Fear No Evil

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Fear No Evil Page 8

by Allison Brennan


  Dillon absorbed the information. “You could have gone for her yourself,” he said. “You didn’t have to wait for me.”

  Jack shrugged. “I promised I’d meet you.” He stared Dillon in the eye. For the first time in many years, Dillon saw a real complexity to Jack. He couldn’t say if it was good or bad, but Jack was a man of his word.

  Without comment, Jack motioned to his team. They’d already circumvented one group of rebels who’d been camping at the base of the mountain. They faced another up ahead.

  Dillon was completely out of his element. Both Patrick and Connor were armed and taking orders from an older brother they barely knew. As cops, they were used to a command structure. Jack’s team of soldiers acted as a unit with a mere hand signal. Dillon had no weapon to protect himself or anyone else. Being physically fit and able to keep up with the others was a small consolation. He was being protected, he sensed it even though Jack didn’t say it.

  The position made him uncomfortable. Dillon was used to being in control of any given situation. People came to him—cops, prosecutors, doctors—for his advice and opinions. He had the respect and admiration of everyone he worked with, his family, and his friends. He was good at his job, his vocation, his ability to crawl into the mind of society’s most sick and depraved and find justice for their victims.

  And until now it had never touched him. Until now he’d believed he was providing a service. After someone had been killed, he helped find the killer by thinking like the killer. Before there was another victim, before the killer struck again.

  He’d never been responsible for finding a victim alive. His analysis largely came from the kill itself, looking at the body scientifically, the life and death of the victim, understanding the victimology, determining through an almost empathetic process—the antithesis of science—what human makeup had done such an evil act. Then peering into the shadows of the victim’s life, narrowing suspects using logic and experience. Forensic psychiatry was as much a social discipline as a scientific one.

  His inadequacies came crashing down. The sheer enormity of what faced them over the next thirty-six hours, that they might not be able to save Lucy, that only through her death might he be capable of finding her murderer.

  “Connor,” he said quietly, “can I have your backup weapon?”

  At first Dillon thought his brother was going to balk. Connor knew Dillon was a novice with fire-arms.

  But he handed it over, butt first. “Safety’s on,” he said.

  Dillon hoped he wouldn’t have to use it. He’d prefer to use words and diplomacy to finesse any tense situation.

  But an arrogant, remorseless killer had Lucy, and if talking couldn’t save her life, a gun just might.

  The dress Lucy wore was identical to the one April Klinger had worn during her final show. It seemed fitting, Trask thought, to have Lucy wear it. They had a lot in common. Not so much the way they looked—April had been petite, curvy, and blond, while Lucy was tall, lithe, and brunette—but Lucy was a dancer, Trask knew that from their months of online conversations. Twelve years of ballet. So was April, until she ran away from home after her grandmother told her she was sending her to drug rehab.

  Trask had liked April, and had used her drug addiction to keep her compliant. He liked April because the girl hated what she did. Her fake rapes were popular because she wasn’t faking most of the time. She was feisty. Still, her drug addiction kept her in line, kept her coming back every week for another live show.

  He remembered when he killed her. As with Monique, he hadn’t planned it exactly, but once his hands were around her neck, he couldn’t stop himself.

  For years, he’d been distributing snuff films through Achilles Distribution. Nervous, because mailing them was dangerous. Still, that was how he learned to hone his sixth sense, to discern what mail drops were monitored by the feds, and whom he could trust. When the Internet bloomed, he created Trask Enterprises. No longer did he need to risk exposure by mailing the films—he could have customers download them.

  But snuff films were dangerous because someone died, and while most of the women he killed were society’s throwaways—prostitutes, drug addicts, runaways—there was always the chance someone would be looking for them.

  With the Internet, the niche market for snuff films was irrelevant. Millions of people would pay him ten dollars a month to watch sex on their computer. He made even more money selling the downloads.

  He’d carefully planned the show. April would play a dance student. Her instructor would call her in for after-class lessons. Denise had always played the lesbian role well. They’d have a little lesbo action, whet the viewers’ appetite, then three men would burst in and rape them both.

  Trask knew it’d be a bestseller.

  But as he watched April dance, he grew hard. In the porn industry, sex was business. It took a very special woman to make Trask feel anything. Unless of course she was chained and fighting him, then he had no problems.

  He let Denise and April go at it, let them titillate the audience, but he stopped the three actors from storming in.

  He walked onstage instead, a mask on, naked.

  One look in April’s eyes and she knew.

  “No.”

  He took her every way he wanted, her fighting egging him on. The act that wasn’t an act. And then she was beneath him. His hands went around her neck. And just like Monique, he knew that only in April’s death would he achieve pure ecstasy.

  The fact that the entire scene was being filmed turned Trask on even more.

  He wished his father could watch. See what he had created. Women would no longer dominate him; he was in control. He would always be in control. He had the power, the money, the brains to have his pleasure and not pay a hypocritical legal system that thought what he did was illegal.

  His father, who had stolen his inheritance, who had humiliated him, who had told him he would be nothing.

  Trask was something. He had more power than his pathetic father had. He had money, three times the wealth of his family—and growing. He was somebody. People feared him.

  Then April was dead.

  Trask watched Lucy dance, the anticipation building. He turned to Roger, who stood next to him. “I want the vote to go my way.”

  “But everyone likes the blood,” Roger whined.

  Trask glared at him, fists clenching and unclenching. “My money, my show.”

  As Kate watched, the girl danced. The filmy white gown shifted and shimmered, revealing her naked body beneath. Lucy was elegant, poised, as if she’d danced her entire life. And maybe she had. If it weren’t for the anger on her face, the terror in her eyes, Kate would have thought Lucy was dancing because she wanted to.

  Kate knew better. Trask had ways of forcing women to comply. And most women did what he demanded in order to save their lives. Not that it helped, in the end.

  Kate stared at the data that had just come in. She didn’t believe it could be that easy to find Lucy. One minute, nothing. The next minute, the coordinates of the feed.

  She searched the Internet for the coordinates to see if she saw anything from satellite photographs. The area was off the coast of Baja California, south of San Diego, where Lucy had been abducted. A string of islands, some with structures, some natural. Kate bit her lip. Was this a trick? Another ambush like two years ago?

  It was too easy. She hadn’t done anything different from when Rayanna had disappeared, but she hadn’t found Rayanna’s location until an hour before she was killed. And the FBI hadn’t arrived for three hours after that.

  Something was off. She should send Quinn Peterson the data, let him make the decision. Because if she was wrong and Lucy was on that island off Baja California, Kate would never forgive herself for not acting to save her.

  But she wanted Trask. And she wasn’t confident that he was on that island.

  Trust your instincts.

  If only she had trusted her instincts before, Evan wouldn’t have died.
She had believed Paige, maybe blindly. Jeff Merritt had told both of them to back off of Trask. Then the next day Paige said Merritt had agreed to their plan and was providing backup. Despite some initial doubts, Kate had believed Paige because she had wanted to. She hadn’t trusted her instincts and Paige had ended up raped and butchered.

  Dammit!

  She didn’t think Trask was there. But she couldn’t ignore the evidence, even after being wrong before. She typed a message to Quinn.

  Either Lucy is here, or Trask has put out another trail of bread crumbs for me—or you—to walk into his trap. I’m sending out all my data and methodology. This one is in your hands.

  K.

  Mick Mallory watched Lucy dance. She was beautiful.

  And she was as good as dead.

  If he could have, he would have slit Trask’s throat in his sleep. The bastard deserved nothing less than death. If he could have, the feds would be all over this island.

  But he had no fucking idea where he was, and no way to contact anyone. Deep cover? Hell, he’d been written off the planet.

  Roger had always been suspicious of him, and Mick didn’t dare attempt anything. He had no phone, he was hired security. Had done one job, proven his worth at the expense of the life of another beautiful innocent girl.

  He’d never be able to live with himself. Even killing Trask wouldn’t remove the stain of sin on Mick’s soul.

  Roger had called him two days ago. Then the bastard had fucking drugged him at the rendezvous point. Brought him to the island to handle patrols.

  Mick had no way of contacting anyone. It was just like the nightmare when Rayanna had died because he had done nothing.

  Lucy would die over his dead body. And maybe, just maybe, his death would mean something.

  But he’d much rather get off the damn island alive. Fuck orders. Saving Lucy Kincaid was more important than arresting Trask, or whatever his name was.

  He’d wait until Trask and Roger were occupied. And that wack-job, Denise. She really creeped him out.

  “Sexy bitch, isn’t she?”

  Roger came up behind him as Mick stared at the monitor.

  “Hm,” Mick grunted.

  “Trask said you can have her next. Thinks you’re ready for the big time.”

  Mick tensed. He’d never thought—

  “What?” Roger said.

  “You’re fucking with me.”

  Roger laughed, slapped him hard on the back. “Trask doesn’t joke around, not with his bitches. You can have her at the twenty-four-hour mark.” Roger leaned forward, whispered. “Or maybe I’m right about you.”

  “I don’t know what the fuck you’re talking about, asshole.”

  Roger laughed again. “Yeah, you probably don’t. Be ready, Mick, or maybe we don’t need you around after all.”

  Roger left the small observation room, closing the door behind him. Roger was in charge of surveillance, monitoring the security cameras that panned the island, the dock, the sky. Mick’s job was to monitor the cameras and alert Roger of a security breach. Now he looked for a landmark. Something, anything to give him a clue where he was. Only the sun told him he was on the West Coast, north of California. Probably off the coast of Washington based on the angle.

  Thank fucking Uncle Sam he’d spent enough years in the military to learn something—like how to make a sextant.

  He also had a 24/7 visual on Lucy Kincaid. He touched the screen. “I don’t want to hurt you, Lucy.”

  But he didn’t see any other way. He’d be dead if he didn’t act the part, and if Mick was dead he couldn’t save Lucy’s life.

  NINE

  KATE HAD RECEIVED a one-word response from Quinn Peterson: Working.

  She hated waiting. Her entire life had become a waiting game. She pushed away from the console and heard something.

  Her gun was in her hand without another thought. She leaped from her chair, moving to the door, putting her back against the wall. The hum of her computers distracted her, the movement of Lucy dancing on the screen drawing her eye. She took a deep breath, focused. Listened.

  Footsteps on the metal stairs.

  Someone was here. It wasn’t Professor Fox. It was the middle of the afternoon and he’d be sleeping. And he wouldn’t come to her room. He always used the intercom to summon her, especially after Kate had almost killed him when he startled her that first time.

  More footsteps. At least three people. Possibly four. Kate closed her eyes. Boots. Army? Hiking? She’d heard that Dominguez’s troops had been hiding out on the mountain after taking out a humanitarian aid convoy last month. The government didn’t take kindly to criminals who stole so blatantly, so Dominguez had a bullet with his name on it, from both his competitors and now the government. It was only a matter of time, not that Kate cared. She could get off the mountain whenever she wanted—by air.

  A knock on her door. If this was the FBI finally coming for her, they wouldn’t have been so polite.

  “Kate Donovan? It’s Dillon Kincaid. I’m here to talk about my sister.”

  Kate stopped in her tracks. The guy who said all those things online? Who, without knowing her at all, had seemed to get inside her head? How could Dillon Kincaid have found her? And how could he get to her in half a day?

  “Kate, please let me in.”

  “Who’s with you?”

  “My brothers.”

  “How many?”

  “Three.”

  “You have three brothers?”

  “Yes.”

  “And you all came up here because you think I can lead you to your sister? Think again. I don’t know where she is. Go home.”

  The doorknob turned. It was locked.

  “Go away,” Kate said. “I’ll send all the information I get to Quinn.”

  But if I think I know where Trask is, I’m going after him myself.

  “I’m not leaving,” he said.

  “Then sit out there all night. It gets cold when the sun goes down, even in June.”

  “I called in favors, traveled hours by plane, jeep, and foot, to find you. I think you know more than you’re saying. I know you can find Lucy. I brought my brother Patrick. He’s a computer expert, like you. He’s the one who isolated your transmission and located you.”

  “Bullshit.” Was the FBI planning her takedown right now? She needed to get the hell out of here. No, dammit! Kate didn’t want to leave. She was so close.

  “We’re here, aren’t we?”

  “You’re jeopardizing everything!”

  “I didn’t tell Agent Peterson where you were. He knows we know, but he didn’t ask, I didn’t tell. Please let us in.”

  She closed her eyes. She didn’t know what to do. She didn’t want help, but she needed it. The Baja island—had she been right? Wrong? Was Trask there, or was it another trap? She didn’t know, couldn’t see the truth anymore.

  She was so damn tired. She missed Evan, she missed Paige. She hated being alone, but she didn’t see any alternative.

  She opened the door, kept her gun leveled at the man on her threshold.

  Two guns were aimed at her head.

  “Kill me and he still dies,” she said, staring into the green eyes of the man she assumed was Dillon Kincaid.

  “Put the guns down,” Dillon said without taking his eyes from hers.

  He was tall. Handsome. In shape, but no bodybuilder. He reminded her of Quinn, GQ good looks; a strong, square jaw; and intelligent eyes. Dillon stared at her, as if he could literally read her thoughts. She quickly appraised his dusty jeans, the dark green T-shirt, and his mussed-up sun-streaked, light-brown hair that, though short, fell in waves across his forehead. But it was the intensity of his eyes, their focus and strength, that took Kate’s breath away.

  “Jack. Connor. Now.” Dillon stepped through the door, toward her gun, no fear on his face. “Kate, please.”

  As soon as he entered, his eyes caught movement on the screen against the far wall. His expression changed, hard
ened. Worry clouded his face.

  Kate lowered her gun, keeping her eye on the men Dillon called Connor and Jack. Brothers? Perhaps. Jack was all military, hard-edged. She knew the type. Connor had the same hard edge without the layer of dissociation. Cop, not military. Yet another man was behind them. Thinner, with fair skin and dark hair. His gun was holstered, and she instantly thought Patrick, the computer expert.

  As soon as Jack and Connor lowered their weapons, she followed Dillon’s eyes to the screen. Her dance over, Lucy was being shackled to a straight-backed chair by two men. She fought them, the freedom of her dance over.

  Dillon walked to the screen. “Which one is Trask?”

  “Neither,” Kate said. “He won’t show himself on camera.” She paused. “I’m the only one who has seen him and lived.”

  Dillon turned to her. “Did you work with a sketch artist?”

  “You don’t understand.”

  “You didn’t tell anyone? What if we can get his picture out?”

  “The man I saw is a chameleon. Of course I gave a description, even while I was on the run from my own government. Do you think I’m so callous that I would let women die in order to protect myself? Because of me they have his fingerprints. Because of me they have a description. Lot of good that did catching him!” Kate turned to the screen, jumping when one of the men slapped Lucy across the face.

  “And because of me my two best friends died.”

  Dillon almost didn’t hear what Kate had said. He tore his eyes away from Lucy on the screen and touched Kate’s arm. All muscle. In her midthirties, her shortish hair was so blond it was nearly white, pulled into a haphazard hair band with loose strands falling out, tucked behind her ears. Her face was devoid of makeup, fresh and clean, worry lines creasing her forehead, her red lips dipping into a frown. This woman had so much pain and sadness in her face, taking the crimes of others as her own personal cross to bear.

  Her computer beeped as Dillon was about to question her. Connor, Patrick, and Jack filed into the room. Jack remained at the door, on alert. Patrick sidled over to the computer system.

 

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