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Chapter Ninety-one
Mary screamed, anguished. She ran to the pier, tears streaming down her face. She reached the spot where Judy had gone over the side and almost fell in looking for her in the gloom. Grady caught her from behind and stopped her.
“Stay back!” he shouted, but Mary was hysterical.
“She got shot! Alice shot her!”
“I know, calm down. Be
“Grady, help!” Be
Grady dove into the blackness beside the ship, disappearing.
Mary heard a splash. She kept watching. She could make out three heads below in black water.
“Maria, Maria!” her mother cried, hurrying up from behind her, and Mary held her close, heaving a great sob.
“Oh, Ma. It’s Judy. Judy, Ma.”
“Oh, no, Deo, Maria.” Her mother hugged her, and Mary tried to shield her from the rain, cradling her tight.
Fiorella stood behind them, soaked. “Your father ran to the restaurant to call 911.”
“Thank God.” Mary tried to control herself, hanging on to her mother like a little girl, not sure who was comforting whom. She looked down, watching the heads in the water, scared to death.
Then she heard her mother praying and joined her.
Until the sirens came.
Chapter Ninety-two
Be
“I got her!” Grady shouted. “You okay?”
“Yes!” Be
“Don’t see how!” Grady looked up. “Too damn high.”
Be
The sirens grew closer, and there was a new sound, the rumbling of an engine, coming from out on the water. Be
“Look, help!” Grady shouted.
“Swim to them!” Be
“Help! Over here!” Grady waved frantically.
“Help! Help!” Be
Mary and the others screamed to the police boats from the pier. Sirens blared closer. Red lights flashed as cruisers hit the Boulevard.
“Thank God!” Grady shouted, joyful.
Be
“Help!” Be
But her gun was probably on the bottom of the river, and Alice had vanished into the storm.
Chapter Ninety-three
Alice swam against the wind and storm. The chop slapped her in the face, rain poured onto her head. She swallowed a gulp of gritty water, then spewed it out. Police boats sped toward the pier but they were already well behind her. She was getting closer to the Jersey side, swimming hard.
The river reeked, and plywood floated by with a nail sticking up. She felt something slither around her leg and kicked it off. Oil dotted the surface of the water. Gunk stuck in her teeth, tasting disgusting.
The current pulled her downriver. She fought it, keeping the bright lights of the Camden waterfront to her left, trying to swim straight. Her heart pounded, water chilled her skin. Her messenger bag weighed her down, too heavy to float. She kept putting it back on her shoulder, pulling it along by its strap as she swam.
She glanced back. The storm grayed her view. She could see the flashing red of a police cruiser. They’d gotten there quick. They’d look for her first on land.
She swam harder, her thoughts churning. The money had already been transferred to the Bahamas. All she had to was get there and take it out. It was almost hers.
She swam even harder, with new energy.
Chapter Ninety-four
Mary sat in the hospital waiting room, trying to come to terms with what had happened. The paramedics hadn’t let anybody in the ambulance, so the only thing she knew was that Judy had been rushed into the emergency room. The doctors hadn’t come back yet.
Her gaze wandered over the wallpaper, a baby blue print that provided an intentionally soothing backdrop for landscapes in muted pastels. Ancient magazines covered the coffee table, and the TV was mounted in the corner, playing on mute. She couldn’t watch it. Judy could be dying at this very minute.
She felt pure dread, and her parents, anguished and bedraggled, weren’t speaking to each other. Fiorella had gone to the ladies’ room, but her presence lingered like an unwanted ghost.
Her mother looked at the TV with her chin tilted up, blinking behind her bifocals. Her gray hair was wet, exposing her bald spot, and she watched Seinfeld with apparent absorption, though she couldn’t have any idea what was going on since there was no closed captioning. Her father kept his head down, his shoulders sunk into his damp windbreaker and his hammy hands folded in his lap.
Her attention shifted to Be
Mary felt a sadness so deep she could drown. Judy was bleeding. Be
Suddenly Fiorella entered the waiting room, smoothing her wet hair back, though its chic cut was ruined. She had no lipstick on, and her wet raincoat covered her black dress. She walked over to Mary’s mother. “Vita,” she said, coolly. “Good-bye, I’m going home.”
Her mother turned from the TV and eyed Fiorella with a look that could kill. “Bene,” she said simply.
“I must collect my things, from your house. I’ll take a taxi.”
“Certo.” Her mother dug in her purse, produced her house keys, and handed them to Fiorella. “Go. Now. Leave under mat.”
“Thank you, and I should say that-”
“Go! Leave!” Her mother pointed at the exit, her cheeks flushed with sudden emotion. “You are powerful woman, Do
Fiorella flinched, took the keys, then turned to Mary and her father. “Good-bye, all. Many thanks for your hospitality.”
Her father said nothing, and neither did Mary.
In the next minute, an ER doctor appeared in the threshold to the waiting room, in blue scrubs and a puffy hat with the Phillies logo.
Fiorella turned, the cops looked over, and Be
Mary stood up, her knees weak. “Is she okay?” she asked, her mouth gone dry.
And the doctor slid off his hat.