Robert Browne - Kill Her Again

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Jake crouched down and shone his flashlight beam on one of the papers.

“Over a month old,” he said. “I’ve got a feeling the occupants have moved on.”

Maybe so, Pope thought, but from what he could see in Jake’s flashlight beam, they’d managed to do a pretty good job of destroying the place first. His plasma TV was missing. The carpet was stained and littered with cigarette butts. The decorative mirror Jake and Ronnie had given them as a housewarming gift had been ripped off the wall and discarded in a corner of the room.

The whole place reeked of stale body odor and vomit, and unlike the prison they’d just come from, there was no smell of disinfectant to cover it.

Pope had stopped caring about this place months ago, when he left it behind. But now his sadness turned to anger. How dare these people invade his home? His sanctuary?

This room was where he and Ben had watched The Jungle Book. Had played video games together. And now some thoughtless, desperate motherfuckers had taken that memory and turned it into this.

“Let’s hurry up,” he said. “I don’t want to be here any longer than I have to.”

There was a small door with a pull chain in the ceiling above the second-floor landing. Pope pulled on it, and springs groaned as the door opened and a ladder unfolded, leading up to the attic.

Pope went first this time. McBride handed him a Maglite and he flicked it on, then climbed to the top of the ladder and shone it into the cramped space above.

Nothing had changed up here. By some miracle, the squatters had never ventured inside, leaving the boxes of old clothes, legal papers, and discarded toys untouched. Pope had been up here a hundred times over the years, depositing unwanted junk, but he didn’t remember ever seeing any marks on the floorboards.

Not that he’d been looking for any.

The attic walls and ceiling were unfinished, made of tar paper and two-by-fours. Pope shone the light toward a nearby stud and spotted the Stick N Click light fixture he’d mounted there. The electricity in the house had been turned off months ago, but there’d never been a line up here anyway, and the Stick N Click ran on a 9-volt battery.

Reaching over, he jabbed it with a finger, and it came to life, illuminating the small room. Not well, but it was better than nothing.

Pope pulled himself all the way up, then shone the flashlight down the ladder.

“There’s room for one more,” he said. “That’s about it.”

“You go on,” he heard Jake say to McBride. “I’ve got some calls to make anyway.”

A moment later, McBride was at the top of the ladder. “Did you find it?”

“Give me a break,” Pope said, “I’m still trying to get my land legs. This place wasn’t built for full-sized human beings.”

As if to prove this, he pulled himself upright and nearly bumped his head on a crossbeam.

The floor was made of narrow wooden slats, and as McBride stood up next to him, he ran the flashlight along them, looking for Susan’s mark.

Nothing there.

“We’re gonna have to move some of these boxes,” he said.

McBride nodded and they spent the next several minutes shifting boxes from one pile to the next. But they found no marks of any kind, except for the usual scuffs and scratches.

“I knew this was too much to hope for. Chalk it up to another one of Susan’s-”

“Wait,” McBride said. She was staring at a nearby ceiling beam. “Let me have that flashlight.”

Pope handed it over and she shone it toward the crossbeam, then moved in for a closer look.

“I found it,” she said. “This is it.”

Pope was surprised. Stepping over to the crossbeam, he took a look for himself, and sure enough, etched into the wood with a knife or an ice pick or a screwdriver was a small, crudely drawn circle with several spokes-about the size of a dime.

The gypsy wheel.

He turned to McBride. “This isn’t right. She said she marked a floorboard.”

“No, she said she hid it under a floorboard. The wheel is just a reminder of where.”

Swinging the flashlight downward, McBride shone it on the wooden slat directly beneath the mark, then touched the slat with her toe.

It wobbled slightly. Loose.

They crouched down and Pope stuck his fingers into the space between the slats, carefully prying the loose one free.

“Why do I feel like Geraldo Rivera about to break into Capone’s vault?”

McBride shone the light inside, but they saw nothing, and Pope felt a twinge of disappointment.

“Maybe it shifted,” she said, then reached a hand in and patted the space between the floor joists. From the look on her face, she wasn’t finding anything.

Then her expression changed.

“I’ve got it,” she said, then reached in farther and brought out a thick, canvas binder. The kind they’d always used in school. It was crammed full of papers and news clippings, but instead of the usual hearts and flowers drawn on the cover, the typical “Suzie loves Joey” adornments you’d find on a young teenage girl’s notebook, this one was covered with gypsy wheels. Some small, some large. Some crude, some intricate. Each one of them the sign of a serious obsession.

“I don’t believe it,” Pope said. “The goddamn thing is real.”

3 4

The Ghost had a problem.

After following his targets to this neighborhood cul-de-sac, he had watched them disappear around the back of one of the houses. It looked to be a typical suburban two-story, but on closer inspection, through his field glasses, he realized it was abandoned.

A moment later, a flashlight came to life inside and he knew they had broken in.

It was, he’d thought, the perfect setup. Go in quickly- pop, pop, pop — and the targets would be eliminated. And because the house was abandoned, it might be days before the neighbors got curious about the Suburban parked out front and decided to see if someone was home.

A minute or two passed; then a dim light went on in a window near the top of the house. The attic, most likely. Because they had been using a flashlight, The Ghost had assumed the place had no electricity. But apparently he was wrong, and working lights was a variable he’d have to figure into his strategy.

Unfortunately, before he was able to calculate his angle of approach, the front door opened and the deputy, Worthington, stepped outside, a cell phone in hand.

Worthington being out in the open like this was the problem. The Ghost could easily take him down with a simple drive-by, but that left two targets inside, upstairs, and no way to get to them and get the job done without taking the risk of being seen or possibly even caught.

As is often the case, he had been presented with circumstances that were less than ideal. And while instinct told him he’d be better off walking away and telling Troy to go fuck himself, he kept thinking about the money.

Always the money.

And if he didn’t act now, Troy might finally come to his senses and call the whole thing off, leaving The Ghost to argue with the fool about return of payment.

And such an argument would be neither pleasant nor beneficial to his career.

Training his field glasses on the small gap between the target house and its neighbor to the left, The Ghost focused on what he could see of the backyard.

Not much, but enough to tell him that access from the rear would not be difficult. The fence bordering the back neighbor’s property was low and easily climbed, and there was just enough shrubbery along the side of both houses to limit his exposure to prying eyes.

A rear assault would also leave Worthington out of the equation until The Ghost was ready to deal with him-assuming he stayed outside long enough. And based on Worthington’s body language, it didn’t look like he’d be heading back inside anytime soon.

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