Talk (13 page)

Read Talk Online

Authors: Laura van Wormer

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Contemporary, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Suspense, #Contemporary Fiction

BOOK: Talk
2.94Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

There was nothing remarkable about Will's body, at least not from Jessica's experience. He was neither particularly muscular nor remarkably endowed. He was simply fit and healthy and desperate in his desire for her. On her part, it was impossible to pretend that her chest was normal--it simply wasn't, but rather, an embarrassment of riches for those so inclined to enjoy. Not everyone was so inclined, Jessica knew. I But Will was. And it did not take long for her brassiere to be off, and then her panties, and then his under1 pants, though they only continued to roll around, kissing each other, exploring each other with their handsl and mouths, prolonging release and reveling in the obvious joy of their bodies. But then it became time critiij cal.

His erection was impossible to ignore, the sleekj dampness between her legs extreme. ;| "Do you--I mean--do we have any birth control?" hej murmured into her ear. | Jessica froze. Of all the times in her life not to be on the Pill. Of all the times in her life not to have condoms. After all these years she was finally with a man shs knew to be a good man, through and through, and irf| stead of running from him, she had embraced him, got ten to know him, let their emotions and attachment develop and now that she wanted this man inside he) more than she had darn near ever wanted anything it her life, she had no birth control on hand. She wanted to feel him inside her so badly she considered lying. But that was not to be the game in this relationship. In fact, there were to be no games at all. No lies. No gambling with pregnancy.

Although she frankly couldn't imagine any child nicer than one fathered by this man.

Jessica loudly sighed. "} don't."

She wondered if she should ask him if he had a condom or two in his wallet. Surely a former playboy would. But if he did and he brought them forth, would he think she'd think less of him? That he carried them around just in case he got lucky and had a chance to sleep with somebody?

"I don't, either," he said through clenched teeth.

Was he thinking now, as she was now, that he should go out and ask Slim if he had anything on him? (Good grief, Jessica thought, Slim's weight was one of the best birth control measures she had ever seen.

He'd kill any body he lay on. ) Alexandra certainly wouldn't have anything around. Although, wait a minute. "You don't suppose there's anything left around from Gordon, do you?"

Will asked, reading Jessica's mind. Gordon had been Alexandra's last fiance. But in the next moment he said, "They'd be too old, though, wouldn't they?"

"He wasn't the last guy," Jessica blurted out. Nice. Blabbing her friend's secrets Alexandra's halfhearted sexual attempt with another man before Georgiana had come into her life.

"I could look around in the bath room. Oh, God, no, I couldn't do that. I can't snoop in her private stuff."

He chuckled into the side of her neck and then sighed a big sigh of frustration.

"Oh, we're a pair, aren't we?"

"I suppose you could," Jessica began, "well, yo know, if you pulled out in time" -- "Sorry, darling, but it's too dangerous," he saic "Not with how worked up you've got me." He raisei himself on one elbow to look at her.

"But I know what I'd really, really like to do, at least or you, to com per sate..."

"What's that?" Then she sat up, getting it. He meant oral sex.

"But I haven't even showered or anything."

"Well, we could take a shower or something," h said, smiling.

"You are brilliant," she told him, kissing him.

And so they scrambled off the bed and into the bath room and ran water into the tub, and poured in bubbi bath.

The bath was delicious. Jessica sat in front. Will r back, and he bathed her from behind. And then she turned around to face him--the faucet pressing into he spine like a gun--and she bathed him, taking extra car with the soap below. His eyes closed, desire renderin him helpless.

Jessica simply continued, stroking, soaping, gently increasing speed and pressure until Will's eyes flei open and he covered her hand with his own.

"Shh, it' okay, close your eyes," she whispered, now on he knees in the tub, leaning forward to kiss him, and the:

resting the side of her face on his shoulder. It was a ver awkward position, but it made him obey and Jessica' excitement grew as she realized he was going to let he do it, let her stroke him, faster and faster in the warm soapy water, until beneath her hand she felt the telltal movement of his gland saying it was coming, he was coming, and. Indeed, he did, with a quiet moan and sigh.

Now the awkwardness of the situation. Of Jessica's position.

But Will was kissing her face, holding her, and then lifting her to an upright position and then he got up, water streaming from him, and pulled her up to her feet so that he could hold her fully against him and kiss her. Then he stepped out of the tub, led her out, toweled them both off and took her into the bedroom. He helped her onto the bed, onto her back, closed her eyes with his hand, and then she felt him lift her up to slide a pillow beneath her. And moments later, his movements so smooth she hadn't even realized he was down there, had eased her legs apart and Jessica took a sharp breath as she felt his mouth on her.

Oh, he was no novice at this. And she let him, as he had let her, and let herself slide away into the sensation, something that had been impossible forever and ever it seemed, since she had stopped drinking.

But it was happening, she was letting go, and he was taking her very far, very deep down inside herself, and it took a while, too long, she thought poor Will but she didn't care because it was as if she had turned a corner, the sudden plunge down inside herself, the feeling that she couldn't stop it now if she tried, and then she was pulling down hard on the sensation, crying out, feeling her body plunge and then surge against him, helpless, until that rolling energy broke to skitter into nerves, and she grabbed his head to stop him.

"Oh my," she said, relaxing, looking up at the ceiling. And then she laughed.

"Oh my." And she reached down for him.

"Come up here this minute." And he climbed up to hold her in his arms, and they lay there, It had been two weeks since the murder of Bea Blakely and things had, as much as possible, returned to normal at the West End Broadcasting Center. Jessica had a new temporary secretary, a man this time who also happened to double as another bodyguard and much had been discovered about the double life that Bea Blakely had led.

The NYPD found that in the seven weeks prior to Bea's death, she had made three separate deposits of five thousand dollars into her bank account, and a final one of ten thousand dollars. The first three were payments accounted for by The Inquiring Eye tabloid magazine, payments they made to Ms. Blakely for "Information regarding the personal life of the talk-show host Jessica Wright." The information supplied had been copies of letters sent to Jessica by the Doc after she dumped him which the tabloid had wisely para phrased so as to avoid prosecution for copyright violation The letters had described Jessica as "a coldhearted, self-centered bitch" who had no mind of her own and was incapable of any relationship beyond "the cold, calculating standards of a prostitute."

Bea had also supplied the tabloid with a sketch of Jessica's day-to-day life, including work, AA meetings and "hours of crying from loneliness because of her inability to sustain relationships."

Hea had also told them that Jessica was no longer taking birth control pills, that she had seen a psychotherc pist for five years and was prone to melancholy blues.

The ten-thousand-dollar deposit, however, had p( lice baffled. It had come from a cashier's check, mad out to Bea Blakely, issued from the First Bank of Las V( gas in Nevada. What this check had been for, or wh had issued it was unknown. The only thing the tell could remember about the person purchasing the cast ier's check was that it had been a polite man who ha paid in cash.

"One of those nice nerdy guys," the teLk explained.

"He said he had won big in the casino the night before."

Trying to find a nice nerdy guy who had won ten thousand dollars or more in a nameless casino somf where in Las Vegas several months before seemed 111 an impossible task. The FBI, however, was studious] cross-checking the IRS forms submitted by every casin for the three nights prior to the purchase of the ban check. The problem was, the NYPD or the FBI didn't r< ally know who or what they were looking for.

The parents had no idea who might have given their daughter ten thousand dollars. And no, they couldn't re men her Bea ever mentioning a boyfriend, or really any kin of a friend for years.

The NYPD was openly working with the FBI to trac down Jessica's stalker-turned-murderer. Less openly Cassy and Dirk and members of DBS News were in full cooperation. The FBI agent in charge, Norman Kunsi had not only worked with Dirk before, when the seci rity expert had been an active agent, but with Cass herself, years ago when she had tipped him off to a major inside-trading scam at a Fortune 500 company.

"It was him, I feel sure of it," Dirk was saying to Cassy and Detective Hepplewhite and Agent Kunsa who had gathered in her office.

"Leopold, the stalker," Dirk continued.

"He paid Bea the ten thousand.

For in formation, or for " He looked at Agent Kunsa.

"Maybe you should explain."

"Stalkers like this Leopold almost always work alone," Agent Kunsa said.

"Carefully premeditated murders, like the one of Bea Blakely, are most often carried out alone. However, to penetrate West End security, we're convinced Leopold had to have the help of someone on the inside."

"So you believe Bea was helping the stalker," Cassy said.

"Yes."

Cassy stared down at her legal pad for a moment.

"It would help explain how he got into West End," she finally said.

"And why he hasn't appeared at West End since her murder." She looked up.

"But what about Alexandra's farm? How the hell did he get through there?"

"We're working on it," the agent promised.

"Well, where are we now? I mean, what do you have?" Cassy wanted to know.

"Definitively, what can I pass on to my people?"

Detective Hepplewhite flipped open a notebook.

"Bea Blakely was electrocuted at 11:35 p.m. on Satur day night. The method of execution was the diversion of eleven hundred volts from a power cable in the wall into the telephone wire leading to the in-house phone in property room three. We know the perp got access to that wall unit from the ventilation shaft leading from the storage room next door, property room two. We believe he placed a splice that was activated by timer or remote control, but we can't be positive because the resulting fire in the wall melted just about everything."

"So," Cassy interjected, "that means he wasn't necessarily here, physically, at West End, to commit the murder."

"We're not sure," Hepplewhite said.

"On one hand, if he had been anywhere near the splice he would have died in the fire--or been electrocuted himself. On the other hand, we believe the victim was expecting his call, or he was actually speaking with her, when the splice relayed the power. It was an in-house phone, but it could receive calls from outside the complex."

"So even if he wasn't here when she died, he did U have to be here at some point, in West End, to set up that splice and relay," Cassy said.

"Yes."

Cassy's jaw visibly tensed.

"What kind of sick creature could do this?"

"One who thinks this is a game," Kunsa said.

"A game?"

Dirk was nodding.

"Stalkers, or murderers like this,! are always playing a game. It's him against us, and forl| him, every successful contact is a round won. He wants|B us to feel like he's been everywhere, like he's a phan-IH torn, and he's daring us to catch him."

"I

"And how does he win this game?" Cassy asked impatiently.

"Exactly what does he have to do to Jessica?! She held her hand up to block an answer.

"Nevi mind." She paused, thinking, and then looked at Age Kunsa.

"So how do we find him? It sounds like you' got next to nothing to go on."

"That's not true," the agent said.

"We've got a g eral profile on this guy already. Our people say he's probably a white male, in his thirties, a loner who's in capable of sustaining a normal relationship with a woman. He's very bright, socially backward and has extensive training and experience in electricity, electronics and probably computers. He's very insecure, has a tendency toward depression and might live with his mother or another dominating female. And al though he's very bright and highly skilled, he probably has a low-level job due to his difficulty relating to people. His job is definitely connected with electricity in some way, probably in construction or with one of the power companies here in the city. The fact he is familiar with West End tells us that he is or has in the past probably worked here in some capacity. Maybe in the building of the complex, or in connection with its maintenance repairs or upgrade of its equipment."

"But the whole complex is in the business of electronics Cassy said.

"The electronic retrieval companies, the research labs, TV broadcasting, our satellite hookup with the affiliates, the Darenbrook printing plants and newspaper-distribution centers good Lord, that's all that we do here. Maintain, repair and upgrade systems that run on electricity." She turned to Dirk.

"Do we know how many outside maintenance and technical people we've had in here the last couple of months?"

"About three hundred."

"About three hundred," Cassy repeated, not looking terribly happy.

"We've got a lot more to work with than you think," Agent Kunsa told her.

"But it's been two weeks!"

"We'll get him," the FBI agent said.

Cassy sat back in her chair, ran her hands over her hair and then dropped her hands on the desk with a thud.

"Maybe what I don't understand is what this guy is getting out of this. Why he's stalking Jessica in the first place."

Other books

Kicking It by Hunter, Faith, Price, Kalayna
The Fall Girl by Kaye C. Hill
The Monet Murders by Terry Mort
The Letter by Kathryn Hughes
Unexpected Marriage by Sheena Morrish
Don't Scream! by R. L. Stine
Parasite by Patrick Logan
Vision of Love by S. Moose