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THE PANDORA
KEY
by Lynne Heitman
Prologue
My assignment is to kill the hostages. I have grown to
like some of them over our ten days together, but my duty is
clear. The army is gathering outside the airplane. It is time to
execute the plan. We all know our places. We all go to our
duties. I dig an extra clip out of the bag. I do not know how
many rounds it will take.
I stop at the front of the airplane, in the section
that we have reserved for ourselves to pray. Then I go back
through the curtains, and when they look at me, they know. By
the way I hold the Kalashnikov or by the way I stand or by the
way I look at them. Something tells them I am there to finish
it.
But I’ve never killed anyone before. I’ve dreamed of
it. I lied about it to be part of this operation, but I have
never done it before. I level the rifle. The first one gets down
on the floor between the seats and curls into a ball. I point
the barrel at his head and fire. The recoil jams my shoulder
back. When the bullet hits, it stops him in the middle of a
scream. His head ruptures.
The others run like frightened beasts. They climb over
the backs of the seats. They stumble and fall and step on each
other, but there is no place for them to go. I smell the fear.
They should die like men, as we all will soon.
Outside, firing begins. At first it is like rain, a
sprinkling against the outside of the airplane. But then the
deluge. The first bomb goes off. The floor rises up then drops
from under me. A wave of pressure pushes me down. My ears hurt,
and when I get to my knees, I can’t hear. One of them is coming.
I find the rifle and shoot. He’s screaming, but I can’t hear,
and he keeps coming. I shoot again and he falls. When I try to
stand, there is too much smoke. My eyes burn, but I can still
see they are all coming. Their faces look like my son’s crayon
drawings. I try to raise the rifle again, but they push me down
and step on me as they go over.
Another bomb goes off. The seats are on fire. The air
feels greasy, like kerosene. Because I can’t hear, everything
feels slow. I crawl up the aisle. A man with blood on his face
and his arms on fire runs toward me. He bumps into something and
falls backward. On the floor in front of me, he twists and kicks
and turns and screams until he is still. I pull myself into one
of the seats. And I wait.
Chapter One
Harvey Baltimore’s house was dying. Once stately, the
Tudor had become an embarrassment to its Brookline neighbors.
Glossy black paint flaked off the shutters, the pocked shingled
roof covered the house like a disease, and the other half of the
duplex, which had long been a source of good, steady income for
Harvey, had been vacant and closed off for almost six months.
The dwelling, like its owner, seemed to be declining at an
accelerating pace.
The doorbell was broken. I let myself in with my key.
For someone as private as Harvey, giving me the key to his house
had been a monumental concession, but it only made sense. He
wasn’t exactly mobile anymore.
“It’s me,” I called out while I wiped my shoes on the
welcome mat in his foyer. No response, as usual, but I knew what
I would find. If it was a good day, he would be clean-shaven,
reading the newspaper by the light of the sun slanting through
open blinds. If it was a bad day, he’d be sitting at his
computer in the dark, unshaven, playing Minesweeper. Either way,
he’d be in his wheelchair, his body ravaged by the multiple
sclerosis that had been stealing function from him in
excruciating increments. I hoped for a good day. There hadn’t
been enough of those lately.
“Harvey, your shutters are flaking. We need to get
them—” I rounded the corner, walked into the office, and
stopped.
Harvey was there, all right, and it must have been a
good day—a very good day—because there he sat in his wheelchair,
engaged in a passionate kiss with the woman on his lap. At
least, until I’d barreled in, at which point they tore
themselves away from each other to stare at me.
Too late to back out unnoticed. I was too embarrassed
to go in any further. “I’m sorry . . . I’ll just . . . I didn’t
. . .” have any idea what to say.
“Oh, my.” Harvey went every shade of red and some from
the orange spectrum. Despite his confinement to the chair, he
managed to do a lot of fluttering about, mostly with his hands.
He encouraged the woman off her perch. She slipped off easily,
stepping gingerly so as not to get entangled in the workings of
the wheelchair. Of the three of us, she was the only one who
didn’t look as if she wanted to curl up into a ball and roll out
of there.
I took a step back. “I can just leave you two and, um .
. . come back later.”
“No,” Harvey stammered. “Please stay. It is I who
should apologize.”
“Why should we apologize?” The woman seemed more
annoyed than embarrassed, as if I had just tracked mud into her
clean house. “We didn’t do anything wrong.”
She was petite and fragile-looking, a good thing to be
if your habit is to sit on the legs of wheelchair-bound men. She
was also vaguely familiar, though I couldn’t imagine where I
might have seen her before. She wore her chestnut hair cut in a
short, shaggy bob. Her tight cotton slacks stopped just above
her ankles, and her high-top basketball shoes were tied with
thick white laces. She could have passed for a twelve-year-old
boy except for her eyes. I took a closer look at those eyes, and
I knew who she was.
“You’re Rachel.”
“Do I know you?”
Since Harvey couldn’t seem to find his voice, I did the
honors. “I’m Alexandra Shanahan, Harvey’s business partner.”
She smiled down at Harvey. “You told her about me?”
I pointed to the picture on Harvey’s desk, the only
personal photograph on display in the entire house and one of
the few things she hadn’t taken when she’d walked out on him six
years ago, two years before I’d met him. I had caught Harvey
making out with his ex-wife. No wonder he couldn’t find his
voice, and no wonder I hadn’t recognized her right away. She
didn’t look anything like her photo, especially with the flowing
locks cut short.
“Would you like a cup?” Rachel must have noticed me
staring at the full china tea service set up on the coffee
table. Harvey hadn’t been able to make his own tea since he’d
dumped a full pot of hot Darjeeling in his lap. That meant she’d
made it, which meant she’d been there for a while.
“Harvey said you would be coming, so I made enough for
three.”
“No, thanks. I’m good.” I set the cup I’d brought from
Tealuxe on the desk. Harvey’s favorite blend had gone cold
anyway.
Harvey cleared his throat and waded in. “Rachel has a
job for us. I asked her to wait until you arrived to detail it.”
“Both of us?”
“But of course. Why would you—” He blinked at me and
reached up to scratch his head, bumping his glasses in the
process. “Oh, my, no. That was just . . . it has been a long
time since we have seen each other, and . . .”
“I’m sorry. It’s none of my business. I’m just
surprised. I didn’t know you two were . . . together.”
“Together?” Rachel laughed. “This is the first time
we’ve seen each other in how long?” She reached over and
straightened Harvey’s collar. Then she just went ahead and
hoisted one petite haunch up on the armrest of his chair. “Four
years?”
“Yes,” he said. “Almost.”
“We were talking and reminiscing about how much I used
to enjoy giving him his back rubs, and one thing led to
another—”
And that was all I needed to know. “What kind of a job?”
“I need someone to go to my house in Quincy and pick up
a few things. Some family photos, mostly, and some jewelry. Some
things my mother gave me.” She glanced at Harvey with a shy
smile. “Some things Harvey gave me.”
“Quincy? I thought you lived around here.”
“We moved a few months ago.”
“Why can’t you get that stuff yourself?”
“Because I’m afraid my husband”—she glanced down at
Harvey—“my soon-to-be-ex-husband will kill me.”
“Did he threaten you?”
She wrapped her arms around her as if a sudden draft
had blown through. “The last time he beat me, he nearly killed
me.”
I looked for visible bruises or scars. That she didn’t
have any didn’t mean she was lying, but we had done work before
for women who had been beaten down by men they loved. The
battering didn’t always leave physical evidence, but it never
failed to leave some part of them shattered, some part they
couldn’t hide. Rachel looked whole to me.
“What did the police say?”
“You know how that is.” She laughed nervously. “I have
no real recourse until he kills me.”
“Do you have a restraining order?”
“Yes. But he has two legs and a car, and when he’s
drinking, there’s nothing that’ll stop him.”
“Why come to us?”
“Because Harvey’s a private investigator.” She stepped
behind Harvey and settled one hand on each of his shoulders. “I
didn’t know about his current condition. I wish someone had told
me things had gotten this bad.” She glared at me as though I
were personally responsible for his MS.
Harvey seemed torn between basking in her attention and
wanting to dive under his wheelchair. Public displays of
affection were not his thing.
“Rachel,” I said, “do you mind giving us a minute?”
She looked down at Harvey. He found her hand, pulled it
down to his lips, and kissed it. They locked eyes and held that
pose until he nodded. I sensed the slightest bit of triumph
behind her smile as she passed without looking at me. I had
known the woman all of ten minutes, and I couldn’t stand her. Of
course, I had despised the idea of her and what she had done to
Harvey almost since I had known him.
To Harvey, Rachel was an angel, the only woman except
his mother who had ever loved him. That she had dumped him for a
younger, prettier boy when he’d been diagnosed mattered not,
because love makes you stupid. But when I looked at her picture,
I had always seen something in her eyes that made me think she
wasn’t the angel he thought her to be.
“Please, forgive me.” Harvey was clearly embarrassed,
and yet he couldn’t stop smiling. “That was—”
“Look, Harvey, you’re an adult, and your business is
your business.” I went over, sat on the couch, and looked across
the tea service at him. “But isn’t she still married?”
“Separated.”
“How long?”
“Eight months.”
The question was, what did she want? Harvey didn’t have
any money. Neither one of us did. “Do you believe—” Scratch
that. He obviously believed her. “Has her husband been stalking
her?”
“I did not ask.”
“Did you know that her husband was abusing her?”
“No.”
“Has she called you even once over the past four
years?”
“No.” He fiddled with the loose leather cushion on the
arm of the wheelchair. I’d been meaning to tighten it and kept
forgetting. “Nor have I called her.”
“Is she planning on sticking around after we
collect her stuff for her? I mean, I hate to be so skeptical,
but doesn’t this all seem to be coming out of the blue and
moving really, really fast?”
He started to huff and puff. “You would expect what? That I
would say no? That I would throw her out of my house and leave
her to her own devices?”
Her own devices seemed to be in fine working order to
me. “If I’m not mistaken, she tried to take this house from you
in the divorce proceedings.”
“Are you telling me that you will not take this
assignment?”
“Is she paying us?” He stared at me as if I’d just
poked him in the eye. How had I become the bad guy? “She left
you, Harvey. She hurt you. Now she wants you to help her out of
a jam with the guy she left you for. I’m only . . . I’m just
asking that you be sure before you get involved with her again.”
“She came to me because she trusts me.” His voice was
quiet but firm. “I could no more turn her away than I could turn
you away in a time of need.”
There it was. In one deft stroke, he had revealed the
essence of his relationship with each of us, stated his
priorities, and ended the discussion. Rachel could ask him to
walk over hot coals in his bare feet, and he would ask me to
hold his shoes. I would do it because I would do anything for
him. I sat back and started getting used to the idea of working
for Rachel.
“I’ll do it for you, Harvey. Not for her.”
He took off his glasses, found a cloth in his
saddlebag, and cleaned them with a determination that wasn’t
required. He put the glasses back on and looked at me with a
steady gaze as he folded the cloth. “Thank you.”
I went over to the door and called Rachel back in.
Harvey beamed at her. “We will be more than happy to help you
with your problem.”
She smiled for him, and I got a bad feeling.
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