MARRYING MR. RIGHT (The Brides of Hilton Head Island Book 3) (4 page)

BOOK: MARRYING MR. RIGHT (The Brides of Hilton Head Island Book 3)
12.99Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

              Zeke swallowed his frustration. “Sorry. Mom.”

              Katherine questioned, “What’s going on in here? Why does everyone look so sad?”

              “Taylor’s missing, Mom,” Zeke murmured, hating to refer to Katherine as his mother. Katherine was
not
his mother. She’d never treated him like a son. Not ever. Wanting his girl to have an abortion. Tonight, Katherine proved she didn’t care about him. Not. At. All.

              Katherine gasped. “Dear Lord. What do you mean Taylor’s missing?”

              Veronica replied, “Taylor hasn’t come home yet. I’ve looked everywhere for her. So have my neighbors.”              

              Colton asked, “Veronica, have you called the police yet?”

              Veronica’s lips quivered as she nodded.
Dripdripdrip
. Tears streamed down her face. “Yes. The police know she’s missing. She always comes home by her curfew. Always. And if something comes up, she always, always calls me to let me know.” Black purse strapped to her shoulder, Veronica put her hand to her ample breast. “I’m terrified.”

              “Me, too. Me, too.” Worry bubbled at the surface of Zeke’s stomach.

              Katherine took a few steps forward and cupped Veronica’s hands. “Veronica, I’m sure Taylor is fine and will show up soon. I know it’s hard, but try not to worry. We’ll call you if we hear anything. Okay?” Releasing Veronica’s hands, Katherine moved back beside Zeke, in front of Colton.

              Nodding her head, Veronica sniffed. “Thanks—” Veronica’s cell buzzed. She reached into the purse strapped across her shoulder to answer it. She placed the cell on her earlobe. “Hello?” As she listened to the person on the line, Veronica’s trembling fingers touched her quivering lips. “Where?” Silence. “By the railroad tracks? Oh God. Oh God. I’m on my way home now.” Veronica pressed the end button on her cell phone. Angst filled her glassy black eyes as a sorrowful wail pressed from her lungs.

              Panic coursed through Zeke’s veins. Gauging the horrid expression on Veronica’s face, he asked, “What’s wrong? What’s wrong, Ms. Spelling?”

              Colton gripped Veronica’s shoulders. “Did they find Taylor?”

              Veronica’s shoulders shook up and down as she cried.  Shaking her head, she mouthed, “No. She’s still missing. They found the locket she wears on the ground by the railroad tracks.”

              “Jesus Christ.” Zeke rounded Veronica and flung open the front door.

              “Where are you going?” Katherine asked.

              “To look for Taylor,” Zeke responded.

              Shaking her head, Katherine placed her hands on her hips. “No, you’re not. It’s past your curfew, young man.”

              Zeke glowered at Katherine. “Taylor’s in trouble. There’s no way in hell I’m going to just sit here and not do a damn thing.”

              Katherine clasped her hands together. “Watch your mouth, Zeke. Please don’t curse in front of Ms. Spelling. Go upstairs and get your homework done,” Katherine stated in a curt, sophisticated tone.

              Colton gave Katherine an icy stare. “Could you at least, for once in your life, have a little empathy for someone other than yourself? His girlfriend is in trouble. Only an irresponsible man wouldn’t go searching for his woman.” Colton fixated his gaze on Zeke, then retrieved his keys from his pants pocket. “I’m coming with you. Let’s go, Zeke.”

              “But Colton, you haven’t eaten your dinner yet?” Katherine whined.

              Unspoken irritation stultified Colton’s brown eyes. “You’re pathetic, Katherine. Don’t wait up for us. We’ll get back when we get back,” Colton barked as he crossed over the threshold, with Veronica and Zeke walking behind him. 

              Sitting in the passenger’s side seat of his father’s black Cadillac Escalade, Zeke’s heart thudded at the base of his throat. Horrified, Zeke put his hands in a prayer symbol, brought it up to his nose, and closed his eyes. Straining not to cry, his nose burned. His heart ached.
Please, God. Please help me find Taylor. Please keep her and the baby safe. I love her, and I promise if you bring her and the baby back to me, I’ll take care of them for as long as I live. In Jesus’ name I pray. Amen.              

 

 

 

 

Chapter Four

             
Walterboro, South Carolina 

             
B
angbangbang. Bangbangbang. 
“Get up! There’s work to be done around here!” Lying on her side, sleeping inside
a cramped room, Taylor’s eyes fluttered open to find darkness surrounding her. Feeling the twin-size mattress metal springs pressing into her side, Taylor’s body ached all over. Blinking against the darkness, a mothball stench crept inside her nostrils. The door slowly cracked open with a resounding creak. “I know you’re not sleeping. Get up! Now!” Old lady Mildred’s tone echoed inside the tiny, cold room.

              Trying to awake from a deep sleep, Taylor kept her back to the mean woman named Mildred who’d kidnapped her seven months ago. Clenching the thin, raggedy bedspread to her chin, Taylor reclosed her eyes and pretended as if she didn’t hear the criminal Mildred.

              Nine months pregnant, Taylor was tired. Didn’t feel like getting up. Always having to do all of Mildred’s housework, she needed to rest for once. If Mildred wanted work to be done, she should ask her son, Kelvin.

              When Mildred further opened the door to the chilly room, the light bulb in the ceiling’s hallway glowed down on Taylor as she remained lying on her side. Mildred sighed harshly. “Oh, so it’s like that today, huh?” The ruffling sounds of Mildred’s feet dragging against the floor assailed Taylor’s ears.
She’s coming. She’s coming.
Keeping her eyes closed, Taylor felt Mildred towering over her, breathing heavily. “Mmmph. Mmmph. Mmmph. You’re just as lazy as they come. Don’t get any lazier than you.” Mildred insulted her on a regular basis.
Apparently, you haven’t looked in the mirror, dumb lady
. “I saaiiddd…get up!” Mildred yanked the covers off Taylor. A cold chill engulfed her.

             
Standing beside the worn bed, Mildred fisted the back of Taylor’s long hair and yanked it. “Ouch!” Taylor’s eyes shot open. She slapped a hard palm to the back of her pained scalp.

              “Bet you get your little ass up now,” Mildred spat.

              Taylor rolled over to her back, scooted up in bed, and put her back against the brown, cracked headboard. Scalp burning, she tried her hardest to give Mildred a pitiful stare. Maybe if she treated her kidnapper nice and obeyed her, maybe someday she’ll let her go. “I miss my mama. Please let me go, Mildred? Please?” Longing to see her mother, Zeke, and her friends from high school, she studied Mildred’s face intently.

              Wearing a flowery dress, gray-haired Mildred had pink rollers in her hair. Chubby face, she squinted her eyes at Taylor. “No. I’m never letting you go. You and the baby are going to spend the rest of your lives here with me and Kelvin. The four of us are going to be one big, happy family.”
             

              Dissatisfied with Mildred’s answer, Taylor felt water spring into her eyes. “But I already have a family.”
And a boyfriend, Zeke.
“They probably think I’m dead. Please, let me go home? I’ll do anything. I promise I won’t tell the police about you if you let me go. I promise.” Unsure if she was having a boy or a girl, Taylor’s big, pregnant belly cramped. Wondering if the sharp pain was a contraction, she cupped the lower part of her belly. “I want to go home, Mildred! Let me go!”

              Mildred slapped Taylor’s face so hard, her head snapped sideways, and now she was looking at the wall instead of the mean lady standing beside her to the left. She huffed. “Look at me,” Mildred ordered in a throaty voice. Breathing harshly, keeping her head sideways, tremors shook Taylor to the core. When Taylor refused to look at her, Mildred reached over and pinched her cheek as hard as she could.

              “Oww. Oww.” Cheek stinging, Taylor turned her head and met Mildred’s hateful gaze.

              Wagging a bony finger in her face, Mildred leaned into Taylor, and their noses almost touched. “Don’t you ever ask me about leaving here again. If you do, there’ll be consequences. Kelvin and I are hungry. Go make us some dinner,” she ordered, her breath foul, smelling like bowels.

              “Oww. You’re hurting my face, Mildred.” Finally, she let go of her burning cheek.
I hate you, Mildred. I hate you.
Tears gushed from Taylor’s eyes. Shifting in the bed sideways, she flung her shackled feet to the floor. “It’s hard getting around the kitchen with my ankles chained like this, Mildred. Will you please take the shackles off?”

              For a brief moment, Mildred didn’t respond; only stared at her. She reached into the pocket of her shabby flowery dress, pulled out a key, and held it up to Taylor’s eyes. “Okay. I’m going to unlock them. But if you try anything stupid like you did the last time you tried to run away, I’m going to make your life a living hell.”
You’ve already done that. This is hell. You’re hell. Your son Kelvin is hell.
Mildred bent over, stuck the key in the shackles lock, and clicked it open. Freed her bound ankles. The metal shackles clinked when they hit the wooden floor. “Thanks, Mildred.”

              “Make something good to eat tonight.”

              “Okay. I’m coming. Just please give me a second.”
Oh God. Why me? Why did Mildred take me? I’m going to die in this cold basement.
More tired than she’d ever been, Taylor glanced around the eerie room. A brown board covered the single window inside the room. An ugly burgundy carpet lay on the wooden floor near the foot of the bed. Other than a twin bed and a tiny bathroom, the room remained isolated. Didn’t even have a television. Just nothing.

              No one knew she was there. Mildred and her son Kelvin had her hidden from the world. They’d kidnapped her. Stolen her from her mother. Taken her away from Zeke.
Oh, Zeke. I miss you so much. I hope you haven’t forgotten about me.

             
“Well, don’t just sit there. Get a move on.” Mildred fisted the top of Taylor’s grey T-shirt and roughly pulled her out of bed. Belly round and hard, Taylor put a hand to her lower spine, dragged her feet along the cold wooden floor.

              Walking behind her, Mildred swatted Taylor’s behind with her hand, causing it to burn. “Walk faster!”

             
Rubbing her hand over her pregnant, protruding belly, Taylor wobbled out of the basement’s bedroom and walked down the narrow hallway in front of Mildred. A sharp pain developed in her abdomen, and she ground her molars. Coming to the stairway, she gripped the handrail and began mounting the staircase toward the top. The worn planks creaked beneath her cold bare feet.
I can’t let my baby grow up in this filthy house with these evil people. I have to escape. God, please help the police find me. Please don’t ever let my mother stop looking for me. Please don’t ever let Zeke stop looking for me either. Zeke will find me. He will. He will. He loves me.  

             
Right when Taylor reached the top of the staircase, the door to the basement swung open. Mildred’s son, Kelvin, stood in the doorway, looking down at them. The tall, skinny man had brown, scraggly hair, blue eyes, and one of his front top teeth was missing. “She giving you any trouble this morning, Ma?” Kelvin asked.

              Holding on to the wooden handrail, Taylor glanced back over her shoulder at Mildred, then back up at Kelvin. Mildred exclaimed, “She tried. But after I slapped the shit out of her, she straightened up.”

              Eyeing Taylor wickedly, Kelvin’s head tilted. “I hope she wasn’t mouthing off, Ma.”

              “Ah, just a little. I took the chains off her feet, so watch her carefully. You never know about this one—she may try something.” When Mildred swatted Taylor’s behind again, she clenched her butt cheeks. “Get in there and cook me and my son something to eat.”

              “Yes, ma’am.”
Darn right, I’m going to try something as soon as I get a chance.
I don’t care if I have to kill Mildred and Kelvin, I’m getting out of this freaking hellhole. They got me locked up in a dungeon. Treating me like a prisoner. I’m not letting my baby grow up like this.

              Kelvin stepped to the side so Taylor could enter the kitchen. “Let her try something, Ma. I’ll be on top of her faster than she can blink her eyes.” Kelvin grinned at Taylor, displaying his missing front tooth, then went and took a seat on the couch inside the den.

              “Don’t be lollygagging around in the kitchen, taking all night to cook me something to eat,” Mildred complained as she headed for the den to join Kelvin on the couch.

              Searching for a way to escape, like she did every morning, noon, and evening, Taylor’s eyes traveled over the musky-scented old house. Just like the basement, boards covered the windows in the den, kitchen, and living room. The front door and the back door had big black chains on them.

              Knowing she’d never give up trying to escape, Taylor’s eyes traveled up the wall and stopped when they reached the small window almost to the ceiling. Glittering stars perched around the glowing half-moon.  There was no way she could climb out of that small hole, especially not with her big belly. Feeling trapped and doomed, bile scratched the back of Taylor’s throat.

              Nauseated, she headed straight to the refrigerator and yanked it open. Gazing over the dirty fridge, she hefted a package of raw chicken, milk, and eggs. With all the ingredients in her hands, she headed for the stove to make the batter for the fried chicken.

              Moments later, as Taylor stood over the stove frying drumsticks, the sound of a plane flying over the house resounded in her ears. All day, every day, she listened to the planes flying to and fro.
This house must be near an airport or something
, she thought, turning just in time to see a plane flying past the window high above her head.

              Wishing she was on a plane flying home to Hilton Head Island, Taylor picked up the tongs from the counter and began removing the greasy chicken from the frying pan, transferring it to the white paper towels sitting on the counter beside the stove.

              Suddenly, a series of sharp pains stabbed her stomach. Taken by surprise, her mouth dropped open. She gripped the sides of her balled stomach, and her spine arched. Pinching her lips together, she swallowed the outburst threatening to erupt from her lungs.
Oh, Jesus. I’m in labor. Oh God. This hurts. So bad. Give me strength, Lord. Strength. 
Not wanting Mildred or Kelvin to know she was in labor just yet, she mustered up some strength and stood erect.

              Looking at the back of Mildred and Kelvin’s heads as they sat on the couch watching Family Feud on television, horrid thoughts ran inside Taylor’s head.
Oh God, what are they going to do with my baby? Keep it? Sell it? Kill it? Oh God. Please tell me what to do.

              Kelvin stood from the couch, pulled a pair of keys from his back jean pocket, and looked down at Mildred
.
“I’m going outside to chop some wood, Ma.”

              Keeping her eyes glued to the television, Mildred kicked her feet up on the coffee table. “Good. I can use a hot fire in this here fireplace.”

              After unlocking the back door and removing the chains, Kelvin pulled open the door leading to the back yard and stood with his back turned to Taylor. He grabbed his parka from the coat rack beside the door and shrugged it on.

              It’d been so long since she’d seen the outdoors. Longing to inhale the scent of the outside air, pain ricocheted through her stomach, threatening to bring her to her knees.
It’s now or never. Now or never.

             
Kelvin’s head snapped in her direction, and he glared at her. “It’s real cold out here. But as cold as it is, I bet you’d like to get out here, wouldn’t you, Taylor?” With her belly in excruciating pain, Taylor nodded. “Too damn bad.” Laughing, he walked outside and closed the door behind him. Taylor listened intently for the sounds of the door locking, but she didn’t hear anything. Could Kelvin have left the door unlocked?

              Suddenly, a thought struck up in her mind. She poured more grease into the frying pan, turned it up to high, and waited. Taylor caressed her stomach, tried to soothe it. Tried to make the pain subside.
I’m getting out of here. Just wait to come, my baby.

              The scorching hot grease in the pan boiled. Taylor gripped the handle of the frying pan in one hand and grabbed a sharp knife in the other. Ready to turn Mildred’s life upside down, she left the kitchen, walked inside the living room, and hid behind the wall.

             
Please God, let this work.
Terrified of what she was about to do, Taylor kept her back to the wall and inched only her head out into the den. “Mildred,” she cried. Mildred turned her gaze from the television to look at her. Taylor’s face contorted. “Hurry. I’m in labor.”

              Mildred’s face split into a big, greedy grin. “Hot damn. It’s payday!” She jumped off the couch and hurried in Taylor’s direction. Taylor’s fingers squeezed the heavy handle of the frying pan with the still burning oil.

              Right when Mildred reached the living room, Taylor threw the hot grease in Mildred’s face. Mildred’s facial skin curled like fleshy cottage cheese, and tortured screams erupted from her throat. Grabbing her face, she ran around in circles, then plummeted to the ground on her knees. “Kelvin! Kelvin! Aagggh! My face! My face!”

BOOK: MARRYING MR. RIGHT (The Brides of Hilton Head Island Book 3)
12.99Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Carioca Fletch by Gregory Mcdonald
Tangled Thoughts by Cara Bertrand
A Case of Doubtful Death by Linda Stratmann
The Black Jackals by Iain Gale
A Safe Place for Joey by Mary MacCracken
Every Move She Makes by Robin Burcell
The Eternal Engagement by Mary B. Morrison
One Last Thing Before I Go by Jonathan Tropper
The Colossus by Ranjini Iyer