by Wendy Davy
Night Waves
Night Waves
“ Tell me what you know about him. ”
“I know you don’t want to cross paths with him.”
“That’s original.” Cali flipped her long hair behind her shoulders and began tapping her right foot again. “Why don’t you tell me something I don’t know?”
Nick clenched his hands into fists and crossed his arms. Shaking his head, he said, “You have no idea what this man is capable of.”
“If you tell me, then I’d know wouldn’t I?”
He ground his teeth and sighed as his irritation grew. “It’s getting late. I’ll walk you back to your room.” He turned on his heel and picked up the water bottles, napkin and the sandwich wrapper, dumping them into the poolside trash can before facing her again.
“So that’s it? You won’t tell me anything?”
“No. I can’t tell you anything. Not yet.”
Cali looked away, took in a deep breath and walked past him out of the pool gate. He let her lead the way back to her rented room. Stopping in front of the door, she wrapped her arms around herself and studied her toes.
Nick slipped the key into the slot and turned it, opening the door an inch. When she moved to step inside, he caught her slender arm in his grasp. “Stop snooping, Cali. Don’t put yourself at risk.”
Her full lips tightened. “I can take care of myself.”
“Yeah? That’s probably what Serena thought, too.”
A brief flash of pain crossed her eyes before they became guarded.
“Listen, Cali, I’m only trying to keep you safe. It’s my duty to protect you.”
Renewed determination swirled in her eyes along with a spark of anger. “Yeah? Well, don’t do me any favors. It was your duty to protect Serena, too. And look what happened to her.”
Night Waves
Night Waves
by
Wendy Davy
Night Waves
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author ’ s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business esta b lishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.
Night Waves
COPYRIGHT © 2009 by Wendy Davy
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or White Rose Publishing except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.
eBook editions are licensed for your personal enjoyment only. eBooks may not be re-sold, copied or given away to other people. If you would like to share an eBook edition with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you’re reading an eBook edition, and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then you should return to the publisher and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
Cover Art by Nicola Martinez
White Rose Publishing
Aztec NM 87410
www.whiterosepublishing.com
Publishing History
First White Rose Edition, 2009
Print ISBN 1-60154-645-9
Published in the United States of America
Night Waves
Dedication
For the victims of violent crime, and their families.
In Loving Memory of:
Mattie and Odeon Bloodgood
Night Waves
Praise for Wendy Davy
On Drake ’ s Retreat:
“The story flowed so well I couldn’t believe when it ended…It is a great read, fun and well worth your time.”
~ Brenda, The Romance Studio
“Drake’s Retreat is a well-written look at the opportunity one has to overcome their circumstances when they are willing to step outside their comfort zone…Read this inspirational romance for a warm-hearted look at the transformation that takes place when someone places God at the center of his or her life.”
~ Night Owl Romance
On A Matter of Trust:
“This is the first book I have read by Wendy Davy and I have to say that I would look for more of her books as she writes very well and her plot line keeps the reader hooked…It is worth treating yourself to this one…”
~Mary, A Romance Review
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Night Waves
Remember the Lord, who is great and awesome, and fight for your brothers, your sons and your daughters, your wives and your homes.
~ Nehemiah 4:14 (NIV)
Night Waves
Chapter One
“Go home Ms. Stevens.” Sheriff Nick Justice let out a long, exaggerated breath. “If you want to help your friend, trust me to handle the investigation.” His resolute gaze held hers without the slightest hint of contempt, but she detected a flicker of impatience run across the dark-blue depths.
Cali Stevens tightened her grip on the hard, wooden armrests of the hard, wooden chair she sat in. She had no doubt the Sheriff of Coral Isle intended the visitors in his office to keep their conversations, or as in her case, their pleas, short and to the point. She glanced around the office. Her gaze touched the bare walls, the spotless tiled floor, and his sparsely occupied desk. Only the barest of essentials earned a place there—a computer, telephone, several neatly stacked file folders, and a half-empty coffee cup. She assumed Sheriff Justice’s personality reflected the office in which they both sat. Hard, well-organized, and no-nonsense.
When she remained seated, he sat forward in his swivel chair and pinched the bridge of his nose with his thumb and forefinger. “Listen, Ms. Stevens…” Weariness seeped through his voice.
“Cali.” She hoped he might see her as more than an outsider if he called her by her first name.
“Cali.” He lifted his head and braced his hands on the edge of the desk. “I assure you, we’re doing everything possible to find Ms. Taylor. Now if you’ll excuse me.” He stood, keeping his tight gaze directed at her.
She shook her head, causing it to ache with growing intensity. “No. I won’t. I came here for answers, and I’m not leaving without them.”
He placed his hands on his hips. One rested directly on a set of handcuffs that he looked more than willing and able to use. A muscle in his jaw twitched, the only outward indication of his failing patience. “I understand your concern.”
“My concern? Serena Taylor is my roommate, and my best friend. I’ve known her for over ten years. She’s like a sister to me. Concern doesn’t begin to describe how I feel.” Her fingers started going numb from her grip on the chair, so she lessened the pressure and took a deep breath, trying to calm her nerves. “I just want to know where she is. I need to know she’s OK.”
“Regardless of what you may think, Ms. Stevens, I do understand what you want and I understand why. But, I cannot give you details of an ongoing investigation.”
“I answered your questions. Now it’s your turn to answer mine.” She fought to keep her voice from cracking and to keep from showing any signs of weakness. “I want, no, I need to know what you know about her disappearance.”
He hesitated before crossing the office to ease the door shut, blocking out any potential eavesdroppers. A hint of concern crossed his angled features as he turned and ran a hand over his dark, close-cropped hair. His eyes softened as he admitted, “We believe she’s been abducted.” His low voice made its way across the now quiet room, filling her with terror like she had never known.
“No.” She stood on shaky legs and rubbed her damp palms together as tears threatened to emerge. “Why would someone…” She let her words falter as she imagined many horrible reasons for a young, beautiful woman to be abducted. She hugged her arm
s around her middle. “What makes you think she’s been abducted? Do you have evidence? Witnesses?” She tilted her head to the side, biting her lower lip to keep it from trembling.
Sheriff Justice remained motionless. “I can’t reveal any details of an open investigation. But as I said, we are doing everything possible to find her.”
Cali ignored his attempt at reassurance. “I knew something was terribly wrong when she didn’t come home from her vacation. I knew she wouldn’t stay on Coral Isle longer than she’d planned without calling and letting me know.”
He placed his hands on his hips again, looked to the floor and slowly shook his head. After a few moments, he lifted his eyes. “I’m sorry.”
His softly offered words drew her out of her panic, out of her paralyzing fear. She straightened her spine. “You sound like you’ve already given up on her.” Lifting her chin, she filled her lungs with fresh oxygen and strengthened her voice along with her resolve. “Let me tell you something. I will not leave this island until she’s found. So, if you want me to go home you’d better get busy.”
He broadened his stance and dropped his hands. “Let me tell you something.” His voice took on a tone of authority, all traces of softness instantly gone. “I don’t give up. Ever. I have this investigation under control. You,” he pointed a steady finger at her, “need to go home and leave the investigation to the professionals.”
She lifted her chin. “I am a professional.”
He scoffed as the corner of his lips turned up into a slight, mockery of a smile, “I’d hardly call an amateur reporter from Brookstone, North Carolina—grand total population of five hundred thirty-two—a professional.”
Cali heard her own intake of breath as heat bruised her cheeks. She should not be surprised about his opinion; she had received the same skeptical reaction many times before, mostly from overbearing, egotistical men. She lifted her chin higher, refusing to let him intimidate her. “I’m good at what I do.”
“Yes, well, Ms. Stevens,” he pronounced her last name clearly, as if they had taken a step back into formalities, “so am I.” He started to open the door but the phone interrupted him. He walked to his desk and picked it up. After answering, he placed a hand over the receiver. “Excuse me. This is important.”
“Remember, Serena’s important, too.” Cali forced her unwilling legs to move, one step in front of the other. She opened the door and walked out without looking back. The once-clear voices of the officers and visitors in the waiting area now sounded like distant mumbles, undecipherable through the blood rushing through her ears.
She spotted the restroom across the busy office and headed directly for it. She shoved open the door and stepped inside, thanking God no one occupied the small room with the single toilet. She flipped the lock, and then willingly gave up what was left of her meager breakfast.
Several minutes passed as she ran cold water over her hands, and splashed her face and neck. Somewhat refreshed, she turned off the water and looked into the mirror. She found a distant relation to her normal appearance. Her faintly tanned skin had taken on a pallor with a sickly green tint, and it wasn’t only from the fluorescent lighting that flickered overhead. Her long blonde hair hung in tangled waves down her shoulders, looking as twisted and mangled as she felt inside.
On an impulse, she fished her cell phone out of her purse and tried calling Serena’s number as she had numerous times in the past few hours. She listened to the voicemail pick up immediately, indicating the phone was still turned off. Serena never turned off her cell phone. Cold chills ran up Cali’s arms at the disturbing thought.
She snapped the phone closed as the feeling of complete and utter helplessness churned her already rolling stomach. She searched through her purse for breath mints, but dropped the package three times before she managed to release two of the small pieces. She tried to calm her shaking hands, but feared the quivering was nowhere near an end.
“This cannot be happening,” her voice sounded weak, echoing across the small, tiled room. Sudden anger brushed past her fears. If there was one thing she had no tolerance for, it was weakness. A new determination surged forth, along with a shot of adrenaline into her veins. She came to Coral Isle looking for answers, and she refused to leave without them, regardless of what Sheriff Justice demanded.
She swung the bathroom door open with so much force that she nearly knocked down an older woman trying to gain entrance. After giving a brief apology and holding the door open for the slight woman, Cali headed straight for the row of chairs lining the front wall. She would give the sheriff one more chance to answer her questions, and if he didn’t satisfy her need to know what was going on, she would dig in her heels and do some investigating of her own. She sat in one of the gray, plastic molded chairs prepared to wait as long as necessary to speak with him again.
****
Sheriff Nick Justice drank the last of his cold, stale coffee, hoping the small burst of caffeine would help fight the tension headache he’d had brewing since Cali Stevens walked into his office. He already felt responsible for the missing woman, but after hearing the desperation in Ms. Stevens’s voice, his sense of responsibility multiplied.
After she had left his office, his conversation on the phone had been brief, and he had spent half an hour with his door closed and head bowed in prayer. He needed guidance big time on this one. He prayed this last disappearance would not confirm his worst fears, but in his heart, he already knew the answer. A serial rapist had decided to use his small, tourist-based island as a hunting ground.
His phone buzzed, indicating Helen, the dispatch officer, wanted to speak with him. Jerked out of his thoughts, he pressed the button. “Yes?” he asked, but he had already guessed what the motherly woman intended to say.
“You need to get some lunch in you, Nick. You can’t take care of others if you…”
“Don’t take care of yourself,” he finished. Despite his stress-induced headache, he smiled into the speaker. Helen always kept him on track. “I’m heading out now.”
“One more thing…” The hesitation in her voice, an unnatural and rare occurrence coming from Helen, made Nick’s heart lurch. Whatever she had to say, it could not be good. She continued in her sweet southern drawl, “Ms. Stevens hasn’t left yet. She’s waiting to speak with you again.”
Nick didn’t respond. He sat back in his chair, groaned, and ran a hand over his face. Although he could not blame the woman for wanting answers, he had a job to do, and it didn’t involve letting an innocent woman put herself in danger. The sooner he convinced her to leave, the better off she would be.
Nick stood, grabbing his pair of sunglasses from inside the desk drawer. He double-checked the pistol holstered at his hip and headed for the door. His intentions to placate Ms. Stevens in order to convince her to leave flew right out of his mind when he opened the door and locked eyes with her. A new determination glittered in the clear-blue depths, and her rigid posture spoke volumes. There would be no placating this woman.
He slipped on his sunglasses and headed out of the front door. Knowing she would follow, he held the door open so it wouldn’t slam into her. As he stepped outside, the scent of the salty sea air surrounded him. It normally comforted him, but today, the heavy humidity accompanying it took away its soothing effects. The onslaught of stifling August heat made Nick’s headache escalate from mildly annoying to downright nauseating. He walked to his white truck with the words “Sheriff, Coral Isle” printed in bold lettering on the side and leaned against the driver’s side door, crossing his arms over his chest.
“I seem to recall asking you to leave,” his abrupt words reflected his down-spiraling mood.
Cali dug in her purse and pulled out a pair of sunglasses. Perching them on the bridge of her nose, she peeked over the rims. “I seem to recall asking you for information regarding Serena’s disappearance.” She lifted the designer glasses higher, effectively shielding her eyes from the sun—and him.
Nick
looked at her petite figure, and resisted his natural protective instinct that urged him to take it easy on her. “You’re a reporter. You should know I can’t give you information about an ongoing investigation.” He used his gruff “cop” voice hoping to dissuade her.
“You don’t intimidate me.” She raised her chin high.
Cali put on a brave show, but he caught sight of her pulse pounding at the base of her slender throat. Despite her brave appearance, she was scared, if not of him then of the circumstances she found herself in, and to be honest, she had every right to be.
“How long did it take you to drive here?”
“Three hours. Why?”
He looked to the bright, mid-day sun then back at her. “Good. That will give you plenty of daylight hours to drive back home. If you get started now, you’ll be back in time for dinner.” Nick watched a sigh heave her chest, and then directed his gaze back to a more respectable position.