“For now,” Jethro Hawthorpe said darkly. “What if this woman changes her mind about not pressing charges?”
“She won’t. I paid her off, she’s gone back to France, where she’s originally from. Nobody will go to the trouble of contacting her there.”
“You paid her off?” I could hear the frown in Jethro Hawthorpe’s voice.
“That’s right.”
“But I thought there was nothing to her accusation?”
“There wasn’t. There isn’t! But what else was I supposed to do, let a court case drag on? Imagine how that would have affected your precious foundation.”
“The stench of sexual assault will still linger,” Jethro Hawthorpe snapped. “You did see the article in the Mail, didn’t you, while you were away getting married? ‘Ned Hawthorpe: Mr. Nice Guy, or Sexual Predator?’ They’re not going to leave it alone. And what about this ridiculous marriage of yours? Don’t insult me by telling me you married for love.”
“It’s none of your business, Dad.”
“Well, I hope you had the sense to get her to sign a prenup.” There was a silence. “Are you completely crazy?” Jethro Hawthorpe exploded. “Have you any idea how much she would be entitled to if you divorce?”
“We have an agreement. In case of a divorce, she gets fifty thousand, nothing more.”
I took a step back. Fifty thousand?
“She agreed to that in writing, did she?”
“No, but I’m going to get Carr to draw something up.”
“And you expect her to sign it?”
“Yes.”
Jethro Hawthorpe snorted. “Then you’re even more stupid than I thought.” There was the scrape of a chair being pushed back. “I need to go.” Then a pause. “Remember, Ned, the slightest whiff of anything that could harm the foundation, I’ll publicly disown you.”
CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN
PRESENT
Deep in sleep, I barely have time to register his hands on my shoulders, the hood coming over my head, my hands being tied behind my back before being hustled from the room.
The need to focus on going down the stairs to the basement jolts me to the reality of what is happening. Isn’t it the middle of the night? Why would he come for me in the middle of the night? My heart pounds when I remember the door Ned and I came through three weeks ago, that led from the outside to the basement. Is that where we’re heading, outside? Has their patience run out? My mind spins as I imagine being made to kneel, then shot. I falter, stumble, almost fall down the stairs. But his hands steady me, and the firm but gentle pressure on my shoulders feels oddly reassuring.
I hear a door being unlocked and feel a rush of relief when I’m pushed inside and the usual routine follows: bound to a chair, my hood removed, my eyes blindfolded.
“Ned thinks we should kill you,” a voice says, the voice of the second man. This time, it doesn’t come from behind me, it comes from directly in front of me.
“If you think Jethro Hawthorpe will pay up if my body is delivered to him, you’re making a mistake.” My voice is strong, but my hands are shaking.
“Why is that?”
“Because I’m nothing to him. Better to cut off something of Ned’s and send it through the mail. But, as nobody seems keen to have him back, you might be wasting your time.”
To my right, I hear muffled sounds. Ned is here too. They must have gagged him.
I hear the sound of something being ripped off. Tape.
“What do you have to say about that, Ned?” the other man asks.
“Kill her,” Ned snarls. His voice is muffled but the hatred still clear. He must be hooded. My nose picks up his smell, but fainter. They’ve placed him farther away from me this time.
“Do you know why he wants you to kill me?” I say. “It’s to save him from doing it himself. I know something about him, something he did, something that would send him to prison for a very long time. If you let me go, I’ll tell you—” A strip of tape comes over my mouth, silencing me. I twist my head away, but it’s no use.
“I think she has something, Ned,” the other man says. “I mean, why would your father pay up if we send her body to him?”
“Because he’d be worried that I’d be next.”
“But she has a point when she says that your family doesn’t seem to want you back. It’s been three weeks. Your father is playing a dangerous game. He knows the score, he knows the longer he takes, the more he’ll have to pay. Yet, he’s in no hurry to pay, in no hurry to get you back.” There’s a pause. “Do you know what your mother did yesterday, Ned? She played tennis. Not only did she play tennis, but she also won at tennis. I have photos to prove it. Does that strike you as the behavior of someone whose son is missing? Either your father hasn’t told her you’ve been kidnapped, or she doesn’t seem particularly bothered. Which is it, do you think?”