Sloane Monroe Series Boxed Set (Books 1-3)

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Sloane Monroe Series Boxed Set (Books 1-3) Page 20

by Cheryl Bradshaw


  “And now you’re following me?”

  He crossed one leg over the other and sat back.

  “I had a vested interest in your case. Congratulations, by the way.”

  “Then you know Parker Stanton was not responsible for Charlotte’s death.”

  He nodded.

  “Parker had no involvement in the real estate scheme at all,” I said. “And yet someone saw to it that he was killed and then covered it up.”

  He interlaced his fingers and rested them on the edge of the table.

  “That’s quite an accusation, Ms. Monroe.”

  “You wouldn’t happen to know anything about that would you?”

  “I found his treatment of women unacceptable. Men like Parker Stanton don’t deserve the life they have. They think they can do whatever they like because they have money.”

  “So you took care of him?” I said.

  I couldn’t believe I had just blurted that out.

  Daniela’s brother reached inside his jacket pocket and I felt a sudden urge to run. He pulled out a small card and handed it to me. It had one thing printed on it––a phone number.

  “You did my sister a service and for that I am grateful to you. Should you ever need anything from me, call that number.”

  “Aren’t you worried I will go to the police?” I said.

  “You could, but I don’t think you will. You see Ms. Monroe, you and I share some commonalities. We both seek justice and do whatever it takes to make sure that happens.”

  “I understand what you must have felt for Parker after what he did to Daniela, but it wasn’t your decision to make,” I said.

  He rose from his chair and snapped his fingers and the other men reappeared.

  “You’ll have to excuse me; I have other business to attend to. Perhaps our paths will cross again in the future and we can resume our conversation.”

  “What about my questions?”

  He started to walk away and then paused and turned toward me.

  “I enjoy your passion,” he said. “Don’t ever change.”

  What if you’d been given a second chance to catch your sister’s killer—would you take it? And if you did, would a lifetime behind bars be justice enough, or would you need to see him dead?

  Meet Sloane: PI Sloane Monroe has solved every case that’s come across her desk with the exception of one—the brutal murder of her sister Gabrielle. Three years have passed without a trace of the killer until today.

  Meet Sam: Enter the mind of Sam Reids, a serial killer who slashes his trademark letter S into the wrist of his female victims before he discards their body in the same place he found them.

  Who is he, and why does he prey on innocent women?

  CHAPTER 1

  Sam Reids reclined back into the seat of his black 1970 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme and examined the women that shuffled in and out of the supermarket like predictable herds of cattle. It had been three long years since he felt the steady churn of butterflies in his stomach, but the anticipation of the nights soon-to-be events made it all worthwhile. The wait hadn’t been easy, and whenever he felt he couldn’t control his urges any longer, he walked down the steep series of steps that led to the basement and gazed at the trinkets he’d collected. They were all spaced two inches apart in single-file formation on a shelf. In total, there were fifteen glass bottles. Each container had a white label about the size of a Post-It note affixed to the front with the date and a name written in thick black marker.

  Over the past few years Sam visited them often and took special care to dust and polish their exteriors, but he never opened them once they’d been sealed. He didn’t want to take a chance that one of his precious mementos could get spoiled. Sometimes he took one to his room and deposited it on the stand next to him while he slept. When he woke during the night to the illuminated glow that shone through the glass from the lamp above, he felt a sensation of peace, like a child that watched the constant spin of the mobile over the crib. It wasn’t the same thrill he’d experienced when he secured the object within the bottle, but it helped him pass the time.

  Through his binoculars, Sam observed two women walk out of the store together; one carried a brown paper sack in her hand and the other, a gallon of milk. The one with the sack showed promise. Her long espresso-colored hair flickered in the wind. It reminded him of flames from a forest fire fighting its way across acres of trees. He waited for her to say goodbye to her friend and then placed his binoculars on the seat next to him. His palms expelled an oily substance that spread until they were both drenched with sweat. The time had come.

  Sam grabbed an unused diaper from the passenger seat and pushed his car door open. At the same time, the woman unlocked her passenger side door and bent down and placed the sack of groceries on the seat of her car. She was too preoccupied to hear him approach.

  “Excuse me,” he said.

  The woman retracted out of the car and turned and faced him.

  “Do I know you?” she said.

  “I’m sorry to bother you,” he said with a crooked smile, “but do you know how to change a diaper?”

  She looked at the diaper in his hand and then back at him.

  “Why do you ask?”

  “My sister asked me to watch my nephew for a few hours, and I can’t seem to get the darn thing on right.”

  He angled the diaper in the direction of his car.

  “I’m parked right over there,” he said. “Do you think you could help me?”

  The woman hesitated and studied the man’s car for a moment and then shrugged her shoulders.

  “I really need to get home,” she said.

  The man smiled, but not just any smile. It was one he’d practiced in the mirror over and over again until it conveyed what he needed it to: trust me.

  “It will only take a minute,” he said.

  They walked over to Sam’s car, and he was careful to remain a few paces behind her. He glanced over his left shoulder and then his right. All was still, and since the store closed in five minutes, he was certain it would remain that way. He watched the woman peek through the window of his car and relished the startled look on her face when she didn’t see a baby. With a perplexed look, she turned and faced him.

  “Where’s the—”

  The man reached into the front pocket of his hoodie with all the calmness of a drug addict who’d just smoked a bag of weed and pulled out a needle and inserted it into her shoulder. In an instant her body went limp and she sagged into him.

  Happy anniversary, he thought.

  ***

  When he arrived home, Sam pulled the woman out of the trunk of his car and placed his hands in the small of her back and tossed her over his right shoulder. Her exposed thigh pressed against the flesh on his face, and he felt her body quiver. It made him feel alive again. The way she looked at him when he opened the trunk and gazed down on her reminded him of a fawn, but she didn’t move or make a sound. He was a little disappointed by this; he’d expected more of a challenge.

  Sam opened the door to the basement, hauled the woman downstairs, and walked past his bottle collection. For the first time since she’d regained consciousness, the woman tried to scream, but it was muffled by the tape he’d secured over her mouth. He stopped for a moment and turned toward the shelves and patted the side of her leg.

  “They’re beautiful, aren’t they?” he said. “Do you see the row there at the bottom? There’s nothing on it now, but in a week or two, it will be all filled up.”

  The woman twisted her body and thrashed from side to side and tried to release herself from the tight grip he had on her.

  Sam just snickered and said, “That’s more like it.”

  He entered a side room that was adorned with a single motif in mind—plastic, and he laid her body across a white padded board in the center of the room. He secured her into the wrist and ankle restraints and then removed the duct tape from her lips.

  “There now,” he said, “
that’s better.”

  A tear trickled down the side of her face, and he took his finger and brushed it away.

  “Now, now. There’s no need for that,” he said.

  “Are you going to kill me?”

  He smiled and ran his hand through her hair.

  “You have beautiful hair,” he said. “It’s so soft. So well taken care of; I admire that in a woman.”

  “Please don’t hurt me,” she said. “I’ll do whatever you want. If you want money, it’s yours, and I won’t say anything to anyone, I promise.”

  It was the same plea he’d heard time and time again. The final plea of a terrified woman who’d pledge anything to save herself. He lifted his pointer finger and placed it in the center of her lips.

  “Shhh,” he said. “I need you to hold still for me. Nod if you understand.”

  She didn’t move.

  “I asked you to nod if you understand,” he said. “It isn’t polite not to respond, especially since you’re a guest in my house.”

  She bobbed her head up and down and another tear escaped from her eyelid.

  “This next part is going to hurt for a moment,” he said, “but I find it’s best to get it over with.”

  CHAPTER 2

  I pushed the shower curtain aside and lunged for my cell phone which had been ringing off and on in a consistent pattern for the past several minutes. Whoever it was really wanted to get a hold of me. I checked my phone and had two missed calls—one from Nick and the other from Maddie. They both seemed burdened by something, and Maddie was on her way over, but she wouldn’t say why.

  I stepped out of the shower and dried off and walked into the living room. A news reel ran across the bottom of my television screen with information about a homicide. I grabbed the remote and jacked the volume up. The female reporter on the screen was situated in front of a grocery store in Kimball Junction. She wore an ill-fitted pastel suit and enough makeup to last her for the rest of the week. The look on her face was grave and told a story all its own.

  “This is Kennedy Price reporting from KRD news,” she said. “In the early hours of the morning, a jogger discovered the body of a woman about ten feet from where I stand now. The police haven’t released many details, and no names have been made public, but what we can tell you is the victim was a female in her late twenties or early thirties, and it’s being reported that she had long, dark hair. Many of our viewers will remember the brutal, sadistic murders of several young women that took place right here in Park City a few short years ago. The killer, who went by the self-proclaimed name Sinnerman, was never caught, which leads us to wonder—”

  She paused a moment and put her finger on the earpiece that was latched to the side of her ear and then continued.

  “We’ve just received word that the victim’s name is Phoebe Summers. She was a married mother of two young girls and a long time Park City resident. From what we’ve just learned, she had the trademark letter S carved into her wrist from what police believe to be a knife. Unless it’s some kind of copycat killing, it appears the Sinnerman murders have started up again.”

  A text popped up on my phone from Maddie:

  Almost there, don’t turn on the TV, okay? I need to talk to you first.

  It was too late for that.

  The news anchor changed to a male with a glossy bald head, and the topic of murder was replaced with a segment on grilling steaks the right way which didn’t seem like an appropriate segue after they’d just terrified every brunette alive within an hour radius.

  I switched the television off and sat down on the sofa. Lord Berkeley, A.K.A. Boo, woke from his slumber and scooted his furry white body next to me and propped his head up on my pant leg. I stroked him and thought about Gabby and how long I’d waited for this day to come.

  A sound echoed from my front door with an accompanying noise like someone was slapping the palm of their hands against it—repeatedly.

  “Sloane, you in there? Open up.”

  I unlocked the door and yanked it back and was met with a flushed and tired Maddie, who clung to my door like she’d just sprinted in the 100 yard dash. Her blond hair was in its usual pigtails, and she wore a ribbed lavender tank top with a white one beneath it and a pair of jean shorts with the insides of the pockets sticking out the bottom. From the look of her, one would never guess she’d been alive for more than three-and-a-half decades.

  “I saw the news,” I said.

  She threw her arms around me and squeezed—hard.

  “Are you alright? I’ve been worried about you all day.”

  “I will be once I get more information about the woman who was murdered,” I said. “Did they bring her to you?”

  She nodded.

  “Have you examined her yet?” I said.

  “They called me out to the scene when she was discovered.”

  “So what do you think—is it him?” I said.

  “We should talk about this when I have more information. My main concern right now is how you’re dealing with all of this.”

  Maddie and I had known each other for almost twenty years, and over that time I had learned to decipher a lot of things about her, including when she was keeping something from me.

  “What aren’t you telling me?” I said. “You were the ME on this case the first time around, and I expect you are again, which means if anyone has first-hand knowledge, it’s you.”

  “I want to ask you something; let’s say it turns out to be the same sick wacko who murdered your sister a few years ago, what are you going to do?”

  “Whatever it takes, you know that,” I said. “You’ve known me long enough to realize I won’t stop this time until he’s caught. And if you have any information that would help me succeed, I need to know what it is, so don’t hold out on me.”

  We walked over to the couch and sat down. Maddie dug into her Chanel bag and pulled out a piece of gum and popped it into her mouth. Some people smoke to relieve tension, but not Maddie. Gum was her form of nicotine. She lounged back and propped her hands up behind her head and stared at the ceiling for a moment and then looked over at me and sighed.

  “Alright, here’s what I know. The victim was female and around the same age your sister was when she was taken, give or take a few years. And she was killed in a similar way—she had the same bruises in the shape of fingers on the sides of her neck and her hyoid bone was fractured.”

  “What about the pressure he used, did it resemble what you found last time?”

  She nodded.

  “It’s the same,” she said. “He predominately uses his right hand to strangle his victims, and the fingerprints have the same inconsistency. The prints on one side of her neck are smaller, and there are only three of them, like he only uses a few fingers from that side of his hand. It’s something I’ve never been able to figure out.”

  “I always assumed he had some kind of deformity,” I said. “Did he umm—”

  “Rape her?”

  I nodded.

  “No.”

  The more she went on and on about the victim, the more it resembled the other killings.

  “Bound?” I said.

  “Yep—there were bruises on one of her wrists and both ankles.”

  “What about the symbol?” I said. “The news reported the deceased woman had knife wounds.”

  “She had the same three slashes in the shape of an S on her wrist.”

  “Or more like a backward Z after he carves his signature,” I said.

  “And she had one gash by her upper thigh that spanned about three inches.”

  “That’s one thing I’ve never understood. Why a single cut on the leg of one victim and several on another?” I said.

  Maddie shrugged.

  “There was one difference this time”, she said. “He didn’t sever all the fingers from one of her hands like he did in the first round of killings; the vic’s entire right hand was missing.”

  “He’s becoming more aggressive,” I
said.

  “Or he’s a copycat.”

  I shook my head.

  “I don’t think so. My guess is that he’s bored with the fingers and needs an even bigger thrill. To slice their fingers off isn’t good enough anymore.”

  Maddie leaned forward and took my hands in hers and rested them on her knee.

  “You want to know something?” she said. “I’m proud of you.”

  “For what?”

  “I violated about a hundred traffic laws on my way here, and the whole time all I could think about was how I was going to break the news to you that this creep could be back, and then I get here and you’re calmer than I am.”

  “I’ve had time to deal with it,” I said.

  “Well, if it’s him, we’ll know soon enough.”

  I leaned toward Maddie.

  “Oh it’s him alright. He’s back—and he’s killing again.”

  CHAPTER 3

  My front door rattled like a herd of elephants prepared for a stampede were pressed against it.

  “What the hell?” Maddie said.

  I stood and Maddie shot up from her position on the sofa and stepped in front of me.

  “Allow me,” she said.

  She walked to the door and glanced out the peephole.

  “Solicitors?”

  “Worse,” she said. “Reporters.”

  “News travels fast.”

  “How do you want to handle this?” she said.

  I walked over to the door.

  “If I don’t talk to them, they’ll just hound me until I do.”

  She raised her pointer finger in front of my face and wagged it in a swirl pattern.

  “Oh no you’re not,” she said.

  “Maddie, I’m fine. I can deal with it.”

  “So can I,” she said.

  And with that she twisted the knob on the door and flung it open and then walked out and slammed it behind her. I pulled back the curtain in my front entrance and got ready for the show to begin.

 

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