Revenge is Sweet (A Samantha Church Mystery, Book 2)

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Revenge is Sweet (A Samantha Church Mystery, Book 2) Page 1

by Betta Ferrendelli




  Title Page

  Revenge is Sweet

  A Samantha Church Mystery

  By

  Betta Ferrendelli

  Other books by Betta Ferrendelli

  The Friday Edition

  The first book in the Samantha Church Mystery Series

  What reviewers are saying about The Friday Edition

  “As I normally read the standards of James Patterson, John Grisham, David Baldacci, I was quite surprised and delighted to read this book. It kept me reading during a long drive and on the beach wondering what was going to happen next.” A 4-star Amazon review

  “This story had realistic characters with a protagonist that, while determined and brave at times, was not paper thin or gorgeous, and struggled with alcohol abuse throughout the novel. The mystery was great and, while I listened to the story read aloud on my Kindle in my car, I found myself circling the block a few times so I could continue the story without interruption.” A 5-star Amazon review

  “I recommend The Friday Edition as an intriguing read featuring a great, full dimensional heroine.” Morgan Mandel, an Amazon top reviewer, a 4-star review

  Dedication

  For my sister, Shari

  In her sweet memory

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Other books by Betta Ferrendelli

  Dedication

  Table of Contents

  One

  Two

  Three

  Four

  Five

  Six

  Seven

  Eight

  Nine

  Ten

  Eleven

  Twelve

  Thirteen

  Fourteen

  Fifteen

  Sixteen

  Seventeen

  Eighteen

  Nineteen

  Twenty

  Twenty-one

  Twenty-two

  Twenty-three

  Twenty-four

  Twenty-five

  Twenty-six

  Twenty-seven

  Twenty-eight

  Twenty-nine

  Thirty

  Thirty-one

  Thirty-two

  Thirty-three

  Thirty-four

  Thirty-five

  The Last Chapter

  Copyright

  Connect with the author

  One

  The wind drove snow into their faces. Samantha Church stepped from the building and tried to shield her eyes with her hand. She could do nothing about the biting cold that swirled about her ankles. “Lousy weather,” she grunted, struggling to hold her purse and briefcase over her shoulder.

  Wilson Cole Jr. followed Sam from the building, fighting the wind. “Watch your step,” he said. He locked the door to the Grandview Perspective newspaper and stopped to button the top of his overcoat, squinting as he looked to the milky sky. He headed toward Sam, his head tilted to one side to avoid the wind and snow.

  The amber lights in the parking lot glowed and Sam could see the snow falling fiercely, almost horizontally, when she looked into the light. They walked toward the only car left in the lot. Wilson had been driving Sam to and from work for more than two weeks now since her ’66 Ford Mustang, her pride and joy, the red one she’d spent years having restored, had been destroyed.

  “Thanks for the ride, Wilson,” she said and shrugged her shoulders. “I’m sorry I know I’m bitching, but this cold weather has been relentless and it’s getting on my nerves.” She looked at him, feeling her face flush, despite the cold. “And I haven’t been in the best of moods lately.”

  “You’ve been through a lot,” he said.

  She slipped and nearly lost her footing.

  “Careful,” he said, gently taking her arm. They trudged a few moments in silence, their faces turned away from each other. “Besides,” Wilson said, “I’m happy to give you a ride home.”

  Sam smiled despite the wind slapping against her face. “You’re just happy ’cause you’re leaving for Mexico in the morning to spend the next twelve days on the beach! But I appreciate the ride,” she said and turned her attention back to his Honda Accord, which she could hardly wait to get into.

  His kindness and attention toward her never seemed to stop. She felt unspeakably grateful to him. She owed him everything. It was because of him she still had her job. It was, of course, more than that. It was because of Wilson that she was still alive and slowly getting her life back.

  Wilson had wanted to go with her the night she attended her first AA meeting. Not her first meeting in the actual sense of the word, for she had attended many over the years with her sister. It was her first AA meeting, however, to acknowledge that she was, in fact, an alcoholic. Wilson said he would wait in the car if she didn’t want him to come in. She thanked him, but said no. “I have to do this myself,” she had told him.

  She remembered he nodded, and she had thought immediately that somehow he always seemed to understand her, to nod with a knowing look in his eyes. He never questioned her and she still did not understand how he always knew what she needed to hear.

  Sam often thought of that first evening she went to AA. She remembered the dark paneled walls that made the room seem smaller than it was, the single window looking out to a mature cottonwood tree. The poster over that dark paneled wall listed the recovery steps AA participants were supposed to memorize and follow if they wanted to rise above their addiction and learn to function in society without a drink in their hand.

  Of course, she remembered the woman asking if there was anyone new attending the meeting that night. Sam could see herself raising her hand just high enough for the woman to see her. The woman nodded at Sam and she rose to her feet.

  She remembered the faces looking at her, waiting patiently, silently for her to speak. She remembered working up the nerve, trying to swallow away the large lump of fear that had worked its way up from deep in her stomach before lodging in her throat, and how a fifth of scotch would help dislodge it. When Sam spoke, however, her words came without hesitation. Without stumbling.

  “My name is Samantha. I am an alcoholic.”

  It had been two weeks, three days and almost eleven hours since Sam had taken her last drink. But who was counting? It was just time. Its meaning was simple: she was two weeks, three days and almost eleven hours closer to getting her daughter back.

  Wilson let go of her arm as they reached his car. He opened the door for her. “Get in, Sam,” he said. “It’ll warm up in no time.”

  She shook her head. “I’ll help you clear off the snow.”

  Wilson handed her a scraper. She had to use two hands to push the snow off the windows. It was a heavy, wet snow, unusual for Colorado in late January. Such snows usually came in the spring.

  Wilson started the car. Exhaust rose and drifted off in a northerly direction. Wilson and Sam cleaned in silence, their breaths rising like puffs of cumulus clouds. The wind had died down and the snow started to taper off, giving them a slight reprieve, but they did not notice.

  Sam stopped suddenly, cocked her head and listened, looking off toward the end of the parking lot.

  “What?” Wilson asked, looking with her in the same direction.

  Sam shook her head, saying nothing, still looking around. He stopped clearing his window and listened. “Wilson,” Sam said, her voice just above a whisper. “Someone’s watching us.”

  Wilson flashed her a skeptical look and continued pushing snow off the back window. “Sam, the lot’s empty.”

  “I don’t know what it is,” she said unconvinced. “It’s just something I’ve been
feeling and it’s giving me the creeps. I know you’re going to tell me to stop imagining things.”

  “I’m not going to say anything,” he said. “All I’m going to say is let’s hurry and get this done so we can get out of here and I can get you home.”

  They finished clearing the windows and were about to get in the car, when three men in dark clothing rushed toward them.

  Two of them ran full force into Wilson and grabbed him tightly around the arms. Wilson grunted from the force of the impact, but stayed on his feet. He tried to free himself, but the men, every bit his size, but stockier, were too strong for him. Their faces were not covered. Wilson looked from one man who was holding him to the other man, and realized they were twins. Latinos, he thought, and everything about them was identical from the length of their black hair, the leather jackets they wore, to the weapons that were lodged in their shoulder holsters. Then Wilson saw another man, a white man with a full, thick dark beard, moving in Sam’s direction. “Sam!” he yelled. “Run!”

  Before Sam could move, the bearded man grabbed her by the arm and struck her across the face. The keen slap echoed into the darkness. She cried out in pain as the force of the blow knocked her backwards. She fell and hit her head on the back bumper of the car and dropped to the snowy ground.

  “Sam!” Wilson said, struggling desperately to free himself. He felt anger surging. “Sam!”

  It began to snow harder. Large flakes collected on Sam’s overcoat. Wilson willed her to move, but she remained lifeless. He heard a car approaching and turned his head toward a shiny dark sedan gliding to a stop alongside them. He watched as the rear window on the driver’s side rolled down.

  Wilson squinted, trying to get a look inside, but the interior was too dark. The car door opened and a tall, lean man stepped out. He looked Latino like the twins, but his face was thin, almost gaunt, making his thick shock of dark hair look fuller.

  He walked slowly toward Sam, pulling his coat collar close to his throat. As he reached her, he used the tip of his boot to lift her arm. He left it there a moment then pulled back and watched as her arm fell back lifelessly to her side.

  Wilson lunged at him. “You son-of-a-bitch!” he yelled, the veins in his neck popping over his shirt collar.

  One of the twins stuck the barrel of his gun deep into Wilson’s belly, hard enough that he groaned and stopped in his tracks. The thin man with the thick shock of dark hair waited a moment before walking deliberately toward Wilson. Standing only inches apart Wilson noticed that the man’s face was so thin it made the angle of his nose come sharply to a point and his nostrils flare angrily at the ends. A foul odor of cigarettes emanated from his breath.

  The man took a step back but kept his eyes fixed on Wilson. He walked to the Accord, reached inside to pop the trunk open. He turned around, pulled a 9mm from his waistband and trained the weapon on Wilson.

  “Make another move like that,” the thin man said. “And we’ll shoot her.”

  He looked at the twins, giving them a quick nod. They let go of Wilson and went for Sam. Wilson watched, helpless, as they easily lifted her off the ground and dumped her in the trunk. As they picked her up, one of her heels fell to the ground. Wilson remained still, his fists clenched at his side.

  The twins stepped back from the trunk and folded their arms, waiting for further instructions. The thin man smiled slightly, pleased with the situation. He looked at Wilson. “Take off your coat,” he said.

  Wilson followed the order. The man pointed toward the open trunk with a quick flick of his 9mm. “Get in,” he said.

  Two

  Wilson opened his eyes. For a moment, he felt nothing. Then the events of last night came back to him. Or was it the night before? It could have been days since it happened. Surely someone was looking for them by now. But where are we and how long have we been here?

  His thoughts felt fuzzy and he was having a hard time trying to connect them, but he was fully aware of the pain in the back of his head. He groaned as he touched the area and felt a large lump just above the base of his neck. As his thoughts came into focus, he became aware that every bone in his body felt bruised and sore as if he had been beaten. He was propped against a wall, but it was too dark to tell how big the room was, or if Sam was near him. He wanted to call her name, but fearing that someone was listening, he did not.

  The darkness began to fade as a shaft of sunlight appeared through a small crack in the wall in the opposite corner of the room. Wilson focused on the emerging light until his eyes adjusted. Then he followed the sunbeam until it fell gently on Sam’s face. The light allowed him to see that she was just beyond his reach.

  His eyes rested on her and he forgot every ache in his body. She was lying on her side, facing him. The image made Wilson recall the night he had found her lying unconscious on the floor in her sister’s condominium. He remembered trying not to count the empty bottles of alcohol that were scattered around her. It had taken him several days to find her. He had gone to her sister’s place as a last resort, and she was there. He thought he had almost lost her then. He was certain that Sam had wanted to die. Her sister’s death on Christmas Eve, and the events leading up to his finding her there, would be her demise.

  Tenderness washed over him as he remembered helping her recover. Wilson looked at Sam’s motionless body now and made himself push those memories away. “Sam,” he whispered.

  He waited. No response. The sunbeam faded a little and Sam’s face fell into shadow. Wilson determined a cloud must have covered the sun. He willed silently for the light to come back. Moments later the sun returned, casting Sam’s face fully in light. He hoped the brightness shining in her eyes would force her to wake up, but she did not stir.

  He called her name again. Nothing. Moving took great effort, but Wilson was determined to get to Sam. He began to crawl on his knees.

  When he reached her he saw that her hands were tied in front of her. He cursed silently and placed his hands gently over hers, wondering why his hands were free and hers had been bound. There was enough light in the room that he could see the rope cutting into Sam’s left wrist. There was dried blood on her hand and on the rope. He attempted to loosen the rope, but stopped tugging when her wrist started to bleed.

  The image of Sam falling to the snowy ground flashed before him. He remembered that one of her shoes had fallen off when they put her in the trunk, but he could see that the other was still on. He touched her foot covered by only the nylons she wore. Her skin felt cold.

  A wave of anger washed over him. “Bastards,” he growled. He was still wearing his suit jacket. He took it off. As he covered Sam, he noticed that a part of the seam in the jacket had been ripped open. “Come on, Sam, wake up.”

  He moved the hair that had fallen across her forehead. The hard look in his eyes faded a little, relieved there were no bruises or marks around her face.

  Wilson, as if his hands were not his own, gently began to caress her cheek. He remembered the first day she walked into the Grandview Perspective—his newspaper—for a job interview. He could tell the way her shoulders were hunched forward, the dark circles under her eyes, that she was weary. The way she had avoided initial eye contact with him suggested something deeply troubled her. When she finally looked at him, he smiled at her, hoping to appear calm and reassuring. She sat a little taller in her chair.

  He knew of her past, the problems she had as a reporter at the Denver Post. He knew why she lost her job at the large metropolitan daily and that it stemmed from her use of alcohol. He knew that there were other journalists in the Denver media who thought she was a pariah. None of that, however, mattered to Wilson Cole Jr. He knew there was something different about Sam, that she had an inner determination. He knew it was something lost just beneath that forlorn surface. Given enough time, it would resurface. He was sure of it.

  Once, many years ago, he too had been a troubled young reporter about to derail a promising career. Someone then had believed enough in him
to give him a second chance. Wilson had vowed to do the same one day. That day arrived when Samantha Church, a seasoned journalist, came to his newspaper to interview for an entry-level reporter’s position. She had interviewed poorly, but Wilson hired her anyway. His managing editor, Nick Weeks, was so furious when he learned Wilson had given her the job, he had threatened to quit.

  “There’s the door.” Wilson remembered saying.

  The sunlight faded and Sam’s face became gray with shadow. As the room grew dark, Wilson heard the sounds of footsteps and men talking. He could hear a key being fitted into the lock and the knob turning. Wilson tried to scramble back to the wall, but he didn’t have time to get back and position himself before the door opened.

  Light poured into the room, blinding him momentarily. Wilson squinted and held his hands over his eyes. Three men entered the room. He recognized them as the twins and the heavily bearded man. Wilson could see now that one twin wore a white T-shirt, the other wore gray.

  The men stood beyond the doorway a moment before they started toward him. The twins reached down, grabbed Wilson by the arms and picked him up as though he was a little boy. His legs were weak from sitting too long, and his first steps were sluggish. They all but carried him across the room and pushed him down hard into a small chair. They let go of him and stepped an arm’s length away. They stood on either side of the chair.

  Wilson took advantage of the light to study the twins more closely. They were identical, down to their pockmarked skin. Each had shiny black hair, combed back slick against the scalp, stopping at the collars of their long leather coats. Small dark eyes and pug noses were set against olive skin.

  The twins had pulled their coats far enough to the side that Wilson saw handguns tucked in their waistband. The bearded man stayed at the door.

  The tall, bony man entered the room. It was the same man who had forced Wilson into the trunk. He stopped in front of Wilson, looking from him to Sam.

 

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