What lies beneath the gr.., p.11

What Lies Beneath the Graves, page 11

 part  #5 of  Spookie Town Mystery Series

 

What Lies Beneath the Graves
Select Voice:
Brian (uk)
Emma (uk)  
Amy (uk)
Eric (us)
Ivy (us)
Joey (us)
Salli (us)  
Justin (us)
Jennifer (us)  
Kimberly (us)  
Kendra (us)
Russell (au)
Nicole (au)


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24

Larger Font   Reset Font Size   Smaller Font  



  “It’s all right, Frank,” she replied, stroking Snowball gently. The purring had stopped, the cat was sleeping. “I suspected you were going to take a trip to Chicago. Soon. I saw the way you and Laura were scheming on the back porch this morning. I know you’re worried about her and her friend Odette. All the missing girls really. And,” she reached over and squeezed her husband’s hand, “if you think you can help protect our daughter in any way up there, then I’m behind you a hundred percent. I hated seeing her leave today knowing what’s going on at the campus. I pray they catch whoever is taking these girls, I know you also believe they’ve been kidnapped and aren’t just missing, and the three girls are found unharmed...and alive.”

  “We all want that. Laura begged me to come up tomorrow and look into this situation. Talk to some of her friends who might have seen or heard something and speak to the campus police. She’s so scared for Odette and the others. She’s frightened for herself. She thinks I can solve anything, any crime, so she said she’d feel better if I looked into it.”

  “That you’re super cop, huh?”

  “She thinks I am. I’m not, of course, but I do want to help find these missing students if I can. I feel so sorry for their families and friends. Also going up there will give Laura some piece of mind because I’ll be close by and will be checking in with her a lot. She’s afraid to go anywhere on campus now by herself.”

  Abigail shivered, remembering her missing husband Joel. Those had been dark, dark days. “Then go, honey. I can do without you for a couple of days. No problem. See if you can help Sam find those girls and...keep Laura safe.”

  “I knew you’d be okay with it. Thanks for being such an understanding spouse.” He gave her a kiss as she lay in his arms. “You know Sam is now a lieutenant detective in his division. He’s at the top of the heap.”

  “Good for him. He deserves it. Though, isn’t he close to retirement?” she inquired.

  “Three or four years away, I think. He was a lot younger than me. It’ll be good to see him again. It’s been too long since we saw him.”

  “Two years or so, huh?”

  “About that.”

  “Say hi to him for me,” she said, “and tell him to come down for a visit sometime soon. He can bring the family if he wants. We have the room.”

  “I’ll tell him.”

  “What about Myrtle’s new mystery? The lost treasure?”

  Frank chuckled. “It can wait. It’s waited for nearly eighty years. I’m sure Myrtle and Glinda can handle it for a while. Probably have it all solved by the time I return. Treasure found and in the bank...if there is any to find, that is.”

  “Possibly. Myrtle is a determined woman. With Glinda’s help she might just unearth that buried treasure.

  “What time are you leaving tomorrow?” Was all she had left to ask.

  “Early.”

  FRANK WAS RIGHT. WHEN she awoke the next morning around eight o’clock he was up and dressed. Bag packed. She was sure there was a gun inside it. He never went anywhere without his old duty gun. “How about something to eat before you go?”

  So they had breakfast, gazing out at the swirling fog beyond the windows which hid the driveway and roads, and she sent him off with a kiss and a hug. “Be careful, Frank.”

  “Driving in the fog? It’s dissipating as we speak.”

  “Not that. Be careful,” she stressed the words and was sure he knew what she meant.

  “I’m always careful.” And he was gone. She watched his truck disappear down the driveway into the fog.

  She got Nick off to school and drove into town to work on the mural. By the time she was behind the wheel the fog was about gone. Good thing. She hated driving in it.

  Chapter 9

  IT WAS STRANGE TO BE in Chicago again, Frank brooded, as he drove into the heart of the city. Cars and trucks zipped by and around him at crazy speeds and he felt the encroachment; it made him nervous. He had never liked driving on the super highways. The sheer size of the city irked him. He’d been gone too long and was no longer used to the congestion, the noise. Usually when he visited Kyle he’d drive straight to his son’s apartment or the hospital where he worked, avoiding the heavy traffic areas.

  This time, revisiting his old police station, he had to go deeper into the city and before he knew it he was on the street where he’d once lived with his first wife, Jolene, and a child Kyle. Driving there had been automatic. The house, as he passed by it, looked the same with the landscaping, the beautiful brick front, and the attached carport he’d worked so hard to build so many years ago. There had been so many happy times he’d shared with Jolene and Kyle there, but seeing it again made him sad. It had taken a long time but he had a new life and was happy again. He didn’t stop, he kept driving and soon was pulling into the police station’s busy parking lot. A mess of old feelings assailed him and he found himself smiling. Oh, not so much for the job he’d left behind, and the darkness it often showed him of the world, but for the friends he’d made all those years ago and sometimes still missed.

  Sam met him at the front desk. “Hi there stranger,” his old friend greeted him. “I saw your truck pull in and thought I’d meet you. The guys are waiting in the back and, as always, they’re ready for food. We ordered in pizzas in honor of your visit. Come on back.”

  “I thought we were going out to lunch?”

  “We were until we got too busy. You know how it is. Pizzas in house is about all the time we can afford. There are too many open cases today. With the warmer weather the gangs are shooting up the streets again, knocking their rivals off and creating bloody havoc across the city. Domestic cases are skyrocketing. Murders are at an all time high.”

  “Sounds about normal.”

  “Do you miss it,” Sam questioned. “The job?”

  “No, I don’t miss this job in the big city. The chaos, the overabundance of gruesome crimes and the homicides. So much overtime there’s little left for family, friends or a social life. I do a little consulting in Spookie for the local sheriff’s department and I have my books, my relaxing family life with a wife and three kids I love...and that’s just fine with me.”

  “By the way, I like your novels, Frank. So believable. You’re a fairly good writer for an ex-Chicago detective. I never knew you had such a prolific writer inside you. I’m impressed and envious.”

  “Thanks. High praise coming from you, Lieutenant Cato. I do my best.”

  “Are you rich and famous yet?”

  “No, but I’m working on it.” Frank walked around the counter as he’d done hundreds, maybe thousands, of times when he’d worked there and followed his friend into the office where a number of the old gang were waiting to see him. They shook hands all around and traded stories of their lives to catch up.

  It was an enjoyable lunch reminiscing with his former colleagues. Then the gang broke up, some went off on calls, to man the phones, and some to do paperwork. The place emptied out quickly.

  “Sam, can we talk about those girls missing at my daughter’s college?” Frank pressed after they sat down in Sam’s office. It was a small workspace, sparse but neat. There were framed pictures of Sam’s wife and kids on the desk. Awards on the wall. It had once belonged to another lieutenant, Lieutenant Sheen, when Frank had worked the job. Sam had informed him Lieutenant Sheen had passed away the summer before. Cancer. A shame. Frank had liked and respected the man.

  “We can do better than talk about it. I was going to drive over to the college and interview some of the students, their roommates and friends who knew the missing girls. I guess I’ll be speaking to Laura then as well. My partner is at a doctor’s appointment right now and took the rest of the day off. You want to ride along? It’ll be like old times.”

  “I was waiting for you to ask me that. I’m in.”

  “Good. My car’s waiting outside. Let’s go.”

  The two of them exited the station, drove to the college and after parking the vehicle in front they headed to the registrar’s office. Sam had telephoned the dean and his head of security earlier that morning so they were expected. After a short visit with the two men and learning the little they seemed to know, they left them to speak to one of the secretaries who might have helpful information about the missing girls.

  Sam stood at the front desk and flipping open the small notebook he still carried to write things in he told Frank, “Since the dean was kind enough to give us the names of the missing girls–Alice Wood, Thandie Harris and Odette Benoist–and some of the students we need to interview, maybe these folks here can let us know where to find the students we need to speak to.”

  It didn’t take long to get a list of the classes the students could be found in and the times they’d be arriving or leaving as well as their dorm addresses. Frank and Sam walked into the first room, an eighteenth century American history lecture, and introduced themselves to the teacher and asked to speak to a Freddie Marsden. The boy was a close acquaintance of Thandie Harris and had been one of the last people to see her before she disappeared. They explained to the boy what they wanted and then asked him the necessary questions. They didn’t learn anything that would help, he’d seen Thandie in class a day or so before she’d vanished and had barely spoken to her at that time, and so they went on to interview the next friend.

  The two detectives spent the following hours tracking down and talking to anyone who had known the missing girls or who had seen them last. They interrupted classes and lay in wait at the student’s dorm rooms, catching them in between their classes or on breaks to talk to them.

  Sam gathered his facts and scribbled copious notes. But when they finally called it a day and were driving to the station, Sam had to admit they hadn’t learned much more than they’d already known. Nothing out of the ordinary had happened to any of the missing girls in the days before they were taken. One day each of them were just gone.

  “These girls aren’t going to be easy to find,” Sam confided in Frank, shaking his head slowly as he drove. “It’s like they have vanished off the face of the earth. No one’s seen anything, knows anything.”

  “Now what?” Frank was staring out the window at the Chicago skyline. The city sparkled and shone in the sun, bright and beautiful, but he knew it was a misleading mirage. There was great darkness beneath the shininess. There was evil in the slums and barrios thriving in the shadows. He knew. He remembered.

  “We go visit the parents.”

  “Oh, that’s always fun,” Frank stated caustically. But inside he was reliving the sadness he’d felt doing that duty. No matter how an officer tried to stay uninvolved, untouched, by the grief a parent felt over their missing child, he could never do it well. Their suffering, their distress and tears, always affected him. It would break his heart every time. He accompanied Sam into the missing girls’ homes but remained silent as Sam did the talking and asked the questions. He was out of his jurisdiction and it was Sam’s case. Frank had to admit, his friend didn’t miss a trick, gathered the information and was thorough but compassionate towards the terrified parents. He promised them he and his fellow officers would do all they could to find their children. Frank’s heart went out to the families because he knew the odds of getting the girls back safe were dwindling with every hour that went by.

  Speaking to the bereft parents also made him worry more for Laura. If he could have he would have made her pack up her belongings and go home with him, but she’d already informed him she couldn’t do that. She had to stay in college, attend her classes, and get her degree. “There’s danger everywhere,” she’d conveyed the night before, “so I have to learn to take care of myself. You or mom can’t be with me forever.” Of course, Laura was right. “I have to live my own life. Don’t worry, I will be careful, I promise.” So he and Abby would have to accept what Laura had decided. It was her life after all.

  When Frank and Sam took leave of Odette’s parents, their final stop, they returned to the college and met up with Laura after her last class at four o’clock. It was an early day for her.

  “How did it go?” Her face reflected anxiety. She’d opened the door and led them into the room she shared with another girl, Sigourney Lassiter; who wasn’t there at the moment. “Did you find out anything helpful? Discover any leads? Has anyone heard anything about the girls or Odette?”

  “No to all four,” Frank answered. “I’m so sorry.”

  “So they’re still missing.” Laura had pulled out a chair for Sam as she and Frank settled on the end of her bed. Frank felt terrible they didn’t have better news for her.

  “Hi Sam. It’s been a while,” Laura said. “You’re looking well.”

  “Thanks. It’s good to see you, too, kiddo, though not so much under these circumstances.”

  “I know.” Laura lowered her chin into her hands, her body slumped against the wall at the head of her bed. “I can’t believe none of the women have been found and nothing has been discovered about their disappearances. I feel so awful. And Odette? She’s such a sweet person. So good. Why would anyone want to hurt any of them, hurt her? Where are they? Where is she?”

  Sam didn’t answer her questions, but instead said, “We talked to your dean earlier and he’s introducing new safety measures across the campus for his female students from now on. Anyone can get a security escort to any of their classes or anywhere they need to go after dark or even during the day if they feel the need for protection.”

  Frank had welcomed that offer. “And Laura, listen, I want you to take full advantage of that, you hear? If you go anywhere on campus where you’re not in sight of other people ask for an escort or make sure you have others around you at all times. Promise me?”

  “I promise. I’m scared, too. I will be extremely cautious. I’ll be over-cautious. Tell mom not to worry about me and don’t you either. I have the screamer and the pepper-spray and I’ll use them if I have to. If mom had her way I’d carry a big stick of wood or a baseball bat for self-defense in my backpack like she used to do before she married you.” Now she gave the two men a small smile, though Frank could see she was genuinely frightened.

  “Oh, I remember that big stick.” Frank softly chuckled. “If I recall, Myrtle used it to knock that Mud People Killer out of a window when he tried to abduct Abby.”

  “She did. I’ve heard the story many times from Myrtle.” Another smile from Laura. “That old woman sure was proud of herself for sending that killer flying out the window.”

  “She sure was.”

  At that point Sam announced, “Sorry to break this up, but I need to return to work. I have paperwork to complete and submit. And since you’re riding with me, Frank, so it’s time to go.”

  “I wish I could stay longer, Laura, but Kyle is expecting me and my truck is parked at the police station. I need to hitch a ride there with Sam. So where he goes I go.” Frank got up from where he was perched on the bed.

  “That’s okay,” she replied, “I have a big test tomorrow and have to study. Say hi to Kyle for me. I’ll see you and mom on Friday. I pray Odette and the others will be found long before then.”

  “I do, too. And I’ll say hi to Kyle for you.”

  “I’m going to do my best to find those missing girls, Laura,” Sam said. “The whole department will. We’re on the case and we won’t give up until those girls are home. So just take care of yourself and stay alert.”

  “Goodbye, Sam.”

  Frank hugged Laura and the two men left. He didn’t feel comfortable leaving Laura. Someone was taking girls and Frank felt helpless to protect her if he wasn’t there to do it. But other than moving in with her and guarding her every minute, there was no way he could. She had her life there and he had to go back to his in Spookie.

  Before he took Sam’s leave, Frank requested, “Hey old partner, could you keep me updated, a text or a quick phone call once in a while, of anything crucial that develops in this investigation as it occurs?”

  “You know I will. I can squeeze in a couple of texts or a call or two. I know you have a personal stake in this case.”

  And that was that. Frank climbed into his truck, drove across the city, and rendezvoused with his son at the hospital where the young man was getting off duty. They went to supper and caught each other up on things. But for the first time in a long time Frank wished he was still on the Chicago force. He wanted so badly to find the creep or creeps who took those girls. But there was nothing he could do. For him those days were over. It was Sam’s world now and Sam’s case. The man was an excellent cop so the problem was in good hands.

  Frank would visit with his son, spend the night, and head home in the morning. Perhaps, on the way, he’d squeeze in another visit with Laura just to reassure her.

  Chapter 10

  WHEN GLINDA ROSE FROM her bed Monday morning she carried a cup of coffee out to the swing in her backyard and as she drank she admired the hazy azure sky and how the breeze riffled the tree limbs around her. She gulped in a breath of the fragrant air and sighed contentedly. It was going to be a spectacularly beautiful day. No rain. Warm. It was good to see spring again. She wasn’t a winter person, though she did like snow if she was inside and it was outside.

  She reflected on the vision she’d had the night before. It’d been a disturbing one. It hadn’t been about Masterson and his treasure, but about something else. Something which had created a sick, horrified reaction deep inside her psyche and given her a feeling of great angst and sadness as she came out of the dream. At the end of the vignette she’d caught a glimpse of Abigail, Frank and Laura deep in conversation, looking anxious. Not unusual because she’d been with all of them the morning before for breakfast and had sensed something was wrong. They just hadn’t shared it with her. Whatever it was, it was bad. Still...she had the undeniable urge to talk to one of them and tell them what she’d seen in her most recent but disturbing dream. Laura was miles away in Chicago and Frank was most likely at work at the sheriff’s department. It was Monday morning after all. Abigail would be the easiest to track down, see, and she had a good idea where she could find her. So after her coffee Glinda got dressed, mounted her bicycle and rode into town.

 

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
Add Fast Bookmark
Load Fast Bookmark
Turn Navi On
Turn Navi On
Turn Navi On
Scroll Up
Turn Navi On
Scroll
Turn Navi On
183