“Meaning I might have seen him today,” she numbly said.
He nodded. “Yeah. Meaning that.”
Stir-crazy didn’t begin to describe Laura’s state of mind. But when two weeks passed following the discovery of the woman’s body with still no sign of an attack, Laura let her guard down, angry that she’d let herself be scared yet again.
It didn’t help there was another tropical storm out in the Gulf headed their way.
Late Tuesday afternoon, Laura flipped the Open sign over, turned the showroom lights off, and locked the front door. She’d sent everyone else home a couple of hours earlier so they could take care of their storm preparations.
She felt tired and needed to go home, but frankly, she didn’t want to return to an empty house. Well, Doogie was there because she didn’t want to have to wrestle with keeping him from running out into the rain. She’d gone home and walked him at lunchtime before returning to the store.
Rob picked up on the third ring.
“Hi, baby girl.”
“When do you think you’ll be home, Sir?” she asked.
His tone of voice immediately changed to concerned. “Why? Is there a problem?”
“No.” She looked out the window at the sky. The tropical storm was predicted to skirt to the south of them, but she still needed to double-check the boats’ mooring lines and stow some stuff inside the cabins in case the wind picked up or the storm changed course. “I just don’t want to go home yet.”
“They have me on stand-by because of the storm. I can probably get away for a couple of hours. Do you want me to come home?”
“Could you? I’m at the shop right now. Meet me here, maybe we can grab a bite and you can follow me home?”
He paused. “What’s going on, baby girl?”
“I think it’s just the storm.” She walked to the back door and glanced at the weather station. “The barometer’s dropping a little already. I think it’s got me on edge.”
“Okay. I’ll be there in about an hour. Gotta wait for Cal to get back from the store.”
“I need to check the boats anyway.”
She hung up, feeling better. She left her cell on the counter and went out the back door. The boats were secure but she liked to double-check. She clung to a piling and carefully climbed down into the larger cruiser, feeling for her keys in her pocket and finding them. The engine hatch was secured, and when she lifted the bilge access cover, the pump float was working and everything looked dry.
Good. It meant one less worry.
She replaced the cover then checked the ports and top hatch inside the cabin. Secured. She climbed out of the cabin hatchway and spied the hose and boat brushes on the dock. Dang it.
She sighed and struggled up to the dock, grabbed the brushes and dropped them onto the deck, then unhooked the hose. She’d stow them in the cabin instead of trying to wrestle them into the already crowded dock box.
Laura thought she heard a car pull into the lot at the front of the building, but then shrugged it off. Probably someone at the real estate office across the street.
She dropped the hose into the boat and was about to climb back in when she heard a car door shut. Sure it was nothing, but realizing she had to go to the bathroom, she returned to the shop and took care of business first. When she emerged from the back room she was startled by a dark figure standing by the counter.
“Hello, Laura.” Don Kern.
“Jesus, you scared me!” Her heart pounded in her chest.
“I didn’t mean to scare you.”
“We’re closed. What do you want?” she snapped as she walked past him and back outside. She didn’t want to be rude but between the fright and the impending storm she was on her last nerve.
He followed her out to the dock and didn’t offer to help when she climbed into the boat and opened the cabin hatch.
“I just had a couple of questions.”
She turned her back to him to pick up the boat brushes from the deck and toss them into the cabin. “Sure, go ahead.”
Laura heard the sound of his feet hitting the deck and felt the boat rock under his weight. Before she could turn, he shoved her into the cabin, leaping on her and pinning her to the floor.
She screamed but she couldn’t reach behind her to get the gun. His knee dug into her back and he laughed.
“Oh, little momma’s packing heat.”
She felt him pull up her outer shirt and slide the gun from the holster. Then she froze as he pressed the muzzle against the back of her head.
“We have unfinished business, Laura.”
She felt a blinding pain as her world went black.
Chapter Thirty-Seven
Laura came to in the cabin and found herself lying on her side on the bunk. She heard the diesel engines running, smoothly throbbing under the deck.
Her head hurt like a son of a bitch where he’d hit her, and when she tried to move she realized her hands and feet were bound. And there was duct tape over her mouth. At least her hands were taped in front of her. She was still fully dressed, so he hadn’t raped her.
Yet.
She hoped the baby hadn’t been hurt when she hit the floor.
The cabin hatch was closed. From the way the boat rocked she knew they were moving. Too fast for the long no-wake channel leading to the mouth of the bay, and the swells felt too big, too long, for the shallow channel.
They were in open water.
She managed to shift herself around so she could look out a starboard port. The gunmetal grey sky threatened with dark, heavy clouds building. She tried to see behind them but couldn’t get a good enough vantage to see land.
Or else they were too far out.
With no sun, she couldn’t use shadows to guess which direction they were heading, either.
Goddammit, what the fuck?
She started to struggle her way off the bunk and then realized her memory had fully returned.
All of it.
She knew.
Two days before the attack, she had signed up for the Classfriends site and filled out a profile. A message from the site arrived that very night from Don Kern.
She politely replied before deleting it.
And several more arrived the next day, until she finally set him to ignore.
And deleted all his messages, which explained why she hadn’t seen them when she looked in the account.
Kern showed up at her apartment Friday night. She’d been aggravated by the knock on her door, and it was so stupid of her to open it in the first place when she spotted him through the peephole. She was going to tell him to leave or she’d call the police, but when she opened the door he shoved it, knocking her off balance as he rushed in and attacked her.
He kicked the door shut behind him and went after her. She’d screamed, clawed at him, ripping a few nails down to the quick in the process.
“I just want to talk to you, Laura,” he’d said in a creepy voice, sounding very calm. “But you’re such a bitch, you won’t let me. So I won’t let you talk to anyone else, either.”
He’d hit her, beat her, and still she fought. She tried to get to the kitchen, where there was a knife on the counter from preparing dinner, and he slammed her into the wall. She knew she surprised him with the ferocity of her resistance. He wanted to tie her up and rape her before strangling her, he told her that. Then when she wouldn’t stop fighting, he kept hitting her, finally getting the rope around her neck and strangling her…
Laura folded against the bunk.
How could I have been so fucking blind?
He’d wanted to get together with her and she’d politely declined, feeling a little creeped out by his enthusiasm and insistence. She’d made the mistake of putting the shop’s website in her profile.
That’s how he must have tracked her down.
Dammit!
MedicineMan.
She silently groaned, feeling terminally stupid. He’d baited her that day at lunch, told her what he did for a living and knew he was safe when she didn’t react at all.
Shit. Of course, that’s how he knew she was pregnant. He’d been at the doctor’s office the day she found out. Probably overheard the receptionist asking her about Lamaze class information.
Now she wondered if he’d really just “happened” to drop by. The receptionist had said she hadn’t been expecting him.
He’d likely followed her.
Wincing, she peeled the duct tape off her mouth, trying to stay quiet. And now her fear took over. He was going to kill her. He’d lied at lunch, knowing her memory was gone.
He had asked her out in college, and she’d refused him because she was dating someone else. The psych prof. Yes, that part was true.
She’d turned him down again after joining the Classfriends site when he asked her to go out through the private messages. She’d meant to tell Rob about it and kept forgetting, not thinking anything of it, used to turning down harmless FetLife creeps without a second thought.
In college, she’d paid little attention to Kern, too caught up in her relationship to even notice him, really.
Scanning the cabin, she spied a filet knife stowed in its scabbard, tucked into a cubby next to the small galley sink. Working with the rolling of the boat she made her way to it and managed to free it without stabbing herself.
Then she heard footsteps on the deck. She flopped back onto the bunk, turning her face away from the hatch, the knife clutched in her hands, and lay still.
She heard the cabin hatch open, then close again. He was likely checking to see if she was still out.
She wasn’t sure he was gone until she heard his steps on the deck again. Sitting up, she held the knife handle between her knees and sawed through the tape. Once her feet were free she looked around for a weapon. She couldn’t bring a knife to a gun fight—he’d simply shoot her.
She needed distance.
Unfortunately, the knife was her best—her only weapon. Then she had to grab the counter as the boat hit a hard swell and pounded into a deep trough, nearly throwing her off her feet.
Dumbass obviously doesn’t know how to pilot a boat.
But a metallic rattle overhead drew her attention and she looked up.
Of course!
Rob arrived at the shop and walked around back. “Laur?”
He went inside and found her cell phone on the counter. “Honey?” He stuck his head into the office, no sign of her. Then he realized what was wrong.
He ran to the back door and looked out again.
The cruiser was gone. “Shit.”
He called 911 first, then Steve. Thomas showed up twenty minutes later while he was giving his statement to the responding deputies.
“How do you know something’s wrong?” Thomas asked.
“She would never take the boat out in weather like this, for starters. And she was waiting for me. Plus there’s a strange car in the parking lot.”
Steve ran in. “What’s wrong?”
Rob gave him the short version. “He’s right,” Steve said. “She wouldn’t do that. Not willingly.” He went behind the counter to the VHF radio, turned it on, and grabbed the mic.
“Lemon Dive One, Lemon Dive One, this is Lemon Dive Base, over.” He let up on the button and they waited.
Laura heard Steve on the radio from inside the cabin. Kern must have turned it on. There was a moment of silence before Steve repeated the hail.
“Lemon Dive One, Lemon Dive One, this is Lemon Dive Base. Laura, you out there? Over.”
A relieved breath escaped her.
Thank god, at least they know I’m missing.
She heard the engines throttle back, idling. Kern thought she was still passed out, obviously. Then came the sound of him walking up to the bow, followed by the sound of him opening the front bow locker hatch and the rattle of anchor chain against the deck as he removed it.
Apparently he didn’t know what the windlass was for. That was the spare anchor he’d tossed, the small one. In seas like this, it wouldn’t hold, it would drag. It was mostly for back-up. They’d end up crossways to the waves with the wind blowing across it.
She shut down those thoughts as she made her hands race faster.
“Lemon Dive One, this is Base. Laura, if you don’t answer, I’m calling Ft. Myers Beach. Over.”
She knew he meant the Coast Guard station.
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