Dreaming Death (Krewe of Hunters #32) - Heather Graham Page 0,104

good!” she told him.

“Dreams are good,” he agreed.

Keenan helped Stacey up. She was shaking. And it was all right, she told herself.

She’d been strong, tough, all the right things when she’d needed to be.

And now it was okay to shake.

“Jean?” she whispered.

“At the hospital. But she’s going to make it,” he told her. “Thanks to you. Stacey, are you all right? Did he cut you?”

“I haven’t a scratch on me,” she said, and smiled. “I’ve got the best partner ever.”

“No,” he told her softly. “I have the best partner ever.”

EPILOGUE

“It’s terrifying to even try to comprehend just how long the killing was going on,” Jackson said, leaning back in his office chair. Keenan had to agree. The entire plot had been insidious, horrific, and devised by people who should have been the pillars of the community.

Three days had passed since Stacey had escaped being Colin Smith’s final event.

Colin Smith and Cindy Hardy were dead.

Dr. Henry Lawrence, hearing that news, and aware that he wasn’t getting out and there would be no congressman there to fight for him and see to any kind of a release, began to talk.

It had all begun years before.

Not immediately after McCarron’s trial: it had taken a few years to set up and get going.

Lawrence still claimed that he’d never killed anyone. Billie and he had first gotten into it, then Billie had noted that Congressman Colin Smith had certain sadistic tendencies. He’d been brought in—along with his long-suffering wife. Sandra refused to get her hands dirty with the killings, but she helped recruit clients, such as when she’d approached Mrs. Kendrick.

Then, when Cindy Hardy had started such a ruckus over her husband, Billie had found a way to lure her into the business side of things. Billie’s charm worked for many things, it seemed. And Cindy had obviously felt the money made up for what had happened previously with her husband.

Between Congressman Smith and Dr. Lawrence, the group had enough wealthy contacts to have a stream of clients. Billie would often find the female victims, recruiting them as potential escorts. Cindy Hardy had used herself as bait to trap victims, too, chatting up business travelers to see if anyone would miss them after they were attacked outside the bar or hotel.

“And, by the way,” Keenan said, turning to Stacey, “your upstairs neighbor, Marty, wasn’t being paranoid. Lawrence hired a few thugs to keep an eye on your apartment. Lawrence and Smith had decided you were a threat. It just took them a while to decide when to strike.”

She looked at Jackson and grimaced. “Keenan saved my life.”

“She saved her own life,” Keenan said. “Don’t cross her. The woman has a hell of a headbutt.”

“We all save each other. That’s what we do here,” Jackson said.

He went on to try to explain more details, though many were still to be figured out.

Sandra Smith was the one who filled in much of what they were missing. She knew she was going to jail, though she claimed she never killed anyone, either.

She had been the one to approach Anita Kendrick. She had watched the woman and knew that she was ridiculously—in her mind—ethical. They hoped she would call the police about the offer they’d made her. Colin would get his chance to kill Stacey. However, it was Henry Lawrence who had wanted her dead.

He was uneasy about her. He knew how close Stacey’s father had come to discovering the truth about Dr. Vargas’s death all those years ago.

He had relished the idea of sending her a piece of kidney.

The Yankee Ripper plot had been Sandra’s invention. She had convinced Colin that Billie was getting out of control. She would be part of it all. She’d been told that there were officers getting a little too close on a few of their missing persons, and they had to throw the law off somehow. Billie had been willing: she had killed the woman in her basement.

She’d had no clue that when she met with Smith, she would be the next victim.

The details in the case, and the follow-up, would be endless.

But, Jackson told them that morning, it was over for the two of them.

“You’re on vacation. Go somewhere. Get far away from here. You two were key in solving more murders than we may ever really know. Hopefully all the victims can find some peace now. Go! Get out of here.”

Keenan looked at Stacey.

“I...I just started. Are you sure?” she asked the assistant director.

“Get out of here,” he told her, smiling.

Keenan stood and took her hand, and they left the office.

“So, where are we going?” she asked.

“Hawaii? Um, Europe? What’s your pleasure?”

“A stop-off, first,” she said.

“Just tell me where.”

In Lafayette Square, they found Philip Barton Key II and Bram Wallace by the fountain. A mime was entertaining a group of schoolchildren, and the two were watching both the mime and the delight of the children with smiles on their faces.

“We came to thank you,” Stacey said. “Without you—”

She broke off, noticing that the two weren’t alone.

Tim Dougherty, one of the ghosts from Dr. Lawrence’s woods, had managed to get himself to Lafayette Square.

“Hello!” he said, peeking around Bram’s ghostly form.

“Hey!” Stacey said.

He looked at Keenan. “Hitchhiked,” he told him. “Your boss is a great guy. Came up with him, his wife, Raina—the dog lady—and the dogs! It was a bit crowded, but...”

“Good. Glad you’re here. Happier?” Keenan asked.

He nodded.

“And your friends?” Stacey asked.

“They went on,” Tim said. “It was...well, I think it was beautiful. There was a light...and they went on. I guess I want to stay a bit. I found these guys. I have purpose. We’re, uh, going to fight for justice.”

“A rookie,” Bram muttered, “but what can you do.”

Keenan laughed. “Rookies can be the best!” he said.

They stayed a while longer, chatting, the ghosts wanting to make sure that Stacey was okay, and both Stacey and Keenan wanting to make sure they knew how grateful they were.

“We played such a small part,” Philip said.

“A small part that saved time and probably my life,” Stacey told him.

“See! I want to be part of that,” Tim said.

When they left Lafayette Square, they headed for Stacey’s apartment.

Keenan was mulling the question, but decided to ask Stacey again. “Where to? The beautiful beaches of Hawaii? The majesty of the mountains? Europe? Italy, Germany? Ah, Iceland is supposed to be amazing.”

She didn’t answer.

A quick look showed she was relaxed in her seat, eyes closed. He thought that she was sleeping. He prayed that her dreams were over.

She made a little moaning sound.

“Stacey, Stacey! Wake up, I’m here.”

Her eyes opened. She stared at him. He pulled over to the side of the road, wanting to touch her, hold her, and give her his full attention.

“You were dreaming,” he said.

She smiled. “I was.”

“And?”

“We were in a room. It had a gorgeous balcony. We watched the sun from the balcony, streaming down. Then you walked over to me, and we closed the curtains...”

“And then?”

“Oh, well, then we stripped one another naked, kissed and touched and did amazing things, and had the most incredible sex ever.”

He laughed softly and begin to drive.

“So, where do you think we should go?” she asked.

“Don’t care, as long as it has a room with a gorgeous balcony, sun streaming in, curtains to draw and that delicious bed where we can be together. Hey—I may know the place. Jon and Kylie are in Scotland. He sent me a text this morning, said we were welcome to join them there. Did your room with the balcony resemble a castle in any way?”

“A castle?”

“Yeah.”

“Oh, definitely. It could have been a castle. Scotland sounds great.”

He drove in silence, smiling.

Suddenly Stacey said, “I think I love you.”

He glanced her way, his smile broadening.

“I know I love you,” he told her. “Best rookie ever.”

She took his hand.

“Best partner—ever!”

* * *

Don’t miss out on New York Times bestselling author Heather Graham’s latest books in her chilling paranormal series Krewe of Hunters.

Seeing Darkness

Deadly Touch

Dreaming Death

Available from MIRA. Order your copies today!

ISBN-13: 9781488056512

Dreaming Death

Copyright © 2020 by Heather Graham Pozzessere

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