Authors: Jo Robertson
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Crime, #Serial Killers, #Romance, #Romantic Suspense, #Thrillers, #Mystery & Suspense, #Suspense
Out of the corner of his eye, he saw Kate gather up her files, but instead of leaving through the department doors, she strolled past his desk.
“Pssst, Slater,” she fake whispered.
“Hey, what’s up?”
“We have to make an ice cream run,” she said.
“You’re kidding.”
“Nope. I never know when a sweet-tooth compulsion is going to overcome me. And Chunky Monkey’s calling my name.”
“Ice cream in the winter. Weird,” Slater said. However, he wasn’t going to refuse her, so he stretched lazily and reached for his jacket. “Let’s get going then.”
She grinned widely. “What a trooper.”
They ended up in Old Town. Kate explained that the local grocery store wasn’t good enough, and they had to drive all the way to Sam’s Old Sweet Shoppe downtown. They parked his truck and ran to the store just as the owner was locking up. Kate pounded on the door and he flashed his badge.
They giggled like kids the whole time.
During the trip back from Old Town to Placer Hills, Slater kept his hand on Kate’s thigh, stroking her jean-clad leg, while she rubbed the back of his neck. By the time they pulled into the rear parking area of Kate’s building, he was so aroused his erection strained against his Levis, and he turned to kiss her deeply before shutting off the ignition.
Slater slid the seat as far back as it would go and pulled Kate onto his lap, her legs straddling him, her back against the steering wheel. Pushing the lever that collapsed the seat, he fell backwards, Kate on top of him.
“I don’t think I can make it into your apartment, little huntress. You’ve caught me in your web.”
“Is that some kind – of mixed – metaphor?” Kate’s breath hitched, as his hands roved under her jacket and shirt to release the clasp of her bra. He lifted the shirt out of the way and nuzzled her breasts with his lips. Her heart thundered beneath his ear.
“I want you now, right here,” Kate whispered, her voice a strangled cry. The two of them were a tangled mess jammed into the unaccommodating space of his truck’s front seat.
His hands slipped beneath the lace of her panties to grab the smooth flesh of her buttocks just as the rough tapping of a hand on the driver’s car window jarred them back to reality. The bright pinpoint light of a flashlight glared in their faces.
Oh, shit.
They rutted like animals in heat. They didn’t even care that the cop interrupted their sweaty sex, didn’t mind that someone else saw what they were doing in the front seat of the man’s truck. That the whole world could see them screwing.
Smith had waited in the shadows of the bougainvillea bushes that flanked the trees at the south edge of the parking lot – the lot of the building where
K. Myers
lived in apartment number one. He was cold and wet and pissed off that he couldn’t help watching the woman, following her, making sure it was – was her.
He was obsessed with her again, with finding out what the witch-girl woman was up to. He’d been forced to wait hours for her and the dark giant to return. Then, instead of going straight into the apartment, they’d been all over each other. Doing things with their hands and their mouths, their tongues.
Things he wanted to do every time he hunted. Every time he searched for the right girl, the one who’d make it right. But each time, he couldn’t. He failed and had to resort to – to other measures. He knew vaguely that those other things weren’t supposed to be enjoyable, but a kind of frenzy came over him, and he couldn’t stop, couldn’t help it.
It wasn’t right, wasn’t fair, he raged silently, that the animal-man and the bitch-woman did those things. That it was so easy for them. Not fair that they enjoyed it and didn’t have to carefully plan and work at it like he did. No, not right at all. Smith was going to make
K. Myers
pay for that.
And then he’d make the animal-man pay.
The thought brought him comfort and he edged his way toward the downstairs window, the one he was sure belonged to the girl-woman’s bedroom.
He stared at the security lights around the small parking lot, three of them, high off the ground. He knew there were cells in them that automatically came on at dusk and off again at dawn. He’d have to figure out how to disable them. Shouldn’t be too hard. A utility truck, late morning when everyone was at work. He’d bet no one would even notice they were out, and anyone who saw him would assume he was at work replacing the light cells.
Smith looked with longing toward
K. Myers’
bedroom window. If she’d left the curtain open, even a crack, he could watch the man and woman. He’d bet they were still at it.
#
“Oh no,” Kate moaned, whether from embarrassment or frustration, Slater wasn’t sure. She angled her face away from the light and buried it in his shoulder.
“All right, break it up in there,” the deputy began. “Oh, God, Lieutenant Slater, sorry sir, I didn’t know who it was.” He turned off the light. “Uh, I didn’t recognize your truck, Lieutenant, sir. I’ll, uh – leave you two alone.”
The deputy quickly climbed into his patrol car, made a three-point turn, and sped out of the parking lot.
“That’s a sure-fire mood changer,” Slater said.
“My god, what were we thinking of?” Kate rearranged her clothing as she reverted quickly to cool and self-possessed.
“Guilty as charged.”
She climbed off him, buttoned her jeans, and hurried into her apartment. Which is where they should’ve started all this in the first place, he thought. What were they, a couple of horny teenagers?
But when she reached the door, fumbling for her keys, the humor of their situation must’ve fully struck her because she started giggling and didn’t stop until she reached the bedroom. Her mood was catching, and he laughed at the irony of their trying to keep their relationship a secret, only to have been caught by one of the deputies under his command.
He caught up with her in the bathroom where they ended up in the shower and finished what they’d started. Afterward, they tumbled onto the bed, and this second time, they paced themselves, arched their bodies to a tempo that felt both new and familiar, and finally drifted off to sleep, bodies spooned against each other.
As he was ready to slip over the edge into peaceful oblivion, Slater heard Kate repeat the question, but he couldn’t understand her mumbling.
Something about the man with the giant hands?
#
“Do you believe in God?”
Slater glanced over at Kate to check the seriousness of her question. They sat in bed, eating a late evening snack of cold cereal.
He took his time responding because he didn’t know the answer. Before his son was jerked so abruptly from his life, he would’ve said yes unequivocally.
“I’m not so sure I believe in much of anything.”
Kate put her spoon inside her cereal bowl, placed it on the nightstand. “Are you saying you don’t believe in
anything,
like God, or truth, justice, and the American way?”
He laughed. “I believe in
you
.”
“Seriously,
do
you believe in God, Slater?”
“Right now, after being with you, I believe in everything.”
That wasn’t much of an answer and he wondered what prompted Kate’s question. The truth was he no longer believed in any kind of divinity, or at least any divine intervention. Since he’d lost the most precious thing in his life, he didn’t put trust in anything but himself.
He turned the question back on her. “What about you?”
She thought a moment. “I want to believe there’s a God, but in my work, I see the worst depravity of humankind. It’s pretty hard to see God’s hand in the creation of animals like our killer. And if it’s intelligent design we’re talking about, there’ve been a lot of stupid engineering mistakes.”
She twisted her lips. “I guess losing my faith went along with losing my sister. What about you?” she pressed.
Now was the time to tell her, he thought. She’d been honest with him about her sister’s death, the entire horror of her youth. She was entitled to his candor. But somehow he held back that last piece of himself. Why was he so reluctant to tell her about Julie and the boy? Had he allowed the wound to fester these ten long years or didn’t he trust her to stay long enough to hear his deepest sorrow?
Later in bed, Slater held Kate tightly and stared through the curtained window into the dark wintry sky until he heard the soft, rhythmic breathing that indicated she’d fallen asleep. He made a decision. He’d tell Kate about Max and Julie when he knew where their relationship was headed, not now when their minds needed to focus on a killer and everything was so unsettled between them.
Even after ten years, the senseless agony of loss was a grievous blow.
Sometime after they’d fallen asleep, the call from Matt Bauer came in on Slater’s cell phone. The sharp tone jarred them awake.
“Slater? Sorry to wake you, but we got something back on the blood in the Pontiac.”
“The Pontiac?” He’d almost forgotten the car, had been sure the blood found there would match the Johnston girl.
“A match to Jennifer?”
“Not exactly, sir. The blood type in the
trunk
matched the Johnston girl’s, but
inside
the vehicle there were some minute spatters of another blood type.”
“So the killer got careless and left evidence in the car.” From his peripheral vision he saw Kate eye him quizzically.
“That’s what I thought. Also, the blood type was O-positive and matched the blood type from the Mathews girl’s pants.”
“Good work, Matt.”
“Uh, I tried to call Dr. Myers, but she’s – uh – not picking up.”
“She’s probably sleeping.” Slater lifted both eyebrows up and down in a Groucho Marx simulation while Kate shoved at him. He hung the phone up and reached for her.
“Why the wiggly eyebrows?” she asked.
“Just amused that Bauer is half way to being in love with you.”
“He’s not,” she protested, slapping his chest.
“Can’t say I blame him much.” He traced gentle swirls down her arm. “Good news on the Pontiac. Blood spatter matched the type found on Alison Mathews’ slacks. Son of a bitch killed them both.”
“Did you think otherwise?”
“Not really. The interview with Stuckey’s sister is tomorrow. Maybe we’ll get something.” He tugged her closer.
“We don’t even know the story of what happened to Mary Stuckey. Was she alone when she drowned? Did she have friends? A boyfriend maybe? Who was the last guy she was with?”
“Tomorrow,” he repeated.
Later he climbed out of bed and stood in front of the living room window, staring out at the limbless trees that jagged against the night sky. The killer was out there, waiting for his next victim. Would they stop him in time?
#
The email message from Sheriff Marconi came to the desk duty officer late in the day when a skeleton force worked the precinct an hour before shift change. Randy Townsend, a brand new deputy of only three months, manned the desk.
The message originated from an internet protocol address in Scottsdale, Arizona. Marconi had no family or friends there, but since Townsend was relatively new to Bigler County, he was unaware of this. The text was brief:
taking short vacation, will return by end of month, slater in charge. marconi.
Townsend relayed the message to Slater by cell phone, alleviating the detective’s concern over the Sheriff’s unexplained departure. Slater didn’t aspire to his boss’s job, but he’d be glad as hell when Marconi retired, and he no longer had to put up with his irresponsible behavior.
Disgusted, but not shocked that the head of Bigler law enforcement would take time off during a major investigation, Slater posted a brief message on the squad room’s bulletin board:
Sheriff Marconi on vacation.
No one except Townsend ever saw the actual email, which he deleted from the office computer.
Had Slater known where Marconi was supposed to be vacationing, he might’ve speculated that the Sheriff had no ties at all to the state of Arizona. The Sheriff had a passion for hunting and fishing in Utah and California, but had never visited Arizona in his entire life.
Xavier Marcus Marconi preceded his nephew into the house. “About that information you asked me to look up – ”
Smith froze, remembering the email he’d sent his uncle from work, asking him to check the license number: 2HYM748. Jesus, why had he made the mistake of involving his uncle? He hadn’t known the last name of the girl in Idaho, just her first name, but once he’d seen the purple-eyed woman at the gas station, he had to know the truth.
K. Myers.
His hand shook as he closed the door behind him.
When Marconi turned to face him, Smith realized how foolish it’d been to rely on Mark. Stupid bastard wouldn’t just look it up and let it go. No, he’d want to find out why Smith was interested in the woman who drove the yellow Volkswagen convertible.