by Rebecca York
It was at that moment she knew she’d let herself go too far; she didn’t even know why she’d stayed on top of him until then. She didn’t trust the man. Yet he exhibited a powerful pull on her, a pull that she hadn’t wanted to admit. Now he was walking into her apartment.
Lord, it was probably a mess. At that thought, she repressed a hollow laugh. She’d just made a fool of herself, and she was worried about how her apartment looked?
She stepped through the door, turned on a couple of lamps, and saw him looking around the small lounge area with a love seat and comfortable chairs that were separated from the bedroom by a screen draped with a Central American woven throw. The kitchen was a counter, stove top and small refrigerator along one wall.
“Nice,” he said as he took in the cozy environment she’d put together with other people’s castoffs and her own imagination.
He turned his head toward an acrylic painting of a St. Stephens wetlands scene that hung over the love seat.
“Did you paint that?” he asked.
“No. That’s by a talented local artist. I traded him for a piece of silver jewelry.”
“Clever.”
He sat down on the love seat covered with an Indian blanket that she’d gotten from a thrift shop, and she watched him making himself at home in her living space, thinking that he shouldn’t even be here. Maybe there were dangers lurking outside, but he represented another kind of danger. She’d kept her emotions under strict control for years. But this man had undone her resolve. When he’d started to kiss her, she should have disentangled herself at once. But she hadn’t been able to keep her priorities straight. Instead of yanking herself away, she’d kissed him back. She couldn’t even say why. Was she so needy that she started making out with the first guy who came on to her?
Even as the thought flitted through her mind, she knew it wasn’t true. There was something about Wyatt Granger that drew her, even when she didn’t want a relationship, and even when she hated the reason why he’d stepped uninvited into her life.
“You had something you wanted to talk about?” she said, directing the conversation away from herself.
He stretched out his legs and crossed them at the ankles. It looked like a relaxed pose, but she could see tension zinging through him. She started to take the chair to his right, then said, “Do you want a glass of water?”
“Yeah, that would be good. Thanks.”
She poured water from the refrigerator into one of the pottery mugs she’d also gotten in trade for her jewelry.
He took a couple of swallows of the water, then set the cup down on the marble-topped table that she’d made from a pastry board and a plant stand.
When he asked, “What does a fun house have to do with you?” she gasped.
Chapter Seven
Wyatt saw the blood drain from Kate’s face.
“I guess that means there’s a connection,” he clipped out.
She answered with a small nod.
“What?”
“You’re saying you dreamed about a fun house?”
“Yes.”
“Tell me the dream,” she said, and he saw she wasn’t going to give up anything until he told her what he knew.
“You think it’s something that’s going to happen? Not something that did happen?” she asked.
“I know it’s something that’s going to happen,” he corrected. “I don’t dream about past events. Well, I mean I might dream about something that happened to me. But if it’s about someone else, it’s one of my prescient dreams.”
He kept his gaze on her, wanted to take in every nuance of her reaction. “I was in a fun house,” he said again. “Only it wasn’t something that was set up for fun. Someone had made it into a . . .” He fumbled for the right word and came up with, “Torture chamber.”
“My God, what do you mean by that?”
“I mean it was full of seriously scary images—and traps. Things that could hurt you. A floor that might fall away under your feet. Something flying across the room that could cut you. Walls that were hot to the touch.”
“And I was in it?” she whispered.
“No. It was an older man.”
“What did he look like?”
“He was short, well maybe about five eight with thinning gray hair and a lined face. He was wearing pants with suspenders, a bow tie that was askew, and a white shirt that was wrinkled, like he’d slept in it.”
She drew in a quick breath. “That sounds like my father.”
Jumping up, she crossed the room to where she’d left a cell phone on the kitchen counter. He watched her dial, then clutch the instrument as she waited for someone to pick up. Instead, he could hear an answering machine message.
“This is Jerry Caldwell. I’m not here to take your call, please leave a message at the sound of the tone.”
“Dad, it’s Kate. If you’re there, please pick up.”
When no one did, she hung up, then stood frozen in place, probably waiting for him to call her back. But the phone stayed silent.
She raised her eyes to Wyatt’s.
“He’s not home. I have to go check on him. Now.”
When he saw her spin around and pick up her purse, he crossed the room and put his hand on her arm. “You’re not going by yourself.”
She’d protested when he’d tried to help her before. Now she said, “Yes, okay.”
“This time you believe my dream is going to happen?” he pressed.
“I don’t know,” she shouted. “I don’t want to,” she added, looking like she was struggling for calm.
He’d told himself that touching her again was a bad idea, but he couldn’t stop from pulling her close and folding her into his arms, rocking her gently. He wanted to tell her everything would be okay, but he knew that was a lie. He’d known something was seriously wrong since the moment he’d awakened from the dream about her the day before.
Was it only that long ago? It felt like he’d been in St. Stephens forever. Or perhaps only for minutes because everything was happening so fast now.
She raised pleading eyes to him. “I have to leave.”
“I’ll drive you. Where does he live?”
“Easton.”
“Okay. Not that far. My car is at the B&B.”
“Right.” She looked around. “I hate to leave after the fire. But I have to see about Dad.”
After they exited the building, she locked the door, and they walked along the harbor and across the bridge to his car. Then he headed for Easton, which was ten miles away.
“Tell me what the fun house means to you,” he said when they were on the outskirts of St. Stephens, and he figured she wasn’t going to demand he let her out so she could walk back.
He saw her swallow hard.
“I told you Dad owned a carnival.”
“Yeah, with charlatan psychics. Didn’t any of them have any talent?”
She shuddered. “Maybe a few did. Maybe I didn’t want to believe it.”
“Why not?”
“I guess I don’t like the idea of telling someone their future.” She shot him a quick look, then stared out the windshield.
“Would you believe I don’t like it either?” he answered.
“Why not?”
“It’s too much responsibility.”
“But it helps you in your work.”
“Yeah.” He tightened his hands on the wheel. “This is getting off track. What about the fun house?” When she didn’t answer, he said, “Talking will keep your mind off your dad.”
“Okay. Yes. It was a regular feature of the carnival. The crew would set it up at every location where we stopped.” She paused, and he thought she might not go on. Then she began to speak again. “A guy named Dave Treeman joined the carnival. He owned a couple of the midway booths. Like where you toss a quarter into a glass dish, and you win it if the quarter stays, but it almost always pops out again. Or the game where you have to toss a ring around a milk bottle. That one’s a l
ittle easier to do.”
“Yes.”
“He had a son, Billy. I was sixteen and he was a year older. I guess he liked me. He gave me the creeps, but he wouldn’t take no for an answer. He kept pestering me.”
When she didn’t go on, he prompted, “Like how?”
“He kept pawing me and trying to kiss me. I told him to quit it, but he wouldn’t stop. And one day Dad had asked me to go into the fun house after hours to change a broken light bulb. Billy followed me inside, and I guess he figured this was his chance to get me off alone.” She stopped again, and Wyatt waited, hoping he wasn’t going to hear what he thought was coming.
“I tried to get out of there, but he pushed me into a corner, and then he pulled me down on the floor.” Her voice sounded detached now, as though she were talking about some other girl. “He was on top of me, trying to pull my pants down. He said he was going to teach me what was good for me.
“I screamed, but he knew nobody was going to hear. That’s why he’d followed me in there. I kept fighting, and I was able to knee him in the balls and get out from under him. I scrambled across the floor to the emergency exit. He was right behind me. He grabbed my hair, but I jerked away.” She kept talking fast, her voice flat, as she repeated a scene that must have run through her mind a million times. Or maybe she’d pushed it away, and he’d forced her to bring it back.
“I got the door open and ran down the stairs, with him right behind me. But one of the steps was starting to crack. Although I got past it and reached the ground, I must have weakened it. It broke, and he fell down the long flight. When he hit the bottom, he broke his neck.”
That was the last thing Wyatt had expected to hear. Reaching over, he put his hand on Kate’s shoulder, stroking her.
“I’m sorry. I mean that must have been terrible for you. The whole thing.”
“It took me a long time to get over it. Mr. Treeman was angry. He said it was our fault that his son had died. I tried to tell him why I had run down the steps, but he didn’t want to hear anything bad about Billy.”
Wyatt wanted to pull the car off the road and fold Kate into his arms, but he understood now why she wanted to get to her dad’s place as quickly as possible.
“What happened after that?”
“My mom decided to leave the carnival with me. She and Dad didn’t get divorced, but they didn’t see each other all that often either. Mom and I settled down outside Pittsburgh. I took art classes, and I found I was good at silversmithing.”
He nodded.
“I lived there with her until she was killed—in a fall down a flight of steps.”
Wyatt winced. “You saw it?”
“I heard her scream. When I ran out, she was alone at the bottom of the stairs.”
He had to ask the next question. “Do you think that was a coincidence?”
“I don’t know. But I didn’t want to take a chance on having the same thing happen to me.” She dragged in a breath and let it out. “Dad sold the carnival, and he gave me enough money from the sale so that I could travel around before I decided where to settle down.”
“That’s when you changed your name?”
Her head shot toward him. “How do you know that?”
“Well, your dad is Jerry Caldwell, and I did a computer search. The name Kate Kingston doesn’t show up until five years ago.”
She dragged in a breath and let it out. “Right. Dad has a number of contacts who make their living in unconventional ways. One of them provided me with the Kate Kingston identity. After I got it, I took off.”
She’d solved the mystery of the name change, and he totally understood.
“What was your name?”
“Well, I kept the Kate part. My dad’s last name is Kaiser.”
“Kate Kaiser. So it’s a variation of King. And he changed it to Caldwell?”
“Yes. I was Kate back then. I figured Kate sounded more mature.”
“Did you see your dad much?” he asked, trying to keep her talking. It was the longest conversation they’d had so far.
“We e-mail each other a couple of times a week, but he thought it was better if we didn’t get together too often.”
“Why?”
“Mr. Treeman had dropped out of sight.”
“So your dad was worried about that?”
“Yes.”
“What about you?” Wyatt asked, working to keep the edge out of his voice.
“I changed my name. I figured he wouldn’t know who I was.”
Wyatt nodded, not as confident, although he understood her logic.
“You and your mom used the name Kaiser until you left?”
“Yes.”
So the man from her past could have tracked her to Pittsburgh and kept her in his sights after that. When Wyatt had first heard about her stalker, he’d thought it had to do with bad feelings among the silversmiths in town. But it could just as easily have been Treeman.
They were almost to Easton, and he asked Kate for her father’s address. The small towns in the area were expanding with new shopping centers and residential developments. Kate directed him to an upscale community on the edge of town where traditional style houses had been built on large lots. Apparently the sale of the carnival had netted her dad a very tidy profit.
No cars were in the driveway, but when Wyatt looked in a garage window, he saw a sedan and a pickup truck.
In his peripheral vision he saw Kate was already rushing toward the front door.
Damn. He would have called out for her to wait, but he didn’t want to make any noise. He caught up just as she turned the knob. The door was unlocked, and when it opened, she started to rush in.
He caught her arm. “Stay here.”
She turned toward him, her expression fierce. “Why?”
“There could be a trap inside. Or someone . . . dangerous could be in there. Wait here.”
She gave him a pleading look. “I have to go in.”
“Let me make sure it’s safe.”
She answered with a tight nod, and he stepped through the door, gun held out as he swung left and right through the house, ready to encounter an intruder or a dead body as he checked all the rooms and closets. He even took a quick trip to the basement and found nothing. Everything seemed to be in order until he arrived in the master bedroom, where he found the covers thrown back, the small rug askew, and a bathrobe lying in the middle of the floor.
“Mr. Caldwell?” he called.
There was no answer, but a noise behind Wyatt made the hairs in the back of his neck prickle. He’d thought he was alone in the house. Prepared to fire, he whirled.
Chapter Eight
Kate was standing where he’d been seconds earlier, her eyes wide as she stared at the gun in his hand.
As he lowered the weapon, she transferred her gaze to the disorder in the room.
“I told you to stay outside,” Wyatt said.
“I couldn’t just stand there—doing nothing. I had to come in.” She took in the details of the room, then walked toward the bed. “I think someone came in here when Dad was sleeping. He woke up and fought with them and tried to get away. The way I did in the fun house,” she added in a whisper.
“Yeah. I think they’re gone, but let me check the bathroom.”
He looked inside, then shook his head. “He’s not in there.”
“He could be hiding. He could be hurt. We can’t just leave it at that.” She dashed to the closet, opened the door and pushed clothing aside, revealing only her father’s belongings. Before Wyatt could stop her she ran out of the room and down the hall, frantically checking closets, under beds, repeating his own search.
He followed with the gun, still on guard but pretty sure from his previous exploration that they weren’t going to find anything or anyone.
He wanted to call her back, but he understood that she had to satisfy herself.
She ran downstairs, looked behind the sofa, in the pantry and behind the drapes in the dining
room before pounding down the uncarpeted basement steps, her footfalls ringing throughout the house. He followed more slowly, his heart squeezing as he watched her throw boxes around in the storage areas and reach behind the furnace before turning away, walking like a forty-pound weight was on her shoulders. She was breathing hard as she sank onto the couch.
“He’s not here.”
“If he was surprised in his sleep, he’s only been gone a few hours. That’s an advantage for us. And if anyone can find him, Decorah Security can.”
Kate lowered her head and pressed her face into her hands. “This is my fault,” she said in a muffled voice.
“No. How could it be your fault?”
“First, I let it happen because I didn’t think Dad was in danger.”
“Why would you?”
Ignoring him, she continued, “And second, because I wouldn’t admit that something bad was going on. It could have been Treeman stalking me in St. Stephens. But I wouldn’t believe it. I should have warned Dad. When you showed up, Treeman figured it was too hard to do anything to me, and he went after Dad.”
“You don’t know any of that’s true,” he said again, but he understood that she was beyond logical arguments.
She looked up, tears glistening in her eyes. “I was stupid not to listen to you.”
“No.”
He sat down beside her and lifted her onto his lap, turning her to the side and cradling her close as he tried to comfort her. She’d been so stubborn and strong, but now she broke down, pouring out her misery. He rocked her and stroked her, wishing he could offer real comfort, but he couldn’t lie to her. This couldn’t be good—particularly after his dream.
Her shoulders shook as she sobbed, but finally the tears subsided. Her purse was still hanging over her shoulder, and she reached inside, found a tissue and blew her nose.
“What do we do now?” she asked. She had said, “We,” like she knew he was going to stick by her. And of course he would.
“We find out if the neighbors saw anything.”