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Buried Secrets_A dark Romantic Suspense

Page 25

by Vella Day


  A cold wind sneaked in through his sweater, but he was more worried about the chilly reception he might get than the possibility of catching a cold.

  He gave the door one last try. “Jenna, I know you’re home.” Frustration bit him until concern edged in.

  Where could she be? He walked around back of the house and peeked in her bedroom window. The bed was unmade, and she was nowhere to be seen. Maybe she was in the shower. That thought lightened his step.

  No wonder she couldn’t hear him knocking. Given he’d never returned her house key, he let himself in.

  “Jenna?” A sharp perfume bit his nostrils, and his skin pricked at the unfamiliar scent.

  He placed the flowers in a vase and propped the card and candy in front. Surprised he didn’t hear the water running, he strode to the bathroom. The open was door and the dark interior confused him. She really wasn’t home.

  Oh, crap. Could she be out on a date? On Christmas Eve? He squashed the jealousy that raced to his gut.

  He snapped his fingers. He bet she was at the hospital visiting her dad. Given the University Community Hospital was half hour away, how did she get there? Had a friend driven her, or one of her cop buddies? And why not take the armored car?

  He looked up the number for the hospital, dialed, and asked to be connected with her Dad.

  “She’s not here,” Mr. Holliday said. “Hasn’t been by in two, three days. Tomorrow’s Christmas though. Jenna loves the holidays. There’s no way she won’t be here to visit. I wouldn’t worry about her. She’s probably off pouting somewhere. I’ll tell her to call you when I see her.”

  “Thanks.”

  Sam disconnected. Jenna could be with her dad, refusing to speak with him, but he doubted it. He looked around her house for clues as to where she might have gone. Two glasses sat on the kitchen table, one with red lipstick rimming the edge, which did not belong to Jenna. He wrapped the glass in a cloth to protect the evidence. If nothing else, he could run the fingerprints and learn who she’d last been with, assuming the prints were on record.

  Sam stood at the table, his mind working overtime. Something wasn’t right. The smell, the lipstick, her car. Before he went back to the hotel, he called Tampa Police and asked to speak with Marlon, the man who’d saved Jenna.

  “I’m afraid he didn’t report into work today,” the desk officer replied.

  The hairs at the nape of his neck stood up. “What about,” he couldn’t remember the guy’s name who was working on the cemetery case.

  “Would you like to speak with her captain? I can patch you through to him.”

  Before he could answer, the captain answered. “Dr. Bonita. I was about to call you. I received a call from Jenna a little while ago about finding a skull at one of our detective’s houses. When we arrived, Jenna was gone.”

  “She just left?”

  “Probably not willingly.” His heart nearly stopped. “We found a woman, Kathy Bello, passed out in the front seat of her car. She’d been drugged.”

  He grabbed onto the kitchen counter. “Did she know where Jenna went?”

  “She doesn’t remember exactly, but they’d gone to Giombetti’s house to look at a skull she’d found while in his house.”

  “Why was she in a detective’s house?” This was sounding too crazy.

  “She’s Marlon’s sister. The man who took Jenna captive, the one who Marlon shot, was their younger brother, Enzio.”

  Shit. Marlon wasn’t at the precinct. “Kathy Bello believes Marlon has Jenna?”

  “That’s our first guess, but I find it hard to believe. Marlon’s been with the force for quite some time.”

  “What are you going to do?” Unease took hold of him and his throat tightened, squeezing the air from his lungs. “I put an APB on Marlon’s car, just in case.”

  That didn’t sound encouraging. “Call me if you find out anything.”

  Jenna cracked open an eye and her stomach roiled. Her mouth was dry, and her skull was exploding from a wicked migraine. Bile raced up her throat. Please don’t throw up. She couldn’t sleep in her own vomit. How had this happened? Again? The man who’d taken her the first time was dead.

  Oh shit. Kathy’s confession about Marlon sprang back to life. It had to be him, but she couldn’t reconcile the man who had a crush on her with the man who’d drugged her.

  There had to be some way to get out of here. She forced her mind off the pounding and onto her surroundings. Stars shone through the window directly above her and the air smelled damp and tangy.

  She tried to sit up, but a series of ropes held her down. Crap. She leaned over the edge of the lumpy mattress and waited for her eyes to adjust to the darkness. The shape of an anchor appeared at the end of the rope. Why an anchor? Was she on a ship? Water slapped against the side of a boat. Damn it. That’s why she was so sick. She hated being on the ocean. She needed Dramamine.

  She went over the series of events that led to her capture. She remembered someone grabbing her. Kathy had been in the car. Had he taken her too? His own sister?

  A giant swell nearly tossed her off the bed. Had she not been tied down, she might have dropped to the floor. She squeezed her eyes shut and thought of Sam. The racket inside her head lessened. He’d been gone a lifetime it seemed. Would he call to wish her a Merry Christmas and leave a message? Would her father call out the dogs when she didn’t stop by to see him tomorrow? For all she knew, it was Christmas already. Jenna lifted her wrist an inch, pressed the light button against the rope and read the time. Not yet.

  Wait. TPD was on its way to Marlon’s house. They’d be suspicious when they arrived and she wasn’t there, but would they think to look on a boat? Crap.

  She was thirsty, hungry, and royally pissed. Jenna debated whether she should call out to Marlon for food and chance getting stuck with another needle or keep quiet. She’d either starve to death or die from an overdose. And she really needed to pee. Not to mention getting out of this stale room before her lungs rotted from the mildew.

  Marlon might agree to her few small demands. It wasn’t like she’d jump overboard if she were allowed on deck. The water temperature alone would send her core plummeting. She’d be dead in no time.

  Her only consolation was that if Marlon had wanted her dead, she’d be fish food right now. No. The bastard had some diabolical plan up his sleeve.

  Jenna swallowed to wet her mouth. “Mar-lon?”

  Laughter trickled into her cabin from under the door. A woman’s voice—and it seemed as if they were having a good time. His partner, Andrea, perhaps? Or Kathy? Were those two in cahoots? Jenna didn’t buy it. Kathy wouldn’t work with the man who killed her daughter.

  The door opened and light from the main cabin crawled in. A man bent down and stuck his head in. “What do you want?” He didn’t sound like anyone she knew.

  Jenna had no idea the identity of Mr. Friendly. “Could I have some water? I also have to take a piss real bad.” Cop terms. Man terms. Something he might understand.

  “Just a sec.” He turned around. “Hey, the princess wants you.”

  “If you don’t stop pacing, I’ll never find out where she is.” Carla shook her head as she shot her gaze upward.

  Sam stood still and balled his fists at his side. “Every minute that goes by could spell Jenna’s death.”

  “Like I don’t know that? I didn’t come here to spend Christmas Eve with you, you know. I am trying to locate her.”

  Sam shoved a hand through his hair. “Sorry.” He’d already spent too much time driving over to Marlon Giombetti’s house in Tampa. The police appeared to be working hard at locating Jenna, but they’d only come up with one dead end after another. Carla was Sam’s last hope.

  Her fingers sped across the keyboard. “Here’s something.”

  “What?” Sam leaned over her back.

  “Marlon has property near Clearwater Beach.”

  “Do you think he’d be dumb enough to take Jenna to his own house?”


  “There’s only one way to find out.” She hit print. The map spit out a moment later. “Go.”

  With map in hand, Sam raced to Clearwater in under an hour. Marlon’s place wasn’t hard to find, but no lights were on and Jenna wasn’t anywhere nearby. Defeated, he turned around and headed back to Tampa. Before he reached the Howard Franklin bridge, his cell rang. It was Carla. “You find something?”

  “Yes. I decided to look into the lives of all the periphery people. Deidra, Marlon, Kathy Bello, Enzio—”

  His fingers turned white from holding the phone so tightly. “Just tell me.”

  “Did you know that Deidra’s sister, Shelby, was a practicing surgeon until about five years ago?”

  Sam let the information sink in. “Oh shit.”

  “What?”

  “Remember I told you Eric and I had this little disagreement about Creighton Jackson and Rodrico Evans, the man the cops found at Ballast Point? About whether the same person had killed them?”

  “Yes. That’s why I’m calling. You said the two men had the same cut marks.”

  “Not exactly the same, but close. I contended two different people had cut them up. Rodrico’s murderer wasn’t as precise as Creighton’s. Eric claimed maybe the guy was rushed since he left before he cut off the man’s second hand.” The car behind him honked, before speeding around him. Sam checked his speedometer and then accelerated.

  “Whatever. I think Marlon might have killed his stepfather, but he had Shelby hack him up.”

  “You think she’s involved because Marlon’s stepfather dated Shelby’s sister? Jenna told me Deidra’s sister just had a baby. I’m not buying it.”

  “Okay, how about this?” Carla said. “Enzio Giombetti, the brother, served in Iraq as, get this, a medic. Maybe Shelby killed Creighton, and Enzio killed Rodrico.”

  Sam rolled down the window to let in the cool air to help him think better. “That’s a reach, but if it’s true, Phil might give you a metal. How does that help me find Jenna though?”

  “Just hold your horses. I hacked into Shelby’s records, as well as a few other people’s accounts. Shelby withdrew fifty thousand dollars from her account two days ago.”

  Sam whistled. “Any idea what for?” Carla had a knack for learning all sorts of goodies from neighbors.

  “I’m thinking it has to be get-away money.”

  “Let me get this straight. You think new mother Shelby is involved with Marlon and helped him cut up his stepdad, and that she’s willing to leave without the kids? Marlon Giombetti might have been a killer, but children need their mother.”

  “It all fits. I bet she plans on coming back after the investigation settles down and picking them up.”

  “In the meantime, they’ll spend Christmas alone if she did run off. And what about Shelby’s husband? Is he involved too?”

  “I’m not sure, but that’s not why I’m calling.”

  He exited the bridge on the Tampa side. “Time is running out. Tell me.”

  “I checked her tax records or rather my FBI friend did. Shelby had a large sales tax deduction last year. Guess what it was for.”

  “Carla!” He gnashed his teeth together.

  28

  “A boat?” Phil shouted over the phone. “Where?”

  A strong salty wind whipped Sam’s hair, and he brushed it out of his way. “Shelby keeps it at a local marina off of Davis Island, no less.” Carla had given him all the information on Shelby’s new purchase, including its location. “I’m here at the marina now, but the boat’s gone. According to one of the workers, the boat’s named, The Gambler. The guy said he saw two women and two men board a while ago. From his description, the second woman might have been Jenna.”

  “Did he say if one of the women was being held hostage or anything?”

  “He said the woman with Shelby looked drunk.” Sam’s jaw tightened. Jenna might drink a beer, but not more than one. Drinking gave her a headache.

  “Probably drugged is more like it.”

  Sam steeled his mind against the horrors Jenna might be going through. “He actually chatted with Shelby because she took on a lot of supplies. He was curious where she might be headed, especially with a sick woman on board.”

  “Did she tell him?”

  “Mexico.”

  “Damn it to hell.” From the loud bang that came over the receiver, Phil must have slammed his fist on something. “Let’s hope to God Marlon doesn’t plan on dumping Jenna’s body in the middle of the Gulf.”

  The moment Phil put the terrifying thought into words, panic gripped Sam. “Don’t even think that.” Drawing on his special forces training, his rapid pulse slowed.

  “You’re Mr. Navy Seal. This rescue mission should be right up your alley. What do you suggest?”

  “You’re asking me? You’re the cop.” Or ex-cop.

  “You have the training for a sea rescue.”

  “I only half completed the course, so I’m no Navy Seal, but I did train long enough to know how to deal with this kind of situation.” His mind raced through the options, discarding most as too dangerous for Jenna. His logical mind latched onto an idea. “Get me near the boat and I’ll take it from there.”

  “How near do you need to be?” Sam appreciated the vote of confidence.

  “Drop me off about a half mile away. It’s dark. Marlon, or whoever is involved, probably won’t think a boat that far off is a threat. Just don’t have the name Coast Guard blazoned on the side of whatever you find.”

  “You want to swim in?” Phil sounded incredulous.

  “With a tank, it’ll be easy. I don’t want anything motorized as sound travels.” He listed a few extras he’d like to have.

  “I’ll see what I can do. It’ll be Christmas morning in a few hours. This might be tough to get everything set up in time.”

  “Jenna needs our help. Besides, you’re Phil, the superhero, remember?” At least that’s what Gina always called him.

  “I’m hardly superhero material, but I’ll find something. Don’t worry.”

  The stench of dead fish hit him, and Sam turned his back to the wind. “If you can’t get the scuba gear, I’ll swim.”

  “Got it. I’ll call Lucas and get back with you.”

  It was times like these he wished he smoked or drank to take the edge off. The waiting and uncertainty might kill him before he was able to hold Jenna in his arms to tell her how foolish he’d been and how much he missed her laughter. “Hurry.”

  Chills racked Jenna’s body. The big man who’d come in to check on her had been nice enough to let her use the head. Most likely, her captor was worried about having to clean up any messes if he hadn’t let her go. The man stood outside the door until she was done, claiming he wanted to make sure she wasn’t injured with all the rocking. Right. As if she even had the strength to climb out the porthole above the toilet, or head, or whatever the hell it was called.

  Her host even provided her with something to eat and drink. While Jenna wasn’t sure what caused her abdominal pain and fever a half hour after eating, she suspected her captor might have put something in the food. She’d run the gamut of being so hot she could barely breathe, to feeling like someone had doused her veins with ice water. She didn’t remember the man giving her any more needles, but hallucinations had a way of changing reality.

  Unless she’d caught some horrible disease whose symptoms mimicked the black plague, the jerk had to be responsible for her disturbing condition. Only what would he get out of it? Was his game to make Jenna as miserable as possible? Weren’t the ropes enough?

  If her captors wanted to do away with her, why wait? Or were they hoping she’d die from this disease and an autopsy would exonerate them? Her mind couldn’t focus long enough to come up with a plausible answer.

  The door opened to Jenna’s small cabin—a cabin where the room was ninety percent bed. “How are you feeling, Jenna?”

  That voice. She knew it. “Shelby? What you are doing here?”
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br />   “Didn’t Marlon tell you?”

  Marlon was here? Shit. So Kathy was right. Her brother had lost his mind. “Tell me what?”

  “That he and I are seeing each other.”

  Okay, none of this was making sense. “I thought you just had a baby.”

  “I did. She’s Marlon’s.”

  “But you’re married.”

  She chuckled, but there was no joy in her tone. “You’re more naïve than I imagined.” Jenna choked on her saliva and Shelby rushed over. “You okay? Are you coming down with a cold?”

  “Cold, hell, you drugged me.”

  “It wasn’t my idea to bring you here.”

  How stupid did Shelby think she was? “So Marlon is behind all of this?”

  “For the most part.” She waved a hand. “But we need to get you some help. Let’s call your boyfriend.”

  Her mind fogged. “Sam? Why would you call him?” Jenna wasn’t going to mention they’d broken up.

  “Who else would come out in the middle of the Gulf to save you? The manifold, or something to do with the engine, broke, and we’re stuck here indefinitely. I don’t want my poor kids to spend Christmas alone, and I’m sure you want to get off this boat for more than one reason.”

  Shelby was making no sense. “Call the Coast Guard. They’ll save us.”

  “On Christmas?” She waved a hand. “Let’s call Sam. What’s his number?”

  As if Shelby didn’t know. Jenna’s mind wouldn’t allow her to think through her options. More chills wracked her body, and an intense abdominal pain took her breath away. She needed to hear Sam’s voice. “You don’t have to wake him. Wait until tomorrow morning.”

  “You need help now.”

  Was Shelby for real? Jenna would do anything to have Sam by her side. “It’s 813-555-9837.” Jenna’s breaths turned shallower as fear pushed her heart faster. What was happening to her?

 

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