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Authors: Ashantay Peters

Tags: #Suspense, #Contemporary

Death Stretch (15 page)

BOOK: Death Stretch
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“Don't hang up. I'm kidding and ready for a break.” That was no lie. It had been impossible to relax after Dirk left; too many crazed hormones flying around. It was either find a skank bar and hope for a random pick-up or exercise until my lust simmered down and—I hoped—Dirk returned. If I'd gone to Johnny's Bar, the sweat trickling down my back would be from a much different cause, and fighting my way to the bar for a drink would be the only reason to be breathless. Not that I’d willingly go to Johnny’s in this lifetime.

“So was I right?”

“You're usually right. What about this time?”

“A little bird told me Dirk visited your house earlier.”

A snort escaped my mouth before I could suppress it. “Little bird, hell. Why didn't you just park and come in?”

My friend's voice lost its cheery flavor. “I didn't want to interrupt.”

“Ginger, what's wrong? Did you and Rob fight?”

“No fight. He's gone.”

My ears seemed plugged. Had she said Rob was gone? “You mean he's not home from work yet?”

Her tone sounded dead. “No, I mean gone.”

“I'll be right over.” No way I wanted Ginger sitting alone in that big old house.

Should I leave a note for Dirk in case he returned? Did that count as presumptuous, wishful thinking, or smart? Phoning him at work wouldn't happen. He got called in and didn't need me giving him detailed movement information. I mean, where would it stop? When I went to the bathroom? Gross.

I settled for a note inside a sealed envelope addressed to him and tacked to the front door. The short distance to my friend’s house seemed like a trip across country. She opened the door right after my car pulled into her driveway and walked out to greet me.

We hugged. “Hey, sweetie. I brought Chunky Monkey and Thin Mints.”

“Dirk has you figured out, hasn't he?”

My back went up. “Whadda mean by that?”

She put her arm through mine and pulled me toward her front door. “You don't buy Chunky Monkey for yourself unless you're PMSing, and I know your cycle because it's the same as mine. That means someone gave you the ice cream unless you stopped on the way, and you got here too fast for a grocery trip. Sooo, I'm voting Dirk.”

“B&J could have been on sale and I stocked up.”

“No sale and it wasn't in your freezer when you gave me cookies the other day.”

My arm dropped from hers. “Damn, you are one scary woman.”

She closed the door behind us and leaned against it. “So am I right?”

“Yes, doggone you.”

She gave me a small smile. “Well, at least something's going right for one of us.”

I searched her expression, but didn't find any answers there. “Tell me.”

We walked to the kitchen. Ginger had tea steeping. She grabbed two mugs and we settled at the table. There'd be no standing on ceremony tonight, not that we ever did.

She hogged the Chunky Monkey in a way that told me she wasn't ready to talk. Halfway through the pint, she put down her spoon. “I think Rob's gone for good.”

Her hand laid palm up on the table so I covered it with mine. “What makes you say that? Did you see him go?”

She muttered a “no.”

“Did he leave a note? Call?”

“No. He said nothing.” She answered my unvoiced question. “His toiletries are gone and so are some of his favorite clothes.”

My chest relaxed. “He probably had to take a quick business trip. I bet he'll call you later tonight.” The idea sounded weak. I wished I knew how to make Ginger’s pain disappear.

Her eyes focused on a point over my shoulder. “You know, I'm not so sure I care if he calls or not.”

“Why not?”

She turned her full attention on me. “I love Rob. It's just that I don't know if I can stay married to him.”

The words echoed through my brain. I’d said almost the same thing to Ginger when my own marriage fell apart. Remembered hurt combined with fresh pain to fill the room. I ripped open the cookie package. Forget aspirin. Emotional relief is best handled with large doses of chocolate.

“If he did leave—”

“He's gone.”

Her monotone indicated she’d stopped trying to improve a sucky situation. “Where do you think he went? He wouldn't bunk with the And Howes, would he?”

Rob's mother always abbreviated her husband Andrew's name to And. when she wrote return addresses. When I originally saw her notation on Ginger and Rob's rehearsal dinner invitation, I showed Ginger and her in-laws had been the And Howes ever since.

“Mrs. H would add a suite to the house if it meant she had her ‘Precious’ back in her nest.”

I steered Ginger away from the landmine that was the And Howes. “So he took some clothes, toiletries, and his car. Anything else missing that could be a clue?”

The color her cheeks had gained with judicious application of excess sugar, paled. She jumped from her chair and ran to Rob's study, me in her wake. Her shaking hands caused a loud clatter as she rifled through a desk drawer.

“Where's the damn key?

“Let me help. What kind of key is it?”

“The one for the gun safe.”

My hands turned into ice cubes. “I didn't know you had a gun in the house.”

“I didn't. Rob did.”

So few words, such a big gulf to jump.

“Got it.” She held up a small silver color key. Moving to the bookcase, she tossed a framed wedding photo on the floor without looking at it. Ginger and Rob’s happy expressions, frozen in time, looked out from behind cracked glass. I turned my attention back to Ginger. My already upset stomach clenched.

She had the door to the small gun safe open. It was empty.

Chapter Thirteen

I didn't think the night could get worse. Silly me. I needed to stop taunting the universe. Ginger refused to talk about Rob or the missing gun. She ignored my pleading and refused to report his disappearance to the police. When I pushed, she kicked me out. We'd never had such an unreasonable fight. The unreality of the evening’s events left me stunned.

Returning home alone thirty minutes later, I saw a suspicious shape in my drive. A dark-colored car parked so close to my neighbor's hedge, I almost didn't notice the vehicle. I slowed but didn't pull in the drive. A mini-panic attack rolled over me until Dirk stepped away from the shrubbery.

He opened the passenger side door and slid in. “I told you to lock your doors and take precautions. Do I have to spell out every move for you? And why the hell did you leave a note giving your location? Do you want the killer to come after you? Or me?”

My unsettled nerves chose anger as a vehicle for a release. “Get over yourself, Johnson.” I showed him the can of pepper spray I held. “I'm prepared. I don't need a babysitter.”

He disarmed me with a quick move and held the nozzle toward me, his finger on the triggering mechanism. “This thing could be used against you that easily. Stop taking risks, Katie.”

Dirk tossed the canister into my lap. “I'll wait while you park the car.” He exited, slamming the car door behind him.

My throat didn't want to swallow the crow I’d just eaten, but I forced down the feathers and pulled next to his vehicle. I locked the car and stalked to my front door. Silly me. Instead of feeling relieved Dirk watched over me, I was peeved. It felt kind of like having my parents back, but different. My thoughts were all messed up, and it was easier to blame Dirk for the confusion than to figure it out.

He moved to my side, waited until I unlocked the door then pushed past me to enter first. I entertained snarky comments about Mr. Manners when he pulled his gun.

“Something doesn't smell right. Wait by the door and be ready to run.”

No way. If someone got past Dirk, they'd be on me like sticky tarpaper coated a new roof. I crept behind him as he moved through the rooms, checking human-sized hiding places.

I noticed obvious signs of an intruder before we even reached the kitchen. The sight of my favorite room almost made my heart stop. All the dishes in my glass-door cabinets littered the heart pine floor in shards. Every piece of glassware was smashed except a few items of Fiesta Ware and a Manhattan Glass serving plate. My back door stood wide open, and a variety of bugs flew around the room. Moths batted against the ceiling light. Some field mice probably snuck in to join the party too.

A message waited for me, written in what looked like bright red lipstick and centered on my fridge's freezer door.

You’re next.

Damn it. I'd just bought that fridge. It'd take me elbow grease I didn't want to burn to wipe that crap off. Plus I had a stomach full of knots. What exactly did the nut job mean? Because the mess I looked at almost made me cry. And that said a lot.

Picking up an iron fry pan, I held my pepper spray ready and crunched to the door. Dirk got there before me, shutting it quietly. He put a finger to his lips. I hadn't heard him coming. Talk about too little, too late.

Dirk pulled me behind him with a stern look and we continued the room-by-room search. By accident or unconscious design, we were standing in my bedroom when he holstered his gun.

My arms crossed over my chest in a comforting self-hug. “Weren't you supposed to call for back up?”

Dirk looked around the room. “Yeah, but I was hoping to catch the shithead so I could push his face in the floor first.” He put his attention on me and waited.

“Look, I don't want you taking risks for me.”

Dirk gave me a look I couldn't read before he shrugged.

Not satisfied, I pushed. “Why'd you come back tonight?”

He sauntered closer and ran his hand over my hair. “We have unfinished business.”

“More interrogation?”

“Oh, yeah.”

His lips moved over mine and his form of questioning could send the female half of the world into a crime spree. Including happily married women, honest.

The bubble burst when he spoke. “Throw some stuff in a bag. You've got to get out of here tonight.”

My head still reeled from the kiss, so I didn’t understand what I’d heard. “Excuse me?”

“Look, this guy is telling you he can get at you any time. You can't stay here.”

I pulled out of his embrace with a jerk. “What are you, the Lone Ranger? This is my home. Sure, it's a mess, but it's mine.” I planted my fists on my hips. “What can this guy do that he hasn't already tried or done?”

“Succeed.”

That one word stymied all my thoughts. I pushed my way through the paralysis and came up with some words. “If that lipstick is a clue, the intruder was a crazy woman. I vote for Flash.”

“The writing looked like a guy's scrawl to me. Stay with me.”

“Don't you think your invitation's a little sudden? We haven't even made love yet.” Oops. What if his offer meant his couch or guest room?

“It will happen. Admit it. You couldn’t keep your eyes off me at the studio. Just a matter of time till we do the deed.”

“You must not have heard me. Men in blue aren't my favorite people.” Arrogant ass. Okay, so I’ve checked his butt out once or twice. How did he see me do it? Too bad he can read me like a grad student with a grade school primer.

“I'm not wearing blue.” He ran the back of his fingers across my cheek. “You're not safe here.”

I shivered. That was the truth and the reality pissed me off. I loved my sweet little mess of a bungalow.

“Don't even try to argue. Get your stuff while I call this in.”

Did I say arrogant ass? Let me add high-handed, big-headed, over-bearing and - and - I need a thesaurus. Oh, yeah. Over-confident and pushy.

“Okay, look. Maybe staying with me isn't the best option right now.”

“Ya think?”

“Would Ginger have room in the McMansion for you? Or do you not get along with her husband?”

Tell him or not? My mouth made the decision for me. “Rob's gone.”

“What? You should have told me.” The growl coming out of his mouth gave me shivers, and not in a good way.

“Just happened. He left tonight.”

Dirk snapped open his phone and turned his back on me. I didn't know which hurt more, his anger or his cold shoulder. Maybe both caused the burning in my chest.

“Matt, we've got a runner. Rob Howe. He's around six two, one-ninety, blue eyes. Hell, just get his DMV photo into circulation.” He turned to me. “What does he drive?” To my blank look he said, “Telling me is faster than looking up their vehicles. At least it would be if you'd answer.”

“He took his new car this morning, a white Mercedes SL class.” Good thing I'd asked Ginger. They'd be looking for the right auto instead of putting out an alert on all the models stored in her five-car garage.

“Don't forget the Homeland Security travel restriction and get someone tracking his credit cards. Wait a minute.” Dirk stopped for a breath.

“Matt, see if you can get a read on his vehicle.” His phone clicked shut and he turned toward me. “The government never should have discontinued the Space Program.”

The sudden detour threw me. “What does NASA have to do with tracking a fugitive?”

“Where do you think all our technology came from? But first we need to get you someplace safe.” He moved in. “I promise I’ll make you feel better.”

Maybe the kitchen mess had scrambled my brain, but before we went further, I needed to clear the air. “Dirk, are you interested in me because I look like Amy?”

BOOK: Death Stretch
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