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“I get to drive your car?” she said.
“You get to close the office,” he said. “Check all the locks, please. You may also let yourself into my apartment so you can sleep in my bed. I will be driving my car.”
“How, if I have the keys?”
“I have a spare key. Do not touch my car.”
“Right,” Nell said. “You know, if we got married, you’d be endowing me with all your worldly goods.”
“All of them except my car.”
“And I thought you were incapable of change,” she said and went to help Suze pour Margie into the Beetle.
“She’s going to be okay,” Suze said to Nell when they were hauling a sleepy Margie up Chloe’s stairs, Chloe fluttering behind them in concern. “We just had to get her out of that house.”
“And off the soy milk,” Nell said.
When Margie was asleep, Nell went back to the agency with Marlene to close the offices. Gabe was probably staked out at Margie’s for the night, but she left her desk light on for him, just in case, and then headed for his office to lock it, only to turn back when she heard a weird purring snarl.
Marlene was growling.
Nell went cold. Get out, she thought and took a step toward the door, and then she heard somebody say, “Nell,” from the storeroom behind her. She turned back and saw Trevor standing in the doorway, smiling at her as benevolently as ever. “I was hoping you could help me,” he said.
“Gee,” Nell said. “I was just on my way to bed.”
“I need the freezer key,” Trevor said. “It doesn’t seem to be on Margie’s key ring.”
“Oh, well, Gabe pretty much holds on to that,” Nell said. “But I’m sure tomorrow he’ll be glad to—”
“Those are his keys,” Trevor said. “In your hand.”
“These?” Nell said brightly, shoving them in her jacket pocket. “No. Those are mine. I—”
“Nell, I gave Patrick that key ring,” Trevor said tiredly. “I know those are Gabe’s keys. I’ve had a very long day, and I want to go home. Open the freezer for me.”
Nell took a step back. “I really don’t have the authority—”
Trevor took a gun out of his coat pocket, and he was clumsy enough that Nell gave up any thought of making a run for it. She didn’t want to be the one who finally prodded Trevor into an impetuous streak, especially if he was armed and awkward. “You’re the one who runs this place,” Trevor said, all the geniality gone from his voice. “You know where everything is. I want the files from 1982.”
“What?” Nell said, incredulous. “That’s all?” He wasn’t looking for a place to stash Stewart? Maybe she’d misjudged him. She looked at the gun wavering in his hand. On the other hand, he was pretty serious about those files. “What’s in the files?”
“You didn’t find it then,” Trevor said. “I thought you could find anything.”
“I didn’t look in 1982,” Nell said, indignant. “Nothing happened in 1982.”
“Oh,” Trevor said sadly, “something happened in 1982.” He waved the gun at her, nodding toward the freezer, and Nell nodded back, eager to please.
“Sure.” She edged around him carefully, and he pivoted as she moved, keeping the gun on her. She went into the storeroom with him close behind—too close—and unlocked the freezer. “There you go,” she said, opening the door. “Have at it. All yours.”
“Find the files from ’82 and bring them out.” Trevor held out his hand. “I’ll take the keys.”
“Uh, these are Gabe’s.”
“But I need them,” Trevor said gently and raised the gun a little.
“Okay.” Nell handed them over, fairly sure that was a mistake but not seeing an alternative. Gabe would have seen an alternative. If she took his offer to divide up the agency work, he was going to get everything involving people with guns. “Listen, there are going to be two or three boxes from 1982. You want to help?”
“No,” Trevor said, and waved the gun toward the door.
“You want to give me a hint of what we’re looking for?”
“No.”
“Is this what Lynnie was looking for?”
“Nell—”
“Because I was just wondering what it was. We thought it was the diamonds, you know.” She edged away from the freezer a little, babbling to distract him. “We had no idea there was anything in the 1982 files. Is that what you were looking for when you broke into my apartment that night? Boy, that must have given you a start, to find me in there. You probably thought the place was empty. So what were you—”
“Nell,” Trevor said. “Shut up and get the files.”
Nell took a deep breath. “Okay, look, you’re not going to shoot me. That’s probably the gun Stewart shot Helena with. You meant to get rid of it, and then put it off, right? I think that’s wise. People make mistakes when they hurry. We should think this over. Because, you know, if you shoot”—me—“the gun, the police will get the bullets”—from my body—“and trace the gun right back to you. So let’s just put the gun down—
“Calm down,” Trevor said. “I don’t want to have to get rid of another body. They’re too damn heavy. At least, human bodies are.” He moved the gun from her to Marlene, who sat on her haunches and looked up at him with her usual contempt as he took aim between her eyes.
“No,” Nell said, going cold.
“A dog body,” Trevor said, “would be easy to get rid of.”
“Wait,” Nell said again and stepped into the freezer.
“Much better,” Trevor said, keeping the gun on Marlene. “Now get me the files.”
“Just give me a minute.” Nell shoved the boxes from the nineties out of the way to get to the eighties, determined to not panic. “Definitely two boxes at least,” she called back to Trevor. She brought the first box out, thinking fast. As long as she brought him the boxes, he wouldn’t shoot Marlene. And of course he wasn’t going to shoot her, either. Stewart shot people but Trevor didn’t.
Trevor put them in freezers.
She went back in and got the second box. “That’s it,” she said as she brought it out and put it on the floor in front of him. She reached for the freezer door to close it, but he was standing in the way. “If you’d just back up, I’ll close this up and help you go through the files,” she said, trying to edge her way around him. “They’ll be a mess—”
Trevor shoved her hard and she tripped back, falling flat through the freezer door as Marlene went crazy behind him. She tried to roll to her feet, but he kicked at her and, when she rolled away from him, he slammed the freezer door, cutting off Marlene in mid-bark, leaving Nell entombed in the darkness.
“Trevor, you son of a bitch,” Nell screamed and stumbled to her feet to open the door as the darkness settled around her like a shroud, impenetrable.
He’d locked the door. He’d locked her inside and he was outside with Marlene. He wouldn’t kill Marlene now. There was no reason to. Marlene was safe, she was sure of it.
But she could die.
Trevor was going to freeze her like he’d frozen Lynnie, so he could keep his life the same once he’d found whatever he was looking for in 1982.
“Trevor, you dumbass,” she yelled at the door. “You’ll never find anything in those files.” She couldn’t remember if the freezer was soundproof, and she didn’t care. It felt good to yell at him. It felt better to remember that Riley’s mother had been doing the filing in 1982 while Chloe was on maternity leave. Trevor didn’t have a hope in hell of finding anything in those files unless he went through them page by page.
Of course, he was going to have a lot of time to look if he took the files with him. And in the meantime, she was freezing.
She wrapped her arms around herself to ward off the cold. Okay, the way not to freeze to death would be to keep moving until Gabe showed up and let her out. She had one moment of doubt—that was putting a lot of faith in Gabe’s powers of deduction—and then realized that she didn’t have to rely on deduc