opened the door, the bells jingling as he stepped in. âRemi?â
The shop appeared empty.
âRemi?â
He eyed her unattended purse, then walked through the store, looking down each aisle, finally finding her standing in the doorway of what appeared to be an office or storage area at the back of the shop. âThere you are.â
âYouâre supposed to wait outside. Remember?â
âEverything okay?â
âI found that cookbook Iâve been searching for. The ownerâs wrapping it up for me. Now, leave or youâll ruin your surprise.â
He stared for a second or two, unable to read anything on her face, her green eyes about as expressive as a poker playerâs. âIâll wait outside,â he said. âDonât be long.â
She smiled sweetly at him, never moving from the doorway. âI wonât.â
He retraced his steps. The door bells jangled overhead as he opened, then shut, the door, remaining inside the store.
While Remi wasnât exactly a stranger in the kitchen, she often joked that
cook
was a noun, not a verb.
Come to think of it, he couldnât recall her
ever
buying a cookbook, much less searching for one. Definitely not while they were married.
She was in trouble.
Nice time to be without a gun.
Typically, he carried a Smith & Wesson .357 Magnum, but they were in San Francisco for fun and so heâd left it on their plane.
Now what? Call 911 and hope the police arrived in time?
Not about to risk his wifeâs life, he silenced the ringer on hisphone, set his hat on the counter, then quietly began opening drawers, searching for something a little more substantial than his small pocketknife to use as a weapon. He found a folding knife with a four-inch blade. He pulled it open, felt it lock. Decent weight, nicely balanced, point intact, probably used to open boxes, judging by the gumminess on the bladeâs edge. Now to get back to that room without being discovered.
He slid his hand into his wifeâs purse, found a small makeup bag, and took out a compact mirror. Flipping it open, he wiped the powder residue from the mirror with his pants, then edged his way down the aisle, making sure a row of bookshelves was between him and the door to that storeroom.
âYou!â a deep voice shouted.
Sam froze.
âForget the combination again and you die.â
âForgive me.â Pickering, the bookseller, Sam figured, as he continued down the aisle. âIâm nervous.â
âPlease,â Remi said. âThereâs no need to wave that gun around.â
âShut up! You, old man. Get that safe open.â
âIâIâm trying.â
Sam forced himself to breathe evenly. His wife was in that room, and all he wanted to do was rush in there, save her. But his haste could mean her death. A folding knife against a gunman. It was moments like this he was glad for the weapons-and-security training heâd received during his years at DARPA.
When he reached the end of the aisle, he stopped, used the mirror to peer around the corner.
Light spilled from the doorway of the storeroom onto the gray linoleum floor. Sam kept to the edge, careful not to cast a shadow. Holding the mirror out, he angled it to get a visual into the room.
Relief at the sight of his auburn-haired wife, now seated by a cluttered desk, was short-lived as he angled the compact farther and saw the short, swarthy fellow holding a semiauto to the shopkeeperâs back. The two men stood in front of a large floor safe, the shopkeeper turning the dial. If Sam approached from this position, it put Remi between him and the gunman.
He didnât like the odds. At the moment, he had no other choice.
Câmon, Remi. Turn. See me . . .
He rocked the tiny mirror back and forth so that the light caught her face. Unfortunately, she looked away, leaning toward the desk, as an audible click indicated the safe had unlocked.