Read Disturbed Mind (A Grace Ellery Romantic Suspense Series Book 2) Online
Authors: Charlotte Raine
(
S
unday Afternoon
; Connor’s House, Murray, Virginia)
AS I PARK MY CAR
in front of Connor’s house, my mind goes through the possible victims: Lori, Benjamin, Brianna, Zach, Kit…maybe even that boy Zach is always hanging out with…Jason. I hope it’s not one of the kids. It’s not that I have anything against Lori or Benjamin, but I’ve already had to do an autopsy on a kid who died after an asthma attack. I had to take a break every ten minutes because the implication that a child was unable to get to experience all of life’s miracles was too much to handle.
As I cross the yard, I see a policeman talking to Lori, Benjamin, Brianna, and Kit. Something tells me that Jason wouldn’t have been over here this early on a Sunday afternoon, which means that it was Zach. Zach was a bit of a jerk toward Grace, but I still feel my stomach curl at the thought of him dying so young. He could have grown up to be a great person. Now, nobody will ever know what he could have accomplished.
“You,” Benjamin snarls, looking at me. “Are you really here to harass my family about the house again? Can’t you see that…can’t you see that something terrible happened? What kind of sick bastard comes up to a good family like mine and bothers them while the police are investigating…they’re investigating my son’s…my son’s…”
Lori embraces Benjamin as he begins to shake—with rage or grief, I can’t be sure. She glares at me before she whispers reassurances into his ear.
“Mr. Schneider, I am terribly sorry for your loss.” I bow my head. “But I’m the local medical examiner and…your son needs to be examined.”
“Not by you,” Benjamin snaps. He turns to the policeman. “You need to get another medical examiner to look at my son. This one has a conflict of interest and hangs around with people that I don’t trust.”
My face burns bright red as the policeman glances at me. I force myself to shrug before pivoting on my heel and walking back to my car. The Schneiders will have to wait awhile for another medical examiner to have the time to look at a body that’s not even in their jurisdiction. As I put my postmortem evidence collection kit into the backseat, I notice Jason talking to Kevin Deats, who had come out of his house to walk a new puppy—or, more likely, to find out what the police were doing parked next door.
I lock my car back up—even in suburbia, I don’t trust someone to not break into my car since Deacon Cochrane broke into Grace’s hotel room last year and tried to frame me for the murder of David Pattinson.
David Pattinson. I had seen Deacon’s journals—at least the parts that various news stations showed—and I know how he felt about David. Deacon believed that David should have become Deacon and his brother’s guardian since that is what Deacon’s father wanted, but David had ignored that responsibility and instead it fell onto the shoulders of Deacon’s grandfather, Albert. Maybe Deacon wouldn’t have become a serial killer if David had taken him in. Maybe everything changes if you decide that someone else’s fate matters even if it inconveniences you.
“Hey, Kevin!” I call out, walking over toward Jason and Kevin. Kevin nods at me. “Thanks for letting Grace crash at your place last night.”
“Well, you know me,” he says, a big smile on his face. “I’m always willing to help Grace when there’s a killer on the loose.”
“It seems like it,” I say.
“Jason was just telling me that they’re saying this death was a suicide,” Kevin says. “It’s so strange that someone can seem happy and then just kill themselves.”
“I just don’t get it, man,” Jason says, shaking his head so hard that his curly black hair bounces. “I never saw him depressed.
Never
. I mean, sure he joked about killing himself a few times when he was with me and Bryce, but he was joking. He was talking about how annoying his family was and how he would rather kill himself than spend another year in the house. But…I can’t see why he would really do it. Things were going well for him. Michelle from school was really starting to dig him. Was it because he was probably moving again? Did he just get tired of moving?”
“I don’t know,” I say. Kevin tilts his head.
“I wonder if Bryce noticed that Zach was depressed,” he says. I watch his puppy begin to chew on its leash.
“Who is Bryce?” I ask. “Did the Schneiders have another kid?”
Kevin laughs. “No. Bryce works for Steve Rolf, the landscaping guy. I helped him get the job and he’s gotten along well with Zach and Jason. I think the kid was just a drifter and liked having some company. Steve’s been thanking me for recommending him, too, since he’s a bright, capable guy who just needs a little encouragement to come out of his shell. I’m hoping Steve might do some work for free for me after this because I have an apple tree that’s falling apart out back. Hell, Bryce might even be able to do it. He’s only been here since the middle of March, but Steve is already giving him lots of responsibility…I imagine it’s because Steve’s own son lives with his mama in France, and Steve’s transferring his fatherly feelings to Bryce, but what do I know? I only supervise schools full of children with their parents hovering nearby.”
“I could always help you out with the tree,” I tell him. “I’m pretty sure Grace and I owe you by now.”
“Nah,” he says. “Grace told me that you’re busy with a nasty murder. I wouldn’t want to distract you from catching these killers.”
“Nasty?” Jason asks, perking up. “What makes it nasty?”
“The face was destroyed,” I tell him. “The teeth taken out, the fingertips scraped off, and the skull was bashed in. That makes it hard to figure out who the victim is to begin with, but the body was also submerged in water for about three weeks…”
Three weeks ago was in the middle of March. I turn back to Kevin.
“Do you know where Bryce is from?” I ask. Kevin frowns, and then shrugs.
“No idea,” he says. I turn to Jason. He shrugs, too.
“I don’t know much about his personal life, just that he’s good at basketball,” he says. “He even had a last name that had the word
ball
in it. I think it was Scottish. Ballick? Ballencia? Ballavia?”
“Do you know anything else about him?” I ask. Jason is still lost in thought, trying to think of Bryce’s last name. “Jason!”
“What?” Jason asks. “Oh, um, he has a younger sister. Kayla. He talks about her all of the time. She’s young. Like twelve or thirteen years old…”
I’m pretty certain Grace mentioned that Francis was an only child. Even if he had picked up a fake name, there would be no sense in him making up a fake sibling that he would obsess over.
“Ballthazar? Ballzine? Balline? Ball…Ballentine! That’s it. Bryce Ballentine,” Jason says, grinning. His eyes glance over at the Schneiders and the smile disappears. “Who’s going to tell him about Zach?”
“I could…” I say, though I’m not too certain that I want to. He might not be Francis, but his arrival is still around the same time as the murder of my John Doe. “Do you know where Bryce is staying?”
Jason shakes his head.
“You could call Steve,” Kevin says. “He would know where Bryce is. Grace has his number. She just called him last night to ask him to get her a quote on that landscaping cleanup that she wanted.”
“I need to talk to Grace once she gets home later,” I say, grimacing. “I have a feeling that I need to give her a long apology.”
“You know what’s better than a long apology?” Kevin asks.
“What?”
“An honest one,” he says. I smile despite everything that’s happening.
“I’ll try that,” I say. Kevin’s puppy raises its leg and begins to pee on Jason’s shoe. I walk away from the two of them before Jason notices and begins to howl about his ruined, brand new Nike sneakers.
(
S
unday Afternoon
; Dr. Schumer’s Office, Murray, Virginia)
DR. SCHUMER
looks like the lovechild of Colonel Sanders and Abraham Lincoln. He has the thin face of Lincoln with the large ears and prominent nose, but he has the white hair, mustache, goatee, and glasses of Sanders. Throughout my therapy sessions, he continuously pushes the glasses back up to the bridge of his nose.
“You seem more anxious than usual today,” he says, gesturing toward my thumbnail that I’m nibbling on. I pull my thumb away from my mouth and fold my hands on my lap. “Did something happen? You made it seem important to meet on a Sunday.”
“No,” I say.
He gives me a condescending smile. “Have you had any more nightmares?”
I sit up, realizing this is my scapegoat—something that I can blame my anxiety on instead of admitting aloud that Francis Tate is free and I’m paranoid that he will try to exact revenge on me for testifying against him and getting him thrown in prison.
“Yeah, I actually had one last night,” I tell him, which I realize is the truth. You forget about nightmares when your life is pollinated with fear.
“Do you want to tell me about it?” he asks. Not especially, but he’ll find it more suspicious if I don’t tell him.
“Well, the first part of the dream I remember is being at my family’s farmhouse, in the kitchen…there was a very pungent scent of apple pie…it’s what I was making when Francis came…except in my dream, I finished making the pie. In real life, I never finished it. I remember being in the hospital, bleeding out and wondering if I left the oven on…anyway, in the dream, I cut out a slice of the pie. The pie begins to leak out something red, and at first, I think that I accidentally filled the pie with cherries. In the dream, my mind thought it made sense that I would mistake apples for cherries. But then, I think it’s blood. I begin screaming and my mom comes into the kitchen. She asks me why I’m screaming. I point to the apple pie, but it’s not there anymore.”
“What happened to it?” he asks.
I swallow.
“I don’t know,” I tell him. “The only thing left on the counter was the knife I used to cut a slice of it with. When I stepped closer to the knife—it was one of those big cake knives—I couldn’t see my reflection in it. Then, I woke up.”
He jots something down on his pad of paper.
“What do you think that means?” he asks.
I shrug. If I knew, it wouldn’t bother me or at least it would bother me less.
“Can I tell you what I think?”
“Sure.”
“Well, most of the dream relates to the attack. The apple pie, the knife, the blood, your family’s farmhouse…those are just traumatic memories replaying themselves, sometimes in a jumbled fashion. But there are two new factors: the fact that you finished the pie and the part about not seeing your reflection. The unfinished pie could be your mind trying to tell you that you left something incomplete in your old life—likely, you feel that you didn’t accomplish as much as you wanted with your students, but it could be something in your personal life as well. The absence of your reflection…well, that one is harder to pinpoint, but I would think it’s connected to a feeling of your loss of identity after the attack or an indication that your conscious doesn’t feel like you’re facing your true self. Of course, this is all conjecture, so you could have just had really bad pie the night before.”
I force a smile. “No, I didn’t have any pie. I actually haven’t had any since the attack.”
“Well, in real life, there won’t be any blood.”
“I hope so.”
I feel my cell phone vibrate in my bag.
“Can I answer that?” I ask.
Dr. Schumer shrugs. “You’re paying for this time. It’s up to you.”
I take out my phone. It’s Sam.
“Hey,” I answer. “What’s up?”
“Sorry, sorry, I know you’re with your friends right now,” he says. “I just need something really quick.”
“What?”
“Steve Rolf’s number.”
I grit my teeth. “Why do you need Steve’s number?”
“I just…need to talk to him,” he says. “I wanted to, uh, make sure that he doesn’t chop up the willow tree. It might be bad for the house, but how many people know that? I doubt any tree aficionados will be looking into buying the house.”
“Can I just text it to you?” I ask. “Why didn’t you just text me this question?”
“Yeah, that’d be good. I just…needed the answer as quick as possible,” he says. I can hear the deceit in his voice, but I can’t figure out why he’s lying about calling Steve. “I thought if I texted, you might not feel your phone vibrate.”
“I’ll text it to you,” I tell him. I hang up. I find Steve’s number in my phone and send it to him. When I look back up at Dr. Schumer, both of his eyebrows are raised.
“That seemed like a tense conversation,” he says.
“We’ve just had a lot going on,” I say. “Him, being new as a medical examiner. Me, going to college again and teaching at a new school. He has a new murder and I’m trying to sell my brother’s house. It’s really chaotic.”
“Have you thought much about your relationship with Sam?” he asks.
“What do you mean?”
“Well…I’ve thought this before, but I was waiting to see if you brought it up…your relationship was formed because you were nearly killed and he saved you. That forms a power dynamic and a status quo—you as the damsel in distress and Sam as the savior—”
“I don’t need to be saved,” I interrupt, heat creeping up my neck.
“I know, Grace,” he says. “I’m just wondering if your relationship is strong without the presence of danger. If a relationship is only good when there’s excitement and chaos…it’s not the person you’re in love with. You’re in love with the adrenaline and the feeling of standing on the edge of the world. If you’re on the edge of a precipice, is Sam pulling you closer to the ledge or is he pulling you away from it?”
“What is he supposed to be doing?” I ask, annoyed with his metaphors.
“Neither,” he says. “He’s supposed to stand beside you. Does he?”
I open my mouth, but I can’t find the right answer to say. Sam has had a history of avoiding difficult conversations and uncomfortable moments. This is something that I can’t simply lie to my therapist about. With the new knowledge that Francis Tate is free, I should feel fine turning to Sam for comfort, but I haven’t. It’s because I’m afraid he will decide I’m too much to deal with. I’m afraid that when I confess to everything that I’m feeling, I will finally see my reflection and neither of us will like what we see.