Black Jack: A nail biting, hair-raising thriller (Jack Ryder Book 4) (5 page)

BOOK: Black Jack: A nail biting, hair-raising thriller (Jack Ryder Book 4)
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Chapter 10

S
eptember
1990

It took Joseph only two interviews before he landed a job as a music teacher at a local school in Savannah, a dream position for him as it gave him the time to pursue his own music and teach young kids about his big passion at the same time.

For so many years he had struggled as a musician, doing gigs here and there in bars and restaurants or at festivals, but never really making ends meet. With this job he was finally able to provide stability for his family and Kimberly could stay home and not work anymore.

It was perfect.

Meanwhile Kimberly had a lot to do, taking care of this new big house. She decided to homeschool Rosa, as she herself had always been homeschooled. Rosa loved being at home all day and having extra time with her mother. As soon as she was done with her assignments and classes for the day she would go into the back yard and play or on rainy days like today, she would go to the attic and play.

“Don’t get your dress dirty,” Kimberly yelled after her, but the girl was already long gone. Why she loved that attic so much, Kimberly never understood, but she could spend hours on end up there.

Meanwhile Kimberly did the laundry. She walked to the basement with the big and filled basket under her arm. She divided the clothes into colors and whites, then put the first load in and started it. The old machine made a loud noise and drowned out everything.

Kimberly whistled as she walked up the stairs to check on her bread baking in the oven. The kitchen smelled divine and she took it out, burning her finger as it slipped when she put it down.

“Ouch.”

Kimberly blew on the finger, and then went to the sink to pour water on it. She held it under the faucet when she heard a sound and turned to realize a raven had found its way inside the kitchen. There were so many of them all over the property and they had even made a nest in the attic, that she had asked Joseph to remove a thousand times.

“Shoo!” she yelled still holding her finger under the cold water. The bird didn’t react. It flew up on the kitchen counter and sat there, then made a gurgling croak while staring at her bread. The sound was rising in pitch and soon it became very loud.

“Shoo!” Kimberly yelled again, but the bird didn’t react. It started to pick at her bread.

“STOP!”

The bird picked and destroyed the newly baked bread in a matter of seconds, crumbs flying everywhere. Kimberly picked up a wooden spoon and threw it at the bird. Finally it moved, but it didn’t fly away. Instead it flew towards her very fast, and grabbed her hair between its claws, then pulled it violently.

“Ouch! You bastard!”

Kimberly pulled her finger out of the water, then grabbed a kitchen knife.

“CR-R-R-UCK, CR-R-R-UCK, CR-R-R-RUCK,” the bird screamed and flew up under the ceiling while the knife missed it but cut off a huge lump of the hair that fell to the ground.

Kimberly gasped and picked up her long hair between her hands, then looked at herself in the mirror.

“My beautiful hair,” she sobbed when realizing she had lost all hair in the right side of her head. Now she’s have to cut off the other side as well to make it even.

Meanwhile the bird sat under the roof, croaking. Kimberly groaned in anger, yelled at it, then picked up a broom and tried to reach it. The bird took off, flying under the high ceiling towards the front door, croaking loudly, sounding exactly like was it laughing at her.

Like it was mocking her.

Chapter 11

M
ay
2016

“We can’t just keep her here!”

Shannon was angry. She looked at Jack who had been on the phone for at least an hour, talking to his colleagues at the nearest police station, but no girl had been reported missing, they told him.

“I’m sorry,” he said. “They don’t have anywhere better for her to spend the night. Besides she’s already sleeping. We’ll bring her down to the station tomorrow and they’ll call DCF. For now she is fine.”

Shannon bit her nails. She didn’t like it. Ever since Jack went to that little girl at the docks she’s had this sensation, this feeling of dread inside her stomach that she couldn’t escape.

Jack got up from his chair and walked to her. He grabbed her face between his hands and kissed her.

“It’ll be fine,” he whispered. “We’re doing something good here. She would still have been out there, if we hadn’t taken care of her. God only knows who she would run into down there or in the streets. We helped her. We’re the good guys, remember?”

Shannon eased up. She needed to trust Jack more, she knew that. It was an issue she was working on. Trust. It sounded so easy. Just a five-letter word. Still it was the hardest for her to do. To trust another human being, especially a man. She hadn’t exactly had much luck doing so earlier in life.

“I know.”

“Now, Sarah has gone to her room, all the kids are asleep and I mean all of them, even Tyler, do you know what that means?”

“We’re alone,” Shannon said.

“Exactly.”

Jack leaned over and kissed her neck. He continued down to her shoulder where he pulled off her shirt, talking in-between kisses. “So…Shannon King…soon to be
Mrs. Ryder…
what…do…you…say to…the two of us…making all…the love…tonight?”

Shannon giggled and closed her eyes. It felt good to feel his lips on her body again. It had been so long. She leaned back her head. Jack stopped. “Wait, you’re not too tired are you? I don’t want to pressure…”

He didn’t get to finish. She grabbed him by the neck and pulled him towards her and soon after they both tumbled towards the couch where they made love.
All the love
, like they always called it. It was taken from some movie, none of them could remember which. It might also have been a cartoon. Shannon never knew these crazy days anymore. But she did know that she loved Jack. She loved him and the family they were building together. She loved her life more than ever before.

“So what do you think is with this girl?” Jack asked when they were done and were lying on the couch of the rental house.

“What do you mean?”

“She’s strange don’t you think?”

Shannon nodded. “Sure do.”

“I mean show me one kid in this country that doesn’t know if they like a burger or not or even what flavor soda they like.”

Shannon laughed lightly. “That is really odd, yes.”

“And that story of the ghost?” Jack asked while putting his pants back on. He left the shirt off since they were going upstairs to bed in a few minutes anyway. “And she kept talking about the Doctor like this doctor was her parent or something. I think she ran a way from an institution around here. I mean that is the only explanation, right?”

Shannon yawned. She was seeing dots in front of her eyes now. It was past midnight. She hadn’t been up this late since she became pregnant. Tyler had been sleeping all evening, Sarah said, so there was a really good probability that he was going to wake up very soon and asked to be fed.

“Sure.”

And there it was. The sound of Tyler crying in the monitor. On the screen she could see that he was wide-awake. Shannon’s eyes met Jack’s.

“Oh no, “she said.

Jack shrugged. “Better now than after you’ve fallen sleep, right? Maybe if you feed him now you’ll get to sleep afterwards.”

Easy for you to say when it’s not you who has to get up at night.

Shannon got up with a growl and went up the stairs. While she was walking up she realized that Tyler suddenly had stopped crying. Puzzled Shannon opened the door to his room anyway. Inside she spotted Betsy Sue. She was standing by the crib, leaning over it. Shannon gasped and the girl turned her head, then smiled. That was when Shannon realized the girl had put her finger into the baby’s mouth and Tyler was eagerly sucking on it.

“I used to do this to Miss Muffit all the time,” she said, her light blue eyes staring at Shannon from her ghostly pale face. “It always calmed her down.”

Chapter 12

M
ay
2016

Two officers came to the house the next morning. I had spent hours the night before trying to calm Shannon down after she walked in on Betsy Sue. Shannon insisted that one of us stayed in the nursery to make sure the girl didn’t walk in there again. I thought she was freaking out for no reason, but that wasn’t what she needed to hear.

“This girl is creepy,” she kept telling me. “I don’t trust her. I tried to be nice, I tried to embrace her, but this… this is awful what she did, Jack.”

“She probably didn’t know any better,” I tried to defend her. “Apparently she was used to doing it to her sister and that used to make her stop crying, so she believed that it was okay. Cut her some slack.”

But it didn’t help. Shannon had decided the girl was sick or a weirdo and that she was not to be trusted. So I ended up sleeping in a chair in the nursery.

When the officers arrived I hadn’t even showered and I felt like someone had run a truck over me.

The two officers, a man and a woman showed me their badges. “Are you Detective Ryder?”

I nodded and let them inside. I straightened my hair with my hand and tucked my shirt in my trousers. Tyler was crying upstairs. Shannon was with him.

“Just give me a second, will you?” I asked them and walked into the kitchen where all the kids were eating cereal with Sarah. Betsy Sue was sitting with them around the breakfast counter, staring at her cereal bowl like was it the Holy Grail. Abigail and Austin were fighting over a spoon and Angela was chatting about her being a flower girl at the wedding to Sarah and explaining how she was going to throw the rose petals.

Betsy Sue seemed awkward as she sat there all quiet and pale. If I didn’t know better I would have thought she had never seen other children before, but of course she had. As far as I knew she at least had a sister, but maybe the children she had known hadn’t been as vocal and rowdy as our kids. She didn’t seem uncomfortable with it, though. It seemed to amuse her.

“Could you take them to the park afterwards?” I asked Sarah pleadingly. “We need to figure out what is going to happen to Betsy Sue.”

Sarah nodded. Abigail and Austin yelled in happiness.

“Yay, the park!”

Abigail looked at Betsy Sue. “I’m sorry you can’t come with us,” she said. “Maybe next time?”

I didn’t see Emily anywhere and assumed she was still sleeping, teenager as she was.

I turned and looked at Betsy Sue, then smiled. “There are some people here to see you.”

Betsy Sue followed me to the living room where the two officers were waiting patiently. I asked them if they wanted coffee but they refused. They presented themselves as Detective Bellini and Detective Nelson from the Special Victims Unit. I explained to them real quick how I had found Betsy Sue by the water, sitting on the seawall at the harbor, her feet dangling dangerously from the edge and that I was worried about leaving her this late in the streets. They both nodded while listening. The female detective, Bellini wrote down what I told them.

“So far all I have gotten out of her is that she is here form Savannah, that she has a sister called Miss Muffit, I don’t know what kind of name that is, but I am thinking it must be some kind of nickname or something. But again I don’t know if it is her sister or not, I just know that she knew her as a baby. She might have run away from some institution or something. She told me she has no parents and apparently she has lived with a doctor.”

Detective Bellini nodded again, and wrote it down, then looked up at me. I sniffled, my eyes darting between the officers.

“We haven’t had anyone reported this girl missing and we have reached out to all institutions and fosterhomes in the nearby area this morning, but no one seems to miss a girl,” Bellini said. She lifted her hand and touched her hair showing off a very big ring on her finger with a heavy green stone.

“That’s strange,” I said.

“If you don’t mind we’d like to talk to her ourselves a little bit,” detective Bellini said.

“Of course not,” I said and got up. “I’ll go check on the baby and his mother while you do.”

Chapter 13

M
ay
2016

“She won’t talk to us.”

Detective Bellini had come upstairs where Shannon and me were sitting, while she was breastfeeding. She knocked on the door and peeked inside.

“Excuse me?” I said and got up.

The detective shook her head. “She refuses to say anything. You say that she spoke to you two last night?”

“Yes,” Shannon said. “She spoke to us a lot, even.”

I looked at Shannon. “She spoke to you mostly. She likes you.”

“We can’t seem to get through to her. We called DCF and they will send someone over. It might take a little while though, since it is Sunday and all. And I don’t want to take her to the station. It might be too much for her right now. She seems quite shocked. And you don’t know what happened to her before she came here?”

“No clue.”

“I have called the station and they they’re going to be knocking on doors. Maybe her parents simply slept in and haven’t discovered that she is gone yet. But is it okay if she stays here at your house till someone from DCF arrives? It shouldn’t be more than an hour or so.”

I looked at Shannon and could tell she wanted to get the girl out as soon as possible. I decided her needs were more important now. “Maybe we should…”

“Of course she can stay,” Shannon interrupted me.

I smiled relieved.

“What?” Shannon asked me when detective Bellini had left us. “I’m not a monster. Besides it’s just a for a few hours, right?”

I chortled. “I didn’t think you were.” I leaned over her and kissed her gently, then leaned down and kissed Tyler.

“Careful not to wake him up,” she whispered. “He finally fell asleep.”

“He looks so peaceful when he’s asleep,” I said.

“I know. Let’s keep it that way, shall we?”

I laughed lightly, then sneaked out and went down the stairs where a woman from the DCF had already arrived. She had pulled up a chair next to Betsy Sue. The girl wasn’t looking at her, but simply staring at her feet.

“That was fast,” I said.

“She lives in the neighborhood,” detective Nelson said.

“So these nice people tell me your name is Betsy Sue,” the lady said. “Is that true?”

Betsy Sue didn’t react. She kept staring at her feet and her long, dirty striped socks.

“Is that your real name or a make-believe name?” the lady asked.

Still no answer.

“You know most people have a last name too. Do you have that?” the lady tried. She seemed a little harsh in the way she spoke to the girl. I wasn’t sure Betsy Sue was going to react well to this approach.

I was right.

“Listen if you don’t tell me who you are, then I can’t find where you live. These nice people tell me you said you don’t have any parents. Is that true? Or were you just wishing you didn’t have them?”

Still no answer.

The lady got up and walked away. She approached the officers. “I am not getting anywhere with her. My guess is she is a runaway, and that she will do whatever it takes to make sure she doesn’t get send back there. We see that often. Unfortunately she will have to get back, but we will have to look into her family once we find them. For now I need to have her checked by a doctor to make sure she hasn’t suffered abuse, then I’ll have to find a temporary place for her to stay until the parents show themselves.”

As the lady spoke, my eyes met those of Betsy Sue. There was something in them, a begging, a pleading for my help, that I couldn’t escape.

You can’t send her off with that awful woman. You can’t send her off to some home somewhere.

Exactly what it was that made me open my mouth and speak, I don’t know. It could have been her begging eyes, it could have been my pounding heart that simply couldn’t stand this. I did it even if I knew that Shannon was going to kill me. When it came to children, I had a soft heart. I had to help. I simply couldn’t do nothing. I would hate myself afterwards.

“She can stay here with us as long as needed,” I said.

BOOK: Black Jack: A nail biting, hair-raising thriller (Jack Ryder Book 4)
12.62Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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