SAFE BY HIS SIDE (MANHUNT) (11 page)

BOOK: SAFE BY HIS SIDE (MANHUNT)
10.93Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“All the more reason to do everything we can to find Nan.” She glanced inside the car, but nothing looked amiss. He must have been watching Nan, jumped her when she came out to her car.

The front door stood ajar, and she slowly walked toward it, but Micah caught her arm. “Let me search the house first.”

Fear shot through her, and she glanced around the driveway for blood or a body, but didn’t see any. “You think Nan might be inside? Or that he might be?”

Micah’s shoulders lifted in a slight shrug. “I don’t know, but we can’t take any chances.”

Her pulse pounded as he pulled his weapon and inched inside the house.  She wished she’d brought her own gun.

The house was a small one-story with an open layout, a large den connecting to the kitchen. Nice wood flooring, expensive cream-colored couches, an office to the right visible from the living area.

“Everything looks in order in here,” Micah said.

Every muscle in Lenora’s body tensed as she followed him down the hallway past the office. What if Nan’s body was here?

What if he’d raped and tortured her in her own home knowing she and Micah would search the house?

Plush white carpet covered the floor of the master bedroom, a queen bed dominated the room, and the closet was open, revealing an array of suits and designer outfits.

Thankfully Nan wasn’t inside the room.

The sound of water trickling echoed from the bathroom and Lenora’s breath caught. God, no…

Simpleton had enjoyed shoving his victims below the icy water in the bath, forcing them under for so long they would be chilled inside, lose the will to live and beg to die. Then he would do it again.

But in the end, he’d revive them, use his precious knife to stab them in the heart and carve an X in their chest

An image of Nan lying on the bathroom floor covered in blood flashed in her mind, and Lenora gripped the wall, unable to look as Micah entered the room.

 

 

Micah exhaled in relief at the sight of the empty bathroom. The water in the tub was dripping, the tub full and starting to overflow, so he turned off the water.

“He used to dunk us in an ice bath and hold us down until we choked and lost our breath,” Lenora said behind him.

He scrubbed a hand over his face, blotting out the image.

Had Simpleton left the water running to remind Lenora of his sick twisted ways?

Demented asshole.

Lenora was trembling, so he clasped her hand and led her back through the house. She paused at the bookshelf and stared at the framed photographs arranged on the shelf. Several of Nan and an older man he assumed was her father, then a picture of Lenora and Nan.

The two of them stood side by side in front of the college in their caps and gowns, their arms linked as they showed off their diplomas.

“I can’t believe she still has that picture.”

Micah cleared his throat. “Maybe she just didn’t know how to help you after the trial,” Micah said. “When some people suffer tragedies or undergo traumatic experiences, it changes them. The people around them often don’t know what to do or say.”

“I know I changed, I was difficult to be around,” Lenora said softly. “I don’t blame her for pulling away.”

He rubbed her arms to warm her. “That’s not what I meant. She was your friend. She let you down when you needed her most. That’s hard to forgive.”

Pain wrenched her face, but outside, the sound of an engine cut through the air, and Micah released her. “That’s probably the crime van.”

He hurried outside to meet them and explained their suspicions. “Look for hair fibers, fingerprints, anything we can use to prove that Simpleton was here.”

The team went to work, and he ushered Lenora back to the car. “I want to look over the files and transcripts from the trial,” Micah said. “Simpleton was interviewed by a court- appointed shrink. Talking to her might give us some insight where he might take Nan.”

“We know it’ll be an isolated area, an abandoned house or building, some place with a basement that’s dark,” Lenora said, her voice regaining strength.

“Yes, but there might be some other detail that we missed that might help narrow it down. Maybe a special childhood place, an area that meant something to him.”

“Call her and let’s go see her,” Lenora said.

The silence was deafening as he sped away. A few miles down the road, he spotted a coffee shop and pulled in. “I have those files in my trunk. I can look at them and find the number of that psychiatrist while we have coffee.”

Lenora’s cell phone dinged, and she snatched it from her purse. When she glanced at the caller ID screen, her face crumpled.

“What?”

She handed him the phone and he read the text.

 

Dearest Lenora,

One for the party. One to go.

Soon it’s time you joined the show.

Love and kisses,

Robert

 

Micah cursed and pulled Lenora up against him, then wrapped his arm around her

shoulders as he escorted her inside. They ordered coffee and muffins, and he laid his briefcase on the table.

“Who is he going after next?” Lenora said in a haunted voice.

“You tell me. Who else are you close to?”

“No one except Jenny,” she said. “And I already warned her.”

“Has she left town yet?”

“I think she was stopping by today to turn things over to Wilma before she left.” Panic flared in her eyes. “I’d better check in.”

She punched her friend’s number while he opened the file and scanned it.

Lenora had been Simpleton’s only survivor so her testimony had been key to the prosecution. Other evidence was muddy due to a mix up at a lab and Simpleton’s ability to cover his ass. Damn crime shows. Between them and the Internet, perps could virtually find a textbook lesson on how to get away with murder.

“What? Listen, Jenny, I don’t like that you’re there alone. I’ll come right over.”

Micah frowned. He was surprised Troy left her alone for a minute, but Jenny seemed as stubborn as Lenora and probably insisted.

“That man already kidnapped one of my friends from college. I don’t know who he’s coming after next, but I’m worried about you.” A pause. “Okay, keep the door locked. And call me as soon as Troy comes back.”

Lenora tapped her fingernails on her coffee cup when she hung up.

“She’s there alone?”

“Yes,” Lenora said. “Troy went to get them some food and should be back any minute.”

“Take a deep breath, and call back in a few minutes. If he’s not back, we’ll go over there.”

“I’d feel better if we went now,” Lenora said.

He’d do anything for her. “All right.” He closed the file just as her phone jangled again.

“Jenny?” Another pause. “Okay, great. Now close up the shop and go some place safe with Troy.”

She looked relieved when she hung up. “Do you see anything in the file?”

“Here’s the shrink’s name and contact information.” Micah called the number, and spoke to her secretary. “I need to see Dr. Rowan.” He identified himself and explained the situation, and she told him to come as soon as possible.

Lenora stood. “Let’s go.”

Fifteen minutes later, they were seated in the doctor’s office. Dr. Rowan was tall and slim with a short, dark bob of hair and square glasses. Thankfully she worked with the police and courts, so privilege wasn’t a problem. With a woman’s life hanging in the balance, she had to talk to them anyway. “I heard about Simpleton’s escape,” she said.

“We need insight to find him. What can you tell us?”

“Robert Simpleton was severely abused as a child. His mother was schizophrenic, and treated him horribly. She punished him with beatings, using anything she could find from a broomstick or belt to tree limbs to whip him. She used to make him cut his own switch for her to use.”

The woman paused, her short fingernails drumming over the man’s file. “She filled a bathtub of cold water and dunked him over and over as another punishment. He lost consciousness more than once, but managed to survive.” Her brows drew together. “Of course he was scarred permanently.”

“She raped him?”

Dr. Rowan nodded. “Repeatedly. Again she used various objects. She also allowed men to come in and use him. She…was amused by it.”

Lenora massaged her temple as if the doctor’s comments were disturbing her. As if she had sympathy for Simpleton.

He didn’t feel sorry for the asshole. Sure, Simpleton had a tough childhood and shouldn’t have been abused, but that didn’t justify his abuse against innocent women.

“In my opinion, the women he tortured personify his mother,” Dr. Rowan continued. “He’s finally getting his revenge against her for what she did to him.”

“We’re trying to figure out where he’s holding Nan Purcell,” Micah said. “Is there anything in his background that might help us? Maybe a specific place his mother used to take him? Some place meaningful?”

Lips pursed in thought, the doctor opened the file and skimmed her finger along a section. Seconds later, she lifted out a childlike drawing of an old Victorian house that looked haunted.

“This is a sketch of the house he grew up in, where his trauma first occurred,” she said. “If Mr. Simpleton believes this is his last chance to punish his mother, he might want to recreate the same setting where he was abused himself for his victims.”

 

 

Robert had been watching Jenny, the girl who worked with Lenora, but some big oaf of a guy was dogging her like she was in heat. He’d have to wait till the creep left her or…find someone else who fit his needs.

He turned on the faucet in the tub in the basement and watched the water begin to trickle. It hadn’t been used in ages and was rusty and spewed brown water, just like the one in his childhood home.

His lungs squeezed for air, the familiar panic and adrenaline mingling as images of the baptisms formed in his mind. That was what his mama called them.

Punishments. Lessons. Cleansings of the soul.

The drip, drip, drip of the water made him smile. The tub was nearly full now. The water icy cold just as it was when his mama baptized him.

Now it was Nan’s turn to be punished. To be saved.

The darkness greeted him like a safe haven as he headed to the room to get her.

Somewhere in the darkness, a mouse skittered. Old pipes rattled. The wind beat at the shutters.

He removed the key from his waist and unlocked the door to Nan’s room. She lay deathly still in the corner, her hands and feet still bound, her hair tangled around her.

Feet moving on autopilot, he shuffled to her and gripped her by the hair. She jerked her eyes open and tried to scream, but the duct tape drowned the sound.

Smiling, he ripped the tape off, knowing no one would hear her cries. They were too isolated.

Her eyes went buggy with terror, and she tried to fight him again, sending his pulse into an uproar. He dragged her up the stairs, then started to undress her.

She kicked and pushed at him with her body, and he slapped her, ripped off that little black dress, and stripped her down to her lace panties.

Those would come off later.

For now, he shoved her into the water. Her scream of shock at the icy temperature echoed in the air like music. Grinning, he pushed her under, counting the seconds as she flailed and struggled.

Chapter Nine

Other books

Tears by Francine Pascal
Once Touched by Laura Moore
Killing You Softly by Lucy Carver
Something You Are by Hanna Jameson
Facial Justice by L. P. Hartley
Death of a Friend by Rebecca Tope
Snowman's Chance in Hell by Robert T. Jeschonek
Forget Me Not by Crystal B. Bright