Dirty Little Secrets (Romantic Mystery) Book 1 in the J.J. Graves Series (27 page)

“What about Amanda Wallace?” I asked.

“That’s an easy one. It didn’t take very much digging to find out she was having an affair.”

“But she was pregnant!” I shouted, anger finally starting to replace the fear.

“I know,” he said. “That was her secret. I almost left her alone when I realized half the town already knew she was having an affair, but then I followed her to her doctor’s appointment. She drove all the way to Caroline County to see her doctor just so she wouldn’t run into anyone she knew. She thought her secret was safe.

“She met with her lover several times a week, and when I followed her to the hotel I knew the time was right. I went up one of the fire escapes and avoided the cameras. I had photographs of her and Colburn, and I threatened to send them to her husband. I told her I’d find a way to let him know about the baby. She let me right in the door, offering me anything I wanted to keep quiet. She really wasn’t as satisfying as I thought she’d be. She didn’t struggle nearly as much as Fiona did. Fiona had a lot more fight in her.”

“How did you find out about their connection with Dr. Hides?”

“Actually, both of them seeing him was just a coincidence, but once I started seeing Fiona I worried that she’d tell him about me. And it turns out I was right to be worried, which is why I took the file. Dr. Hides held the secrets to a lot of people’s lives in that locked cabinet of his. I took Amanda Wallace’s file because I wanted you to be surprised about the baby. Surprises are good. Don’t you think, Dr. Graves?”

“I think you’re bonkers. You’ve killed god knows how many people for years just because you had some pathetic, school boy crush on me and wanted me to notice you. Well, I have news for you. I would have never noticed you that way. I’m only interested in men.”

I expected the crack of his hand across my cheek and braced for it, but that didn’t make the pain any less. He’d been right when he’d said he was stronger than he looked. My head whipped to the side and blood filled my mouth.

Jeremy took a few deep breaths until the rage left his face. “Naughty, naughty, Jaye. You’re not going to make me angry by taunting me. You should know by now that I have exquisite control.” He moved closer to me, and I automatically backed up, but the wall loomed closer behind me. I was out of room.

“And of course Dr. Hides was a liability because he knew all about me, so he had to go. Did you know he was blackmailing Fiona? For a little over a million dollars and her services for free just to keep her secret. He wasn’t able to get as much from Amanda Wallace, but he was blackmailing her too. That put an interesting twist to things, I think. I know you and Jack thought that it was him all along. I was watching you when you found him. I laughed my ass off at the expression on your face. I’ve watched you a lot, Dr. Graves. Bet you didn’t know that.”

“No, I didn’t.” When the phone rang, I think it surprised both of us. We stared at each other to see who was going to make the first move.

“I think we’ll just let it ring. If I had to guess I would say that’s Jack. That woman from the boutique got a good look at me when I was with Fiona. Who knew? Nosy bitch. I would’ve had to take care of her eventually, but I would’ve made it look like an accident. Jack’s probably just now gotten a description of me from the woman, but he won’t make it all the way from Nottingham in time to save you. He does so want to be your hero.” Jeremy sighed dramatically. “Ahh, young love. Of course, I’ll have to kill him too because he’s found out
my
secret.”

The phone stopped ringing, and I wanted to shout in frustration and beg for my life all at the same time.

“Now I think it’s important that we talk about
your
secret, Dr. Graves. You’re a fascinating creature. It’s really no wonder that I wanted you.” His smile was admiring and sinister both at the same time. “I wonder what the people of Bloody Mary would say if they found out you’d killed a man,” he said.

Up until he’d said it out loud I’d thought he’d been bluffing about knowing my darkest secret. It wasn’t one I’d want anyone to find out, even if I wasn’t around to know they were talking about it.

“You know the evidence against me was inconclusive,” I said calmly. “That’s why it was in a sealed file, and I was able to keep my job at the hospital.”

“Just because they couldn’t prove you did it doesn’t mean they don’t know you did. Dr. Givens would have loved to see you rot in jail. Did you tell yourself it was a mercy killing? To end that man’s life because he was suffering and begging at the end? Did you cry for him?” He asked. “Did you?” he demanded.

“Yes. Yes, I cried for him,” I screamed. I was crying now, wishing for things that couldn’t be and a life I’d never really lived. “But I would do it again because he thanked me as he went to sleep that final time. He was finally at peace after so many months of unbearable pain. He was my friend.”

“Do you kill all your friends? Is that why you have so few?”

“No, but I wouldn’t mind killing you right now.”

“Tsk, tsk. Don’t forget your Hippocratic Oath. Again,” he said. “I’m afraid we’re going to have to hurry this along. I’d like for you to be good and dead when Jack gets here, so it has more of an impact. He loves you. Did you know that? I’m a trained observer. He’s loved you for years, but you’re oblivious to anyone’s feelings but your own as usual.”

“Jack’s never been interested in me that way. We’re just friends.”

“Don’t kid yourself, sweetheart. Just because he would screw any woman in the state of Virginia doesn’t mean he doesn’t want you. But he’ll keep screwing those other women because he knows if it’s ever you he’s with it’s going to matter and those tom cat days will be over. It’s a shame neither one of you will get to figure it out. Now,” he said all business. “How should we do this?”

“How about you leave and get a head start, because Jack is going to tear you apart when he finds you.”

“It’s good to see you can keep your sense of humor at a time like this. You could at least make this interesting. I’ll even give you a handicap.”

I stood there looking at him, not sure what he wanted me to do.

“Run, dammit!” he said, slapping me again across the same cheek as he had the last time. I didn’t take time to feel the pain. I just ran. I sprinted out of the study to the front of the house. All I needed was to reach the door.

I heard his footsteps behind me and knew I’d never make it. He took me down with a tackle around my knees, and I wrenched my shoulder as I hit the floor. The faces of Fiona Murphy and Amanda Wallace went through my mind, frozen forever in death, and I remembered what he’d done to them.

I screamed—guttural, animal sounds produced from true fear—and fought with everything I had left inside me. My nails clawed the side of his face and my knee desperately tried to find a clear shot to the groin, but he was strong. He rapped my head hard against the floor and addled my senses long enough to pin me down so I couldn’t move at all. My left eye was almost completely swollen shut, but the other one widened in horror as he pressed his full weight against me.

He laughed close to my face so spittle reigned down and covered my blood soak skin. “Don’t worry, Dr. Graves. There’s just not enough time for what you’re thinking. Dirty girl. Though you have no idea how often I’ve thought of the two of us together that way.”

I reduced myself to begging when I saw the void he’d spoken of enter his eyes. He put his hands around my neck and began to squeeze. My air was cut off immediately and my lungs burned. Dark spots danced across my vision, and my legs jerked in reflex. My attempts to remove his hands were easily dodged and only made him squeeze harder.

I knew it was over for me—would have known it even without seeing the look of triumph on his face. But I had one final moment of satisfaction before I died—when I heard the sound of Jack’s voice and saw the red splatter of blood across Jeremy’s chest and neck. The warmth of his blood on my face was the last thing I felt before darkness claimed me.

 

 

Chapter Twenty-Six

It was the irritating beeps that rang frantically in my ears that told me I wasn’t dead. Or wasn’t dead anymore, at least. I’d been there, seen what the other side had to offer before life was so cruelly forced back into my body. At least
There
I’d been at peace, with no pain.
Here
there was unspeakable pain. Brody was gone. And the anguish from that memory was worse than any ache in my body. But somehow I was still here. Was it my fault Brody was dead? Because I hadn’t trusted him enough? Because I hadn’t let myself love him enough? Those weren’t questions I was ready to answer just yet.

It was Jack’s voice I finally heard that made the beeps slow back down to an easy rhythm. It was his hand holding mine and his voice that was choked with emotion.

“You gave me a scare, Jaye. I thought you weren’t going to make it,” he said.

I opened one eye slowly, but things were still fuzzy. And I knew before I tried that speaking would be pointless. Jack’s eyes were bloodshot and his smile strained. Several days of beard growth on his face made me wonder how long I’d been in the hospital.

“You’re not going to be able to speak for quite some time,” he said. “He crushed your windpipe, and there was some hemorrhaging along the brain. So no singing or autopsies for you any time soon. Maybe all that time they spent on you in surgery will help that tone-deaf problem you have.”

I smiled as best I could and squeezed his hand just because it felt good to be alive, even if there was unspeakable pain and a long road ahead of me. The morphine started to work, and I slowly went back under. The last thing I heard him say was enough to let me rest in peace.

“I got him for you, Jaye. I got the bastard who did this to you. You can rest easy now, and I’ll be right here when you wake up. I’m going to be here from now on.”

 

 

 

The End

 

Please enjoy this excerpt of
A DIRTY SHAME
,
book 2 in the JJ Graves series!  It comes out on October 30, 2012!

 

 

 

Chapter One

 

 

 

There was something about the dark.

 

The way it surrounded completely—a gentle embrace that comforted with a soft sigh and a delicate touch. The way it could intimidate and threaten, so the blackness was almost debilitating.

 

The dark wielded power.

 

But to me, the darkness was a place to hide—a place to bury my face when it was covered with tears, and a place to huddle protectively when the nightmares came lurking. And they always lurked. The darkness was a place to escape when life invariably turned to shit.

 

My name is J.J. Graves, and the darkness had become my friend over the past months. So it seemed fitting that I wait until that blackest time of the night to slink my way back home—to the place that had left a bitter taste in my mouth and sweat coating the palms of my hands. To sneak back into the town that had raised me and gossiped about me with equal fervor.

 

I jerked at the wheel of the old Suburban and pulled to the side of the road on the outskirts of Bloody Mary, Virginia. I lowered my head to the steering wheel and took a few desperate breaths that did nothing to relieve the tightness in my chest. The windows steamed slightly and the sound of harsh breathing echoed in my ears. I tried to ignore the pounding inside my skull and the way the heater couldn’t quite chase away the chills that wracked my body, but it was no use.

 

“Come on, Jaye. You can do this.”

 

My voice was still hoarse and low, though the pain had been gone for several weeks. The doctors said to be patient. That things would return to normal the more I let myself heal. But I wondered how anything would ever be normal again when all I could think about was the blood that had coated the floors of my childhood home—violent splatters that gleamed like the black center of a Burmese ruby as death tried to claim me. I still heard the deafening sound of the gunshot and felt the blood that rained down on my skin like scalding tears in my dreams. It was easy to forget how hot fresh blood was. It was always cold by the time I had my hands in a body on my table.

 

Jeremy Mooney had taken something from me that day, when he’d had his hands wrapped around my throat. I couldn’t say exactly what it was he’d taken. I only knew I was different now. I’d watched him murder a man I’d been intimate with—a man I’d told myself I could love if I only allowed it. Guilt and self-loathing ate at me because I hadn’t known if I could really be in love with Brody, while feelings I couldn’t put into words were forming for Jack—the man I’d called my best friend. The guilt still ate at me. And I’d been avoiding Jack because of it.

 

I didn’t love easy, and honestly I wasn’t even sure I knew what love was. I’d thought my parents had loved me. But I’d been wrong there.

Terror had crippled me after my brush with death. And I hated that about myself. I’d never been a coward. Had never been one to hide from a scandal or the terrible things that life seemed hell bent on throwing in my path. Lord knows I’d faced enough of them in my thirty years. But I guess everyone has a breaking point, and I’d finally met mine.

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