The Iron Tiara

Satisfied that X would get the word out, Anthony went outside and quickly changed the tire on his truck. He returned to his office and sat at his desk. He thought carefully about his next course of action. He wanted to be out there searching for Christy, but he also wanted to be near his phone. He knew that Detective Cochran would have already broadcasted Christy's vehicle and possible destination. Anthony could only hope that his men found her first and when they did, they didn't scare her. They had explicit orders to quietly detain her and contact him or X.

His eyes wandered to the blank check that he'd carelessly tossed aside as he swallowed against an ache that had formed in his throat and made its way down to his heart. When had this become about the woman and not the massive debt Van owed him? The answer was obvious. The moment she'd offered to pay him and he refused. The shrill ring of the phone broke his thoughts and he hastily grabbed the receiver.

"Yeah?" he gruffly answered.

It was his cleaning lady, Lourdes. She explained that her granddaughter's scheduled Cesarean had been moved up and instead of coming in a couple days, she wanted to know if she could clean Anthony's house later that evening. She apologized for the last-minute change. His first instinct was to tell her that she didn't need to come at all, but an idea had formed and he told her it would be fine. He might need her.

He headed for his bedroom and retrieved Christy's suitcase from the bed. He also went to the bathroom and grabbed the spare toothbrush, the only evidence that he'd had a guest. He headed for his huge walk-in closet and closed the door behind him. After sliding some clothes to the side, he released a paneled wall and used a keypad to unlock a heavy sliding door. The home's former occupant had created a hidden room. It was sandwiched between the master and guest bathrooms, which gave the illusion of being larger than they actually were, and the only way to access it was from his closet. Anthony glanced at the small but accommodating living space. On the left wall was a twin bed. A telephone that was hooked up to the same untraceable line as the one in his spare room sat on a small nightstand. A sink and toilet were situated in the far-right corner. The wall opposite the bed had a small under-the-counter refrigerator with a toaster oven and several television monitors sitting across the expanse of the countertop. With the flip of a switch, the room's occupant could monitor activity inside his home and on the property. There were shelves going as high as the ceiling and they stocked everything from canned goods, medicine and toilet paper to books, magazines and toiletries. The wall above the bed housed every weapon and ammunition imaginable. He tossed Christy's suitcase, her toothbrush and the blank check on the bed and returned to his office.

He paced for the next thirty minutes and only stopped when he heard Lourdes pull up. After thanking him for letting her come at night, he explained that he would be joining the search for a missing friend. He also instructed his cleaning lady to let anyone who might show up looking for his friend to look through his house. Her brows drew together at the comment, and she wanted to make sure she understood him correctly.

"You are sure, Mr. Anthony?" she questioned.

"Yes, I'm sure," he told her. "I have nothing to hide. If they ask if they can look around, let them. You can see for yourself she's not here."

He'd already hidden the only evidence of Christy being in his home and he was certain that Lourdes' cleaning skills would remove any trace evidence. Of course, he didn't think it would come to that. If anything, Detective Cochran might send someone over to be sure he didn't have her. And if the other people who were out searching had the guts to show up at his house, so be it. The sooner he squelched any rumors of them being together, the better. It would more than likely dissuade anyone from showing up when he finally did bring her back. And he had every intention of getting Christy Chapman back.

He rubbed his hand down his face and wondered how much time had passed. His pager went off and, recognizing the number, he immediately dialed it.

Apparently, Christy had somehow ended up at the Glades Motel. He called Alexander and told him where to meet him. They would be taking a trip across the Alley.



Christy was surprised that Grizz knew when Anthony had arrived at the motel. Even with her supersonic hearing she never heard a vehicle. But then again, she'd taken more than one blow to her head in the last forty-eight hours. Maybe her hearing wasn't as up to snuff as it normally was.

Two raps at the door and it flung open. Anthony Bear's commanding presence seemed to swallow up the room as he looked from Grizz to Kit, his eyes finally landing on Christy. His expression went from one of relief at knowing she was safe to an intense anger when he saw the swelling on her cheek and nose. Grizz, who was already standing, motioned for Anthony to step back outside. He didn't want Kit—who'd been desperately battling being taken under by sleep from her pain medication—to become upset by what he needed to tell Anthony.

Grizz closed the door behind him and pointed across the motel parking lot to the pit where a solitary figure sat in a lawn chair in front of a dying fire. The bright red glow from the end of Carney's cigarette was visible.

"Is that the guy who did that to her face?" Anthony asked as he calmly gestured toward the man in the lawn chair.

Grizz nodded. "I stopped him, but I didn't touch him. Wasn't sure what you wanted done with him, if anything."

Anthony nodded slowly and said to X without looking at him, "Get my machete from the truck and meet me behind the motel."

"Does she mean that much to you?" Grizz asked.

"Yeah, she does," Anthony answered as he walked toward Carney.

After Grizz and the men walked outside, Christy tucked her hair behind her ear and swallowed nervously. She looked from Moe to Kit and said, "Is there any way you can help me?"

Kit blinked at her, not sure if she heard Christy right. The pain medication was starting to take its toll. She tried to sit up straight, but the effort was too much. "Help you? How?" she almost whispered.

"Can you help me escape? Let me call someone else to come get me?" Christy bit her lip as if in thought. "Oh, I don't know what I'm asking. I'm so confused." Who would I call to come get me? she thought, her mind muddled.

"Escape from Anthony?" Kit asked groggily.

"Yes," Christy replied. "I mean, no!" She let out a deep breath and tried to explain. "It's not Anthony. It's my stepfather, Van Chapman. He owes a lot of people money and I'm in danger. And if I'm in danger, I'm putting Anthony in danger too. It's best for everybody if I just go away. And I can pay. I have money to—"

Her words died mid-sentence as Grizz opened the door and walked in.

"Bear will be in for you in a few minutes," he told Christy.

Christy jumped up and asked to use the bathroom.

"Through the bedroom," Grizz said, nodding in that direction.

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