Read Jump The Line (Toein' The Line Book 1) Online
Authors: Mary McFarland
I think of Julianna Short, Stok
e’
s first victim, and of Meera and Angie and now myself. To think,
I’
d begged Brick to help me match impressions of Stok
e’
s teeth to Megalo Do
n’
s.
“
Lie down
,”
Stoke orders, helping Brick drag me to the gurney.
“
No.
I’
m not making this easy for you
.
”
“
Yo
u’
ve made everything easy for me, Blaze, right down to spending Oma
r
’ Jai
n’
s night deposit
.
”
“
You punkass
!
”
I spit on Stoke.
“
You at least coul
d’
ve been decent about that. It was
n’
t your money
.
”
Brick picks up his favorite tool, the gleaming scalpel.
“
Do that again, and
I’
ll fix your smil
e—
without anesthesia. Now move it
.
”
“
Make this easy on yourself, Blaze
,”
Stoke says, giving me a push with the barrel of a gun. My ankles still bound with duct tape, I fall backward against the gurney.
“I’
ve always known there was something weird about you, Stoke
,”
I hiss, wanting to unload on him, now that I know h
e’
s Bric
k’
s son.
“
You disgust me. You left that gir
l’
s shoulder in my fridge, did
n’
t you
?
”
“
Look, Blaze, i
t’
s not personal
,”
he says, the terrifying scowl
I’
m getting used darkening his face.
“
We need your fucking teeth
,”
he says, edging the gun barrel around my jaw line in the same disgusting way Brick uses his fingers
,“
but if you do
n’
t cooperate, w
e’
ll use her instead
.
”
I shoot a frantic gaze at Officer Barbie. Sh
e’
s still groggy and moaning. Useless. Now the teeth in my mout
h—
even my lif
e—
have become hostage because of her. I want her to get her ass up and do her job. Be a cop.
“
I fucked him
,”
I say, frantic and feeling myself panicking. Trying to stave off the inevitable, images of my prone body on that gurney, two killers molesting my body, cutting teeth from my mouth, I say the one thing I know will upset Stoke.
“
I fucked Aidan Hawks, and I enjoyed hell out of it. But you would
n’
t understand, would you? Yo
u’
re an impotent pussy, like your daddy
.
”
Stok
e’
s a textbook case of the sadistic sexual killer. I just hate myself for not paying closer attention. I hate myself for being so needy and lacking in self confidence that
I’
d befriend a pervert like him. Happily, my taunt is pissing him off, but just like Brick he fights for control.
“
Maybe
,”
he says, licking me across the face.
“
Maybe
I’
m not a big stud like Detective Hawks, but Alaina, you can be sure of thi
s
”
—
he licks me agai
n
—
“
I might not be as good a fuck as Hawks, but
I’
ll be your last
.
”
Vomit rushes from my stomach. I ca
n’
t stop it. When I retch, I lunge toward Stoke with the razor. When it connects with his face, a sense of rapture takes over, or maybe
I’
m just numb. I slice downward, slicing the razor hard across his face. A sudden rush of animal joy suffuses me when I hear his scream: how good it feels to cut. No release like it!
“
You bitch! Yo
u’
re done
!
”
Inside my head I hear the gun going off, and then the most blissful sound.
“
Baby girl
!
”
I try to listen, but
I’
m floating away, certain
I’
ve been shot and
I’
m on my way to whatever fate awaits me. But in my delirium I hear it again.
Berta Colby is screaming.
“
Die, you sumbitch
!
”
Chapter 52
The officers Captain Meyers sent over as backup arrive at Stoke Farre
l’
s apartment building. I run over to them.
“
Wher
e’
s Wes Gillam? You seen him
?
”
They look at each other.
“
No, sir, Detective Hawks. W
e’
ve been waiting on you
.
”
“
How about Detective Laws? You seen he
r—?
”
“
No, sir
.
”
“
—
or any Feebs? SAC Smith
?
”
“
No, sir, one of the boots, Officer Bailey says.
“
Captain sent us to serve your warrants. He said w
e’
re to wait on SWAT before going in
.
”
“
Right
,”
I say. Taking the front steps two at a time, I bust inside the dump that slime ball Stoke Farrel calls home. Flying down the steps to the basement, I slow at the bottom, where officers Bailey and Scofield catch up.
“
Take positions
,”
I order.
With them on either side of the door, I kick it open and nearly fly into the empty apartment. I
t’
s not locked.
“
Jesus
!”
I whisper, gagging when the stench hits me.
A blur flies from the apartment and then hits me square in the chest. I grab and hold it.
“
Shhh
!”
I say, praying
I’
ve not alerted whoeve
r’
s inside.
“
I
t’
s about time you got here
,”
Berta Colby hisses, yanking free.
“
What did you do, Detective Hawks? Take a vacation in the Bahamas on your way
?
”
What do you do with a woman like this?
I’
ve no time to argue or upbraid her for leaving Goshen without me.
“
Get your ass upstairs
,”
I say.
“
Yo
u’
re obstructing a murder investigation
.
”
If we were
n’
t both intent on finding her daughter,
I’
m sure sh
e’
d toss her head back and laugh, but in that familiar hands-on-hips defiant gesture
I’
m learning is a Colby trademark, she rasps
,“
It would
n’
t be the first time
.
”
Brown eyes snapping, she adds
,“
Hear me out, Detective Hawks. Yo
u’
re going to put up with me. I
t’
s my daughter w
e’
re talking about.
I’
m not going upstairs or any place without my baby girl
.
”
She smiles, but on her it looks more like a grimace.
“
Now what do you plan on doing about
that
in there
?
”
“
Yo
u’
ve been waiting inside that apartment
?
”
She lets out a short impatient snort.
“
Only for a few damn hours while you traipse around Mount Repose with Billy Lee
.
”
I swing my gaze toward the open door.
“
Wha
t’
s in there
?
”
“
Yo
u’
ve got an officer down
,”
she says.
“
I think that sumbitch w
e’
re looking for is around here somewhere, but I ca
n’
t smoke his ass out for the life of me
.
”
“
I think I can
,”
I say, stepping inside the apartment.
“
There
,”
Berta says, pushing up behind me.
“
Oh, God
.
”
I
t’
s Wes. H
e’
s lying on the floor in a pool of blood.
“
Fuck
.
”
Silently signaling for one of the boots to call an ambulance, I carefully scan the apartment, but when I start to turn I hear gunshots.
At first I think the
y’
re in the room with us: the
y’
re that loud.
“
The
y’
re close
,”
I say, listening
,“
but they sound muted
.
”
“
I
t’
s coming from behind the wall
,”
one of the boots yells from across the room.
“
Here
!
”
Officers Bailey and Schofield and I, and Berta Colby, rush toward the wall. Turning ourselves into a human battering ram, w
e’
re fighting to breach it when SWAT arrives.
Inside the room, I find carnage. And Alaina lying on the floor covered in blood.
Chapter 53
I hear Robin puttering around in his bedroom, listening to his Gun
s‘
n Roses.
“
Listen to your music online
,”I’
ve always begged him, but he wo
n’
t. He has to touch his DVDs, rearrange them.
“
It helps me focus
,”
h
e’
s always saying, defending his OCD behavior. Today, after all h
e’
s been through, I do
n’
t say a word. Instead I enjoy the fact h
e’
s home. H
e’
s safe.
I’
m safe, too, thanks to Aidan. He told my mom that NPD is wrapping up their Megalo Don investigation. I
t’
s been a week since Aidan busted in that basement room with NP
D’
s SWAT, my mom on their heels. My mom, wh
o’
s staying with me until sh
e’
s sure
I’
m okay, and Robin and I are all working to get our lives back to normal, whatever that is.
I touch my jaw, running my tongue gratefully along my teeth.
I’
d fought, but Stoke and Brick had shoved me up onto that gurney and tied me down. The
y’
d started extracting two of my teeth when Aidan caught them. Almost becoming Megalo Do
n’
s last victim has given me a new appreciation for my pearlies, all thirty-two of them.
Robin walks barefoot from his bedroom and shoots me a smile that melts my heart.
“
Hey
,”
I say, giving him an impulsive hug.
“
Wha
t’
s that for
?
”
“
Thanks for my surprise birthday present
,”
I say.
“
I
t’
s the best ever
.
”
After he and his NPD team busted in on Stok
e’
s and Bric
k’
s basement party, and shot Stoke and arrested Brick, Aidan urged me to go the hospital.
“
Yo
u’
re going
,”
he said, when I kept insisting I was okay.
“
Then when yo
u’
re home w
e’
ll talk. Okay
?
”
At the hospital, he gave me a hug, several hugs, and lingering kisses that gave Berta a coughing fit.
“
A LEO
,”
sh
e’
d joked.
“
Baby girl, I told yo
u
—”
No LEOs
.
“
I know, Mom, but
I’
m not six any more
,”I’
d reminded her.
“I’
m going to be twenty-tw
o
—”
I’
d watched her and Aidan swap secretive gazes at the hospital when
I’
d mentioned my upcoming birthday. They amazed me, laughing at each othe
r’
s jokes, my mo
m’
s as crude as Aida
n’
s. It also made me happy. For the first time ever, we all felt like a family. Berta was sober. Robin was
n’
t stoned. The tension from our past, the arguing, had evaporate
d—
temporarily. It helps that I finally had my little chat with Berta and confronted her about my da
d’
s death.
“
Did you murder him, Mom
?
”
She never lies, and she did
n’
t this time.
“
He had the gun, baby girl, and was going to shoot me. We wrestled and it went off, then he dropped it. I was so scared. I got to the gun first, but he shoved me back down on the floor and was coming after me again. I fired. He fell
.
”
Her eyes had teared over, and for once I saw my mom as the vulnerable human being
I’
m getting to know.
“
It was self defence, Laney, and tha
t’
s exactly how the prosecutor saw it
.
”
I’
d hugged Berta and rocked her when sh
e’
d cried.
All that matters is that she and
I—
mom and daughte
r—
are talking.
I know the Colbys too well to think ther
e’
ll be no arguing. But for my birthday I got the best present you can imagine. Berta told me where Robin had been, when I was worrying he was Megalo Don and was out murdering girls, including my friend, Angie Miller.
“
He wanted to surprise you for your birthday. He self admitted at STARZ, one of the best rehab joints in the country
.
”
While I was running around frantically searching for Robin, worrying he might again be using drugs and going to end up back in prison, h
e’
d admitted himself into a detox facility for his meth addiction. H
e’
d been under lockdown, a perfect alibi, which meant he could
n’
t have murdered Ang, or anyone, and that he could
n’
t be Megalo Don. Aidan also told me at the hospital that Robi
n’
s friend, Squeal, who the
y’
d finally tracked down and interviewed, confirmed his story that Robin was checked in at STARZ. Squeal had felt bad about snitching Robin out earlier by telling NPD h
e’
d seen my brother in the alley the night Angi
e’
s body was dumped behind Oma
r’
s.
Being in rehab at STARZ also meant Robin could
n’
t have visitors, so h
e’
d sworn our mom to secrecy because he wanted to surprise me for my birthday.
I release him from a hugeass hug.
“
Just because
,”
I say, aching when I think what h
e’
s done for us.
“
I like to hug you just because
.
”
He drops his head, smiles some more, a little embarrassed. I do
n’
t bother wiping the tears from my eyes. Ther
e’
s hope for my little Goshen Colby family and former crime gang. For my brother. For my mom.
For me.
“
Thanks for not thinking I was Megalo Don
,”
he says, socking me on the shoulder.
“
I trust you. Always have
,”
I say, wondering what woul
d’
ve happened if Meer
a’
s family had trusted her. The
y’
d chosen a husband, a much older man, for her to marry in India, and sh
e’
d ran away to escape the arranged marriage. For a brief time, before her dad had tracked her to Cincinnati, sh
e’
d worked in a tattoo parlor off campus, which is where I recall seeing a photo of her ankle tattoo. The initials, G.M., had
n’
t meant anything to me, so
I’
d forgotten them until the moment Brick and I had been gazing at photos of her ankle. Yet I could
n’
t place them, and they remained as the
y’
d always been: low-level noise floating around in my brain. Until Aidan told me the
y’
d stood for Gayatri Mantradi, her name.
Poor girl. Like I said, if only someone had trusted her, as I trusted Robin not to be Megalo Don. I gaze at my handsome brother and smile.
“
I kicked around the idea you were Megalo Don, Rob, but then I dumped it.
“
But
,”
I add, wishing trust ran both ways
,“
You and Mom lied to me. She let me think . .
.
”
Mo
m’
s not telling me where Robin was has been bothering me, so I feel like
I’
ve got to clear the air.
“
I told her not to tell you I was at STARZ
,”
he says, defending her, making me feel like w
e’
re back to being our usual quarreling selves.
“
Besides, I did
n’
t tell you, either
.
”
“
I know
,”
I say. I want to trust her, as I do Robin. I want this all to work. I know i
t’
s going to take time. Tha
t’
s okay, too, I guess.
“
Hurry
,”
I tell him.
“
W
e’
re going to be late
.
”
“
Would
n’
t want that
,”
he says, grinning.
“
No, I would
n’
t
,”
I agree, finger combing my hair.
I’
ve purposefully worn no makeup, except a dab of blue mascara and my Black Pomegranate nail polish. It matches the little black dress Aidan sent me for my birthday, along with a dozen pink roses. I have
n’
t called him since he visited me at the hospital. After what almost happened to me,
I’
ve needed time to myself. I
t’
s time I shoul
d’
ve taken when I first met Aidan.
Do I regret jumping into bed with him without knowing who he was?
Not at all.
I’
m slowly discovering that while Robin is OCD,
I’
m impulsive. I also realize that love-at-first-sight is a strong possibility with Aidan, and tha
t’
s great, but i
t’
s an impulsive feeling that prompted me to fall blindly into bed with a man
I’
d yet to know.
I’
ve no serious regrets, other than just wanting my spac
e—
freedom from the complication of a hooku
p—
to sort myself out.
I look at myself in the mirror on the hall door.
“
I look like Mom
,”
I tell Robin
,“
and I
like
me today
.
”
“
Wha
t’
s wrong with looking like Mom
?”
he says.
Robin told me sh
e’
s been conspiring with Aidan. The
y’
ve planned a birthda
y“
luncheon
,”
as Berta say
s—
snickerin
g—
Aida
n’
s mom calls it.
The Hawks. I shiver. Nervous, I guess. For one,
I’
m going to meet them. For two, I have to apologize to Aidan. I accused him of using me, trying to trick me into rolling over on Robin. I was wrong.
I twirl and touch the dress.
Expensive. Am I worth it?
“
You look pretty
,”
Robin says.
“
Thanks
.
”
It clings to my body, so I know Aidan picked it out to please him, not me. But i
t’
s also demur, long sleeved, and sophisticated. His mom will like i
t—
I hope. For several seconds, I gaze at my reflection. I feel almost like the Hyde Park whiney heads, like I really am worth it.
I do another twirl then stop, my breath catching. Why do I question my self worth?
I
t’
s his wealth. Aida
n’
s family i
s“
loaded to their gills
,”
my mom says. While she finds it amusing
I’
ve fallen for a LEO with money,
I’
m scared. Meeting his mother terrifies me, but Aidan swears sh
e’
ll love me.