Eden Palms Murder

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Eden Palms Murder Page 23

by Dorothy Francis


  I set my malt on the hood while I dug in my purse for the door key, the ignition key.

  “Having trouble?” Dr. Gravely drove up beside me and called through his open window.

  Drat! Was he going to scold me for ignoring his proper-care rules for my leg? My stomach tightened when he left his car and stood beside me smiling, while I continued to fumble for my car keys.

  “Bailey, it’s good you’re able to be out and about with that leg. Has it been giving you any problem? Any additional bleeding?”

  I hesitated, trying to find words more adequate and time-consuming than “no.” I sensed Gravely hadn’t come to check on my leg or to pass the time of day. What was he doing here? What could he want?

  “My leg’s doing great, Dr. Gravely. You’ve done an excellent repair job.” As soon as I managed to unlock my car door, I started to get inside. Gravely put a hand on my arm.

  “Wait, Bailey.”

  “What is it? I’m really in a rush. Zack’s waiting—”

  “Yes, Zack’s waiting. That’s why I’m here. Zack’s worried about your trying to drive with that injured leg. He asked me to pick you up, take you to Eden Palms. He promised to send someone for your car later.”

  Liar! My thoughts whirled in a maze of fear and anger. I knew Gravely was lying when a tic contorted his cheek. Zack wasn’t at home. He’d watched me leave. He knew I wasn’t having driving problems. I glanced at the photo shop, hoping Free might be watching. But no. He was nowhere in sight. In fact there was nobody in sight, nobody out and about at the moment. But a blast on my car horn might bring someone.

  I reached toward the steering wheel, but Gravely caught my arm and jerked me toward him.

  “Let me go!” I shouted. “Right now! Let me go!”

  I jerked my arm from his grasp, but he reached into his jacket pocket. When I looked down, he was aiming a gun at my heart.

  “Shut up. Get into my car.”

  His words numbed me and he nudged me toward his car with the gun barrel. Would he shoot me in the Searstown lot? I remembered words from a long-ago lecture on women’s safety. Run! Don’t get in that car! But running wasn’t an option. Terror paralyzed me.

  THIRTY-TWO

  I couldn’t see through the car’s tinted windows, but when Gravely opened the door behind the driver’s seat and shoved me toward it, I smelled the cloying scent that traveled with Tucker Tisdale. Funeral flowers? Embalming fluid? No long sleeves hid his arms today, and the sight of his peeling skin sickened me. I shuddered in fear and revulsion. In the next moment, I saw the gun in his right hand, the duct tape in his left hand, a coil of clothesline on the floor.

  “Good afternoon, Bailey.” Tisdale’s falsetto voice chilled me. “How about a pleasure ride?”

  I clenched my teeth and backed away until I felt the prod of Gravely’s gun. Run! Run! My mind screamed the order, but my legs balked. Three kids on mopeds zoomed into the parking lot. I shouted. Their boom box blared hard rock. They didn’t hear me. Free approached his shop window to watch the mopeders, but before I could call again for help, Gravely jabbed me with his gun.

  “Get in the car. Now.”

  “Where are you taking me?” Again, I tried to back away. “Shut up. Get in.” He pressed against me, shoved me.

  I slid onto the seat beside Tisdale. Gravely slammed the door. Once a captor forces you inside his car, you have little chance of escape. You’re facing death—a violent death. The safety lecture replayed through my mind, but if it had contained a solution for surviving, I couldn’t remember it.

  “Shall I tie her up?” Tisdale’s voice squeaked. He kicked the rope with his toe.

  “Not yet,” Gravely said. “Too risky. We need privacy. Keep your gun on her.”

  Gravely started the car, and the door locks clicked as we moved forward. He inched toward an exit. I looked over my shoulder at the Phrame Shop. No one in sight. Pausing only a moment at a stop sign, Gravely eased closer to the highway, waiting to nose the car into the stream of traffic.

  My last chance of escape. Go! Now! I leaned forward. But no. Tisdale dropped the duct tape onto the coiled rope and grabbed my arm, restraining me. I eyed the door lock. Could I jerk free and yank up that button? Open the door? Run? Tisdale’s grip tightened.

  “Don’t even think about it.” He leered at me, following my gaze. “You’re not going anywhere, Bailey. We’ve too much to lose to let you escape.”

  Too much to lose? What was he talking about! “Where are you taking me?”

  “Be patient and all will soon be revealed to you,” Tisdale squeaked.

  A kind motorist slowed enough to allow Gravely to enter the stream of traffic. We were on our way.

  “Where are we going?” I demanded. “Where are you taking me? You’re not getting away with this. My friends will miss me and come searching.”

  Silence.

  “Zack’s waiting for me. We have an appointment. He’s expecting me and I’m already late. He’ll be looking for me.”

  “Save your breath, babe.” Tisdale’s laugh carried menace and now that we were moving in heavy traffic, he released my arm. “We’re whisking you to a secret place, a place where Zack’ll never find you. Zack nor anyone else.”

  Suddenly, car horns blared. Brakes screamed. Drivers shouted and flipped road-rage salutes to a mopeder who cut in front of a Bone Island shuttle, narrowly escaping injury. A wreck, I thought. Please God, let there be a wreck. Let traffic back up for miles and stop us. But traffic paused only an instant and then flowed ahead.

  Gravely drove beside the bay, where white-sailed boats skimmed across the water. Closer at hand, joggers ran along the sidewalk two abreast. Three kids on skateboards defied the law of gravity, jumping over cracks in the concrete. When we arrived at the turnoff to Old Town, Gravely hung a right and we passed Garrison Bight and the docks where fishing party boats would soon be arriving with their day’s catch.

  I guessed Gravely’s destination—the marina. What better way to get rid of me than to force me aboard his boat, bind me, and drop me overboard? Would he tie a concrete block to my feet to be sure my body would sink quickly? I imagined the scene, imagined sharks and ’cudas snapping off my toes and fingers, arms and legs.

  Could these men get by with another murder? Now I felt sure they had murdered Francine to keep her from opening a homeless shelter in their elegant neighborhood. I felt sure they had murdered Wizard. But why? I couldn’t figure out the why of that one. And me? Why did they need to get rid of me? None of this made sense.

  Gravely turned onto Grinnell Street, where a motorist braked suddenly, undecided about making a left turn into the parking ramp. Behind us horns blared. Tisdale leaned forward.

  “Pass him. Pass him!”

  Gravely had no room to pass and traffic behind us screeched to a stop.

  Now! Now’s your chance!

  Catching Tisdale by surprise, I yanked up on the lock button, opened the car door, jumped into the street. The jolt from car to concrete made my leg throb. So what! Better a bum leg than a dead body. I ran, expecting a bullet to slam into my back.

  Run! Run! Now what? Clear thinking eluded me, yet I knew I couldn’t depend on the goodness of a stranger for help. If I stopped running to approach a car, Gravely would be on my tail. Doctor Gravely. I imagined him identifying himself in sonorous tones and flashing his medical I.D., confident that strangers would give it immediate respect.

  How easy for Gravely to call me a crazy who had wandered from his clinic, a mentally ill patient in need—a creature to be pitied. How easy for him to lovingly tuck me into the safety of his car. Few people argue with a doctor. Parents ingrain such deference in their offspring from childhood.

  I ran in the only direction open to me—into the parking ramp. I dashed past the elevator on my right. If Gravely left his car and gave chase, he could follow me, trap me in there. Ha! I wouldn’t give him that chance. The throbbing in my leg worsened and my lungs burned. I gasped for air, ignoring all pain. I r
an for my life.

  “Stop!” Gravely shouted. “I see you. Make it easy on yourself. Give yourself up.”

  Where was he? I needed time. I’d hoped it’d take him longer to escape the traffic snarl. Did he really see me? Could he? His voice echoed eerily, bouncing off the concrete walls. Had he shouted through his open car window? Or had he given chase on foot? My heart revved to a hard tom-tom thumping. I had to rest. I needed to recover my sense of direction and place—to recover my sense of his direction and place.

  I ducked behind a salt-encrusted SUV, panting for breath. For a few moments I heard only my own breathing, the street traffic, the screech of distant gulls. Where had my captors gone? Then, peeking around the back of the SUV, I saw Gravely’s car nose up the parking ramp, turn into an empty slot a few cars below me, and stop. I ducked from sight. Two car doors slammed and footsteps grated against concrete. Both men pounded toward my hiding place.

  “Come on out, Bailey.” Tisdale tried to entice me from behind the SUV.

  “Save us all a lot of time and trouble,” Gravely added. “Speak up. Where are you?”

  Where, I wondered, was the parking attendant? Coffee break? Or maybe the kiosk where he sat was soundproof. I waited. The only way to run was up, and I heard Gravely and Tisdale coming closer. If I stayed put, they’d soon see me. If I ran, they’d soon see me. I’d been a fool to jump to freedom. I’d have been a fool to stay in their car.

  Trying for silence, I eased around to the hood of the SUV, slumped down, and crammed my body between the car’s grill and the retaining wall. I raised my feet in case they looked beneath the cars, and for a few moments I suspended myself between SUV and concrete. My breath came in thready gasps, noisy gasps. I held my breath when I heard them approaching.

  “Bailey,” Gravely called again. “We see you. Come on out.”

  I knew neither captor had seen me, and I inhaled again once they passed the SUV. I had a few moments of respite while they trudged on toward the top of the ramp. Would I have extra moments of freedom while they paused to enjoy a panoramic view of their surroundings? No. A view of the city would be last on their current list of things to see and do in Paradise.

  I toyed with the idea of retreating back down the ramp and hiding nearby until they left the area. I’d noticed scrub palms, crotons, hibiscus bushes. Then I had a better idea. At least it seemed better at the moment. I walked down the ramp to Gravely’s car, unscrewed the valve cap from his right front tire, pressed the stem. Some child-like urge made me want to giggle while the air hissed out. I squelched that urge. Had they heard me? Detecting no noise from them, I scurried around the car and began flattening the other front tire.

  “Hey!” Tisdale shouted. “Listen! She’s letting the air out of our tires! Hear it?”

  “She won’t get away from us,” Gravely said. “She has to be close.”

  Right. Too close. I hunched over, too near to them for my own well-being. Then I saw an open convertible only three slots from Gravely’s car. In a moment I jumped inside it and ducked from sight, silently thanking a person so trusting he’d left his convertible top down.

  “I saw her,” Gravely shouted. “She’s in that rag-top.”

  In moments they held me captive again.

  “You bitch!” Gravely spat the words at me. “Come with us if you want to live.”

  “Can it,” Tisdale said to Gravely. “Someone’s coming.”

  True. Someone was coming, but by the time they took their parking ticket from the machine and reached us, Gravely had shoved me at gunpoint back into his car, and Tisdale sat smiling at me as if we were long-lost friends. The car passed us without its occupants looking in our direction.

  “What do we do about the tires?” Tisdale asked.

  “I’ll call Monroe Tire & Auto,” Gravely said. “You take her for a walk. Keep her out of sight until we’re mobile again.”

  “No way,” Tisdale said. “She said Zack’s looking for her. I’m not going to be the one he catches holding her captive.”

  “Okay,” Gravely said. “Bad thinking on my part. Stay here. Keep your pistol trained on her and don’t say a word.”

  Capture. Escape. Recapture. Exhaustion and terror left me limp and my leg throbbed. I wished Tisdale had agreed to take me for a walk. I might have yelled for help if Gravely hadn’t been present to call me insane. But now Gravely pulled out his cell phone and keyed in the service garage. After a long wait, a tow truck arrived. Even with the windows rolled up, I could hear Gravely explaining to the serviceman that kids had let the air out of the tires.

  “Yeah, kids.” The mechanic shrugged and inflated the tires. “Lucky they didn’t slash them. Slashing’s one of their favorite tricks.”

  Gravely signed some papers, the serviceman left, and we were off again. Gravely paid the parking attendant and we left the ramp.

  “Think you’re smart, don’t you?” Gravely glanced over his shoulder at me. “Well, all you did was cause yourself a lot of trouble. You’re no better off than you were.”

  Tisdale scowled and nudged me with his gun. “And now you’ve made us mad.”

  I wondered if Zack had missed me. Maybe he was searching for me right this minute. I live in possibility.

  “Where are you taking me?” I didn’t expect an answer, but there was a remote chance they might reveal something. There was a slight chance that if I knew our destination, I could do something to change it, to thwart their plans. I felt almost sure they were heading toward the marina where Gravely kept his speedboat, but instead of turning in that direction, he drove to Whitehead Street, turned on Eaton and drove slowly until we reached the turnoff to Eden Palms. What a round-about route they’d taken. Maybe they’d been making sure they weren’t followed.

  THIRTY-THREE

  Gravely passed Eden Palms, drove to his clinic, and into the attached garage behind it. A dim bulb barely lighted the area, and when he opened the rear door, I smelled an odor of gasoline.

  “Out.” Gravely pushed a button and the garage door began to close. Although I had little chance of escaping, I lunged forward, pushed around him, and ran toward the closing door.

  Both men sprang into action. Gravely grabbed me, pinning my arms to my sides, while Tisdale wrapped duct tape around my legs.

  “Do her arms, too,” Gravely ordered. “Now.”

  Although my bound legs left me off balance, I flailed my arms, striking out against both men. Hopeless. Tisdale slammed me against the car and held me there with the pressure of his hips while he helped Gravely grab my arms and tape them together.

  Although I could neither walk nor protect myself, Gravely wrapped more tape around my eyes. Tisdale laughed. They picked me up, one at my shoulders, the other at my feet. I could only guess they were taking me into the clinic.

  “Easy,” Gravely warned. “Don’t want to damage her.”

  My spirits spiked for a moment. Maybe they were going to let me live!

  “Where are you taking me?”

  “Operating room,” Gravely said. “You’ll understand why soon enough.”

  Again, fear paralyzed me. Were these two mad scientists who experimented on unwilling patients, performing surgery that left the victim in a vegetable state? I could barely speak, but my voice was my only weapon. I mustered strength and screamed.

  “Shall I tape her mouth?” Tisdale asked.

  “No need. I dismissed my patient to her family earlier. We’re alone.”

  I stopped screaming. I felt them carry me up a short staircase and heard them snap on some lights before they lifted me onto a bed—a hard bed—the gurney. I’d been here before.

  “I’ll ready the steamer while you untape her eyes,” Gravely ordered. “Don’t want to damage the eyes. Go easy with the tape.”

  Tisdale eased the tape from my eyelids fraction of an inch by fraction of an inch, lifting it carefully until I could open both eyes. I lay in the same room I’d occupied when Gravely treated my leg. Gravely clicked on an overhead spotlig
ht that gleamed on surgical instruments lying on a table near the gurney as well as on many stainless steel pans and a stack of Styrofoam coolers.

  “Loosen her feet.”

  Gravely had barely given the order when Tisdale began removing the duct tape from my ankles.

  “Easy now,” Gravely said. “Easy. Leg bones are valuable. Let me help you.”

  “What about her injured leg?” Tisdale asked.

  Gravely checked the bandage. “No more bleeding. I did a good job. It looks fine. We may lose some tissue around the wound, but only a little. Bone’s in good shape.”

  When my legs were free, I kicked at my captors, but they grabbed my ankles and used strips of terry-cloth towels to tie both legs to the gurney. Then they untaped my arms. I struck out with enough force to knock off Tisdale’s glasses. He swore as they clattered to the floor. But in the next minute they grabbed my arms and bound them to the gurney. Walking to a closet, Gravely flung open the door and removed two white lab jackets. He thrust one at Tisdale and donned the other one himself. Both men washed their hands before they pulled on surgical gloves.

  “Got to keep things sterile,” Tisdale said, as if I’d asked.

  “Off with her clothes.” Gravely pulled two pair of scissors from the hissing steamer near the sink, handing Tisdale one pair and keeping the other pair. Both men clicked the scissor blades as if testing them for sharpness.

  For a moment I thought I still had a chance of escape. When they unbound my arms and legs to undress me, I’d fight for my life. Whatever they intended to do, I’d flail and strike out. I’d make it difficult for them, if not impossible. But it didn’t happen that way.

  Both men began cutting my clothing away. Tisdale worked from the top. Shirt. Bra. He grinned at me, winked, and let his hand cup my right breast before he dropped the garments onto the floor. Gravely worked on the rest of my clothing. Slacks. Panties. After many snips, I lay nude. Gravely eased my sandals off and dropped them onto my mutilated clothes. Never before had I felt so violated. Anger flooded my body with pulsing heat at the same time terror chilled my being.

 

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