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Those of the Margin: a Paranormal Suspense Thriller (Derek Cole Suspense Thriller Book 2)

Page 12

by T Patrick Phelps


  "Maggie," he yelled again. Straining to hear anything coming from the path ahead, he sprinted as quickly as he could, down the short decline, across the short stretch of the path then slowed his pace to make the path's sharp left turn.

  Still nothing in his sights.

  "Maggie," he called again, then increased his speed. The path stretched out in front of him for another 20 feet then turned sharply right, up into a tree lined area of the path. He charged the distance, his eyes set not on the path in front of him but towards the tree-lined area.

  As Derek barreled past the trees lining both sides of this part of the Way, he recognized that the small hill he was climbing was where he and Maggie were to wait for Ron's call. But Maggie was still not in sight. He pressed on, up and over the hill. As he was about to yell for her again, he crested the hill and saw that Maggie was standing, arms tightly crossed against her chest, at the bottom of the path's rise.

  Had Derek been running in the summer months or if the Marginal Way was clear of snow and ice, he would have been able to stop his charge, not have slipped onto his back, bowled Maggie off her feet, and sent her crashing to the frozen ground.

  "That's a hell of a way to get a girl's attention," Maggie said, apparently uninjured from the collision.

  Derek scrambled to his feet and assumed a defensive position, his sights bouncing in different directions.

  "Where is he?" he asked.

  "Where is who?" Maggie asked.

  "You didn't see him?"

  "See who?" she said, her voice much quieter and dripping with worry.

  "Did you hear me yelling at you?"

  "Yes," she said. "I chose to ignore you."

  "Maggie," Derek said after determining that the area was safe and that, whoever he saw had either never existed or had been scared off by Derek's yells. "When you turned and walked away, a man came out of the trees and started after you."

  A deep chill blanketed Maggie. It started at her arms before racing across her back and finding its center in her lower back.

  "Are you sure?" she asked, already regretful of asking the question.

  "You didn't see, hear, or feel anything?" Derek asked, his words still racing with concern.

  "Nothing. I just walked away. I was walking pretty fast but not too fast that someone couldn't have caught up to me if they wanted to."

  "The tracks!" Derek said, as his eyes grew wide. He turned and quickly moved up and over the hill. He stopped when he was no more than 15 feet away and called for Maggie to follow him.

  "Sorry," he said when she drew closer. "I almost left you alone again."

  "What are you looking for?" she asked.

  "His tracks."

  Holding Maggie by her arm, Derek turned, and the two began walking back towards where Derek thought he saw the man begin his follow of Maggie.

  "I came down this path pretty quickly and wasn't thinking about being careful not to mess up any footprints, but I didn't run through the trees where he walked out of. Unless I was seeing things, he must have left footprints behind."

  "You are standing awfully close to someone you think is dangerous. Aren't you worried?" Maggie said, her voice both teasing and accusing.

  Derek was tangled in Maggie's eyes. He didn't reply but, instead, pulled Maggie closer to him.

  "Whoever it was," Derek said, raising his hand and pointing off the path just ahead of where the two were, "came charging out from those trees." Looking at the snow covered ground, Derek stopped walking, dropped to one knee, then looked up at Maggie. "Here. Do you see it?"

  "Oh, my God," she said as she tracked the footprints leading from the trees off to the side of the path to the print that Derek was kneeling next to.

  Derek stood up, grabbed Maggie's hand and walked with her up to where the footprints started. The two looked closely and saw the footprints that proved that someone had been standing, well concealed in the thick trees.

  "These tracks show that whoever or whatever was standing here started following you from this point."

  Neither could find any prints that indicated from which direction the man had come from.

  "It's just like the footprints of the man who tripped you," Maggie said, her face quickly becoming drained of color as the terrifying possibilities of what they were up against started to register in her mind. "They appear out of nowhere. Derek," she said, "what is going on here?"

  "I don't know," he said. "But we need to figure this out before someone gets killed." He retrieved his iPhone from his pocket and checked the time. "We need to get back to the meeting point before Father John calls."

  Maggie and Derek walked back to the designated meeting point, both desperate to find evidence that whoever had charged after Maggie, had split off his charge and had left footprints that they could follow. When they reached the point where the prints ended, they both paused and both nodded to each other.

  "Gone. Just gone into thin air."

  CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO

  Father John Flannigan wasn't the only one who thought offering spiritual support to the residents and staff of the nursing home was a good idea. He sat in a large waiting room with no less than six other clergymen. The nursing home administrator thought it would be a good idea to have them all sit together in one room while the nurses and nurse's aides went about asking residents if any would like to speak to a priest, rabbi, minister, or cleric.

  "I do appreciate you all showing up here," the administrator said once the seven were collected and gathered in the room. "But I feel that having you all wandering about the floors may create a sense of panic in our residents. If anyone wants or feels the need to speak to someone, I've instructed my staff to ask their religion. Then, I'll send word to you all, and, whoever covers a specific religion will be told which room to visit."

  "I know that Ron was a Catholic," John said. "I'd like to contact his family to offer my prayers and support as well. Can you get their number for me?"

  "I've been in contact with Ron's family. They didn't mention a desire to speak with a local priest. But if they call again, I will ask them. Sound fair?"

  John was getting nowhere. He had arrived at the nursing home before his scheduled 10:30 time and had immediately and politely been escorted to the lounge on the second floor. He glanced at his watch and saw that his 10:45 scheduled call to Derek had passed. He needed to get to the third floor porch, check the aim of the telescope, and make the call to Derek.

  "I need to stretch my legs," John said to the others in the room. "If Nurse Ratched comes back," he said, alluding to the nurse in 'One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest,' "tell her I needed to use the restroom."

  "Should we figure out a series of warning whistles to alarm one another?" the rabbi joked.

  "You know," said a minister, who was clenching a bible in his right arm, "there's gotta be a joke about this. A priest, rabbi, a Baptist minister, and four Protestants walk into a nursing home...."

  John slipped through the door as his cellmates erupted in laughter. He made his way to the nearest stairwell and, after making sure no one was watching him, quickly walked up the stairs. Once on the third floor, he opened the door, checking the hallway before casually walking out into the hall. It took him a moment to realize that the porch was located in the opposite direction from where he was headed. He ducked into a patient's room, where a nurse greeted him.

  "Father," she exclaimed. "I just about to send word that Mr. Price would like to speak with you. How did you know without me saying anything?"

  "I had a feeling," John said.

  Once the nurse left, her face filled with wonder and amazement, John stood at the side of Reginald Price's bed. The radio alarm clock that sat on Reginald's nightstand read 10:59. John hoped that Derek and Maggie were okay and that they would understand his delay.

  "Hello Father," Reginald said. "I was hoping that a priest would show up."

  "How can I help you?" John said. He was angry with himself for wishing that whatever Reginald wanted to
talk about would be quick.

  "All those policeman were walking around here last night and this morning. No less than five of them asked me if I saw anything."

  "And did you?" John asked.

  "The only thing I've seen in the past two months is the nurse's face when she empties out my bedpan."

  "I am sorry that you aren't feeling well. What did you want to talk with me about?"

  "All those policeman asked me if I saw anything," Reginald said again, "but not one of them asked me if I knew anything about Ron White."

  "And do you? Do you know something about Ron?"

  "I know that he asked me to keep something safe for him," Reginald said. "I didn't know Ron that well, but he did stop by every so often. Yesterday, he dragged himself in here, sat down, and asked me to do him a favor. Seems he felt that he was in some type of danger. He asked me if he could put a notebook in my drawer and asked me not to say anything to no one about it, except for a private investigator named Cole."

  "Derek Cole?" John asked, his excitement palpable. "He said to give the notebook to Derek Cole?"

  "That's the name. But since I don't get around too often, I don't think I'll have the chance to contact Cole and let him know I have something for him. Hell, I don't even know who he is. Excuse my language, Father."

  "I know Derek Cole quite well. He and I are friends. I can give the notebook to him, if you'd like?"

  Reginald nodded towards the nightstand. "It's in there beneath a whole mess of magazines that I'll never read. Take it to him for me, would ya?"

  John pulled the drawer open and removed a leather-bound notebook.

  "Not sure what is in those pages," Reginald said, "but I can tell you that Ron seemed pretty nervous about something. Seems like he had reason to be, huh Father?

  "It does seem that way," John said. "Is there anything else you wanted to talk with me about?"

  "Nah," Reginald said. "I ain't even Catholic. Just get that notebook to Cole and let him know that Ron wanted him to have it, okay?"

  "He will have it today. And it's best that you don't tell anyone else about this notebook. Just in case."

  "My memory the way it is, I'll probably forget about the whole damn thing by supper time tonight. Excuse my language, Father."

  "No problem. And thank you."

  #####

  Derek and Maggie were standing, facing each other. Derek was explaining the contents of the notebook and trying to resolve why Ron wrote "Danger" after Maggie's initials.

  "Maybe he thought that I was in danger?" Maggie offered.

  "Could be," Derek said. "Why do you think Ron felt that you knew more about whatever it was that he was investigating than you let on?"

  "I don't know," Maggie said, still feeling that Derek suspected her in some way. "Maybe because whenever Ron asked me about Jack, I usually just changed the subject. My question is, why was Ron White investigating Jack? Was he a retired cop or something?"

  "I don't know," Derek admitted. "I haven't heard from Ralph Fox yet and was hoping that you'd be able to get info on Ron from his family."

  "I did try to call them this morning before I left to bring Robby to school. There was no answer."

  There was a long pause in their conversation. Maggie locked her eyes with Derek's and both stood, not knowing what to say. It was Derek who finally spoke.

  "Maggie, I don't know exactly what's happening here. Not only with this case but also with how I am feeling for you. All I know is that when I read that note about you either being dangerous or in danger, I puked my guts out."

  "Romantic," Maggie said.

  "I have a way with words. It's not that I don't want to know if what I'm feeling for you is the same that you are feeling for me, it's just that I have to figure this whole case out before anything else."

  "I understand," she said, moving her body closer to his. "And once we figure this all out, I have some things I need to take care of as well." She reached out and grabbed Derek's hands. "Then we can talk about what to do since you and I are feeling the same way about each other, okay?"

  Derek couldn't hold back the smile that filled his face. The urge to pull Maggie close to him was building to a point that he knew he couldn't withstand. If it wasn't for the vibrating cell phone in his pocket, Derek knew that he his would have succumbed to his driving urge and kissed Maggie Bryant.

  "Sorry it took me so long," John said. "Not that it's any of my business, but you two are standing awfully close to one another. Hope I didn't interrupt anything? Or maybe I should be glad that I might have interrupted something."

  "Father," Derek said as he stepped away from Maggie and turned his head towards the direction of the nursing home. "Can you see us?"

  "Well, since I just said that you two are standing awfully close to each other, I assumed that it was obvious. The telescope was still on the porch, and it is aimed directly to where you two are standing."

  "I thought so," Derek said. "Find out anything else?"

  "Sure did," John said. "When can you and Maggie meet me at the rectory? I have something that Ron wanted only you to see."

  "Is it another notebook?" Derek asked as he remembered seeing Ron carry two notebooks with him when he walked out to the porch to meet with him.

  "It is. How did you know that?"

  "I'll tell you when I see you."

  "See you in 30 minutes?" John asked.

  "We'll be there."

  CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE

  Maggie was going to arrive at the rectory much later than she, John, or Derek expected. Derek and she walked back to Derek's car, he drove her over to Perkins Cove, dropped her off at her car, and left to drive over to St. Mark's rectory. Maggie had every intention of joining Derek and John at the rectory, and would have been an enthusiastic participant in any conversations in which the newly formed "R&R Investigative Firm" would have been engaged. In fact, when she started her car, shifted into gear, and pulled out of her parking spot, Maggie had but one destination in mind: The rectory located behind St. Mark's Church.

  But before she even reached the main road, her phone rang. It was the principal at Robby's school.

  "Mrs. Bryant, I just wanted to make sure you were expecting your husband to pick up Robby early from school today. Robby seemed a bit too surprised to see his father show up today. Your husband said Robby has a doctor's appointment today?"

  "Call the police," Maggie screamed. "Why did you let him take Robby?"

  "Mrs. Bryant," the principal responded, "either parent has every right to sign their child out of school, I can't call the police since it was Robby's father, your husband who signed Robby out."

  Maggie slammed on the breaks, having no idea where to go, who to call, or how to make sure her son was okay. Within seconds, her phone rang again. The caller ID told her it was her husband.

  "Where is Robby?" she demanded.

  "Calm down," Jack said. "He's fine. He's sleeping right now in the back seat. He told me he was up late last night listening to you talking with Father John and Derek Cole. What are you up to, Maggie?"

  "Bring Robby home," she said. "If you..."

  "If I what? You think I would hurt my own son?"

  "Which son?" Maggie shot back, her voice teaming with anger, fear, and disgust.

  "I have some advice for you, honey. You and your new friends should stop sticking your noses into other people's business. That's how people get hurt."

  "What did you do to Ron?"

  "Seriously, Maggie?" Jack said. "You seriously think that I would bash his head in with a baseball bat? For what reason? You have no idea what's going on."

  "How did you know Ron was killed with a baseball bat?" Maggie said as terror washed over her. "Let me talk to Robby," she said after Jack didn't answer her question about the baseball bat.

  "I told you," he said, his voice cutting through the cellular waves with perceived hatred. "He's asleep. All I am doing is keeping my son safe. You have no idea what you and your boyfriend are stirr
ing up. Leave well enough alone, Maggie."

  Maggie screamed at Jack, demanding that he bring Robby home and promising that if he did anything to hurt Robby, that she would make sure Jack would pay a horrible price. She screamed, but Jack heard nothing. The call ended after his last remarks.

  #####

  Derek had just taken his first sip of the coffee that John offered when his iPhone vibrated.

  "Jack has Robby. I need you."

  "Maggie, what do you mean 'Jack has Robby?'"

  "He took him out of school. He just called me and told me that he is keeping Robby safe but won't bring him home to me."

  "Call the police, then get over here, now!" Derek said.

  "I have to go home and wait for Robby," Maggie said, her voice shaky with the intense crying that was quickly approaching.

  "Maggie, no. Do not go to your house. That's what Jack thinks you'll do. Maggie, listen to me. I know it's impossibly hard, but you need to come over here with me and Father. We'll find Robby together and make sure that he isn't injured."

  "He has my son," Maggie said as she lost the battle of holding back her tears. "He has Robby."

  "Where are you? Pull your car over, and I'll come get you."

  "He killed Ron," Maggie said between sobs. "He mentioned that Ron's head was bashed in with a baseball bat. How would he know a baseball bat was used unless he did it?"

  "Maggie," Derek said as he slipped on his coat and was motioning to John to follow him out to his car, "tell me where you are. Father John and I will be there right away."

  "He has Robby."

  #####

  Derek and John found Maggie, sitting in her parked car, sobbing into her hands. Derek opened the door, startling her, reached across her body, switched the ignition off, and removed her keys. John squeezed his way behind Derek and put his arm around Maggie.

  "Come with me, Maggie," he said. "We'll find Robby and get him back home with you where he belongs."

 

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