Read If Looks Could Kill Online

Authors: Heather Graham

If Looks Could Kill (26 page)

BOOK: If Looks Could Kill
6.3Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“But how did—how did Dan know?”

He shrugged. “Apparently Kaila thought he sent them. And she wore them for him.”

“Well, then…” Madison trailed to a stop. “Obviously, if she wore them for Dan, then she isn't having an affair. Some prankster must have sent them—”

“Well, we'll find out,” Kyle said casually.

Madison frowned. “Kyle, why would you want to do anything that might jeopardize Kaila's marriage?” she asked nervously.

Kyle shook his head. “You're forgetting something.”

“What?”

“Your sister is a redhead. If some prankster is sending her things, I want to know just who the hell it is.”

“But, Kyle, it could be—”

“Damn it, Madison, she can work on her marriage after we finish worrying about her life!” he said firmly.

Madison fell silent for a minute. “Give me a chance to talk to her, okay?”

“All right.”

“All right.”

“Tomorrow,” Kyle said. “At my father's gallery opening. You know she'll be there.”

“Right.”

“Madison?”

“Yes?”

“If she doesn't talk to you, I will use every investigative avenue available to me to find out how your sister managed to get such a gift.”

Madison pulled the car into her driveway. Kyle carefully lifted Carrie Anne from the back seat and carried her to the house while Madison opened the door and punched in the numbers on the alarm pad.

Kyle took Carrie Anne on into her room, where Madison thanked him. He left, as Madison got ready to change Carrie Anne into a nightgown.

Madison thought he might be waiting for her in the kitchen or the living room, but he wasn't. She hesitated, then went to the guest room door and tapped lightly.

“Yes?”

She opened the door. He was at the computer. “Sorry. Just wanted to say good-night.”

“Good night, Madison.”

She nodded and closed the door.

Well, so much for him dying of desire for her.

She went to bed herself, certain she would lie awake or, worse, that she would fall asleep—and dream.

She did. In her dream, she was driving. It was her, and this time she knew it was her, not some other woman. She was driving hard and fast, almost recklessly.

She was driving down the Tamiami Trail, far west, out of the city of Miami. There were old dirt roads out here. Some were roads that cut into the swamp, across canals and marshes, ending nowhere. Some were roads that headed toward the old shacks that remained hidden deep in the pine hammocks.

She was driving in a panic, trying to get somewhere. Somewhere she knew. From a different life, she thought.

Or from a time when she had been very young.

She shouldn't be going, but she couldn't turn back.

She had to get…
somewhere.
It was like the time when she had come out of her bedroom. When she had known that she had to reach her mother. She had to move, move swiftly, because if she didn't…

Oh, God, if she didn't…

Someone else was going to die. Someone else she loved. Oh, God, she had to floor it, floor it, drive….

 

“Madison, shh, Madison, it's all right….”

Kyle was there. He'd gotten into the bed beside her, taken her into his arms. Now he was soothing her, running his fingers through her hair. “I'm here. It's all right.”

She shivered fiercely. He held her close.

“What was it this time?”

“I was driving again. I was driving down the Tamiami Trail. I had to get somewhere really fast, and I was desperate, because if I didn't get where I was going, something awful was going to happen. I was trying to reach…one of the shacks. Remember the shacks, Kyle? When were young, Roger and my dad used to have them, until the government cracked down on the Everglades. Men used to go out there hunting, but they usually just got drunk and shot up beer cans. Your dad must have taken you out there.”

“Yes, he did. They used to get so tanked up, it's probably a miracle that the only things that ever got killed out there were beer cans.”

She smiled, then groaned, burying her face in her hands. “Am I ever going to stop dreaming?”

“Madison,” he said, gently lifting her face to meet her eyes. “Those shacks were all torn down years ago. It's a new world. The environmentalists hate guys who shoot beer cans.”

She half smiled, and he grazed her cheek with his knuckles. He was so close, but his arms drew her closer. She had been shivering; his strength warmed away the cold of fear. He was wearing only a robe. Temptation ruled. She slipped her fingers into the opening of the robe, running them along his chest. Lower. Her fingers brushed, then covered, the length of his erection, sending a fierce shudder throughout her. She stroked him beneath the robe, her lips coming closer to his. But he drew away suddenly, whispering softly, “The door.”

Carrie Anne was in the doorway, rubbing sleep from her eyes.

“Mommy, you were screaming again.”

Madison instinctively jerked away from Kyle. Loosely belting his robe, he rose, walking toward the doorway. He tousled Carrie Anne's hair. “Well, you're here now. You go snuggle Mommy, huh?”

“You can stay,” Carrie Anne said politely.

He glanced over at Madison.

“I think I'll take a shower,” he said pleasantly. “You girls get some sleep. Tomorrow's a big day. My dad's gallery opening.”

Plagued with guilt, Madison welcomed Carrie Anne into her arms.

And tried to sleep.

15

“T
his just isn't working,” she told Kyle over coffee in the morning.

“Oh?”

She flushed. “You haven't done anything. It's just…not working.”

“This isn't about the delicacy of anybody's feelings—yours, mine, or even Carrie Anne's. You're in danger.”

“We don't know that!”

“It's a damned good theory.”

“But, Kyle—”

“You can't be alone.”

“I'll go to Jassy's. She can shoot like a pro.”

“She's never home.”

“I can go to my father's.”

“Maybe that's not such a good idea,” he said, looking at his coffee.

Madison gasped. “You're accusing my father—”

“I know that your father and mother had a huge fight not long before she was killed. You didn't see it, because you were at school. I happened to be home, for some reason. She'd summoned Jordan to the house, crying over something my father had supposedly done, and trying to use Jordan to get my father riled. To his credit, Jordan wouldn't be used.”

“Right! So he came back later to murder her! You're full of it! What about your father? He and my mother fought all the time, and I know that for a fact, because I had to listen to it just about every damned night!”

“Fine, my father is a suspect, too.”

She threw up her hands. “Well, we can't keep doing this! It isn't working. What about Kaila's?”

“Do you really think Kaila needs someone else living in her house right now?”

“Darryl, then. I'm the mother of his child, for God's sake.”

“Great. Then Darryl can soothe you from your dreams in the middle of the night.”

“It would probably sit better with Carrie Anne,” Madison murmured.

He rose, angrily walking to the sink. “Can we solve this later? I can sleep in the damned car or something, but right now I've got to get to the gallery. This event is important to my father. And you're coming with me.”

She arched a brow, feeling her temper stirring. “I
am
coming with you, but
not
because you say so. I'm coming with you because Roger has always been good to me, and what's important to him is important to me!”

She spun around, leaving him in the kitchen and going off to get dressed. The opening was scheduled to run from two o'clock until ten; they arrived by twelve. Madison's job was to keep the local artists—the stars of the event—calm. For some of them that meant two tons of caffeine. For others, it meant breaking into the champagne early.

Roger was delighted that she had arrived early with Kyle. After escaping the crowd around him, he took her hands, then stepped back, surveying her. “Gorgeous! They compare you to your mother. Rubbish. You're ten times more beautiful!” He kissed her cheek. “Thanks for coming and helping. Your dad's right over there.” He looked at her assessingly again. “You are dynamite.”

She hoped so. She'd dressed dramatically, in a short black silk cocktail dress that dipped in front and back, and contrasted with the vivid color of her hair. “Thanks,” she told him.

“You're kind of pretty, too, son!” Roger teased Kyle. He wasn't pretty in the least. He was striking, in a black shirt with a casual pinstripe jacket and beige pants.

“Ah, Dad!” he murmured.

“Enough. To work!” Roger told them all.

 

By five o'clock, Madison was beat. She'd been taking care of the kids for the past hour. The gallery boasted a kids' corner, little tables with little chairs and buckets full of building blocks, crayons, stencils and so on. Kids could express their artistic vision while their parents, in Roger's words, spent “big bucks” on local talent.

She sank into one of the kiddie chairs, tired and bemused. By her side, Carrie Anne and Kaila's brood were busy doodling with a pair of five-year-old twins. Jimmy Gates was nearby, listening patiently as one of the artists explained the “surrealism” of her work. Dan and Kaila were inspecting a beautiful seascape. Madison frowned slightly. She was worried about Kaila again. Her sister seemed nervous. She kept looking over her shoulder as if she expected…what?

“Watch it! Watch it!” she heard suddenly.

She turned to see that Rafe, Trent and Kyle were carefully lifting a metal fountain sculpture of goddesses in a garden. The artist and purchaser were worriedly giving directions, along with Roger. The scene, Madison thought, was priceless.

“Hey, Jassy!”

“What?”

“Take over the kids, huh?”

“Sure.”

Madison rose and wandered to the front of the gallery to observe the goings-on with the sculpture.

“Hey! Watch Athena's book there!” she warned.

“Thanks!” Trent told her, making a face.

“Got it!” Rafe assured her, grimacing.

Kyle arched a brow at her.

She smiled, following them to the doorway, then leaning against it as they struggled to get the sculpture onto the bed of its new owner's truck.

She closed her eyes for a minute. It was late spring, but the past few days had been hot as hell, and the breeze picking up this evening was beautiful. She opened her eyes and looked around. The gallery was situated just down the street from Cocowalk and Mayfair, two very unique malls. The area was also littered with charming specialty shops. The Coconut Grove area of Miami was popular with both the locals and tourists. Roger's gallery should do well.

“You!”

She didn't pay any attention to the voice at first; she was busy enjoying the breeze. And Coconut Grove had its share of crazies, after all, most of them harmless.

“You!”

She turned then—and stared, stunned and incredulous.

There was Harry Nore. Bug-eyed, wild gray hair completely unkempt, unshaven face covered with a scraggly beard. He looked as mad as he had all those years ago, when he preened excitedly for the television cameras after Lainie's murder. Despite the heat, he was wearing a dirty old once-beige trenchcoat. And he was pointing at her—with the razor-sharp end of a switchblade.

“You! She-devil, she-bitch, spawn of Satan, seducer of innocents! You've come back. You've come back from the very bowels of hell! You've come back from the dead, like Satan's own, but Satan will have to take you back to hell, and you'll burn! You'll burn!”

The last was a screech, and with it, he catapulted toward Madison. She jumped back, slamming against the doorframe. He lunged again, and she was forced back again. She heard a crack. She had slammed against the gallery's big front window, and now she was losing her footing, sinking to the ground. She couldn't fall, couldn't let herself become vulnerable, but she couldn't regain her balance, either. She had to fight, or at least get away.

But even as she looked up into Nore's hideously contorted face and saw him so close that she could count every rotting tooth, she heard another hard slam.

Kyle had brought him down to the pavement.

Then pandemonium broke out. Trent landed on top of Nore, as well, as people came spilling from the gallery.

Suddenly Rafe was at Madison's side. “Are you all right?”

She nodded, her mouth and throat dry. Jassy was there, ducking down beside her.

Madison grasped her sister's hands. “Get Dan. Have him take Kaila and the kids out the back. Please, I don't want Carrie Anne to see, to be afraid, please….”

“Stay with her,” Rafe told Jassy. “I'll see to it that Dan and Kaila take Carrie Anne home with them for the night. The cops will be here soon. You'll have to talk to them, Madison.”

“The cops are already here,” a voice said. Jimmy. He, too, was kneeling beside Madison. “You okay, kid?”

She nodded.

“You've done something to your wrist, breaking your fall. Your hand is swollen.”

“I'm all right.”

“You need some X rays.”

“The cops—”

“We can talk at the hospital,” Jimmy said.

Sirens were screaming everywhere. The next thing Madison knew, her father was with her. She'd never seen him look so white, so tense.

So old.

“The ambulance is here.”

“Dad, my wrist is swollen! I can walk, I don't need an ambulance.”

“Right. But it's here, so get in it anyway.”

Within the hour, her wrist and hand had been x-rayed. She was fine; she'd just sprained it, and an elastic bandage for a few days would make her right as rain.

As if everything that had already happened weren't enough, she wasn't even going to get to meet Darryl's new girlfriend. And she'd ruined Roger's opening. Talk about your basic day from hell…

When the nurse finished with her bandage, she returned to the waiting room. Her father, Roger, Jimmy, Jassy and Kyle were there, along with a young police officer. She gave him a brief statement, assuring him that she hadn't seen or heard from Harry Nore since her mother's death. He didn't need much from her; there had been witnesses to the attack.

“There are a bunch of reporters outside,” Jassy warned her unhappily.

“I'll take the Cherokee around back and pick Madison up at a different door,” Kyle said determinedly.

“That sounds good,” Jordan Adair agreed. He kissed Madison on the cheek. “And stay with her,” he cautioned, turning back to Kyle.

“I intend to,” Kyle said, leaving.

Madison could see through the glass hospital doors that a group of reporters were milling outside. Did this mean that it was over?
Had
Harry Nore been killing women now, and had he really killed her mother all those years ago?

“Let's get you out of here,” Jassy said.

She almost shoved Madison out the back. Kyle had the car running and the passenger door open. She slipped quickly inside.

He started driving in silence. He looked ashen, she realized, and his jacket was torn and dirtied from his tussle with Harry Nore.

“I really am all right,” she told him. “And Carrie Anne—”

“Carrie Anne doesn't have the slightest idea that anything happened. She's with her aunt and uncle and cousins, and she's happy, because Dan is going to set up a tent in the living room so the kids can pretend they're camping out tonight.”

Madison fell silent, looking down at her hands. “So, what's your plan?”

“We're getting out of here for twenty-four hours.”

“How? Where?”

“You'll see. Trust me.”

“I don't trust anybody anymore.”

“Then consider this an abduction and do your best to enjoy it anyway.”

“Where are we going right now?”

“The airport.”

“The airport! I can't just—”

“Yes, you can.”

“This
is
an abduction,” she said angrily.

He shrugged.

“I could start screaming and pitch a real fit at the airport, and then you'd have some tough explaining to do.”

“Would you please quit it! I'm taking you to do something you said you've always wanted to do.”

“What?”

“Swim with dolphins.”

“What?”

“You did say you wanted to swim with dolphins.”

“Yes, but, we could just drive down to the Keys—”

“That's not far enough for this evening,” he said determinedly. “We need to get away. I have a friend who runs a private facility on one of the islands off Martinique. We'll be there in two hours.”

He was crazy. They both looked like refugees from
The Poseidon Adventure,
and he couldn't really be planning to just take off for an island with everything that was going on.

But he was.

She followed him through the airport terminal to a shop where they were able to buy T-shirts, baggy shorts, bathing suits and cheap sandals.

“You were the one who insisted I couldn't just take off without telling people!” she reminded him as they stood in line to pay.

“I've told your father and Jimmy what we're doing.”

“You what? You told my dad that we were going off overnight to a Caribbean island?”

“Yes.”

“How could you?”

“How could I not?”

“But—he didn't know anything about the two of us!”

“I think he did. Anyway, it doesn't matter. He wants you alive, Madison. There's the ladies' room. Change. Quickly. Our flight is already boarding.”

He was in his new clothes when she came out. She almost smiled, seeing Kyle in a tourist shirt with brightly colored flowers all over it.

BOOK: If Looks Could Kill
6.3Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Shot Down by Jonathan Mary-Todd
Whiskey & Charlie by Annabel Smith
The Greek Tycoon's Secret Heir by Katherine Garbera
City Of Tears by Friberg, Cyndi
Killer Crullers by Jessica Beck
Dangerously Charming by Deborah Blake
Megan's Alpha Male by Wilde, Becky