Jump The Line (Toein' The Line Book 1) (52 page)

Tall, big-boned, big tits, sh
e’
s nothing like Alaina. 

I close my eyes, making Alaina materialize in my mind.  Supple body.  Dance
r’
s body.
 
Not one ounce of fat.  No oversized mammary glands lik
e—
I stare at the camera, watching the Holstein navigating her way through my living room.  Wh
y’
s she look so surprised?  What does she think?  This is
n’
t a hay field: i
t’
s my home.  To her, i
t’
s the last place sh
e’
ll see daylight. 

I close my eyes again and wait for the inevitable. 

Alaina.  I can
taste
her, little white trash slut.  Wh
y’
d she throw herself at the detective, when she coul
d’
ve had me? 
I’
d like to cut her in half and eat her, like a heady buffet of baby salad greens, despite the fact sh
e’
s fucked him.
Fucking
him.

I do
n’
t mind, not so much.  Sh
e’
s not mine.  I promised Daddy
I’
d save her for him.

Holstein pulls up to the door of my secret room.
 “
Showtime
,”
I say, wishing she could hear.  I get a fish-eye view of her swollen pink lips, fluttering eyelashes.  Sh
e’
s working through the puzzle. 

Wha
t’
s this?  A peep hole in the wall for pretty me to look through?
 

Playing a little game of ESP, I urge her mentally to open the door. 
So I can eat you!


See what
I’
ve got for you, doll
,”
I say, fingering the barrel of the big fat Glock I lifted from her when I bumped into her at Arne
e’
s. 

Hullo.  Ho
w’
re you going to explain being shot with your own gun?

Ha, ha.  Tha
t’
s rich.  I suppress a giggle.  I lifted it right off her hip and she did
n’
t know, until sh
e’
d gone outside with Detective Hawks.  But she hid her screw-up from him.

Releasing the Gloc
k’
s safety, I give Dolly the Cow a few more seconds to work up her nerve and open the door.  I can barely hide my excitement.

Chapter 46

Stok
e’
s agreed to help me make my jump-the-line video, so
I’
m hoping h
e’
s on his way to the campus to pick up the video equipment. 
I’
m still feeling creepy about promising him
I’
d show up at his place tonight, but also
I’
m feeling proud. 
I’
ve convinced him he does
n’
t need to pick me up after work tonight, not that
I’
m going. 
I’
m done dancing at Oma
r’
s until I find Robin and catch Megalo Don.   

I think
I’
m set to nail him, but
I’
ve got one more item to get off my plate.  Thanks to the pervert lawyer who gave me a ride here and saved me some time,
I’
m almost ready to roc
k‘
n roll.


Aurelia, hullo
,”
I say, sliding in the back door at Verbote Dental, expecting her to pounce on me.  Fortunately,
I’
m not due today, so I wo
n’
t have to suffer Aureli
a’
s overbearing barrage of write-ups for being late.  Today, however, I kind of wish she were here.  The silence is freaking me out. 


Aurelia, are you here
?
” 

Verbote Dental on a busy day feels like the morgue, but walking the gray carpeted hallway alone, I feel like
I’
ve entered a frightening underworld.  The silence thickens.  The plush wallpaper
I’
ve hated since I first started working here looks like the fur of a sleeping beast.  I want to turn and run, but do
n’
t.  I promised Angie
I’
d find her killer. 
I’
m here to make that happen.

But why is
n’
t Aurelia here?

Hands at my side, I creep down the hall to Verbot
e’
s lab and knock on the door. 


Doctor Verbote?  Um, Brick?  Hullo.  I
t’
s me, Alaina. 
I’
m sorry to bother you, but
I
—”

The door flies open.  Waving his ever-present scalpel, Brick studies me like
I’
m one of his impressions, or worse, like
I’
m a cadaver.  A befuddled look clouding his face, he finally speaks.
 “
Alaina, what are you doing here?  I was
n’
t expecting you
.

Well, yeah.  Tha
t’
s the idea.
 

I smile brightly, edge closer.
 “
Are
n’
t you going to invite me in
?

He does
n’
t.  No surprise.  This is Bric
k’
s sanctuary. 
I’
m the invader, albeit invader standing her ground.  When I do
n’
t budge, his befuddlement gives way to the usual dull wary look I do
n’
t think
I’
ll ever get used to.  Today, i
t’
s a little less equine, edgier, and a tad more beastly.


Wher
e’
s Aurelia?  I did
n’
t see her up front
.


I do not watch her
,”
he growls.

Well, alrighty then.
 
I’
ve caught him off guard, but is that wha
t’
s wrong with Brick?  Somethin
g’
s definitely changed in his demeanor, and I do
n’
t like it.


Um,
I’
m sorry to barge in on you.  I know this is a surpris
e


and if ther
e’
s one thing Brick hates, i
t’
s a surpris
e


but I need your help
.


Come back later.  This is
n’
t a good time
.


I
t’
s about Meera
,”
I say, hoping to excite his curiosity
,“
and . . . the other girls
.


Mmm-hmm
,”
Brick says, not giving an inch.
 “
Yo
u’
ve solved the case all by yourself, eh?  A regular Sherlock Holmes
.

I do
n’
t think even Sea Biscui
t’
s head is as hard as Bric
k’
s.  Ignoring his mood, I pin back my shoulders and press on.
 “
My brothe
r’
s in trouble, Bric
k—
Doctor Verbote.  Please, yo
u’
ve got to help me
.

Seeing a glimmer of interest, I keep pitching.
 “
The police think my brother killed those girl
s


I glance inside the lab where
I’
d normally see Meer
a’
s parts scattered over the stainless steel tabl
e


but I know wh
o’
s doing it.  I
t’
s not Robi
n
—”


Who
?”
Brick asks.  Suddenly alert, he steps back, angling his huge head and staring down his equine nose at me.
 “
Who migh
t’
ve committed all this murder and mayhem
?


Stoke Farrel.  I need your help proving it, thoug
h


Stoke Farrel
?

 
Lowering his scalpel, he leans toward me and stares, like h
e’
s having trouble seeing me, or breathing. 
I’
m not sure which. 


Brick, are you okay
?”
I ask, backing up.  If I did
n’
t have to be her
e—
alon
e—
I would
n’
t stay.  This is getting creepier by the second.  


Yes, yes,
I’
m fine
,”
he says, recovering from whatever near seizure
I’
ve instigated with my remark about Stoke being the killer.


Tell me why you think . . . who did you say?  Stoke Farrel?  You think h
e’
s the murderer?  Is
n’
t he your little friend
?


My little
f—?
” 

I step back, feeling more agitated than I want to. 
I’
ve never seen Brick like this.  The scalpel waving increases.  The look on his face is scaring me.  I give myself a mental buck-up speech and hunker down. 
I’
m not leaving until I get what I came for.
 “
Maybe we should go sit down
,”
I say, shoving past him into the lab, feeling like someon
e’
s rubbing my spine with ice cubes, grateful the door remains open behind me. 

Several minutes later, after I show Brick my Twizzler package and explain the shoulder in my fridge, plus tell him why I think Stok
e’
s our serial murderer, I make my big pitch.
 “
I was hoping yo
u’
d use your HVO to check Stok
e’
s bite marks against those yo
u’
ve already analyzed on Meera and Angie Miller
.

Bam!  This is jolt number two to Bric
k’
s system.  H
e’
s kept me in the loop with his progress on NP
D’
s case.  H
e’
s even shared how, by using HVO, h
e’
s determined Megalo Don has killed Meera and Angie.  I do
n’
t think, however, he was expecting me to walk in with a piece of cardboard from a Twizzler package and ask him to test Stoke Farre
l’
s bite marks against those of Megalo Do
n’
s.

He recovers quickly.
 “
It will take time
,”
he says.


I do
n’
t have time, Brick.  I need these teeth marks teste
d—
like
yesterday
, you know
?

Petulance is a feminine trait, one I associate with my whiney-head Hyde Park friends, not
moi
.  But I hear it in my voice, and from Bric
k’
s reaction, I do
n’
t think he likes it.  Yet the piercing gaze he turns on m
e—I’
ve seen him look at Meer
a’
s bones this same way a million time
s—
tells me h
e’
s reached a turning point.  H
e’
s made a decision.


Wha
t’
s your rush
?”
he says, his tone confirming my guess Bric
k’
s ready to help.

Yet I ca
n’
t blurt out that I want the match before I go to Stok
e’
s apartment tonight.  What if
I’
m wrong and Stoke is
n’
t Megalo Don?  What if I confront my friend, my
former
friend, based on a few hunches and the fact only Stok
e—
never my sweet, innocent brother, Robi
n—
coul
d’
ve put that garbage bag in my freezer?  What if . . . the bite marks do
n’
t match?  Then
I’
ll have wrongly accused Stoke, a childhood friend, my Bubby, of murder, and tha
t’
s a felony for which I can be prosecuted, a potential blemish on my record.

Brick lays the scalpel carefully on the stainless steel table.
 “
An entire police department, several in fact, are searching for your killer, Alaina.  The FBI is looking, too.  But only
you
have the evidence to prove who he is
?

Brick is mocking me.  Why?  I want to run, get the hell out of here. 
I’
ve felt weird since the moment I walked in, and the fact Aureli
a’
s not here just keeps creeping me out. 


And
,”
Brick continues
,“
you and only you suddenly must prove the police and FBI wrong.  And yo
u’
re going to do so with this
?
” 

Using his scalpel tip, he drags the Twizzler cardboard toward him across the expanse of stainless steel.  Suddenly, I no longer care if Bric
k’
s mocking me.  I no longer care h
e’
s my boss.  I would
n’
t care if h
e’
s freaki
n
’ Megalo Do
n’
s twin.  All I want is to get what I came for, but Bric
k’
s no longer behaving like my teacher, my geeky mentor.  H
e’
s instead hell bent on belittling me, and tha
t’
s one thing that pisses me off good.


Dammit, Brick, maybe
I’
m not Sherlock Holmes, but
I’
ve brought you honest-to-goodness forensic evidence, teeth marks from Megalo Don.  I did
n’
t have to, but I thought you were on the side of law enforcement
.

 
Seeing the anger rising in his gaze, I soften my approach.
 “
Look, yo
u’
ve helped me so much in the past, so I thought. . .
.

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