KIDNAP.org
Page 1
KIDNAP.org
By Peg Herring
Gwendolyn Books, USA
KIDNAP.org
© Peg Herring, 2017
Printed in the USA
Cover: Phillips Covers, http://phillipscovers.com
Editor: R. Hodges
KIDNAP.org is a work of fiction. The names, characters, and incidents are entirely the work of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or events, is entirely coincidental.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be copied, transmitted, or recorded by any means whatsoever, including printing, photocopying, file transfer, or any form of data storage, mechanical or electronic, without the express written consent of the publisher. In addition, no part of this publication may be lent, re-sold, hired, or otherwise circulated or distributed, in any form whatsoever, without the express written consent of the publisher.
ISBN: 978-1-944502-08-9
Table of Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-one
Chapter Twenty-two
Chapter Twenty-three
Chapter Twenty-four
Chapter Twenty-five
Chapter Twenty-six
Chapter Twenty-seven
Chapter One
Robin was taking her second shower of the day when her phone played a few bars of “Fat Bottomed Girls.” As the ringtone sounded a second and third time, she leaned out to see the caller ID, but clouds of steam obscured her view. As Freddie sang out a fourth time she stepped out of the stall, dripping water and soapsuds onto the fleecy bathmat. Taking up the phone, she stabbed the connect button and said, “Hello.” It was more of a challenge than a greeting.
“Um, Robin, this is Carter. Your friend from down the hall?”
She suppressed a sigh of irritation, in no mood to chat with a neighbor who was eccentric, to say the least.
It’s not his fault you’re upset.
A glance at the mirror revealed a face still blotchy from tears. Despite aroma therapy promises, her lavender-scented soap had not relaxed her tense muscles. After the worst morning of the year—make that two years—she wasn’t in the mood for people, not even harmless guys like Carter.
Still not his fault.
The voice that often spoke in her head tended to be argumentative, making Robin doubt even her best intentions. Still, it was correct in this instance. Her disastrous day wasn’t Carter’s fault.
Grabbing a fluffy, pink towel from the bar, she dried her face with her free hand as she tried for a normal tone. “What’s up?”
“I—I shoved a guy and then I locked him in the trunk.”
Robin stopped toweling, and her own concerns slid into second place. “What?”
“We had a fight and I pushed him and he fell into the trunk and I closed the lid and I drove away and now he’s real mad.” Carter’s voice rose a tone as he asked, “Should I let him out?”
Be careful. When Carter’s nervous he chokes up, and you’ll never get a straight answer.
A year before, when he moved into the apartment down the hall, Carter Halkias had briefly stirred Robin’s fantasies. Tall, dark, and handsome enough to model for romance novel covers, he’d carried in large items of furniture as easily as if they were toys. It had been disappointing to learn he operated at about the level of a ten-year-old. Though Carter managed simple life tasks like paying the rent and purchasing groceries for himself and his ailing mother, he had few social skills and seemed unable to fathom the world of adults.
They’d become acquainted in the building’s uninspired but adequate workout room, where Robin pedaled the stationary bike in an attempt to keep extra pounds from attaching to her thighs and butt. Each morning as she sweated and the bike hummed, Carter lifted large weights and recounted his achievements on various video games, complete with sound effects. Apparently, tossing out an occasional “Wow!” had made her a friend in Carter’s mind.
“Robin?” Worry came through in his soft Georgia accent. “Should I open the trunk and let the guy out?”
Now there’s a question I never imagined being asked.
“Where are you now?”
“You know the empty grocery store on Twelfth Street by the green church? I parked behind it so nobody can hear the noise he’s making.” His voice rose. “What should I do, Robin?”
Toweling more vigorously, she replied, “Don’t do anything, Carter. I’ll be right over.”
The outside temperature wasn’t too bad for February. After putting on soft jeans and a long-sleeved shirt, Robin added a light jacket and slid her feet into flats rather than her favorite flip-flops. Since her hair was still wet from the shower, she covered it with a hat, and since the heater in her car was almost non-functioning, stuffed gloves into her jacket pockets. After a few irritating moments spent locating her wallet and keys, she was on her way.
Cedar, Georgia, was a city whose fine old bones were fast succumbing to inferior replacements. Buildings that had once held dignified offices now rented to tattoo parlors and vape shops as wealthier tenants moved to multi-story buildings downtown or branches in the suburbs. As she steered her battered CRV through streets too narrow for the traffic they carried, Robin’s thoughts jolted, stopped, and swerved like the vehicles around her. She tried to push her bubbling cauldron of worry to the back of her mind and concentrate on driving carefully. It wouldn’t do to have a cop notice some minor infraction and follow her to where Carter waited.
If Carter thinks I can help, he obviously doesn’t know me very well. Her eyes filled with tears for the third time that day. I can’t even help myself!
She replayed the conversation with Carter, imagining what she should have said instead of what she had said.
“Robin can’t come to the phone right now. Call someone else.”
“I’m in the shower, Carter. Can’t hear a thing.”
“Robin moved to Seattle to experience Puget Sound and the Cascades.”
“You’ll have to move to Tibet, because no one here can help you.”
“I’m your neighbor, not your keeper, your mother, or your friendly neighborhood 9-1-1 operator. Take your body in the trunk and stuff it—somewhere else.”
She couldn’t have said any of that. Carter was a nice guy with problems he wasn’t equipped to handle. His mother’s death a month before had no doubt contributed to whatever he’d done today. If she explained to the man in the trunk about Carter’s mental challenges, his shallow understanding of societal norms, and his recent bereavement, she could smooth things over. She was likely to have better luck fixing his mistakes than she ever would with fixing her own.
***
Carter stood next to a vintage Lincoln Continental whose rear end protruded slightly from behind the abandoned grocery store. Even if she hadn’t known there were problems afoot, she’d have detected stress in his repeated gestures: mussing his hair and wiping his hands on his shirtfront. Full-blown panic wasn’t far away.
As soon as she got out of her car, Robin heard curses coming from the rear of the Lincoln. The voice sounded tired, as if the speaker no longer believed his threats would come to anything.
“Who’s in there?”
she asked.
His beautiful brown eyes avoided hers, but that wasn’t unusual. “Mr. Barney Abrams. He’s a Cedar County commissioner.”
Great! Why didn’t you choose a decorated war vet or a homeless six-year-old?
“You attacked a county commissioner.”
He looked at her briefly before his gaze slid to the side again. “I guess.”
Staring at the trunk Robin repeated, “Barney Abrams, County Commissioner.”
Though she wasn’t politically aware, an overly-smiley face plastered on billboards around town before the last election came to mind: Honest Abrams. Despite the epithet, Robin recalled the man being accused of corruption more than once. He’d wriggled out of it each time, claiming the charges stemmed from misunderstandings or personal vendettas. Once when undeniable proof of wrongdoing was offered, he’d blamed it on a mistake and fired some nameless staffer. Her bosses at the law firm sometimes commented on Abrams’ “acumen,” which she read as “ability to make big profits while not getting arrested.”
“Tell me how Mr. Abrams got into the trunk.”
Carter rubbed at his chest as if he had some weird kind of rash. “Remember I told you I had to see about a mistake with my mom’s property?”
She recalled him saying something about it, but the clanks of lifted and dropped weights had interfered with her hearing. She’d been impressed though, because Carter usually wasn’t willing to interact with strangers. The matter must have been important to him.
“You went to take care of a problem and this is how things ended up?”
“I can hear you, young woman.” The voice from the Lincoln was scratchy but loud enough to make her scan the area for passers-by. “Explain to your retarded friend that he will never breathe air outside an institution again!”
“Let’s move over there.” She led Carter to a spot some distance away, where his prisoner couldn’t hear. He glanced back at the Lincoln nervously, and she realized he needed time to collect himself. “Wait here.” Crossing the street to a gas station, she bought two sodas and hurried back. Ice sloshed in the foam cups as she held them out, allowing Carter his choice. After he chose the Pepsi, Robin sipped at the Sprite. “Tell me about the mistake.”
Taking a long pull on the straw, Carter swallowed and began. “Mom, Dad, and me lived out in Westfield my whole life. Dad was a farmer, so we had a lot of property.”
A farm family. That explained some of Carter’s discomfort in social settings.
“Dad died two years ago. Then Mom got sick, so we moved into town so she’d be close to the hospital for chemo and stuff.” He took another drink, which seemed to calm him. “After she died I found out she sold the farm.”
“Without telling you.”
His eyes went sad. “She used to cry about how I wouldn’t have anybody to take care of me. I told her I can do stuff myself, but I guess she didn’t believe it.”
“She did what she thought was best.”
“Except she got cheated.”
“You’re sure about that?”
Shifting his muscular shoulders, Carter nodded. “At the funeral, one of our old neighbors said our place is gonna be worth a lot of money soon. He hoped Mom didn’t sell too cheap.”
“Why will it be worth a lot?”
“They’re going to build a mall out there, and I guess our farm’s the best spot for it.”
Robin’s gaze shifted briefly to the Lincoln. “Abrams bought your mom’s farm?”
“Somebody else did.” Carter’s dark eyes clouded. “But Mr. Abrams came to our apartment one day back in November, when I wasn’t there. He told Mom I’d need money for her funeral and stuff. He said the farm wasn’t worth much but he knew a guy who’d take it off her hands.”
She pointed at the Lincoln. “This guy got your mom to sell her farm to a different guy?”
“He says he never, but Mom’s letter says he did.”
“Letter?”
“Mom wrote a bunch of stuff down for when she was gone and I couldn’t ask.”
Robin pictured Mrs. Halkias, a tiny, slightly querulous woman who’d tapped her forehead one day as she told Robin, “My boy is different. The Lord gave him to us because He knew we’d take good care of him.”
Had a couple of local crooks cheated a dying woman and her special son?
She thought about what had happened to her earlier that morning. It must be open season on people who can’t fight back.
“So you went to ask Abrams about the land deal. How did he end up in your trunk?”
“Not in my trunk.” Carter’s tone implied that would be silly. “The car is his.” Robin couldn’t think of anything to say to that, but he went on. “The lady at his office said Mr. Abrams wasn’t there, but I saw him go in. She was real snotty about it, so I decided to wait outside until he went to lunch and talk to him then. Around noon he came out and headed for the parking ramp. I followed him to his car, and he opened the trunk to put a suitcase in there. When I tried to show him Mom’s letter, he grabbed it right out of my hand and tore it up.”
For the first time Robin felt empathy for Carter, not just sympathy. “He destroyed a letter your mom wrote to you?”
Carter’s gaze stayed just to the left of Robin’s. “He started yelling at me, and he hit me on this shoulder.” He touched the spot as if the location of the blow was crucial to her understanding. “He poked me with his finger a couple of times. It didn’t hurt because he’s kind of blobby, but he wouldn’t stop, even when I asked him nicely.”
He scrubbed a hand through his hair, leaving a curly clump at the crown that made him look like a kindergartner just up from his nap. Though Robin didn’t know what his mental capacity actually was, Carter’s axons obviously fired in a whole different way from those of most people.
She squeezed his arm, finding steely muscles that contradicted his childlike demeanor and hesitant manner. “We’ll tell the police you didn’t mean to kidnap the guy.” Five minutes after meeting him, a cop would understand Carter had trouble making decisions under pressure.
“He said he’ll have me put in jail.” Again Carter’s eyes met hers briefly. “I wouldn’t like being locked up, Robin. I need to go outside sometimes and look at birds and stuff.”
“He threatened to have you arrested for asking questions?”
“Yeah. He took out his phone and said he was calling the cops.” Carter sniffed, trying to hold his emotions in check. “That’s when I got scared and kinda mad, and the next thing I knew, I shoved him and he fell into the trunk, and I—I shut the lid.” The words came out in a rush.
“Is he hurt?”
“I don’t think so. He started making noise right away, kicking and hollering. I thought somebody might walk by and ask why he was in there.”
And well they might. “What did you do?”
“When I shoved him, his phone went flying and his keys fell on the ground. I picked them both up, and then—” He paused before the next admission. “—I got in his car and drove away.”
Changing the crime from simple assault to kidnapping. “Why did you do that?”
Another hair tousle. “I thought if I drove around for a while, he’d calm down and listen to me. Whenever I get nervous, I go for a walk or a drive and it helps a lot.” Carter paused, genuinely unable to see where he’d gone wrong. “But he just keeps getting madder.” A sharp thump from the car trunk verified the statement.
Oh, my Great Aunt Fanny.
“Did he actually call the police?”
“No. He just waved the phone around like he was gonna call them.”
A bluff? If Abrams wanted to scare Carter but didn’t want a cop to hear what he had to say, could she use that against him somehow? She rolled her shoulders in an effort to ease their tension.
“The phone works, even after it dropped on the concrete,” Carter said. “I’ll give it back when he feels better.”
Great idea, neighbor, but it’s hard to say when that will be.
 
; Had Carter actually uncovered a plot between Abrams and a second man to cheat an old lady out of her property? It seemed improbable, but working at a legal firm had opened Robin’s eyes to how heartless—and how devious—people could be when large sums of money were involved. “You said your mom should have gotten more for her land. How bad was it?”
“She sold a hundred acres for ten thousand dollars.” His mouth twisted sideways as he added, “Ms. Kane says we got screwed because my mom was a dodo who lived in the past.”
Emily Kane lived across the hall from Robin and next door to Carter. Though about the same age, she was the opposite of Carter’s mother, sharp-minded where Mrs. Halkias had been vague, and opinionated where the other was self-effacing. Robin wondered how the two women had become acquainted, but infirmity might have created commonality. Mrs. Halkias was weak from cancer, while Ms. Kane thumped around the building with a cane due to a bad hip.
A practical question occurred to her. “Don’t car trunks have escape buttons these days?”
The tension in Carter’s face cleared. Cars were something he could talk about all day, and he was far more comfortable with facts than feelings. “Since 2001 they have to, but this is a 1996 Lincoln Continental 75th Anniversary Edition. It’s got leather seats, voice-activated cell phone, JBL audio system, auto electro-chromatic dimming mirror with compass, and traction control. He updated it with some really cool stuff too. It’s got remote access and starting—”
“We don’t need the Wikipedia version.” Another thud sounded from the Lincoln. “Can he breathe in there?”
Carter pointed at the car’s rear end. “He punched out the tail-lights on the way here.”
She stared at the trunk as another thump sounded. If Abrams had read internet advice on how to behave when kidnapped, he’d soon start waving his necktie through the opening.
Not funny, Parsons. The man had every right to have Carter arrested. Things she might have suggested two hours earlier, hiring a lawyer or contacting the press to address her neighbor’s grievances, weren’t possible anymore.
“He said the sale was legal and I should get over it.” Carter’s brow knit as he struggled to recall Abrams’ exact words. “I need to accept the way the world works.”