Her Last Day (Jessie Cole #1)(44)
“Are you sure?”
He turned to face her. Dark shadows appeared as half-moons beneath his eyes. “The mayor isn’t convinced. He doesn’t want to panic the public, but we’re seeing the same pattern as last time. A group of people goes missing, and dead bodies from his last hunt begin to emerge. Last year it was a married couple, Garrett and Robin Ramsey, taken while picnicking in a wooded area. Two days later, a teenage boy disappeared after leaving a party—”
“And then the twin girls abducted on their way to the bus stop,” Jessie finished. “So what happened?”
“An abandoned car with a flat tire was found on a road just off Highway 99. No sign of the driver, Erin Hayes, eighteen. This followed by Natalie Bailey, a psychotherapist taken from her bed while her husband lay sleeping. Test results haven’t come back yet, but we believe he was drugged.”
“That’s horrible.”
“Yeah, and a few hours ago, Garrett Ramsey’s elderly father found his dead son sitting in the back seat of a vintage car propped on blocks in the side yard. The missing twin girls were also inside the car. Their decomposing bodies had been set up, one on each side of Garrett.”
Jessie had no words.
He looked around. “I needed to know you were safe. Where’s Higgins?”
“He’s been sleeping with Olivia.”
“I’m sending someone over tomorrow to put a dead bolt on both doors.”
Before she could answer, he said, “Natalie Bailey lives a block away. Humor me.”
“Okay,” she said.
He kissed her forehead. “Thanks.”
She frowned when he turned and headed for the stairs. Ever since he’d come back into her life she’d been holding back, afraid to get too close too fast. Not having him around for the past six weeks, though, had made her realize that not only did she need him; she wanted him to be a part of her life. “Leaving already?”
“My night is only just beginning. Talk to Olivia in the morning—will you?”
“I will.”
“Lock up behind me.”
She followed him down the stairs. “Stay safe,” she told him before shutting and locking the door.
Erin woke up shivering again. It was dark. She could hear the sprinklers and droplets of water hitting the outside of the box.
Hot during the day. Cold at night. She wasn’t sure which was worse.
She was always thirsty. She couldn’t remember if she’d gone twenty-four hours without water or forty-eight. Her mouth felt like sandpaper. She’d read somewhere that a person could live three days without water.
The smell inside her confined space was becoming unbearable. But that was the least of her worries. She dragged the coin against the decaying wood, back and forth, back and forth.
Scraping, scraping, scraping.
Crack.
Had that really happened?
Did the wood just crack?
It did. It did. It did. Be careful. Do not drop the coin.
Despite losing a few pounds since being thrown in the box, moving her arm from her side to the top of her stomach was still a tight squeeze. But she did it. Very carefully she placed the coin snugly atop her belly button, then moved her arm back to her side and used the tips of her fingers to push against the wood where she’d been working. One of her fingers poked through decayed wood.
She stifled a giggle.
Stop it.
She couldn’t allow herself to get overly excited. Not yet. Too early.
She pulled and dug at the wood until two of her fingers slid through the hole. The tips of dewy grass brushed against her fingertips as a lone tear slid down her cheek.
Early the next morning, Jessie sat at the kitchen table across from Olivia and looked through Zee’s Polaroid pictures, examining each one closely while Olivia read Zee’s journal.
“It’s says here,” Olivia said, “that Zee hears voices in her head. The voices even have names. Lucy is the most outspoken and is easily angered. Marion is the clever one, the one who knows how to make potions and put spells on people. And Francis is the troublemaker.”
“She has schizophrenia,” Jessie said without looking up. “You should be working on your report.”
“I am. This is research. If I can help you solve the case, then I’ll be able to relate with Sherlock Holmes, which will make it so much easier to write my paper. And since I’ll be helping you for the next few days, you can think of me as a consulting detective.”
Jessie rolled her eyes.
“Sherlock was known for his keen observation,” Olivia said. “We have to be sure to look at every detail. We must look at every word she wrote and every item in that box as a clue.”
Jessie ignored her as she examined the picture in her hand closely and then set it aside after failing to see anything unusual. She was careful with the dried flower petals as she sifted through the box. She put all the photos with scribbled, hard-to-decipher words in the margins to the side. At the bottom of the box were two pictures that were stuck together, image to image. Zee must have piled them together before giving the ink a chance to dry. She peeled them slowly apart, careful not to ruin the photos.
Olivia left the table to grab a snack and a glass of milk. When she returned she stood looking over Jessie’s shoulder and pointed at one of the pictures Jessie had put to the side. “Those are supercool sunglasses she’s wearing in the photo.”