put the Jeep in park, and switched off the engine.
âNow what?â he asked, pulling the key from the ignition.
âStay in the car. Hands up. Iâll come around.â She opened her door, the gun still trained on him, then walked around the front of the Jeep and stood outside the driverâs door, her muzzle aimed at him through the window. âLet yourself out,â she said.
Carefully, he opened the door, his hands raised in front of him. She took the keys from his hand.
âGet the twine from the back of your car.â
âThe twine?â
She nodded.
âYouâre not going to tie me up,â he stated flatly, challengingly.
âYes. I am.â
âIt wonât work. What are you running from? Theyâll find you.â
â No.â
âDonât take offense. But I donât think youâre good at this.â
Liv barked out a harsh laugh. âIâm only as good as I need to be.â
He thought that over, then walked around to the back of the Jeep and pulled up the hatch as far as the twine would allow. He untied the twine, gathered it together and put it into Livâs outstretched hand.
She said, âIâm going to put this gun into my jacket pocket now, but Iâll shoot you through it if you do anything while we walk across the breezeway to the back door.â
He made a movement of acquiescence and then headed out the garageâs man-door, across the breezeway and up two concrete steps. At the door, he said, âIâm going to need the key.â
Carefully, she put the full set in his upturned palm.
âI usually close the garage door,â he told her.
âIâll do it later.â
There were no neighbors directly across from him. In fact this stretch of road was winding and covered with fir trees, with a wide stretch of sun-scorched lawn beside the cracked cement driveway. If she had to stay out of sight a while, it was not a terrible hideout.
He threaded a key in the lock. Twisting the door open, he stepped inside, but Liv was right on his heels, just in case he planned to slam the door in her face and lock her out.
They were in a kitchen with a small wooden table and two chairs. âSit down,â she ordered, holding the length of twine.
He eyed the twine and said disbelievingly, âYou plan to tie me to a chair?â
âYes.â
âOh, come on. Iâm not going to do anything. I donât really care what youâve done. Letâs just sit down and talk about it.â
She gestured with the muzzle. âSit down. Put the keys on the table.â
He eased himself into one of the chairs, set the keys on the table, then slid them away from himself toward her. She picked them up and put them in her pocket.
âThis must be a first offense,â he said.
âItâs not,â she lied. âPut your arms behind you.â
âOh, come on.â
âJust do it,â she snapped.
âSo, youâre a hardened criminal? Is that what youâre saying?â He put his arms around the back of the chair, though it was clearly hard for him to comply.
âThatâs what Iâm saying.â
With his arms behind him, she threaded the twine through the lathed spokes of the chairâs back and around his wrists, tying them tightly, testing the twineâs strength.
âThis is gonna get damned uncomfortable real fast,â he muttered.
âBe quiet. Please.â
âFirst offense,â he said. âYouâre way too polite.â
âShut up.â
Sheâd set the .38 on the table out of his reach while she tied him up, but if he made a move for it, she was pretty certain she could beat him to it. He might be able to take her down with brute strength, but there was the chance she could get a shot or two off were it loaded, and since he believed it was, he let her truss him to the chair with no resistance though the dark, mutinous look on his face
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