Read Stalked Online

Authors: Brian Freeman

Tags: #Police Procedural, #Duluth (Minn.), #Police, #Stalking, #Mystery & Detective, #Minnesota, #General, #Mystery fiction, #Missing persons, #Large type books, #Police - Minnesota, #Fiction

Stalked (22 page)

BOOK: Stalked
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“A blog?

“Yeah, I guess it was one of those MySpace things, like ‘Lady in Red’ or ‘Dark Lady’ or ‘Lady in Waiting.’ It was lady something.”

“Did you know who the blogger was?”

“Nope. The Viking dude, he said it was probably a woman in her late thirties, but we’ve got lots of women like that here. So he started talking to them one by one.”

“Did he say why he was looking for her?”

“No, he didn’t. After he talked to a couple of the women, people started getting a little freaked-out. You know, like he might be a stalker or something. Security went to him and told him to lay off or they were going to kick him out.”

“Did that stop him?”

Dave shook his head. “Not really. I saw him at intermission, and he was still talking up the women ushers. To tell you the truth, most of them didn’t mind. I mean, he’s a good-looking guy, you know? There was just one woman who got hot and bothered about it.”

“Who was that?”

“Her name’s Helen.”

“Is she here tonight?”

“I haven’t seen her for a while. You’d have to talk to the admin guys about her schedule. The thing is, she couldn’t have been too upset, because when I left the theater that night, I saw her talking to the Viking guy in the park across the street.”

“You saw Helen and Eric together?”

Dave nodded.

“You’re a doll,” Serena said.

Dave blushed again, and Serena retraced her steps to find the security guard hovering near the theater door. She asked him about Helen and discovered that the usher’s full name was Helen Danning, single, late thirties, quiet.

“When is she next scheduled to work?” Serena asked.

The guard shook his head. “She’s not.”

“Why?”

“She quit last week. Called on Thursday and said she was moving out of town. No warning, no explanations, nothing.”

“Did she say where she was going?”

“We don’t even know where to send her last paycheck.”

Serena frowned. “Do you know where she lived?”

“I think she had an apartment in Lowertown. Near the farmer’s market. She told me it was nice to walk across the street on Saturday morning and get fresh tomatoes.”

“And you’re sure it was Thursday she called to give notice?” she asked.

“Yeah, I remember. They needed to find someone to take her place for the weekend shows.”

Serena thanked him again. She checked her watch as she left the theater. It was getting late, and she still had to make the long drive back to Duluth that night. Even so, she needed to make a detour to Lowertown. She didn’t like the chain of events. On Saturday, Eric was seen talking in the park with Helen Danning.

On Wednesday, Eric was murdered.

On Thursday, Helen fled the city.

 

 

 

Chapter 28

 

 

When Katrina Kuli answered the door, Stride remembered that she had covered the bruises on her face with makeup and shrugged off the cut on her neck when he had first met her at the Java Jelly coffee shop. He wished he had put the truth together sooner. She held the door open and waited stiffly while he walked into her apartment.

“I’m glad you called me back,” he said.

Katrina closed the door and locked it. “I’m not filing a police report. I don’t want this to become public.”

She gestured at a yellow futon by the living-room windows, and he sat down. She made sure the blinds were closed and then lowered herself gingerly into an upholstered chair across from him. He saw her wince as she breathed.

“Are you still in a lot of pain?”

She shrugged. “A couple of cracked ribs. They don’t do anything for that these days. Just grin and bear it.”

“What about other injuries?”

“Bumps, cuts, bruises. I’m healing.”

“I just want to make sure you’re being treated.”

“I am.”

“What about a counselor?”

“I’ve got some names,” Katrina said. “I haven’t called anyone yet. I figured I’d be hysterical, you know, but I don’t really feel anything. It’s weird.”

“It happens like that sometimes. I’ve talked to a lot of women who have been through this, Katrina. Some become very emotional, some go numb. It’s normal. Just don’t deal with this alone. Call one of those names, okay?”

“Yeah, okay.”

Katrina was wearing a loose-fitting flannel shirt and gray sweats. Her round face was blank, and her hair lay in clumps on her forehead. Every few seconds, she fingered the cut on her neck tenderly, as if it might have gone away since she last touched it. Her hands trembled, and the barbed wire tattoo quivered.

“When did it happen?” Stride asked.

“Last month.”

“Here?”

She nodded.

“How did he get in?”

“He came up a back stairway.”

“I’d like to have a forensics team go over the apartment for trace evidence.”

“There’s no DNA. I cleaned up.”

“There could still be hair, fingerprints, residue.”

“Look, he wore gloves and a stocking cap. Trust me, he didn’t leave anything behind. I’d just like to move on.”

“Do you have any idea who it was?”

“No, and I don’t want to know.”

Stride leaned forward and balanced his arms on his knees. “Why don’t you want to report this?”

“Are you kidding? If a pretzel stick like Tanjy got raped all over again in the media, imagine what they’d do to a girl like me. I know exactly what kind of jokes people would tell. ‘They’re not sure if they can charge him with rape. Is having sex with a farm animal a crime?’ ”

“No one would say that.”

“Sure they would.”

“Did you tell anyone after it happened?”

She nodded. “I told Sonia at the dress shop.”

“Not Maggie?”

“Especially not Maggie.”

“Why? You said the two of you were friends.”

“She and I haven’t talked in a while,” Katrina said. “Plus, she’s a cop.”

Stride thought about what Tony Wells had said. This perpetrator picks women who are sexually vulnerable. “There’s something else, isn’t there?” he asked.

“What do you mean?”

“I mean, this guy doesn’t choose his victims by accident. He picks women who have something to hide.”

“There are other victims?” Katrina asked.

“Yes, and they learned their lesson from Tanjy, just like you did. Don’t report this if you want to keep your secret.”

Katrina shoved herself out of her chair. She peeked through the blinds into the darkness and then turned back and folded her arms. She studied Stride. “If I tell you, the whole world will know.”

“Not necessarily, but I can’t promise you anything.”

Katrina’s lip bulged out in defiance. “What I do in my private life is my own damn business.”

“I understand.”

“You’re right,” she said finally. “I didn’t report the assault, because there were some things about me that would have come out. Embarrassing things.”

Stride waited.

“I was an alpha girl,” Katrina continued.

“What’s that?”

She hesitated and sat down on the other end of the futon sofa. “I’m not sure I should say anything. If you don’t know what it is, it means you don’t know about the club. I could cause problems for a lot of people.”

“Katrina, you were raped.”

“I know.”

“Tell me what this is about. If it’s something illegal—”

She shook her head. “It’s not illegal. At least, I don’t think it is. Immoral, maybe. I was part of a sex club in town. I was the alpha girl for the night.”

Stride thought about his brief time in Las Vegas, which was a city that made a living on sex. Your basest desires were advertised on taxicab posters and hawked on the sidewalks. The only difference between Las Vegas and anywhere else was that Vegas didn’t hide its lust. The city didn’t invent sin; it imported it. All the people, all the desires, came to the desert from somewhere else. From places like Duluth.

“How did you get involved with this club?”

“Sonia recruited me.”

Stride wasn’t surprised that Sonia Bezac’s name popped up in the middle of this. “She’s a member?”

“She and Delmar started the club. It takes place at their house. There’s a downstairs room she calls the temple.”

“How many people are involved?”

“I’m not sure. There were a dozen or more people there when I was the alpha girl. Maybe seven or eight men and a few women, too.”

“What’s an alpha girl?”

Katrina squirmed on the sofa. “Look, I wasn’t ashamed of it. I did it because I’m a wild chick, and I like to experiment. I’m not hung up about sex. But it’s different when you have to start telling people about it.”

“I’m not judging you.”

“Yeah, well, we’ll see about that. There’s a different alpha girl each time. We’re basically there to have sex with anyone who wants us. Sometimes it’s men who like to do it in front of other people. Sometimes it’s wives whose husbands like to see them with other women. Sometimes it’s the husband and wife together at the same time. There are also couples who simply like to see public sex and make out or masturbate while they watch us.”

“That all sounds like an invitation to STDs.”

“Condoms are the rule. Nobody goes bareback. Even the husbands and wives who have sex with each other have to use condoms while they’re there.”

“I’m having trouble understanding why you would want to do this to yourself,” he said, choosing his words carefully.

“But you’re not judging me, right? Ha. Hey, we’re swingers, so what. I told you that most people wouldn’t get it. That’s why it’s a secret. That’s why I don’t advertise it, and neither does anyone else.”

“It feels dehumanizing to me, not erotic.”

“Well, that’s you. Me, I loved it. I was never more turned on in my life than I was that night. You have no idea how a big girl like me struggles with body image. But that night, every man wanted me. A bunch of women, too. I’ve never felt more desirable.”

Stride wanted to get the facts and get out. “When was this?”

“Last month. December.”

“How often does the club meet?”

“I’m not sure. Once a month, maybe.”

“Do you think the rapist knew about the club?”

“Hell, he came after me the day after the party. It’s not like that could be a coincidence, right?”

“Could it have been someone who was at the sex party with you?”

“I don’t know. Maybe. I doubt it.”

“Who else was there?”

“I don’t know.”

“You mean you didn’t recognize them?”

“I mean, everyone wears masks. It’s part of the game. The anonymity.”

“So when you go, you don’t know who else is going to be there?”

“No. Other than Sonia and Delmar, of course.” She twitched and pressed her lips together. Her eyes darted to the floor.

“What is it?”

“I did know someone else who was there,” she admitted.

“Who?”

“Maggie’s husband. Eric. He was easy to spot. Him and his long blond hair.”

Stride thought about Maggie.
Do you think I don’t have secrets
?

“Did Maggie know about Eric and the club?” he asked, but he already knew what Katrina was going to say.

“Oh, yeah. She knew.”

“You’re sure?”

“We talked about it before I did it.”

Stride shook his head. He couldn’t believe any of this.

“What did she tell you?”

“She said I should do whatever I wanted, but we haven’t talked since then. I called her after Eric was killed, but she never called me back. I guess I don’t blame her.”

“Are you telling me that Maggie was
in
the club?” Stride asked, and he could taste horror like sour wine in his mouth.

“Fasten your seat belt, Lieutenant. Maggie was the alpha girl the month before me.”

 

 

 

Chapter 29

 

 

Serena hated driving through the winter nights in Minnesota.

It was nearly eleven o’clock, and the northern highway was a long stretch of nothingness. She was an hour from Duluth, in the empty stretch where miles went by between towns. On either side of the road, the evergreens pressed in like dark towers, and the wilderness behind them was a black mass. She was afraid of deer springing out from the woods. There were carcasses on the shoulder every few miles, and when her headlights lit up the median, she could see hoof tracks cutting through the snow. The beasts were out there, tracking her.

She found a country radio station, but the signal came and went. She heard bits and pieces of songs by Miranda Lambert, Alan Jackson, and LeAnn Rimes, and she found herself singing along, making her feel less alone in the car. Country music was one of the things that she and Jonny had in common. You either got it or you didn’t. Most people groaned when they heard her playing Terri Clark on the stereo, or when she told them about driving six hours to go to a Sara Evans concert in Des Moines. She didn’t bother explaining. If you didn’t get tears in your eyes listening to “No Place That Far,” you wouldn’t understand.

Her cell phone rang on the seat next to her.

“Oh, man, what are you listening to this time?” Maggie asked.

Serena laughed and switched off the radio. Maggie was like Tony Wells, a fan of hard rock and heavy metal.

“That’s Garth, you heathen. Say one word against him, and I’ll be forced to shave your head.”

“Jeez, one innocent remark, and you country music fans go all shotguns and hound dogs on me.” She added, “Where are you?”

“I’m heading north on Thirty-five. I’m just about to Finlayson.”

“Watch out for deer.”

“I’m trying to.”

“Have you talked to Stride?”

“Not tonight. I tried earlier, but I got his voice mail.”

“He wants the three of us to get together tomorrow,” Maggie told her. “He thinks he knows how some of the pieces connect.”

“Do you know what he’s got?”

Maggie’s voice was flat. “Yeah, I did something stupid. I should have told him about it myself. I didn’t think there was any connection to what happened to me, but I guess I was kidding myself.”

Serena let the silent air drag on, waiting for Maggie to continue. She didn’t. “You want to tell me about it?”

“I’ll let him do it. I feel like enough of an idiot already.”

BOOK: Stalked
11.64Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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