Read Stop Me Online

Authors: Brenda Novak

Stop Me (2 page)

BOOK: Stop Me
11.6Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

business, to get a check, to drop off some paperwork. Occasionally he hired vagrants to organize his warehouse or build a fence or even clean up the yard. In any event, she’d believed their visitor was a nice guy.

Heaven help her, she’d believed he was nice. And she’d let it happen….

“You want I should call an ambulance?” the Mexican man ventured.

Jasmine had to cover her mouth so the screams inside her didn’t escape.

Breathe deeply. Get hold of yourself. After nearly destroying each other with their bitterness and grief, her parents had given up hope. But she’d kept a candle burning deep inside. And now this…

Sheridan returned and nudged her way through the four or five people who were watching to see if Jasmine would rally. “I’ve got her. Everything’s fine,” she told them, and they began to drift off, but not without a backward glance. “Drink this,” she said.

The freshly squeezed lemonade tasted reassuringly normal.

A man seated next to them stood and offered Sheridan his chair. She thanked him and perched on the edge of it.

After a few minutes, Jasmine’s breathing and heart rate slowed. Still, she was damp with sweat and when she tried to talk tears slipped down her cheeks.

“It’s okay.” Putting an arm around her, Sheridan squeezed her shoulders.

“Take all the time you need.”

Jasmine appreciated her friend’s empathy, but now that the shock was wearing off she had so many questions. Who had sent the bracelet? Why after so long?

What’d happened to her sister? And the biggest question of all—was there any chance that Kimberly was still alive?

“I’m so sorry I brought that package with me, that you had to deal with this in a public setting.” Sheridan’s expression revealed her chagrin. “When I saw it sitting on the reception desk with the rest of the mail, I thought it might be something 12

you’ve been waiting for. I knew you weren’t planning on coming into the office today so I was…” she shrugged helplessly “…trying to be helpful.” Jasmine wiped her eyes. “It’s okay. Of course you’d never expect anything like this.”

“Who sent it?”

“I don’t know.” She studied the box. There was no return address. There wasn’t even a note, just some crumpled packaging material—

Jasmine’s pulse spiked. Wait a minute… There was something written on one of the papers that’d been wadded up.

Careful not to tear the note or get her fingerprints all over it, she flattened it out—and saw two words printed in what appeared to be blood: Stop me.

That night, Jasmine hovered over the phone. Should she tell her parents about the bracelet? She couldn’t decide. According to the cancellation stamp, the package had been sent from New Orleans, but she didn’t know if she’d ever be able to glean more information than that. She was reluctant to open old wounds—and yet, her folks had a right to the information, didn’t they? Would they want to know?

She picked up the handset. Her father would. After the bearded man took Kimberly, Peter Stratford had become so single-minded in his quest to find his youngest daughter that he’d eventually lost everything—his business, his wife, his home. He’d searched until he’d nearly driven himself mad. Searched until everyone else in his life, including Jasmine, had become nothing more than shadows. Even then he’d given up only because he had no choice. There was nowhere else to go, nothing more he could do.

Now that Peter had moved on, he was doing better than he had in years.

Would learning about Kimberly’s bracelet send him into another tailspin?

Jasmine set the phone down again. It probably wasn’t wise to take the chance.

And then there was her East Indian mother. Gauri was so full of bitterness and blame, toward Peter and Jasmine, she had difficulty being in the same room with either of them.

The phone rang. Nervous that it might be one of her parents—that she’d be confronted with a situation she hadn’t figured out how to handle—she checked caller ID, then breathed a sigh of relief. It was her friend and coworker, Skye Kellerman.

Actually, Skye Willis since her marriage last year.

Dropping into a seat at the kitchen table, Jasmine rubbed her fingers over her left eyebrow as she answered. “Hello?”

“I just got your message. And several from Sheridan, too.” Skye’s voice came across as brisk, worried. “I’m sorry it took me a few hours to get back to you. David and I were in Tahoe and didn’t have phone reception.”

“It’s fine,” Jasmine said.

“It’s not fine. Are you okay?”

13

Jasmine wasn’t sure. One minute she was filled with rekindled hope, the next terrified that nothing could change the outcome of her sister’s abduction. “I’m okay,” she said, although her mind added a little “not.”

“This is so…unexpected,” Skye exclaimed. “Why now? Why after so many years?”

Jasmine had asked herself the same question. But it hadn’t taken long to come up with the most probable answer. “It must be because of the publicity on the Polinaro case.” Four weeks ago, she’d been on America’s Most Wanted, profiling a sex offender who’d victimized nine boys. When authorities got too close, he fled.

She’d been invited on the show to suggest places he might have gone, things he might be doing.

“Of course,” Skye agreed. “That episode aired right before Thanksgiving.”

“How else would he have known where to find me?” After her mother had remarried and left Cleveland, where Jasmine was born, Jasmine had dropped out of high school and moved away from home, starting a three-year descent into drug abuse and self-destruction. During that time, she’d drifted from one city to another, working odd jobs, even begging in the streets for enough money for one more fix.

She doubted anyone could’ve tracked her movements back then. Her parents certainly hadn’t been aware, much of the time, of where she was or what she was doing. It wasn’t until Harvey Nolasco, a long-distance trucker, picked her up and insisted she get some help that she settled down. And then she’d married a white man, like her mother, and became Jasmine Nolasco for a short while.

“I’m pretty sure they posted our address at the charity,” Skye said.

“They did.” When dealing with the media, Jasmine always mentioned her affiliation with The Last Stand. TLS relied exclusively on donations to keep its doors open. She couldn’t miss the chance to raise public awareness and support, and it’d proved to be a good move. Since the episode had aired, they’d received thousands of dollars—and more requests for help than ever before.

“The package came to the office, right?” Skye clarified.

“Sher found it with the other mail and brought it with her when we met for lunch.”

“Have you had anyone inspect that note?”

“We took it directly to the police.”

“And?”

“They confirmed it was written in b-blood.” She stumbled over the last word because picturing the large square letters on that note sent a chill up her spine.

“Do you think it could be Kimberly’s?” Skye said.

“Even if she’s dead, I suppose it could’ve been frozen.”

“But you’re guessing? You don’t have any psychic perception about this?” 14

“None. I’m too close to it.” Her impressions came and went at random, anyway. Although her abilities had helped in a few heavily publicized cases, sometimes even she didn’t know if she could trust the brief visions that occasionally intruded into normal thought.

“There’s still the potential for profiling, isn’t there?” Jasmine had a GED and barely thirty credit hours of college, all of which she’d obtained in the two years she’d been married to Harvey, but she read just about everything she could find on deviant behavior and psychological profiling and had become so proficient at it that the FBI occasionally called her in as a consultant.

Some people assumed it was her psychic ability that made her so good, but she knew it was primarily an instinctive understanding of human nature and the knowledge she’d gained through self-education that guided her, because she could do it even when she had no discernible psychic response.

“Yes. This is more about the shock.” Half standing in order to reach it, Jasmine pulled the box across the table. The note was on top of the fridge, where it wasn’t likely to get damaged, and the bracelet was in her jewelry box because she couldn’t bear to look at it. “He’s letting me know he’s the one who took Kimberly,” she said, her finger running over the deep grooves created by the ballpoint pen he’d used to address it. “Without the note, the bracelet could conceivably have come from someone peripherally connected to the abduction. Maybe someone who knows the kidnapper and what he did—a friend, relative or wife who wants to do the right thing but doesn’t dare come forward for fear of reprisal. And…” she hesitated, trying to get a feel for the type of person who’d do something like this “…the blood is to upset me, to let me know he’s serious.”

“About what?” Skye asked.

“About stopping him.”

“That makes it sound like he’s playing games.”

“It’s not a game; it’s a challenge. He doesn’t have the guts or the willpower to turn himself in. But he knows he needs to be stopped.” The Last Stand was more deeply imprinted in the cardboard than the other words. As her fingers moved over the letters, the impressions Jasmine had thought weren’t there, or were repressed because of her closeness to the victim, suddenly began to flow. She could see the man with the beard—a face she’d long forgotten and despaired of ever describing accurately enough so police could track him down. Although still partially hidden in shadow, as if he stood beneath the shaded eaves of a house, the image took her breath away. “He’s a killer.”

“You’re sure?”

She could sense the bloodlust. “Positive.”

“Does he feel guilty about that?”

15

Jasmine was tempted to lift her fingers from the words he’d written, to break the gossamer thread of energy that’d sparked the foreign thoughts and feelings swirling through her. It was frightening, uncharted territory for someone who tolerated, rather than embraced, her psychic gifts. But she couldn’t. She knew this might be her only chance to learn something about this man that would give him away. “Not guilt. That would take empathy.” Closing her eyes, she experienced his confusion, his desire to be like everyone else. “It’s not a cry to ease the pain he’s inflicting on others. It’s a cry to stop the pain he’s feeling himself. It’s all about him.

He kills to stop the pain.”

“What does he get out of hurting others?”

“A power high. He craves…” The answers were coming, but they were so dark, so frightening, Jasmine’s mind balked. She pulled her hands away and went blank.

“Attention?” Skye finished.

“That and recognition, for starters.” Jasmine stared at the box. He’d felt closer than he’d been in the sixteen years since he’d stood in her living room, talking to Kimberly. Too close. It made her queasy, but she retraced the individual letters he’d written, forcing her subconscious to go where it refused. For Kimberly.

“So you think there are others?” Skye asked.

The scraggly beard. The bottle-green eyes. The bladelike nose. The baggy, dirty clothes…

“Jasmine?” Skye prompted when she didn’t answer.

It was no use. The vision was gone, leaving her with only the memory of it.

“What?” she said.

“Do you think he’s kidnapped other children?”

Covering her eyes with a shaky hand, Jasmine took a deep breath. “Don’t you?”

“Killers don’t kill everyone they meet. It could be that he’s held Kimberly captive all these years and not taken anyone else. Maybe he wanted a daughter, someone to love him unconditionally, and she filled that need.” Gooseflesh rose on Jasmine’s arms. “It had nothing to do with love.” And he wasn’t satisfied, probably could never be satisfied, or why would he need her or anyone else to stop him?

“He might’ve let her go at some point,” Skye reasoned. “But that doesn’t mean she would’ve come home.”

“Of course it doesn’t. She was eight when she went missing,” Jasmine said.

“Abducted children often begin to feel an attachment to their abductor, to relate and adjust and go on living as if they never had another life.”

“Maybe he kept her with him until she grew up and now she’s out there…

somewhere.”

16

A version of her former self but not the same person, Jasmine nearly added, but she couldn’t say that aloud. If she ever had the good fortune to find her sister, that was something she’d think about when and if the time came.

“Are you going to order a DNA test to see if the blood on that note is similar to yours?” Skye asked.

“Of course. I’ll use the private lab in L.A. that did so well with the evidence in the Wrigley case.” She’d also have a fingerprint specialist search for latent prints.

She doubted they’d get anything from the cardboard box. Too many people had touched it in the process of mailing. And, after three or four days in transit, any prints the sender might’ve left would’ve soaked in too much to be recovered even with chemicals. The tape or the paper itself might give them more….

“Why not let the police handle it via their own lab? You were living in Cleveland when Kimberly was taken. Doesn’t that give them jurisdiction?”

“I don’t want to turn what I have over to them.”

“Why not?”

“Because the detective who was in charge of the initial investigation is still on the force.” Jasmine stood and went to the window, where she gazed out at the parking lot two stories below. Old trucks, economy cars and an occasional SUV sat beneath the heavy floodlights attached to the building. Her condo wasn’t located in one of the more affluent suburbs of Sacramento. She, Skye and Sheridan took only as much from the charity as they needed to survive, which didn’t allow for an expensive home. But it wasn’t one of the worst neighborhoods, either. She felt safe here, or as safe as she could feel, considering that her work involved opposing so many dangerous people.

“How do you know?”

“I checked earlier today.”

“You don’t think he’s capable of handling the investigation?”

“My father almost cost the man his job over that ruined tire track evidence.” Ripping a paper towel from the holder at her elbow, Jasmine dabbed at the perspiration that’d broken out on her forehead. “I don’t think he’ll want to reopen the case.”

BOOK: Stop Me
11.6Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

A Moveable Feast by Lonely Planet
The Young Elites by Marie Lu
The Truth Machine by Geoffrey C. Bunn
Alexander by Kathi S. Barton
Passing Strange by Catherine Aird
Shadow (Defenders MC Book 1) by Amanda Anderson
The Body Snatcher by Patricia Melo