Open Wounds (17 page)

Read Open Wounds Online

Authors: Camille Taylor

Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Police Procedurals, #Romance, #Romantic Suspense, #Mystery & Suspense, #Suspense

BOOK: Open Wounds
11.12Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter 27

 

 

Amelia sat at her desk looking down at the sketch of Wayne Burton. She tried to remember if she’d ever seen the man before, on the street, hanging around Coleani’s establishments or even downstairs getting fingerprinted.

He was no stranger to the building, having been brought here ten times over the past twenty years for a variety of crimes. Surprisingly enough, not one of them had been rape. She didn’t doubt Kellie’s memory and the sketch only confirmed her ID.

She couldn’t imagine the emotions that must be going through her friend at the present moment. Amelia recalled seeing her in the hospital bed. Her head had been bandaged, her blonde hair matted with blood. She’d looked so small and delicate covered with the thin blanket, her body hooked up to an array of beeping machines.

Her whole life she’d never needed to cry, but she’d wanted to, and had done so for Kellie when she’d gone home. She knew Kellie wouldn’t have allowed her to do so in her presence

just as she wouldn’t have if their roles had been reversed

so she’d bottled up her volatile feelings for later.

Never would she’d have guessed it would be more than a decade later before they’d be let loose.

 

***

 

Twelve Years Ago

Harbour Bay Base Hospital

 

Amelia stepped forward, toward the hospital bed. Her heart pounded in her chest and tears threatened to escape down her cheeks as she imagined the pain her friend went through, and continued to go though. From the moment she and Kellie had first met at school, they’d never been separated.

Until now.

Why had she left Kellie alone? Why hadn’t she walked her home? All these questions filled her head only to have no answers. She should’ve been with her, knew that now, and allowed the blame to fall squarely on her shoulders.

Amelia shivered as she took in the sterile room. Clean and empty. There were no flowers or
get well soon
cards bar the Canna lilies

Kellie’s favourite

that she was holding.

She moved closer to the bed and reached out to touch Kellie’s hand.

“Don’t touch me,” she screeched as her eyes opened wide, sensing a disturbance in the surrounding air. Her body shook and the heart rate monitor beeped rapidly as her blood pressure shot up.

Amelia stepped back, afraid to set her off. Dark circles marred the soft skin of her face, light purple discolouration dotting her arms, neck, and face.

“Are you in pain?” she asked as she placed the flowers down on the table beside the bed.

“Not anymore. What are you doing here?”

“I’m here to see you. I wanted to make sure you’re going to be all right.” She stopped, her throat closing and she fought not to cry. Her friend was broken and in pain. Kellie had always been so full of life, until last night, when she had fought for that life almost to the last minute.

“I don’t want to see anybody,” Kellie informed her, her voice barely audible.

“Except me right, Kel, your best friend? We share everything, why would you think we wouldn’t share this too?”

“This is something that can’t be shared and I’d rather be alone when I go through it if you don’t mind. I don’t want anyone to know the details of last night.”

“That isn’t going to be happen, so get used to me being here.” She glanced around the empty room. “Am I your first visitor?”

“They called my mum, but she had to work,” Kellie replied and shrugged as if it meant nothing when in fact it meant
everything
. “What can you do?”

Amelia clenched her hands into fists. The rage she felt at knowing Kellie’s mother left her only daughter to go through this alone was enough to put murder on her brain. She had never liked the woman but had endured her for Kellie’s sake. As far as Amelia was concerned she was an utter failure at everything she did including raising her daughter.

Kellie said it was because of her father, that her mother had loved him so much that after he was gone a part of her left too. But Amelia didn’t buy that crap. In her opinion Jules Munroe only cared about one person and that was herself. Kellie was just an ornament, like a plant that gets watered at the end of a long day’s work.

The only time Jules spared a moment for her daughter was the first few minutes once she got home at seven in the morning after her shift and ate the breakfast her daughter made for her. But in Kellie’s eyes her mother was doing the best she could. It just wasn’t the best anyone hoped for.

Amelia never knew her own father. He’d left the same day

the same hour

he’d knocked up her fifteen-year-old mother, who was no peach herself. For the first five years of her life, Amelia moved from one floor mattress to another around the neighbourhood.

She survived on other people’s kindnesses until DoCS had stepped in and removed her from her mother’s lack of care. A week later, her mother’s parents had come and collected her. They were for the most part unforgiving, determined that she did not follow their daughter’s dark path, but they loved her. For the first time in years she’d gone to bed every night after bathing, her stomach full.

She didn’t even mind brushing her teeth but her childish brain still believed her mother would come for her, that she wouldn’t want to live her life without her daughter, and for years, Amelia had continued to believe it. Until one night when two police officers came to her grandparents’ caravan with the news that Bree Donovan was dead, a victim of stupidity, and with it went Amelia’s dream of her mother returning to claim her.

But the one constant in her life had been her grandparents. They’d fought at times, even drove her mad at their attempts to control her, but they did just about anything for her. She never lacked or wanted in her life, and she knew that should she ever call them, they would be there for her, wherever she was, ready to help her with whatever she needed.

A wave of sympathy went through her, knowing how alone Kellie was. How her own mother couldn’t find the time to visit her in the hospital, a victim of rape.

Amelia felt grateful for those she had, but Kellie did have someone who cared

her

and she would do anything for her friend. She was everything to her, the air she breathed, the reason she got up in the morning, the sister she never had and her only friend in the world. She antagonised a lot of people, and Kellie was the only one to stick around after being introduced.

Amelia had always seen their neighbourhood as just another place to live. Moving around in her younger years like a nomad had made her settle in, had her thinking this was as good as it got. Kellie had always been different. She knew there was a better life out there and was determined to be a part of it. Amelia had seen the drug dealers and the prostitutes and thought nothing of it. That everywhere in the world was the same low grade rent, but now she saw it for what it was

human degradation. She knew now of the things that went bump in the night. It had been too late for Kellie.

She couldn’t imagine the pain she felt, what she was going through, but it made her ache to know that her friend was hurting. If only she could take it all away. If only she’d been the one to be attacked and not Kellie.

Could she truly heal mentally, or was her friend doomed to remain fragmented? She itched to hold her, to comfort her the only way she knew how. Amelia wasn’t the easiest person to love and people in pain weren’t usually something she sought out. She had always been unable to tap into that part of her that gave people hope or comfort and she felt out of her league, but her friend needed her, now more than ever. Amelia was determined to give her something

anything.

“But I’m here. So that’s all that matters. I’ll be with you every step of the way.”

Kellie shook her head slightly before wincing. “I don’t want you here.”

Pain, hot and sharp sliced through Amelia at the words. The voice speaking them didn’t sound like the girl she had known for ten years, the tone dead and cool, so unlike Kellie’s exuberant bouncy tenor.

“Kellie, please don’t push me out. You’re everything to me and all I want to do is help you. I couldn’t be there for you last night, to stop him from hurting you, but I’m here now. Let me stay. Please.”

“I don’t feel like reassuring you right now. I’m the one whose life has ended. I don’t care about anyone else. I don’t care how you feel. I only have room for me and I don’t want you to know what he did to me.”

“It doesn’t matter to me. You’re still Kellie, my best friend. No one can take that away from us no matter how hard they try. Concentrate on getting better but know that I’m here. That I’m not about to let anything else happen to you if it’s the last thing I do. I promise you that, Kel.”

“Just go away please. Let me deal with this on my own.”

Amelia stared into Kellie’s watery eyes and saw bleakness. She nodded, telling Kellie silently that she was fulfilling her wish and turned toward the door just as it opened and an older gentleman, dressed in an inexpensive suit, stood just in the entrance.

“Kellie Munroe?” he asked, his smoker’s voice filling the room. “I’m Detective Ed Graham and I’ve been assigned to your case.”

Amelia’s eyebrow rose. Usually people in their neighbourhood avoided the cops like the plague, and she’d not known any that had willingly helped anyone whose address was in Coleani’s territory.

“I didn’t realise a girl like me would rank high enough to warrant a detective,” she told the cop acidly. Kellie’s sharp tongue hadn’t diminished in the last few hours.

He moved into the room, closing the door quietly behind him. He brought out his notebook from his pocket and allowed it to tap against his thigh as he approached the bed.

“I don’t care about your address or where you come from or what you do. I only care about the crime committed and the person left behind. I’m going to do everything in my power to find the man who did this to you,” Detective Graham promised.

Kellie nodded, her hand trembling as she wiped the tears from her cheeks. Amelia had to admit he sounded sincere, like he meant every word. Time would only tell if he was a man of his word
,
and God only knew how few of those there were.

She refused to budge when he asked her to leave. He scowled before relenting, probably deciding it wasn’t worth arguing the case or maybe sensing it might be best to keep her in the room. Kellie wasn’t exactly stable and could crumble if left alone with an unknown man. She watched as Detective Graham surveyed Kellie on the bed. His gaze analysed her bandaged head and the few bruises that showed above her blanket. He raised his notepad and pen in preparation to write.

“Can you tell me what happened?” he asked.

“Haven’t you people already taken enough from me? My clothes, swabs, photos. I’ve been poked and prodded and now all I want to do is forget this ever happened.” A tear spilled over onto Kellie’s cheek, rolling down to be absorbed by the white pillow under her head. Her hands shook slightly as she swallowed convulsively.

“I know this is hard for you, Miss Munroe, but the best bet I have in finding the scum that did this to you is with your cooperation. I need you to tell me everything.”

Kellie turned her head away, her entire body shaking beneath the blanket.

Amelia frowned and stepped forward, closer to her friend. “Must you do this now?” Amelia asked Detective Graham.

Kellie could only take so much, and Amelia was concerned with her state of mind.

“It would be easier to get the questions over with now, while the unfortunate event is still fresh in her mind.” He turned back to Kellie. “I wish I wasn’t the one to say this, Miss Munroe, but I don’t believe you will ever fully forget what happened last night.”

Amelia itched to lay her hand on Kellie’s, but she sensed it would be of no help at the moment and would only hurt the situation. She crossed her arms over her chest to keep herself from temptation as Detective Graham continued.

“There is nothing to be ashamed or feel humiliated about, Miss Munroe. You are not to blame for anything.”

Kellie turned her head slowly, her eyes red and weeping. “You’ve never been raped have you, Detective?” she asked as her chin wobbled. “Never had someone claim your body without your permission. Never had someone you’d never met before put his disgusting hands all over you, to rip and tear your clothes while he took away the only thing you had control over in life.”

Kellie exhaled, shaking, as her hands linked together so tightly her skin paled. “Yes, I feel ashamed. Ashamed that I couldn’t stop him, prevent him from hurting me. To save myself and fight back. Humiliated that he could so easily take from me what he wanted without so much as a proper fight, that he used my body, desecrating it, making me feel dirty, like a whore. Yes, I know, it wasn’t my fault. But I should’ve known better. After all, it was Coleani’s neighbourhood, and I knew what might be there, so I should’ve been more cautious.”

Other books

Much Ado About Nothing by Jenny Oldfield
Meet Mr Mulliner by P.G. Wodehouse
Summer by Karen Kingsbury
The Mariner's Gift by Kaylie Newell
Rise of the Female Alpha by Jasmine White
The Dark Light by Julia Bell
Max Brand by The Garden of Eden