That was Hugo’s car she took. She left Rivertown in a Jeep Cherokee. I turn my head, spotting the old navy-blue vehicle way down in front of Mr. Woodson’s house.
She took the wrong car.
Guilt hits me. She took the closest escape.
But then, it hits me. Green…
“Shit,” I whisper.
It was a ribbon hanging out of her pocket. A tattered. Green. Ribbon.
I turn to Kade, pointing to his truck. “Go!”
We run, Stoli and Dirk following, all of us piling into the cab. I start the engine and take off. “She’s got Jared’s charm,” I spit out, racing around the corner.
“The thumbprint?” Kade asks.
“It was in Dylan’s room.” I hit the gas, not caring if I get a ticket. “The Rebels would love to have that fucking trophy.”
The thumbprint belongs to Dylan’s mom. She made it when she was a child, and there’s a whole story about it between Dylan’s parents. It’s special. Jared always had it on him for races, and last year, he gave it to Dylan for luck on the track. It’s worth five cents and our family’s most valuable heirloom.
“Goddammit.” I zip around a car and speed up on another. Hugo and his guys appear ahead, and I fly past, watching them in my rearview mirror.
“I don’t see her,” I pant, searching the road ahead.
But Stoli speaks up. “It’s just a piece of clay, Hawke.”
“And the only thing of value to Jared, other than his family,” Kade fires back. He looks to me. “Don’t lose her. I want it out of her dirty, thieving hand.”
Where the fuck did she go? I spin around the corner, race down the empty street, and look left and then right. Taillights catch my eye, and I jerk my head, seeing a car enter the park.
Those aren’t Mercedes taillights, but I recognize the vehicle. I hit the brakes, a screech filling the air around us.
“Ugh, there goes ten dollars’ worth of tire,” Kade grumbles.
Reversing, I turn and hit the gas, driving into Eagle Point, around the bend, and up the lane. The chain-link fence lays across the road, the back entrance of the park only for people entering on foot.
Did she do this? Is she trying to get arrested?
I drive in, the fence grinding under my tires, and survey the area, looking for any sign of her. Picnic tables and playgrounds decorate the landscape, along with a pavilion and amphitheater, and then there’s the…
I glance left, seeing the pond.
The Mercedes is there, driven to the edge of the bank that overlooks a fish pond about ten feet down. The driver’s side door hangs open.
I turn, hurrying over.
“Where is she?” Kade asks.
I pull up to the car, leaving it ru
I stop at the edge of the basin, looking down into the water below. Dylan’s parents were married here. It’s a small body of water, man-made, surrounded by a rock deck and rock walls. A small waterfall spills below me, a tiny stream leading to the water. It’s blue-green in the sunlight, but tonight it’s black.
Where the hell is she?
I head back to the Mercedes, searching the car, but there’s no sign of her.
The trunk.
That’s what Axel had said. He was worried about the trunk. I pop the lid and look inside, two black duffle bags next to each other and stuffed in the back.
I pull one out, unzipping it.
Stacks of cash sealed in Ziploc bags cover the bottom, two large, red bricks of coke on top.
Son of a bitch.
Kade peers inside. “Is that…?”
“Yep.”
“In Shelburne Falls?” he blurts out.
I shake my head. He doesn’t let himself see things he doesn’t want to see, including the fact that our nice, little town has a dark side.
I yank out the second bag, finding more money.
I don’t give a shit about the cash, but if these drugs belong to who I think they do, turning them in to the cops is useless. My gut twists, knowing what my dad would do. Especially after what happened a few years back.
All this shit does is hurt people.