Beautiful Maids All in a Row (29 page)

Read Beautiful Maids All in a Row Online

Authors: Jennifer Harlow

BOOK: Beautiful Maids All in a Row
3.86Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Chapter 27

Being hit by a truck was the only explanation for that much pain. My entire head throbbed, and every muscle ached with such ferocity I was afraid to move. My arms were the worst, limp like all the bones had disappeared. They were stretched above my head, held up by something tight and cold wrapped around my wrists. I willed my arms to move, but I'd lost control of them.

After a second fruitless attempt, my brain finally rebooted and started functioning past the instinctive level. The smell hit me first: stale air and musky mildew. Touch: besides the general hit-by-a-truck feeling, I also felt a trail of something sticky starting at my throbbing forehead and running down to my cheek. My head was leaking, never a good thing. My hair was still damp, a fact that pleased me to no end. That meant I'd been out for only a few hours, not days.

Sound came next: thumping footsteps above my head, followed by the creaking of wood. Finally, I opened my eyes, blinking a few times for them to adjust. The boxes stacked up, the redbrick walls, the dirty concrete floor that I seemed to be sitting on, the lone light bulb hanging above, and the steep wooden staircase that led up to the kitchen. My basement. Okay.

Back to the problem at hand, my arms. I tilted my head up to see what was so tight around my wrists. Big mistake. A wave of nausea hit like a baseball bat. I choked the foul bile back. I was now positive I had a concussion; it was something that could never be mistaken for anything else. After the nausea passed, I bent my head back slowly this time, keeping the second onslaught to a minimum. My arms were handcuffed to a rusty pipe above my head, attached like two white vines. No wonder they were numb. I balled my hands into fists several times to get the blood flowing. My arms started coming to as the pins and needles under my skin started. Improvement, but not much. I was, after all, handcuffed to a pipe in my basement while a psychopath was upstairs planning God knew what.

When my arms no longer felt dead, I started pulling on the pipe with all my might. The handcuffs dug into my wrists, rubbing them raw. I grunted and groaned, using all of my 105 pounds to pull. The pipe didn't move an inch and neither did I.

“Good, you're awake.”

I gazed up at the staircase and saw Shepherd, nonchalantly resting against the doorframe. The light from the kitchen behind him gave him an almost supernatural look, as if he were standing at the doorway of heaven looking down into hell.

“You know,” he said, pushing away from the doorframe, “you have no real food here. I found about five different kinds of candy bars but nothing of substance. I have no idea how you manage to keep your figure.” He began to limp down the stairs one at a time. The right pant leg was torn, with white gauze wrapped around it.

“What happened to your leg?” I asked with satisfaction.

“Your dog bit me.”

“I'll have to remember to get him a steak next time I go shopping.”

“I wouldn't bother.” He stopped at the bottom of the stairs and pulled out a silver, snub-nosed .38 from his pants. “I shot him.”

I jerked forward but the cuffs stop me. “You son of a bitch!” I screamed. “I'll fucking kill you!”

“I don't think so. You don't get to make the threats now, I do. Bet you're wishing you'd killed me when you had the chance.”

“Fuck you!”

He crossed the room at a superhuman speed. Before I registered it, his fist made contact with my cheek, sending my head flying back into the wall with a thump, fazing me. “Nobody talks to me that way, Iris,” he hissed.
“Nobody.”

Now my cheek felt like the rest of me, broken and throbbing. “Oh, God,” I whispered.

“I never thought I'd ever see you looking so pathetic. It almost takes the fun out of this. Almost.”

I looked up at his hard face. “What are you going to do to me?”

He knelt down to my level. “I haven't really decided yet. There are so many possibilities, I almost can't choose. Looking at you like this, so helpless,” he began to trace my naked arms with his fingertips, “I feel like a kid in a candy store.” He trailed them down my cheek, the one he'd hit, but I yanked my head away. He caressed it anyway. “I've waited for this moment for weeks. You can't imagine the things I've done to you in my mind.” He traced the outline of my jaw. “And now to finally have you in front of me…” His thumb gently rubbed my dry lips. “I'm rock hard.”

I spit on his cheek. He winced on contact. “Get your fucking hands off of me.”

He scoffed and wiped the spit off. “Classy.” With one quick movement, he raised the .38 toward my head and fired.

BOOM!

My eyes closed instinctively as I moved as far left as I could. Not far enough. Bits of brick hit my face, ripping my skin away in their wake. The pain was the only way I knew I was still alive. I opened my eyes and turned to the right to find a smoking hole in the wall three inches from my head. Short gasps escaped my mouth, close to the point of hyperventilating.

“I'm surprised it didn't ricochet,” Shepherd said nonchalantly. “Good gun. Got it black market. Untraceable.”

“This is insane,” I said to myself, my whole body quivering from shock and fright. “You got away with it. What can you possibly gain from this? Everyone's going to know it's you. Why are you doing this?”

With his whole body, he leaned forward into me. For a moment I thought he was going to kiss me, but his face stopped two inches from mine. “I can't stop thinking about you,” he said. “Your hair, your lips, your…breasts.” He touched the curve of my breast with a faraway look in his eyes. “You haunt my dreams, Iris.” He looked up at my eyes. “You're driving me crazy.”

“You were crazy to begin with,” I said breathlessly. “I'm not responsible for
that
mess.”

He snarled like a wolf. “I
hate
you. I hate you more than anyone else I've ever come across.”

“Well, at least we're on the same page there.”

He pulled away from me and stood, gazing down at me, eyes laughing with victory. “I just figured out what to do with you. I think I'll go find your friend Carol and her little boy. She still lives on Hazel Lane, no? I'm going to fuck her while you watch and slice open her chest when she's alive. Then I'll do the same to her little boy. He's not really my type, but tonight I'll make an exception. Then finally, I'll do you. Every which way possible…
repeatedly
until the sun comes up, then I'll rip out your beating heart. How would you like that?”

“Your mother
really
did a number on you,” I said with as much confidence as I still possessed, which wasn't much. “Or maybe it was you who initiated first contact. Maybe you snuck into Mommy's room, and she was there, looking
so
beautiful…Did you get an erection, Jerry? Do you still beat off to her picture?”

“If you're trying to get me to shoot you, save your breath. I'm not going to kill you in some fit of rage. I can only kill you once.”

“And then what? You think the pain will go away when I'm dead?”

He knelt down right beside me again. “No,” he whispered as he leaned in so close to my face I could smell the Scope on his breath, “but it'll make me feel
so
much better.”

He lunged at my face, smashing his lips against mine so hard my lips hit my teeth. As if that wasn't revolting enough, his free hand moved into my tank top, finding my bare breast and kneading it roughly, twisting the nipple like a screw so hard I would have screamed if I could. Panic hit. This was really happening. He was going to rape and kill me in my own basement. I was momentarily paralyzed with fear, unable to do anything even if I'd been free. But when his slimy tongue slipped into my mouth like a slug, it snapped me out of shock and into rage.

I bit it. Hard.

My mouth filled with metallic blood and the nausea resurfaced. Shepherd pulled away, hands and all, and touched his bleeding tongue. I'd only nicked it, but he got the point. I spit out his blood onto the concrete.

He spit out his blood too, only he did it on my face. “You fucking bit me!” he shouted, absolutely shocked.

“Didn't think I was going to make it easy for you, did you, you
fucking psycho
!” The back of his hand smacked the left side of my face, sending my head flying back again. My poor head—good thing I was so thick skulled. I turned back to Shepherd and smiled. “That all you got? My grandmother hits harder than you.”

He was right back in my face. “I am going to teach you what real pain is,” he whispered through clenched teeth.

I leaned in so our noses touched. “Then do it,
motherfucker.

A screeching from above caused us both to glance up at the ceiling. The alarm. Dear Lord, I would never complain about that sound again. A perplexed Shepherd jumped to his feet. I could practically see the wheels of his mind turning, running through all the possibilities and contingencies. After five seconds, he looked back down at me, holding the gun up to my forehead. “Give me the code and password.”

“Fuck you.”

A pounding upstairs made him turn back to the open door at the top of the stairs. There was rhythmic pounding, then silence. Two gunshots boomed above us, followed by the sound of wood breaking.

“Help me!” I screamed at the top of my lungs. “I'm down here!”

Shepherd pulled out a set of handcuff keys, and keeping the gun turned on me, unlocked my cuffs. He yanked me to my feet, pressing the gun against my temple. He held my left arm, fingers digging into my flesh so hard I winced. Iris Ballard, the human shield.

“Keep your hands to the side,” he said into my ear as the running footsteps got closer, “and don't make any sudden moves or I'll fire.”

“Iris?”

The sound of his voice was such a relief, I was sure I would have fallen if Shepherd weren't holding me so tight. “Luke?” I called.

“Iris?” he shouted again, desperation in his voice.

“Luke! Run!” I shrieked. “He has a—”

Luke stepped into the doorway, his own gun out. No man had ever looked so good to me before. His eyes doubled in size when he saw me, a mix of terror and relief on his face. As trained, the moment he saw the gun, he moved behind the door for cover. Shepherd pressed the gun even harder into my head.

“Take out the clip and bullet in the chamber and throw it all down here,” Shepherd commanded.

“No way, Shepherd,” Luke said.

“I will shoot her dead if you don't.”

“Luke, don't you fucking dare!” I shouted.

“Let her go, Shepherd!”

“Throw the gun down first, and then we'll talk.”

Luke peeked out of his hiding spot, glancing down at me. I pleaded silently with my eyes for him to just turn around and run. Our eyes met. For a fleeting moment I saw his indecision. Training said you kept cover, tried to talk the perp down, and waited for backup to arrive. And you never,
ever
gave up your weapon. Luke's indecision vanished. He always was a chivalrous fucking idiot. I gasped as he pushed the clip release button. It fell into his hand. He tossed it down the stairs. It landed in the far corner. He yanked back the chamber, expelling the sole bullet. The rest of the gun landed on top of some boxes in front of me. Luke raised his hands and laced his fingers behind his head, surrendering. He slowly walked down the creaky stairs. “Now let her go.”

Shepherd's chuckle sliced through the air. “Iris, you have quite a man here. He's got balls of steel. Probably a dick to match. You're a lucky girl.”

“Damn lucky.”

“How sweet,” Shepherd said. “So, Agent Hudson, how
did
you find us?”

“You were under unofficial surveillance in New York,” he said to Shepherd.

“I thought so,” Shepherd said. “Wasn't sure, though. So you traced me here. Bravo. Didn't catch me in time, though.” He pressed the gun harder.

“Let her go, Shepherd. The police are on their way. You'll never get out of here if you don't leave now.”

“I will if I have a hostage.”

“Then take me,” Luke said. “You'll be able to negotiate better if you have an officer of the law.”


True,
but I can have a lot more fun with your Iris here.” He licked my cheek, leaving a bloody slime trail in his wake. “She really is a beautiful creature. It must be torture knowing she'll never reciprocate your feelings. That the grief and guilt of that one night will always cloud her affections. That she'll always look at you filled with self-loathing, when all you want is for her to gaze at you like she did him. She never will. She isn't worth dying for, Luke.”

Luke's clear blue eyes met mine. All fear and doubt vanished in an instant. The whole world fell away as a small grin crossed his face. “Yes…she is.”

Shepherd shrugged. “If you say so.”

With one quick movement Shepherd's arm leveled, gun pointed out. Three shots, one after another, rang out, drowning my screams. The bullets hit Luke's chest, three holes blooming on his white shirt. He flew backward from the force, spinning and landing on his bullet-riddled chest.

He didn't move.
No.

Everything became red. Every muscle in my body tensed with pure hate. My blood boiled inside me so hot I wanted to jump out of my skin.
Not again.
With the strength of six men, I clenched my hands together and elbowed Shepherd's taut solar plexus. All the air rushed out of his lungs with a large gasp. He bent at a 90-degree angle, clutching his stomach with both hands, releasing me. I spun around and kicked up my right leg, hitting his lower jaw with a crack. Still holding the gun, he fell on his back, stunned for only a millisecond before sweeping my feet out from under me. I fell on top of him.

I grabbed both his hands, raising them above our heads so the gun pointed to the wall. He tried to move the gun toward my head, but I was too strong. Of course, so was he. Shepherd wouldn't release it no matter how deep I scratched. As we struggled, the jostling and clawing made the gun go off. Once. Twice until the gun clicked empty. With that first click, I jammed my knee as hard as I could into his groin, sending everything but the stove flying back. He groaned like a punk as I jumped off his body and flew up the stairs two at a time.

Other books

McDonald_SS_GEN_Nov2014 by Donna McDonald
Logan: New Crusaders MC by Wilder, Brook
Not Your Average Happy Ending by Chantele Sedgwick
Forgotten by Kailin Gow
Notorious in Nice by Jianne Carlo
Man From Tennessee by Greene, Jennifer
A Lovely Sunday for Creve Coeur by Tennessee Williams
Death's Shadow by Darren Shan
Sands of Time by Barbara Erskine