One More Day Page 86

“Two minutes,” Raina hissed from the doorway.

If Raina was expecting a fight from him, she wasn’t getting one. He fully agreed with everything she’d said. It was his fault that Ridley had been in harm’s way in the first place. His fault. He just kept failing the women he loved. Ridley deserved better than that. Better than him.

He leaned down and pressed his lips to Ridley’s forehead.

“Goodbye.”

*   *   *   *   *

“WHEN CAN I get out of here?” Three days later, Ridley was beyond ready to leave the hospital. Unfortunately, until her doctor decided she was strong enough to go home, she was stuck.

Stuck in a stupid hospital bed watching stupid TV while her sister held her stupid phone hostage.

“The doctor should be around soon. He usually checks on you right before lunch.” Raina folded the blanket she’d been using in half.

“Aren’t you ready to get out of here? That chair can’t be comfortable.”

The nurses had offered to bring her a cot but the chair in the room was big enough that Raina had been able to prop a pillow against the back and sleep there. Still, she was going to end up in traction if she slept all cramped up for much longer.

“I’m fine. I’m just worried about you.”

“Is that why you won’t give my phone back?” Ridley asked.

Raina wouldn’t meet her eyes. She picked at the edge of the blanket until a few long, white strands came out. “I forgot it.”

“Again? That’s what you said yesterday.”

Raina crossed her arms and glared at Ridley. “You are supposed to be recuperating not socializing.”

Ridley held in a groan. She’d thought Raina had been insufferable before but she’d had no idea. Ever since the shooting, Raina had been in hyperdrive. The poor nurses on the floor were no doubt ready for her to leave so they wouldn’t have to deal with Raina questioning everything they did. It had been endearing the first day or two but she was about ready to shake her sister silly.

If she was strong enough to get out of this damn bed.

There was a brisk knock at the door and Ridley turned toward the sound. Elliott stood in the doorway holding a small teddy bear and looking extremely uncomfortable. She wondered how much he’d heard. He looked back and forth between them.

“Is this a bad time?”

Raina looked like she was about to protest when Ridley motioned him forward eagerly.

“Elliott! Come in, come in. I’m so glad you came to see me.”

Eli stepped in and set the teddy bear on the edge of the bed. “Hey, how are you feeling?”

“Like crap. But I’m alive. Thanks to you. So what happened, you know, after everything? I don’t really remember.”

Elliott perched on the edge of the bed carefully. “Well, I figured out David’s identity on a hunch. I knew he’d been using an assumed name for about three years but it wasn’t until I looked at the information on the flash drive that I put it all together.”

“The flash drive?”

He reached in the pocket of his jacket and pulled out a stack of photos. He flipped through them and then pulled one out.

“That’s the necklace he gave me.” Ridley took the picture and ran her thumb over the image. It was hard to believe something so small had been at the heart of everything.

“It opens to conceal a flash drive.” Eli held up another picture. In this one the necklace was in two parts.

“That’s why he wanted it back. What was on it?”

“Confirmations of payoffs. The wire transfers we noticed going through the accounts he set up in your name were just the beginning. He’s been borrowing identities for a while now. He uses them to set up accounts to funnel mob payouts to his father’s offshore accounts. Then after a few months he closes the accounts and moves on.”

Ridley tried to sit up a little but pain lanced through her side.

“Wait, I’ll help you.” Raina rushed over and pushed the button to raise the bed.

“Thanks. So, that’s why he needed it back so badly. Because it has all the account numbers and payoff information?”

Eli nodded. “I’m sure he’s got bits and pieces of information saved other places but a lot of criminals keep their information offline. That way it can’t be hacked. He must have known the FBI was on to him again. So, before staging his car accident he hid the flash drive somewhere no one would ever find it. With you.”

“And I ruined his plan by running.” Ridley closed her eyes.

“Yes. You put quite a kink in his plans by doing what you did. Moreno is a great tracker but you literally disappeared for a while. He admitted that Raina’s house was the first place he looked. But when it stayed empty, he had no idea where to go. It wasn’t until he saw the tabloid pictures of you and Jackson that he knew for sure you were in Virginia.”

“You know I almost left the necklace behind that day.”

At Elliot’s puzzled look, she continued “He saw me put it in the drawer of my front hall table the day he gave it to me. Right before the accident. I took it out at the last minute because I was going to the bank. I thought it would be safer in my safe deposit box. If I hadn’t done that, he would have gotten it when he broke into my apartment. None of this would have happened. I would still be in Florida living my life.”

Ridley swiped at her eyes, embarrassed to find that her cheeks were wet. Part of her wished it had happened that way. She’d still have been a victim of identity theft, but at least she wouldn’t have been injured.