Wolf spoke.
“Get in and get out, then. But remember, you’re on your own. And remember, too, if that woman finds you and you don’t do what’s necessary, I will.”
The phone went dead.
Machete stood there shaking and hot with sweat.
Finally the breeze began to cool his skin as he waited for the Fed to leave.
Except...
He didn’t leave.
The sweat on Machete’s skin began to turn to ice. He didn’t want to make another call.
What the hell was he going to do if the agent never left?
Or, worse, if Hannah O’Brien didn’t leave, either?
5
Great, Hannah thought. Broad-shouldered and bossy was staying at the Siren of the Sea.
Just what she needed.
But...she didn’t have an alarm system. It was complicated enough to keep track of her keys—and no way was she destroying the Siren’s period charm by using those little plastic cards the big hotels had all switched to. Guests got one key to the front door and then a key to whatever room they were renting.
Tourists tended to imbibe in Key West. Heavily. Some of her friends who also ran B and Bs had alarm systems, and they were constantly having them reset because their drunken guests couldn’t get the code right. And the codes had to be changed constantly, since after a few months dozens of people had the same one.
Besides, in all her years of running the Siren of the Sea, she’d never had a problem.