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Obsessed (The Lizzy Gardner Series)

Page 2

by T. R. Ragan


  Hayley pressed the knife deeper. More than a few drops of blood dripped onto his already-stained pants. She glanced around to make sure the man had no friends willing to help him out, but it was as she expected. Everyone in the place was enjoying the show too much.

  “I’m sorry,” he croaked.

  She looked at the woman standing with her back to the wall. “You might want to leave now.” When the woman began making her way to the door, Hayley told the idiot, “If you ever touch her again, I promise you I will hear about it. And if I do, you’re going to lose every rotted tooth in that mouth of yours—one by one, which would suck because there’s nothing I hate worse than watching a grown man cry.” She dropped her hold on him, twisted him hard aside from her, and headed across the room toward the exit, her blood pumping rapidly through her veins. Finally.

  “What about your whiskey?” the bartender called after her.

  “It’s all yours,” she said. “I don’t drink.”

  CHAPTER 3

  Seth’s ass was sore and half-numb. Once again he’d been sitting in his car watching Madeline’s neighborhood for too many hours. It was a Thursday evening, just past eleven.

  After the nosy neighbor approached him last week, not only had he invested in a pair of binoculars so he could watch Madeline’s house from farther away, but he’d also rented a car with four windows that actually worked. The bad news was the car smelled as if decade-old smoke had seeped into every crack and crevice. He’d paid cash for the month’s rental of the Nissan, since he didn’t want his wife to know what he was up to. Every night he parked the car somewhere different, somewhere close to home so it was easy to get to.

  Eyelids heavy, he was about to call it a night when he caught sight of a dark figure approaching Madeline’s house.

  A man, on foot, head held down. He wore jeans, sneakers, and a padded coat with a hood.

  It was cold outside, but not cold enough to warrant a hood pulled up around the face. The guy was obviously trying to hide his identity.

  Seth’s pulse raced as he watched the man through his binoculars: crooked nose and unshaven jaw. Was this Madeline’s stalker—the man who’d caused her so much grief?

  Sure enough, the hooded figure made a right, walking at a brisk pace up Madeline’s walkway. The man didn’t bother looking around to see if he was being watched. It was as if he’d gone to her door a million times before.

  Madeline would be returning home in another hour. Seth needed to think. Keep your head straight, he told himself. He leaned over and opened the glove compartment, pulled the hunting knife from its sheath and tucked it inside his jacket pocket. Then he slipped out of the car.

  If he was lucky, he would catch the guy in action, maybe see him placing one of his gifts on Madeline’s welcome mat. Two nights ago, she’d told her listeners that the gifts were appearing less often, but were much more disturbing.

  With quiet steps, he walked toward Dr. Blair’s house.

  Hidden within a grouping of birch trees across the street, not far from where the neighbor had questioned him, he watched the hooded man curl his fingers around the door handle and try to push the door open. Giving up on the door, he peered through the front window.

  Seth’s fingers curled around the knife handle. He should call the police.

  The streets were empty. Where was the busybody neighbor when he needed him?

  The hooded figure disappeared through the side gate to Madeline’s backyard, then returned to the front before Seth had the chance to follow him back there.

  Although Seth wanted nothing more than to see what gift he’d left for her this time, he didn’t want to lose him, so when the man walked away from the house, Seth followed, staying far enough back so the man wouldn’t know he was being followed.

  Now that he was outside, the man’s hooded jacket made more sense. The temperature had dropped considerably. They walked for three blocks before the man took a sudden right between two office buildings down an alleyway a block after the single-family homes stopped and the commercial buildings began.

  If Seth didn’t hurry, he was going to lose him. He stepped up his pace. Despite the intense cold, sweat covered his forehead. His breathing had grown heavy, his legs already cramping. Clearly, he didn’t get enough exercise.

  Making the same right into the alleyway, Seth saw that it ended in a loading dock some thirty feet ahead of him and stopped. Nothing stirred. He crept past a Dumpster overflowing with garbage along the brick wall to his right. Boxes and trash littered the ground. Dark shadows threw him off, but he finally noticed the man standing where the Dumpster met the wall.

  “Why are you following me?” the man asked.

  Seth stepped closer as he peered into the dark. “What are you doing in this neighborhood?”

  “That’s none of your business. Tell me why you’re following me or I’m going to call the police.”

  “Go ahead,” Seth said with a snort, relieved. “That’s a great idea.” He pulled his cell phone from his pocket so he could make the call himself, but the man batted it away, sending the phone clacking against the rough pavement and sliding out of reach.

  The hooded man squinted into the dark in the direction of the phone. “Listen, man, sorry about your phone. I thought you were going for a gun or something. We both need to chill out.”

  This was the man who had been stalking Madeline. Seth was sure of it.

  The man stepped farther down the alley, his head bent down as he searched the ground. “I’ll get your phone.”

  Slowly, Seth reached into his coat pocket and made sure he had a good grip on the handle of his knife.

  “My name is Chris Porter,” the man said as he peered, still bent over, into the blackness against the next building’s wall. “I live around the corner. I was visiting a friend, making sure she was OK. I’ll get your phone, and then why don’t you tell me why you’re here and we can both return to our homes and call it a night?”

  Bright lights, a kaleidoscope of colors, flashed inside Seth’s head. The man was lying. He knew a liar when he heard one. His wife, Janelle, it turned out, had lied to him many times. So had his mother and every person he’d ever befriended.

  While the guy’s back was still to him, Seth pulled out the knife and advanced on him with it held straight out in front of him. The sharp blade glinted in the darkness. He didn’t want to hurt the guy. He wanted the truth, and then he wanted to see him locked behind bars.

  The throbbing in his temples felt like a metal vise pressing against his head. The pain was excruciating. His palms were drenched with sweat, and he tasted something metallic and horribly familiar.

  The same thing he tasted during his episodes when he was younger.

  Shit. Not now.

  “Here it is,” the hooded man said as he turned. “I found your phone.” Screwing with Seth’s mind—the man didn’t even look up at him as he came at him, pretending to try to piece the phone back together until he got close enough to strike.

  Bright lights zipped and zapped, making the advancing man look as if his arms were flailing about in a roomful of strobe lights. Every movement distorted. Shadows everywhere.

  Panicked, Seth thrust the knife forward, hitting the man dead center.

  He felt the blade go deep.

  Chris Porter, if that was really his name, gasped. He sucked in a breath as the knife went deeper.

  Their gazes met, the whites of the stalker’s eyes gleaming like a wounded animal’s in the darkness.

  The phone hit the pavement again. The man wobbled. “Why?” he asked.

  Still holding on to the handle, Seth felt the blade slicing through the man’s soft innards. In his mind’s eye, he could literally see the blade cut through the upper part of the abdominal cavity, piercing through muscle and tendons, hitting the diaphragm and then the pancreas. As he’d always suspected, t
he human body was complicated, but vulnerable and easily destroyed.

  The hooded man put his hands to his stomach where the knife protruded, but it was too late.

  Feeling a flash of disgust with what he’d done, Seth pulled the blade out. He felt confused, disoriented.

  The man was still standing, struggling to stay on his feet.

  Seth thought of Madeline and how relieved she would be when she realized her stalker was no longer bothering her. He was her hero. His groin tightened as he stepped toward the man and thrust the blade into his chest.

  A kick of adrenaline registered. He inhaled sharply. What a high. With each thrust and twist of the knife came a series of involuntary contractions as his excitement peaked. He stabbed Madeline’s stalker, again and again, enjoying the suctioning as he pulled out. The knife easily cut through flesh and muscle as he guided the blade into the man’s left side. He thrust the knife into the man’s shoulder next, saving his neck for last.

  He froze, shuddered, closed his eyes.

  Moments passed before he stood tall. He took a good long look at the body on the ground. Raw emotions flooded through him. The first thrust had been prompted by a burst of confusion replaced with rage. Then had come that wave of disgust, and finally something he could hardly comprehend: something sensual, bordering on erotic. He’d never experienced anything like it before.

  He had killed a man for Madeline, and he was glad.

  The skies opened up suddenly and heavy rain quickly seeped through his clothes and gave him a much-needed jolt. He needed to get out of there. He needed to be smart. He took off his eyeglasses and rubbed the bridge of his nose as he tried to think. There was lots of debris and trash scattered around. The man’s hood no longer covered his face. He was quite young.

  Noticing a grate, he bent down, grabbed the man’s sweatshirt and dragged him over the grate so that the blood had somewhere to go. Next, he got down on one knee, patted the man down and found a wallet. The name on the ID read Chris Porter.

  Had the man given him his real name?

  When he slipped the wallet into his pocket he noticed blood covering his hands. He took off the man’s sweatshirt and used it to clean himself up. Working quickly, he covered the body with boxes and trash, figuring he’d have to come back and find the strength to lift the body into the trunk of his car. He then went in search of his broken cell phone, relieved to find it close by.

  Exiting the alleyway, both hands hidden within the pockets of his bloodied pants, he clicked his tongue as he walked off.

  CHAPTER 4

  Dr. Madeline Blair had eight minutes before she would be on the air.

  Earlier today she’d had a talk with her boss. Ratings had tripled since she’d mentioned having a stalker on air. Although she felt a bit of guilt at deceiving her listeners and her boss, it was all in the name of entertainment. It wasn’t like she was doing real therapy, after all—though she might have to do just that, go about the daunting business of reestablishing an actual therapeutic practice, if she didn’t maintain these ratings.

  And if she wanted to keep the momentum going, she needed her stalker to call in one more time.

  Drastic times called for drastic measures. She picked up her cell and made the call. Her friend David picked up on the first ring.

  “What’s up, Jelly Bean?”

  She’d been addicted to Jelly Belly jelly beans almost as long as she’d known David. And thus her nickname had been born. “Hey, Stalker,” she said.

  “No, no.” She could hear the smile go out of his voice. “Let’s dump that nickname.”

  “Oh please, David. That’s a little dramatic, isn’t it?”

  “Maybe. Someday we’ll look back on this and laugh, maybe. But for now, let’s put it behind us, all right?”

  “Well . . .” she said. “Maybe not just yet?”

  She could hear him breathing.

  “I need you to make one more creepy call.”

  “You can’t be serious. You promised me that the last call I made would be the absolute final call.”

  “Please, David. Just one more time, I promise. My ratings went through the roof. You sold it! So many listeners called in to ask about the creepy caller. It was perfect. Do you have any idea what that means for my career?”

  He lowered his voice. “Do you have any idea what this could do to my career if anyone found out what I did? And what about my wife? Debra would kill me if she knew what we were up to.”

  “Nobody is going to find out. And besides, Debra would love you more for helping out a friend in need. One more call and I will never ask you to do it again, I swear. I’ll watch your kids for an entire week straight so you and Debra can go on a second honeymoon.”

  No response.

  “Please, David. I have to be back on air in a couple of minutes.”

  A ponderous sigh. “When should I call?” he asked, clearly not happy with her. “And what do you want me to say this time?”

  “It will be sometime in the next few days. I’ll call you an hour before the show to remind you. Use the same voice you used the first time, but try to keep it going for as long as possible—you know, lots of deep breathing and long pauses, like last time. And if you could ask me a few questions about what I’m wearing, that would be great. Or maybe you should ask me why I refuse to go out on a date with you. Ask me something very personal; make my listeners stop what they’re doing and turn up the volume.”

  “God, Madeline. Listen to yourself.” She could hear him swallow thickly. “This is so not right. It’s not worth just some temporary spike in ratings.”

  “I’m begging you. Think about all the people who call in, all the people I’m able to help because of this show.”

  “I want to go on record saying I don’t like it, Madeline. We’ve been friends for a long time, but for the first time ever I’m questioning why I even like you. It’s time for you to get a life. You need to get out there and mingle with real people instead of the voices on your radio show. You’re scaring me.”

  She laughed. “Now you’re being dramatic. You’ll be happy to know I’ve been spending time with a neighbor of mine.”

  “A real live person?”

  “Yes, David, a real person. A man, in fact.”

  “I don’t believe it. What’s his name?”

  “Chris Porter. He’s a few years younger than me, but he’s adorable and a real, honest-to-God gentleman. He’s a great guy. You and Debra are going to love him.”

  “Have you told Chris that you’re pretending you have a stalker?”

  “No, of course not. I doubt he listens to my show.”

  “If he’s the great guy you think he is and he’s interested in you, then believe me, he’s listening to your show. And if that’s the case, he’s probably worried for you.”

  “Since when have you become such a worrywart?”

  “Since I married and had two daughters. Promise me you’ll tell this new guy of yours what’s going on, and I’ll make the call.”

  “It’s a deal.”

  CHAPTER 5

  The café in Roseville had an outside seating area. It was nine in the morning, chilly enough to turn every breath into a tiny cloud of white mist. Jessica Pleiss was the only one sitting in the back area framed by latticed wood walls and a couple of potted plants. She looked over her shoulder when the back door of the café opened, surprised to see that Hayley had actually come.

  She didn’t come to her feet. Instead, she waited for Hayley to take a seat across from her, which she did. “Thanks for meeting me,” Jessica said. “Care for some coffee? Something to eat?”

  “No, thanks. Why don’t you go ahead and tell me why you asked me to meet you.”

  Jessica took a breath and processed the moment. After she’d quit working for Lizzy, she really wasn’t sure if she’d ever see Hayley again. And
now here they were. “It’s hard to believe it’s been two years since I saw you last. How have you been?”

  “The same.”

  Jessica knew that was a lie. Hayley looked as if she’d lost fifteen pounds she didn’t need to lose. With her pale skin and dark circles under her eyes, she looked like death. “I asked you to meet me because I need your help.”

  No raised eyebrow. No crossing of the arms. Nothing.

  “A little girl was shot and killed about two weeks ago,” Jessica continued. “Her name was Taylor. It was in the news. A twelve-year-old, minding her own business, just sitting alone at the table doing her homework. Her older brother, it turned out, had pissed off some idiot in a gang, so they did a drive-by and happened to tag his little sister.”

  “Where’s the connection?”

  “What do you mean?”

  “The connection to you,” Hayley said. “Why do you care?”

  “The connection is Eloise Hampton, the girl’s mother. Back in the day, before my sister disappeared and my family fell apart, Mom paid Eloise to clean the house and help with laundry. Eloise is only ten years older than me. I think of her as family. Eventually she married, moved away, had kids. Then her husband left her and the kids to fend for themselves. We’ve stayed in touch. Every now and then, I watch her kids for her.” Jessica drew in another deep breath and willed her pulse to slow. “I need to know who killed her daughter. I need a name.”

  “I heard that you were accepted into the academy.”

  “That’s right.”

  “Good for you.”

  “Thanks.”

  “Since you work for the feds—”

  “Hardly—”

  “—it shouldn’t be too hard for you to find out which gang is responsible and then go knock on their leader’s door.”

  “I already did. A member of the Franklin gang is responsible. Nobody’s talking.”

  Hayley snorted. “But you think they’ll talk to me?”

  “Not you. Your friend.” She tried to remember the girl’s name and came up empty. She’d only met her once or twice. She was younger than Hayley, maybe sixteen when Jessica had met her two years ago.

 

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