“You got a tree,” she said, appearing surprised as she entered. She dropped her purse and keys onto the foyer table. Shrugging out of her coat, she came into the living room to survey the large Douglas fir.
“Since you’re having my family here on Saturday, I thought you should have one. Manny helped me cut it down. We hauled it here in the truck.”
When she gave him a worried look, he added, “I needed the exercise, Caitlyn. And I got the go-ahead from the doctor three days ago.”
“You’re right,” she admitted. “I’m being overprotective.”
In more ways than one. Reid wondered again why she hadn’t taken him with her to Springdale Penitentiary.
Caitlyn walked to where he stood. She touched his chest in an affectionate gesture, causing some of his upset to evaporate. Reid was intensely fortunate, he knew. The second tumor he had been diagnosed with was benign, and in a location treatable this time through stereotactic radiosurgery, also known as gamma knife radiation therapy. Compared to the vastly more invasive brain surgery he’d undergone the first time, the procedure had been minimal. He hadn’t even needed to shave his head. Reid was scheduled to officially return to work following the Christmas holiday, which was just a little over a week away. He’d been staying at the farmhouse at Caitlyn’s invitation as he recuperated. It had given them a chance to get to know one another better, as well.
“I haven’t actually had a tree yet—in the house, I mean. My first Christmas here, I just couldn’t work up the holiday spirit.” Her green eyes were soft as she gazed at him. “But this year, I feel like I have something to celebrate.”
“We have something to celebrate.” Reid bent his head and brushed his lips over hers. “How did the Christmas shopping go?”
“Fine,” she said, sounding artificially upbeat. She stepped away to retrieve the coat she’d laid on the couch and went to hang it in the closet.
“Where are the presents?”
“In the trunk.”
“I’ll get them for you.”
“No.” Caitlyn halted him. “There’re some gifts for you in there. I don’t want you to see them—”
“I’ll just bring the bags in,” he offered, pressing the issue. “I’m a big boy. I won’t peek, I promise.”
“Really, let’s just leave them there until morning.”
Reid crossed his arms over his chest, deciding to end their charade. He gave her an evaluating gaze. “I can tell when you’re lying, Caitlyn. Your cheeks get all pink. And I already know you haven’t been anywhere near a shopping mall today.”
Her blush deepened. Reid realized what he felt wasn’t anger but concern. “Morehouse called me. He told me you went to see Joshua.”
“I had to,” she admitted. “He owed me the locations of the other women. I got all four of them.”
“He told me that, too. Excavation teams are going to search for the bodies starting tomorrow if the weather doesn’t interfere. I’m planning to take part. It was my case and I need to be there.”
Caitlyn’s only response was a faint nod. He realized how hard it must have been for her to see Joshua, knowing her brother had blackmailed Mitch into abducting her, and that his intent had been for her to suffer a horrible death at his hands. Although he understood her motive in going to visit him, it was something Reid would never have wanted her to do alone. He thought of the cigarette burns that had left scars on her porcelain skin. They were a painful reminder of the nightmare she would most likely carry with her forever. He tried to console himself with the knowledge that he had managed to stop Mitch before Caitlyn had been raped, tortured further, even killed. But sometimes that knowledge wasn’t enough.
“I wish you would’ve let me come with you,” he said.
“I know. It’s just that I know you’ve been struggling…”
She didn’t have to say about what. The revelation that his partner was behind the copycat killings had been a lot to handle. Alternately, Reid felt hurt, angry and even responsible because he had failed to pick up on Mitch’s illness. And that was what he was calling it. An illness. There was simply no other explanation for his downward spiral.
I wanted to see what it was like, to understand what made him do it. I thought something about it would feel good. It did for a while.
I’m no better than him.
Reid thought often of the suicide note left behind by David Hunter, aware Mitch had coerced him into writing it. He had probably dictated it to him, word for word. Reid believed its contents had come from some still-sane portion of Mitch’s brain, one that felt shame and remorse. In the note, he hadn’t been speaking for Hunter, but himself.
Ultimately, Mitch had committed a form of suicide, even though it was Reid who had pulled the trigger. He looked at Caitlyn and felt his heart tug. Mitch had left him with no other choice.
“Did you get to see your mother today, at least?” he asked.
She absently touched a brown pinecone still attached to one of the tree branches. The entire room had begun to take on a fragrant evergreen scent. “Before I saw Joshua. She wasn’t talking much today.”
Reid heard the tinge of melancholy in her voice. He moved to stand behind her, his hands caressing her shoulders. Caitlyn had lost so much. Family. Friends. Rob Treadwell had been arraigned by the Loudoun County D.A.’s office two weeks earlier on charges relating to the illegal videotaping, and the Treadwells’ home now had a real estate sign on its front lawn. The local gossip was that Sophie had left her husband and moved back to upstate New York where she was from. Caitlyn hadn’t heard from her.
“The woman who called me that night, about Mom,” she recalled, turning to him. “The one pretending to be a nurse so I would come to the hospital? Who do you think she was?”
“Maybe someone Mitch was seeing,” Reid guessed. “He probably told her she was helping with some kind of sting to bring in a suspect.”
“Do you think she could’ve ended up as one of his victims? Someone we don’t even know about yet?”
It was a sobering thought. “I hope not.”
Caitlyn noticed his laptop as it switched to screen saver mode. It sat on the walnut coffee table, nestled between an earthenware mug and a stack of files from the copycat investigation. Reid had been going through them, looking for some sign of Mitch’s unraveling he might have missed.
“You’ve been working today?” she asked.
“Just catching up on some email.” He wanted to tell her, to hopefully make her part of his decision. “SAC Johnston contacted me about writing a paper for the FBI training academy at Quantico. About the Capital Killer investigation, as well as the copycat case and the discovery that a federal agent was behind the murders. He thinks it could be a good psychological study on the pressures of the job and the realities of dealing with violent criminal behavior on a daily basis. If the paper turns out well, there’s a possibility I could teach a course.”
“What do you want to do?”
“Writing the paper might be cathartic. And Mitch…he’s someone we’re going to be studying for a long time.” With a sigh, Reid thought of the famous Nietzsche quote, the one about he who fights monsters taking care not to become a monster himself.
“I just don’t want you to take on too much, too soon—”
Gently, he lifted her chin with his fingers and stared into her eyes. “There’s no need to protect me, Caitlyn. And I’m dealing with Mitch.”
Her slender fingers curled around his wrist. “I know you are. We both are, actually.”
“I really do love you,” he whispered.
He lowered his head to hers, their mouths melding as Caitlyn looped her arms around his neck. He pulled her closer. Reid reveled in the feel of her body against his, and he loved the realization that he had become familiar with every soft curve of her.
“There’s something in the kitchen for you,” he said once his lips had left hers.
She gave him a curious look, then walked from the room.
When he reached the kitchen, he found Caitlyn gazing at the small, rectangular box wrapped in silver holiday paper.
“Is this a Christmas present?” she asked, holding the box as she turned to face him.
“Just an early one.”
With a small release of breath, she sank onto a chair at the kitchen table and tore away the paper. Inside was a small diamond pendant on a delicate, white gold chain.
“It’s beautiful.”
“It’s a thank-you for letting me stay here,” he teased. “Megan helped me pick it out.”
Taking the necklace from the box, she carried it over to Reid and he helped her put it on, securing the clasp at her nape.
He owed her so much. Caitlyn was the reason he’d been willing to submit to whatever treatment was required to make him well again. She was why he had stopped running from the possible harsh reality of it, the fear. He’d been expecting the worst, had been prepared for it, but the gamma knife option was something he hadn’t considered open to him. He prayed this time he would stay healthy. He wanted to live a full life.
She turned to face him, the small diamond glimmering in the shallow hollow of her throat.
“Having you here is gift enough, Reid.” Her voice was soft.
He cupped her delicate jawline, his thumbs stroking her pale cheeks. They had been talking about the possibility of making their current arrangement more permanent. He had to admit he was enjoying the quiet, country life. Middleburg was peaceful, with its quaint antiques shops and traffic circles, or roundabouts, inside the town limits. It was a respite from the violence he saw almost daily in his job. He would need to keep his apartment in the District for practicality, but the idea of staying out here with Caitlyn, waking up beside her in the mornings whenever he could, was tremendously appealing to him. She belonged out here with her horse stables and equine therapy program, but she could keep some things at his place in D.C., as well.
“I know once you start back to work this would be a long commute—”
“We’ll work something out. I want to be with you, Caitlyn.” He added, “But what I really want to know is whether you’re ready for the Novak family onslaught.”
Caitlyn had invited all of them out for a weekend at the stables. The snowfall would make for a breathtaking holiday setting. Ben and the girls would be staying in the spare guest rooms, while Megan and Cooper had booked a suite in town at the nearby Red Fox Inn, a historic bed-and-breakfast. Caitlyn was planning a big, family-style dinner. She’d asked Manny and Maria to come, as well.
“I can’t wait to take Isabelle and Maddie on their first horse ride,” she said, smiling. “Megan says it’s all they’ve talked about.”
He wanted to share his family with her, too. Try somehow to make up for the one she no longer had. Caitlyn and Megan had begun a friendship, and it was clear his father and nieces were wild about her already. Reid was falling more deeply in love with her each day.
“We could decorate the tree,” she suggested, looking again at the giant, bare fir. “I have some lights and ornaments from the house in Georgetown. They’re in boxes in the attic. I’ll go get them.”
She turned, but he caught her hand.
“I’m thankful for every day I have with you,” he said solemnly. “Caitlyn, we both know my health is still tentative—”
She hushed him, placing her fingers against his lips. “Dr. Isrelsen believes your prognosis is excellent. He says the tumor is responding extremely well to the treatment. It’s going away. Everything’s going to be okay, Reid. I can feel it in my heart.”
He embraced her and she settled her head against his shoulder. There was no certainty about what tomorrow might bring. No one truly had that. He thought of his parents and his mother’s illness that had separated them. He also thought of David and Julianne Hunter. But he and Caitlyn had right now. The headaches were gone. He felt healthy and whole.
“We don’t have to decorate the tree this very minute, do we?”
She looked up at him. “Did you have something else in mind?”
“Maybe dinner.” He slowly kissed her mouth and then murmured, “Maybe something else.”
“I like how you think.”
Reid closed his eyes and breathed in the fresh, clean scent of her hair. Having her in his arms felt right. Being here for her felt right, too. Tragedy and unspeakable violence had caused their lives to intersect once again, but this time he wasn’t going to let her go. He wasn’t going to walk away. She was the one good thing that had come from all this. Fat, white flakes were now falling outside and Reid counted his blessings as they drifted past the picture window.
They belonged together.
ISBN: 978-1-4592-0888-9
MIDNIGHT FEAR
Copyright © 2011 by Leslie Tentler
All rights reserved. Except for use in any review, the reproduction or utilization of this work in whole or in part in any form by any electronic, mechanical or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including xerography, photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, is forbidden without the written permission of the publisher, Mira Books, 225 Duncan Mill Road, Don Mills, Ontario, Canada M3B 3K9.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
MIRA and the Star Colophon are trademarks used under license and registered in Australia, New Zealand, Philippines, United States Patent and Trademark Office and in other countries.
For questions and comments about the quality of this book please contact us at [email protected].
www.MIRABooks.com
Midnight Fear Page 30