Blake Pierce - The Making of Riley Paige - 4 - Taking

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Blake Pierce - The Making of Riley Paige - 4 - Taking Page 20

by Blake Pierce


  She gulped and thought …

  Something’s wrong here.

  As she hesitated again, Pete said with a smile …

  “It’s getting colder out here. Are you coming in or aren’t you?”

  Sally felt a little embarrassed at her own reluctance. Sure, she could turn

  down his invitation, but …

  What kind of a free spirit would do that?

  As she followed him the last few steps to his fancy motor home, she

  figured she knew at least one thing for sure …

  This is going to be another adventure.

  CHAPTER TWENTY EIGHT

  Riley’s teeth were clenched as she drove down through the mountains,

  away from the Thorpe Overlook and Crayfish Creek Campground. She was

  furious with herself.

  “Stupid,” she growled under her breath. “I was so stupid.”

  Crivaro chuckled from the passenger seat. “What are you complaining

  about? We caught a bad guy, didn’t we? And it was your doing.”

  It was all Riley could do not to explode with anger.

  She replied, “We caught some ordinary dork, Agent Crivaro—a stupid,

  harmless guy who happened to have a stash of pot that he didn’t know how to

  get rid of.”

  Out of the corner of her eye, she could see Crivaro’s shrug.

  “Well, the last I heard, pot’s illegal,” Crivaro said. “Especially smuggling

  and selling it. Although I hear tell that might change one of these days, at

  least in some places. Meanwhile, you successfully tracked down a bona fide

  lawbreaker, and that’s something, isn’t it? Maybe you should reconsider this

  whole BAU thing. Maybe you’ve got a career in the DEA.”

  Crivaro chuckled some more at this remark.

  “You think this whole thing is funny, don’t you?” Riley grumbled.

  Crivaro sighed and said, “Kid, in our line of work, you’ve got to laugh

  once in a while, even when things don’t seem very funny. Maybe especially

  at times like this. The job will kill you if you don’t keep your sense of humor.

  That’s one thing they didn’t teach you at the Academy, I guess. Too bad. It’s

  time you learned.”

  Riley noticed that Crivaro wasn’t laughing anymore. His voice sounded

  tired and discouraged. She knew he’d just been trying to find something to

  make light of, now that things were going so badly.

  And it’s all my fault, she thought.

  “I’m sorry,” she told him. “I had a hunch, and I insisted that we follow it,

  and—”

  Crivaro interrupted, “Hey, don’t beat yourself up about it. A hunch is a

  hunch. It’s not rocket science, and it’s not brain surgery either. Hunches are

  wrong a good percentage of the time. Mine are and yours will be too.”

  Riley drove in silence for a moment. Then she said, “The killer’s still out

  there.”

  “I know,” Crivaro replied.

  “He might be getting ready to kill somebody else right now. Or he might

  have already done it.”

  “I know that too,” Crivaro said.

  “So what do we do now?” Riley said.

  “That’s a good question. I was hoping you could tell me. I was all for

  staying right there at Crayfish Creek until we could think of some new

  strategy. Maybe get a good night’s sleep there first, because I think we could

  really use it. It was your idea to head right out driving God knows where.”

  Riley shook her head and thought …

  “God knows where” is right.

  She’d insisted on leaving as soon as the campground’s security people had

  George Carver safely in custody and the police were on their way. The

  evidence against the man was obvious, and the security guys had seemed

  happy enough to take credit for the arrest.

  She and Crivaro could write or phone in additional statements if anybody

  needed them.

  Riley had felt as though she couldn’t stand another minute in that place

  where she’d made such a stupid mistake.

  But now that they were on the road again, she had no idea where they

  were going.

  At least it was a bit of a relief to be descending out of the mountains.

  She’d found it rather nerve-wracking to drive this Class C behemoth through

  snow on the road at those higher altitudes. Their RV wasn’t equipped for that

  kind of travel, and she knew they were lucky to have made their way out

  without getting stuck. By the time they got back to the main highway, the

  roads were clear. Any snow that had fallen here had melted off promptly.

  Rather than retrace their route back toward Arizona, Riley turned right on

  the highway. Then she said to Crivaro, “Get the map out of the glove

  compartment.”

  “Why?” Crivaro asked.

  “Just do it, OK?” Riley said. “Give me some idea of where we might be

  headed. Because I sure as hell don’t have any idea.”

  Crivaro let out a soft groan. He clicked open the glove compartment and

  took out the map, which rattled as he unfolded it. He peered closely at it with

  a little penlight and said in a mildly sarcastic tone …

  “Well, if we keep heading west like this, we’ll wind up in beautiful Zion

  National Park. Or we can turn north and wind up in the equally beautiful

  Dixie National Forest. The thing I want to know is, why would anybody want to go camping in any of these places at this time of year?”

  Riley grumbled, “Campgrounds for RVs, Agent Crivaro. Or even better,

  motor home resorts. We’re looking for a place to stay for what’s left of this

  night.”

  “Well, we could drive right back to Crayfish Creek and—”

  “That’s not going to happen,” Riley snapped at him. “Find somewhere that

  we can rest and regroup.”

  Riley was startled by the sharpness in her own voice.

  Who do I think I am, giving him orders like that?

  She wasn’t sure why Crivaro didn’t snap her head off in reply, except that

  he seemed too tired and listless to bother.

  As he rustled the map some more, Crivaro said, “Well, we’ve got a lot of

  choices in this part of the country. There’s the Water Sedge Campground,

  Kehoe Gulch Resort, Indiangrass Campground, and the Delphi RV Resort—”

  “The what?” Riley interrupted.

  “The Delphi RV Resort. Have you heard of it?”

  Yes, I have, Riley thought.

  It took her a moment to remember just when or where, but then it came to

  her. Back at the Spring View Campground, the women she’d talked with had

  spoken of Delphi in the most glowing way …

  “… a very blessed place …”

  Riley also remembered what the women had said about the people who

  went there …

  “… the very best people …”

  “… evolved people …”

  “… people with the highest self-esteem …”

  “… people who know their true self-worth.”

  Riley heard Crivaro say, “Well, that sounds nice.”

  Riley blushed to realize she’d said at least some of those words aloud.

  I guess I’m pretty tired too, she thought.

  Crivaro added, “Sounds pretty ritzy, though. I’m not sure we should be

  living too high on the hog at the Bureau’s expense. Maybe we should go with

  one of the cheaper places.”

  Riley didn
’t reply. Instead, her own words were rattling in her head now—

  things she’d said when she’d been trying to profile the killer. Aside from the

  obvious fact that he was well off financially, she remembered describing him

  with words like …

  … arrogant … superior … entitled …

  She also flashed back to something Crivaro just said …

  “Why would anybody want to go camping in any of these places at this time of year?”

  Then she remembered something else one of the women had said.

  “Nobody who is anybody would ever miss out on going to Delphi.”

  Riley felt a sharp jolt of intuition.

  He definitely considers himself to be somebody, she thought.

  Somebody very special.

  Somebody with lots of self-esteem.

  Somebody very … evolved.

  She said to Crivaro, “Tell me how to get there. To Delphi.”

  “Huh?” Crivaro said.

  “Give me directions,” Riley said.

  Crivaro checked the map again. “You’re headed in the right direction,” he

  said. “It’s just off this highway, on the right. Should be about an hour.”

  Folding up the map, Crivaro asked, “Would you mind telling why you

  want to do this?”

  Riley tried to think of how to explain her gut feeling. But before she could

  say a word, Crivaro said …

  “You know what? Skip it. I’ll take your word for it. I’ll leave the whole

  thing in your capable hands.”

  Riley was startled to see that he was unsnapping his shoulder harness.

  What’s he going to do? she wondered.

  Was he going to tell her to pull off the highway and let him out? Was he

  so discouraged that he was giving up on the case—and on her as well? Was

  he just going to disappear into the night?

  Instead, he awkwardly began to climb between the two seats back into the

  living section of the RV.

  “Where are you going?” Riley asked.

  “To get some sleep,” Crivaro said. “I’m bone tired. Right now I’m no use

  to you or anybody else.”

  He disappeared into the darkness behind her.

  Riley felt shaken.

  He sounds so discouraged, she thought.

  Now that she thought about it, he’d been sounding that way a lot lately.

  Actually, he’d seemed depressed much of the time since they’d flown out to

  Arizona.

  Now Riley felt a pang of guilt. All this time, she’d been thinking about

  herself—whether Crivaro was angry with her, whether he even wanted her to

  be his partner. It really hadn’t occurred to her …

  Something is really bothering him.

  Probably something that had little or nothing to do with her.

  She wished she could ask him about it, but she figured he was already

  lying down and dozing off by now. And besides, he hadn’t seemed to be in

  the mood to talk about anything.

  Maybe later, she thought.

  Meanwhile, she’d made a decision for both of them, and Crivaro seemed

  to be resigned to accepting it.

  They were going to the Delphi RV Resort.

  This time I’d better be right, she thought.

  CHAPTER TWENTY NINE

  The man was pleased as the woman named Sally accompanied him the last

  few steps toward his RV. In glow of streetlamps that illuminated the swirling

  snow, he was again struck by her healthy, vigorous appearance.

  That’s not going to last, he told himself.

  Very soon, she’d be looking pale and weak, just like the others.

  She’d seemed startled to see him just now when they met on the outdoor

  path.

  I caught her off guard, he realized.

  Of course, that had been part of his design. When she’d sat alone in the

  clubhouse sipping her drink, he’d been standing outdoors in the shadows for

  a while. Although he’d told her he’d meet her in that clubhouse, he’d never

  had any such intention.

  Watching through the window, he’d observed her body language. He’d

  seen how she’d fingered the rim of her glass in boredom … how she’d

  slouched in her chair as it had seemed to occur to her little by little that she was going to be alone here at the Delphi Campground after all. When he felt

  sure she’d been about to decide that he wasn’t going to show up, he’d

  returned to his motor home to wait for her.

  He’d parked where he could watch the walkways she’d be taking on the

  way back to her own RV. So when she’d given up waiting and started

  walking back to her trailer, it had been easy to abruptly appear in front of her on the path.

  A masterstroke.

  He was proud at how disarmed she’d been, and it gave him a feeling of

  power. And power, after all, was what all these special events were about. He

  was taking back power over his own life after years of feeling fearful and

  helpless deep down inside, in a part of his psyche where nobody else could

  see his pain.

  He knew this last murder would complete the process once and for all.

  He felt absolutely sure of it.

  He heard Sally gasp as she stepped up through the doorway into his motor

  home. He smiled at her obvious astonishment as he walked in behind her.

  The interior of his elegant camper was lit entirely by candlelight. This was partly out of necessity and partly out of cunning. He hadn’t hooked up his RV

  to any of the campground facilities, including electricity, and he didn’t want

  to use up his battery. He needed to be able to pull out of here in a hurry in

  order to carry out his plan.

  But he also found the effect of the candles stunning, rather romantic, and

  even a bit Gothic.

  He only hoped it wasn’t too much for her. He didn’t want to spook her

  into trying to leave. Not that he had any intention of letting her get out of the RV alive. But he wanted this killing to be different from the others, much less abrupt.

  This time he actually wanted to spend some time with his victim, savor the

  experience, get to know her better than he already did.

  And he’d made all the necessary preparations.

  The dining table was set with two crystal glasses and an open bottle of red

  wine, plus a tray with cheese, crackers, and other snacks. His crowning touch,

  he thought, was the serrated knife for slicing the cheese. It was the same

  knife he’d used to kill three other women.

  And he was certainly going to use it to kill Sally.

  “Please,” he said to her. “Make yourself comfortable.”

  Sally didn’t look especially comfortable. Her mouth hung open a little,

  and her eyes were wide with amazement. Nevertheless, she sat down at the

  table.

  The man sat across from her, watching her closely.

  She stared at the candlelit wine and snacks and stammered …

  “Pete, I—I don’t know about this.”

  The mention of his made-up name took him slightly aback and her words

  worried him a little.

  With the most charming smile he could muster, he said, “I’m sorry. I

  didn’t mean to overwhelm you. I just wanted our evening to be … special.”

  Sally laughed nervously and said, “Oh, it’s special, all right. It’s just …

  not what I’d expected.”

  He chuckled and said, “I’m told that I have that effect on people. I hope

  this is
all right.”

  He waited to hear her say it was all right.

  But she didn’t say anything at all.

  Instead, she visibly shivered.

  Is she cold? he wondered.

  That couldn’t be it. His propane heater kept the motor home quite warm. If

  anything, the man was afraid it might get too hot and stuffy.

  Careful not to show his insecurity, the man poured wine into the two

  glasses.

  Then he lifted his glass and said, “Here’s to new acquaintances.”

  The woman smiled a little and raised her glass and clicked it against his.

  They both sipped the wine.

  Still sounding nervous, Sally said, “The last time we talked, I … I went on

  and on about myself. I don’t feel like I know anything at all about you.”

  She sounded worried about that.

  He reached his hand over the table, hoping she’d offer him her own hand.

  She didn’t.

  With a soft, reassuring chuckle, he said, “Oh, I’ll be glad to tell you

  everything. Once I get started, you’ll hear much more about me than you

  could possibly want to hear. But first I want to hear much, much more about

  you.”

  Her eyes darted about for a moment.

  Then she sat staring at her own glass of wine with a troubled expression.

  The candle nearest her on the tabletop flickered and almost went out, and

  it was harder to see the woman’s face clearly. The effect upon the man was

  unsettling. He wanted to be able to study that face in detail.

  But now, in the wavering light and shadow, her face seemed changed

  somehow, but also more familiar.

  He gulped hard as he realized …

  Aunt Florence.

  He’d picked this woman out in the first place because of her resemblance

  to his childhood tormentor—the same ruddy skin, the same curly brown hair,

  the same piercing blue eyes. Earlier today, the resemblance had pleased him

  to no end.

  But now, here in the flickering candlelight, the resemblance was too

  uncanny.

  He struggled to remind himself that she wasn’t a ghost or an apparition.

  Even so, he was seized by an irrational spasm of that old childhood terror.

  He could imagine her smiling and saying those dreaded words …

  “Out of sight, out of mind.”

  And if she did, would his strength fail him utterly?

  The razor-sharp knife lay on the tray directly between them.

 

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