Merciless Crimes: A Thrilling Closed Circle Mystery Series (Merciless Murder Mystery Thriller)

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Merciless Crimes: A Thrilling Closed Circle Mystery Series (Merciless Murder Mystery Thriller) Page 1

by Tikiri Herath




  Merciless Crimes

  A Merciless Murder Mystery Thriller

  Tikiri Herath

  Other Titles by Author

  The Red Heeled Rebels universe of mystery thrillers, featuring your favorite PI, Asha Kade:

  Merciless Murder Mystery Thrillers

  Merciless Legacy

  Merciless Games

  Merciless Crimes

  Merciless Lies

  Merciless Past

  Red Heeled Rebels Thrillers - The Origin Story

  The Girl Who Crossed the Line

  The Girl Who Ran Away

  The Girl Who Made Them Pay

  The Girl Who Fought to Kill

  The Girl Who Broke Free

  The Girl Who Knew Their Names

  The Girl Who Never Forgot

  The Accidental Traveler

  An anthology of personal short stories based on the author's sojourns around the world.

  The Rebel Diva Nonfiction Series

  Your Rebel Dreams: 6 simple steps to take back control of your life in uncertain times.

  Your Rebel Plans: 4 simple steps to getting unstuck and making progress today.

  Your Rebel Life: Easy habit hacks to enhance happiness in the 10 key areas of your life.

  Bust Your Fears: 3 simple tools to crush your anxieties and squash your stress.

  Collaborations

  The Boss Chick’s Bodacious Destiny Nonfiction Bundle

  Dark Shadows 2: Voodoo and Black Magic of New Orleans

  Contents

  Title Page

  Other Titles by Author

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Message on the Girl's Bathroom Cabinet

  MONDAY

  1. Chapter One

  2. Chapter Two

  3. Chapter Three

  4. Chapter Four

  5. Chapter Five

  6. Chapter Six

  7. Chapter Seven

  8. Chapter Eight

  9. Chapter Nine

  10. Chapter Ten

  11. Chapter Eleven

  12. Chapter Twelve

  13. Chapter Thirteen

  14. Chapter Fourteen

  15. Chapter Fifteen

  16. Chapter Sixteen

  17. Chapter Seventeen

  18. Chapter Eighteen

  19. Chapter Nineteen

  TUESDAY

  20. Chapter Twenty

  21. Chapter Twenty-one

  22. Chapter Twenty-two

  23. Chapter Twenty-three

  24. Chapter Twenty-four

  25. Chapter Twenty-five

  26. Chapter Twenty-six

  27. Chapter Twenty-seven

  28. Chapter Twenty-eight

  29. Chapter Twenty-nine

  30. Chapter Thirty

  31. Chapter Thirty-one

  32. Chapter Thirty-two

  33. Chapter Thirty-three

  34. Chapter Thirty-four

  35. Chapter Thirty-five

  36. Chapter Thirty-six

  37. Chapter Thirty-seven

  38. Chapter Thirty-eight

  39. Chapter Thirty-nine

  40. Chapter Forty

  41. Chapter Forty-one

  42. Chapter Forty-two

  WEDNESDAY

  43. Chapter Forty-three

  44. Chapter Forty-four

  45. Chapter Forty-five

  46. Chapter Forty-six

  47. Chapter Forty-seven

  48. Chapter Forty-eight

  49. Chapter Forty-nine

  50. Chapter Fifty

  51. Chapter Fifty-one

  52. Chapter Fifty-two

  53. Chapter Fifty-three

  54. Chapter Fifty-four

  55. Chapter Fifty-five

  56. Chapter Fifty-six

  57. Chapter Fifty-seven

  58. Chapter Fifty-eight

  59. Chapter Fifty-nine

  60. Chapter Sixty

  61. Chapter Sixty-one

  62. Chapter Sixty-two

  63. Chapter Sixty-three

  64. Chapter Sixty-four

  65. Chapter Sixty-five

  Back in New York

  66. Chapter Sixty-six

  Merciless Lies - Chapter One

  Exclusive Deleted Scenes!

  The Merciless Murder Mystery Thrillers

  The Red Heeled Rebels Thriller Series

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Copyright

  Message on the Girl's Bathroom Cabinet

  “Don’t come looking 4 me. Pls don’t tell Mom & Dad. B back soon.”

  Written in blood-red nail polish on the back of the bathroom cabinet door in the missing girl’s dorm room.

  MONDAY

  Chapter One

  Private. Keep out. Violators will be prosecuted.

  Katy and I stared at the large, red-lettered sign nestled in between the two pine trees.

  We had stopped in the middle of a lonely country road that curved its way through a secluded part of the forest.

  I’d already double-checked the locks and made sure the windows were rolled up.

  Three times now.

  “Is it me, or is it creepy here?” I said, pulling my jacket closer around my shoulders.

  “You’re such a big city girl, Asha,” said Katy. “Any place with more trees than towers scares you.”

  My best friend was in the passenger seat next to me, exhausted after her driving shift from New York to Boston. I’d taken over the last leg of our road trip as we headed north of the city to our destination.

  We were twenty minutes from the Red Lake Academy, where I had an urgent appointment with my latest client—a client I hadn’t yet met.

  Katy clutched my arm, making me jump.

  “Did you see that?” she hissed.

  “What is it?” I asked, swiveling my head, my heart beating a tick faster.

  “I thought I saw something move over there…” Katy trailed off, staring into the shadows among the trees.

  I peered over her shoulder, but saw nothing.

  “Was it an animal? A person?” I asked.

  Katy rubbed her face.

  “Just my tired eyes, I guess,” she mumbled. “All that driving has me beat. I really hope they have a nice place for us to sleep tonight at the school.”

  I was exhausted too, and a migraine was coming on. It always did when I felt uncertain in my surroundings.

  Uncertain.

  And uneasy.

  I glanced around me.

  Massive oaks and maples lined the road. The trees were in their shedding season, preparing for another long and cold winter, typical for this region. Their twisty, gnarly branches pointed up at the gray sky, as if they were calling to the gods above.

  Other than a frightened white-tailed deer that had crossed our path ten minutes ago, we hadn’t encountered any life for miles since I took the last turn on the road.

  What an isolated place for a girls’ school, I thought as I peered through the windshield.

  The calls for help that came to my private investigation firm were usually unconventional, and my upper-crust clients were always idiosyncratic.

  But this call had been downright peculiar.

  How does a girl vanish from the most upscale boarding school in the country?

  I checked the windows again and instinctively reached up to feel the roof of my cabriolet. I was glad I’d put the top up and secured it before we left Boston. I’d have hated to drive through the
se dark woods exposed to the elements.

  And who knew what else?

  A strange rustle above made me look up.

  “We have company,” I whispered, pointing through the windshield.

  Katy craned her neck to see what I’d spotted.

  Half a dozen black crows perched on a naked tree branch just above the sign, their beady, intelligent eyes watching us.

  Waiting.

  For what?

  I felt a shiver go down my back.

  Suddenly, the entire brood flew off, cawing loudly enough to awake the dead. It was like they were warning us.

  “A murder of crows,” I whispered to myself as I watched them take to the stormy gray skies, flapping their dark wings.

  A murder of crows.

  I wasn’t the superstitious type, but I couldn't shake that feeling. Like a premonition of what was to come.

  Chapter Two

  I took my foot off the brake and maneuvered around a sharp corner of the road with yet another ominous no trespassing sign along the side.

  “Peace and I have been talking about a good private high school for Chantelle,” said Katy. “This might just be the place.”

  “Did you see the prices on their website?” I said. “School fees are almost forty grand a year. It’s crazy.”

  “Chantelle’s only eight,” said Katy thoughtfully. “We have time to save up.”

  It seemed like that was all my thirty-something-year old friends were thinking about these days: where to send their kids to school. Thank goodness, I didn’t have that problem.

  Peace, Katy’s husband, who was also my business attorney on retainer, had a high-paying job in Manhattan. My friend wasn’t doing too badly herself, as the financial controller of my own baby, the Red Heeled Rebels bakery in New York.

  Still, these kinds of school fees weren’t anything to sniff at.

  “Why would anyone set up a school in such a remote area?” I said. “It’s too lonely out here.”

  “To keep the riffraff away,” said Katy. She waved her phone in the air and blew an exasperated raspberry. “I just wish wireless reception would work here. They had better be connected at the school.”

  “The principal’s assistant emailed me with directions, so they should have Internet,” I said, giving a side glance at my friend, wondering how little Chantelle would feel to be stuck in such a faraway place.

  But Katy was dreaming.

  “There’s an Olympic-sized pool, a basketball court, tennis court, a squash court, plus a natural lake for the girls to go rowing,” she said, speaking more to herself than me. “They have a one-hundred-acre plot of land. How amazing is that?”

  “That’s a lot of space for two hundred kids,” I said.

  “This is where all the moneyed families send their children. Diplomats from overseas and even Hollywood stars.”

  “Jet-setters,” I said, wishing I’d worn a warmer jacket.

  It was only mid-afternoon, and we were still in that part of fall where an Indian summer could be just around the corner. But the deeper we penetrated these dark woods, the chillier I felt. Right to my bones.

  “Jet-setters who probably wear diamonds for supper,” said my friend, her voice slightly in awe. Katy was a sucker for anything with a tinge of celebrity or fame.

  My GPS pinged loudly.

  We were arriving at our destination.

  I eased my foot off the gas and slowed down, keeping my eyes peeled for an entrance, a driveway, a fence—

  I turned one last corner when my jaw dropped.

  “Wow,” gasped Katy, as I pulled up to a large steel double gate.

  It was like we had time-traveled back a century.

  There was no placard or name plate on the gate, but this place looked exactly how I’d expect an exclusive all-girls’ boarding school to look.

  Many yards behind that steel fence sat a sprawling Victorian mansion in the middle of an immense manicured green lawn. The steep gabled roof, the tall turrets, and the stained-glass windows told me this structure had been built in an era when corsets and crinolines were common.

  It was the type of building you’d find in an iconic British mystery.

  Or an old horror flick.

  A white door at the far end of the building had a red cross on it. A clinic?

  In front of the building was an empty tennis court and a small parking lot with a handful of mid-sized cars scattered across it.

  The school was enclosed by the ten-foot black steel fence. The woods grew thick around the perimeter, casting dark shadows on the grounds.

  The place was deserted.

  “It’s fabulous,” breathed in Katy. “I love it.”

  “Looks like a creepy movie set to me,” I said, staring through the thick bars.

  Katy jabbed a finger on my shoulder.

  “That is a true heritage building,” she said in a scolding voice. “Those tall glass towers in New York are nothing compared to this. This place is steeped in history.”

  I scanned the grounds. Set on the west end was a row of brownstone row houses.

  “Those must be the staff quarters,” I said.

  “I bet you that’s the principal’s house over there. Absolutely gorgeous,” said Katy, indicating the white manor set against the woods further away from the school. She swiveled her head around. “Where’s the lake? The Red Lake?”

  “Behind the building?” I said. “Gosh, where is everyone? It’s so quiet here.”

  The anonymous phone call that came in yesterday sprang to my mind.

  Stay away from the Red Lake Academy if you value your life.

  Only Katy, my security expert Tetyana, and I knew of that call. If Peace or David, my fiancé, had heard anything about it, they’d have got worried sick and tried to convince us to not take the job.

  I pushed that strange call to the back of my mind, but this place was giving me a sense of foreboding. I wondered if I’d made a mistake to come and bring my friend along too. Maybe I should have asked Tetyana to join us.

  I turned to Katy.

  “Please don’t send Chantelle here.”

  “Why?”

  “There’s something depressing about this place.”

  “Your imagination’s running away from you as usual,” she replied, her voice firm. She pointed at the gate. “Can we focus on how we get in? Why don’t you honk?”

  “This doesn’t look like a place where you honk,” I said, pulling my mobile out of my purse on the backseat.

  “We have reception,” I said, relieved to see the green bars light up on my phone.

  “Thank goodness for that,” said Katy, checking her own mobile.

  “They must have a cellular booster at the school,” I said, as I scrolled through the email thread I’d exchanged with a Nick Davies.

  Nick was the principal’s assistant. He’d made our accommodation arrangements and had set up the meeting with the school principal today.

  I read and reread the emails.

  “Strange. He doesn’t give a phone number.” I smiled and nudged my friend. “Ready to climb the fence?”

  “Bad idea,” said Katy. “Check out that wire on top. It’s electrified.”

  “My goodness. This is a fort. How ever did a girl run off from here?”

  Katy slapped my hand.

  “Look! They know we’re here.”

  As we watched, the black gates opened silently in front of us, as if unseen hands were at play.

  That was when I spotted the camera on top of the fence. It was turning slowly, panning the area. The gate had to be automated or controlled by someone inside. I wondered if anyone was watching us from a security screen right now.

  “Smile,” I said. “We’re on camera.”

  “We have to mind our manners here, Asha,” said Katy, as I nudged the car through the open gates. “I bet you everyone’s supposed to dress up for supper and be all prim and proper—”

  She didn’t get to finish.

  Two pa
le, bony hands slammed on her window.

  Chapter Three

  Katy screamed.

  I jumped on the brakes, my heart hammering.

  “What was that?” I said, glancing around in panic.

  A high-pitched, maniacal giggle came from nearby.

  There.

  I saw the culprit.

  It was a schoolgirl in a short tartan red skirt and a white shirt. She was walking quickly, away from our car. She knew we were looking as she gave us the finger without even turning around.

  Within seconds, she slinked into the woods and disappeared from view.

  I turned my eyes back on the road.

  “What a way to welcome us.” I shook my head.

  “I nearly got a heart attack,” said Katy, as I drove down the red bricked driveway toward the Victorian mansion. “I’ll be complaining to the principal.”

  Just as I pulled up to the main building, I spotted a tall man standing at the threshold of the front entrance, his unsmiling eyes locked on our car.

  Is that Nick Davies?

  I parked my little convertible next to a Mercedes van with the fancy Red Lake Academy logo splashed on the side. I guessed this was their upscale version of a yellow school bus.

  “He doesn’t look too friendly,” I whispered, as we unbuckled and reached for our handbags from the backseat.

  “Let’s keep an open mind,” said Katy, getting out.

  We walked toward the main doors, feeling the man’s eyes on us. Something about the way he was watching us made me feel uneasy.

  Did he have to stare like that?

  Next to him, a wizened security guard slumped on a metal chair near the doors, eyes fully closed. There was a black handgun on his belt, but he looked barely capable of using it.

  “Not much of a guard, is he?” whispered Katy as we walked up. “Sleeping on the job.”

  “Must be eighty at least,” I whispered back.

  A hissing sound from the corner of the building made me swivel around. Three schoolgirls in their red-skirted uniforms were leaning against the wall, watching us.

  They stood, arms crossed, sullen looks on their faces, like we were unwanted pests invading their personal space.

  What an unfriendly place this was.

 

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