Prey of Desire

Read Prey of Desire Online

Authors: J. C. Gatlin

Prey of Desire

 

By JC Gatlin

 
 
 
 

© November 2013

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Prologue

 
 

Friday,
May 24, 1974

11:32 PM

 

Beneath
a brilliant swirl of stars, the Black Moon Forest stood like an impenetrable
wall of twisted pines, cypress trees and thatch, and from deep within its
bowels
came
an eighteen year old man, running bloody
and scared.

Brian
Williams, the popular senior on the varsity wrestling team and son of the
wealthy state governor, was neither aware nor cared that he was covered only by
his underwear, still wet and torn from a frantic rage through the hushed swamp.
His vulnerable feet were bleeding and left a splattering red trail behind him.
And, in his bare arms, he held the lifeless, naked body of his girlfriend.

He
ran faster out of the thorny brush, holding her tightly to him, struggling to
warm her skin.

Directly
ahead, outlined in the night, Brian could make out a farmhouse. Its black
windows reflected moonlight like a warning beacon. As he approached, he fell to
his knees and screamed for help. He nearly dropped the naked girl, but
tightened his grip then screamed again, a wail more agonizing than before.

Lights
flipped on inside and, from the deep shadows of the porch, the screen door
opened. Someone approached. Clothed in a blue robe and night slippers, a man
stepped to the edge. He paused there with an expression of surprise on his
face. It turned to shock, then to unimaginable horror.

Brian's
eyes met the young father's as he struggled to hold Bonnie upright. Her skin
was now pale and bloated, her long black hair matted and stuck to her head. She
wasn’t breathing, and it was his fault. He tightened his grip on her body and
trembled, sobbing uncontrollably.

“Help
her,” Brian cried. “Please.”

Her
father leapt from the porch edge and raced toward them. Brian watched him approach.

“W-we
were at the lake when something happened.” The boy could barely speak. “She
just disappeared under the water and I - I - I didn't know what to do.” He
coughed, expelling water from his own strained lungs.

The
father knelt in front of them. He reached out and touched his daughter's arm,
then her face. He immediately removed his robe and placed it over
Bonnie's
bare shoulders, covering her breasts.

He
didn't ask what happened, or how, or why. A dead stillness had overcome him,
and he said simply, quietly, “We need to get her inside.”

Brian
shook his head, looking at his girlfriend's body, then at the stoic father,
then back at the body. “S-Shouldn't we get her to the hospital? Don't we need
to do something? Call
someb
… ”

“We
need to get her inside,” he said again.

Brian
didn't know what to do. Everything around him seemed to be moving in slow
motion. The ground was spinning; stars above him blinked out of existence.
There were crickets chirping and then silence, then chirping.

“Young
man,” the father said again for a third time. “We need to get her inside.”

Cringing,
Brian shifted and grabbed hold of her legs. The father slipped his arms around
her torso, lifting her up. Together, they carried her through the dark as her
arms dragged across the damp grass. The robe fell away. They trampled it as
they brought her to the porch, stepped up and opened the screen door. They
carried her inside.

Laying
her on the kitchen table, the father covered her bare body with the table
cloth. Her eyes rolled open and, with every move, water trickled from her mouth
and nose.

Brian
lost control.

“We
need to call somebody.” He brought his hands up to his temples and turned away.
His fingers ran up his forehead and through his wet hair, pulling and tugging
at it. He paced around the kitchen. “We got to do something for her. Tell
somebody.”

Without
a word,
Bonnie's
father walked away. Brian watched
him.

“What
are you doing?” He stopped pacing. “We can call my Dad. He'll know what to do.”

The
father returned to the kitchen with his tool box. He set it on the table next
to Bonnie. Opening it, he took out a hammer and a tape measure. There were
other tools, and he fumbled through them, searching.

“Are
you listening to me?” Brian yelled, fighting back tears. “My dad, he knows the
best doctors. He can help. We
gotta
do
somethin
' for her.”

The
stoic father paused, turning his head. His eyes pierced the teenage boy with
sharp, brutal stabs. He turned back to his task, removing nails and a level. He
found a spiked awl.

“What
are you doing? This is crazy.” Brian stepped closer to
Bonnie's
corpse; his own wet, near-naked body trembled. He was crying now. Unable to
comprehend what was happening, he touched her hand dangling over the table and
held it tightly in his own. Her palm felt like clay and her fingers like
rubber. He shut her eyes as tears rolled down his cheeks. He looked back at her
father.

The
man lunged forward and jabbed the spiked awl into Brian's right eye.

It
was one, swift motion.

The
father stepped back as Brian's body twitched violently, his hands flailing
toward the wood handle sticking out of his eye socket and pressing against his
nose. A second later, he collapsed to the floor.

The
father stood there and watched the teenager die, then turned to his daughter's
corpse.

“Oh,
Bonnie,” he whispered. “If you forget me, there's something I want you to know.”

 
 
 
 

25 years later…

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

1

If You Forget Me…

 
 
 
 
 

Friday,
December 31, 1999 

7:10 PM

 

He may
have been the only person in the entire world alone on this New Year's Eve. He
sure felt like it.

Like any
average twenty-year-old boy with a broken heart, Ross McGuire stood in the
parking lot of the Flying J Truck Stop, twenty miles north of Tampa, Florida,
at a pay phone. He didn't want to be alone. He pressed the silver buttons with
frantic urgency, but paused before hitting the last digit.
What was he going
to say? Would she even accept his call?
It had been three weeks, four days
and sixteen hours since he pulled his
Camero
to the
side of the road, let her out and drove off, leaving her sobbing in the
rearview mirror.

Three
weeks, four days and sixteen hours.

A semi
truck pulled into the parking lot, grumbling loudly as it rolled past the frail
phone booth. Ross slammed down the receiver. Turning to his blue
Camero
parked a few feet away, he made the decision: He was
leaving.
For good.
She
called off the
engagement; not him.
She
ended this relationship; not him. It was time
to move on.

And it
was the perfect time to do so. It was about to become a new year.
A new century.
Time to start a new chapter
of his life.

With keys
in hand, he shook his head and looked out at the dark parking lot. The semi
pulled around and slowed. Brakes squealed as steam released above the tires.
Halting, the large truck blocked his view of the storefront and engulfed him in
deep shadows.
Almost as if it was cutting him off from the
world.

Standing
in inky blackness, Ross paused. Or, more accurately, he was stopped by the
weight of a small diamond ring in his shirt’s breast pocket. He removed it and
held it in his hands for several seconds.

Despite
the oppressing shadow of the semi, the small Solitaire diamond sparkled,
reflecting the swirling starlight above him. He really loved this ring. Its
thin band was two-toned, and contained a small, studded diamond indicating
elegance and intricacy. To him, this symbol truly represented Kimberly, the
love of his life. He picked it out nearly two years ago, and had saved and
scrimped and sacrificed to buy it. When he finally proposed and slipped the ring
on her finger, her reaction was a resounding, “Yes!”

Barely
twenty-four hours later,
she gave
it back. In a fit of
rage, he’d pulled off the highway and left her standing at the gravel shoulder.
Their relationship was over.

Or was
it? Could he ever really stop? They had their ups and downs; he knew that. He
admitted that he'd hurt her. And, he really did love her. Squeezing the ring in
his palm, he returned to the phone booth and dialed her number.
All seven digits this time.

The line
rang.

He
waited.

It rang
again. A female voice answered on the other end.

Before Ross could respond, a hand wrapped around his throat,
cutting off his windpipe.
Shocked,
he struggled and flailed his arms. The grip tightened and a second later he
felt a sharp pain in his right eye. The thin spiked awl penetrated his upper
eye cavity, through the skull and pierced his brain. Ross slumped forward,
dead.

The
diamond engagement ring dropped from his palm and clinked onto the pavement
just beyond the phone booth. The black handset hung wildly above Ross’ body as
his girlfriend's voice rippled through the receiver.

“Hello...?”

A man
leaned down and picked up the ring, then nodded toward the phone booth.
Reaching out, he picked up the swaying handset and listened to the woman on the
other end.

“Hello?”
she asked again. “
Is someone there?”
He hung up the
phone.

“Oh,
Kimberly,” he whispered. “If you forget me, there's something I want you to
know…”

 

 

* * * * *
* *

 

“Hello...?”
she had asked into the phone in her living room. “Is someone there?” But there
was no answer. She could hear breathing, then a muffled
uuummppfff
.
The phone clicked and the line went dead.

Kimberly
Bradford thought little more about it and hung up the phone.

It was
New Year's Eve, the dawn of a new century, and her first evening out since
getting dumped three weeks, four days and 16 hours ago. Nothing was going the
way she expected. She was running late for a blind date she'd been reluctant to
accept in the first place. Then the kitchen garbage disposal exploded and
drenched her evening gown with black muddy grime, making her even later. The
landlord said he'd be right over to fix it, but Kim couldn't wait. She grabbed
the nearest towel and ran next door with Zeus, her Doberman, to her best
friend's townhome.

Now, an
hour later, Kim was borrowing evening wear from a woman with a fashion sense
somewhat more liberal than her own. To add insult to injury, she was having a
bad hair day.

She
walked to the bedroom mirror and turned, carefully studying the low-cut, blood
red gown with leopard print breasts. She shook her head, mortified.

“Don't
you have something black?” she asked, turning away from the mirror. “How about
that dinner jacket you wore last week?”

“You look
fine” Her friend's reply was muffled behind the bathroom door, which was
slightly ajar with the shower running. Kim shook her head.

“I don't
think so. Reds just not my color...”

The
bathroom door opened wider and Mallory poked her head out, glancing at Kim. At
twenty-two, Kim was a college student at Stillwater University and, as Mallory
liked to describe her, a “book worm” Kim had only one boyfriend her entire life
- an aimless but incredibly good looking grease monkey named Ross McGuire.
Mallory always made it clear that she never understood what Kim saw in him,
other than it was the boy who took her virginity. But that's another story.

Tonight,
Kim had let Mallory talk her into joining the rest of the world --- where
tonight everyone would be ringing in the New Year. Here, the entire town of
Stillwater would be attending the Congressman's New Year's Eve party at Black
Moon Manor. It was the perfect opportunity to find the new love of her life.

“Wear red
or nothing at all,” Mallory said. “This is your first night out since you cut
that 180 pound tumor out of your life. You need to look young and vibrant and
energetic.”

“I can't
wear this. This looks like something a drag queen would wear in a Madonna video.”
She ran her hands through her thick black hair, piling it on top her head then
glanced at Zeus. The Doberman lifted his eyes and huffed. Kim laughed,
receiving the message loud and clear.

Mallory
continued. “If I know Dr. Whitman, that dress will really turn him on.”

“I'm not
interested in turning him on.” Kim really didn't want to meet this man, but
Mallory was always pushing her into uncomfortable situations.

Kim had
known Mallory a few years now. She was ten years older, but not nearly as
mature. Mallory had lived next door ever since Kim moved into the gated
townhome community, and in that time had become, by default or by convenience,
her best friend. In her heart, she wanted to describe their friendship as Lucy
and Ethel. But it was Mallory, not her, who was the adventurous red head. By
Kim's standards, Mallory was a wild, free-spirited force of nature
who
, inexplicably, was a magnet for both men and money. Now
Mallory was introducing her to one of those men.
Why couldn't it have been
the money?
Kim thought,
then
added, “Besides, he's
not a doctor... he's a head shrink.”

“What do
you think a shrink is?” Mallory flipped through a small closet crammed full of
clothes, belts, shoes, hats, scarves and who knows what else. In the clutter,
she found a skimpy royal blue dress and pulled it off the hanger. “Besides,
you're missing the point. The man's crazy in love with you.”

Kim shook
her head. “He's never even met me.”

“But I've
told him all about you. He's crazy in love with you. There's no other way to
describe it.”

“Well,
he's going to think I charge by the hour if I show up at the party wearing this
dress.” She turned her back to the mirror and reached for the zipper. “I want
to wear that navy blue skirt and matching jacket.
The one
with the little white buttons.”

Mallory
made a disgusted face and pretended to gag. “You can't wear that. I already told
you, you look depressing in dark colors.”

“It's
understated. Muted,” Kim said. “And besides,
it's
how
I feel” She unzipped the gown, letting it fall to the floor. “I really don't
want to go. I'm not into head shrinks with obsessive personalities.”

A knock
on the door downstairs interrupted the girls and the Doberman leapt to his
feet, barking. Mallory turned her head as a deep voice echoed through the
townhome.

“Ladies,
time is of the essence. We're in a fantastic hurry.”

It was
Mallory's date, a tall, rather well-fed chap dressed in a tuxedo. He was
considerably older than either Mallory or Kim, with graying temples and a
carefully trimmed salt-and-pepper beard and mustache. People often compared him
to Sean Connery, and Mallory loved that about him.

Zeus
barked excitedly and scrambled down the spiral staircase.

“It's
Addison,” Mallory said under her breath. “And damn it, he's early.”
 

Kim
glanced at her watch. It was a quarter after eight. Actually, he was almost
forty-five minutes late, she thought. Mallory had been dating Addison for as
long as Kim had known her - just not exclusively.

Mallory
often described him as necessary, like going to the dentist. It's not something
you enjoy doing, but it's something you have to do if you want to look your
best. And Addison did make Mallory look good; he bought her clothing and
jewelry. A solid twenty years older, he was wealthy, owning a successful
insurance business and properties throughout Stillwater. He was nice though,
and sometimes Kim felt bad for the way Mallory treated him.

As Zeus
tripped over his feet to welcome him inside, Mallory leaned over the banister
at the edge of the loft and waved.

“We're
not dressed yet,
Pudd'n
Toes,” she called to him. “Give
us just a minute.”

Addison
stepped into the living room, glancing at the Doberman and then up at her.

“Now,
Mallory, I must insist...” He placed his hands on his hips and leaned forward,
looking up at her. “It's after eight, and you know dilatory entrances are one
of my issues.”

“Oh,
baby... Take a Valium,” she yelled back at him. “And make yourself comfortable.”
        
Zeus watched Addison's every move with
intense interest, his large brown eyes growing as the man paced the living
room.

“Where's
the shrink?” Kim joined Mallory at the banister and leaned over the railing,
trying to see past Addison and out the door. But he blocked her view. “I
thought you were both meeting us here.”

“We're
rendezvousing with Dr. Whitman at the benefit precisely at nine o'clock.” His
voice was stern and authoritative, and he had no intention of being late. “Dr.
Whitman stated he received a call from a patient who was abnormally anxious of
the Y2K bug,” he added.

“I can't
believe this.” Kim pulled away and sat on the bed. Mallory turned and followed.

“It’s
okay. The Y2K is an urban myth.” She sat down on the bed beside her. “Your
computer will be fine.”

“That’s
not what I’m talking about.” Kim put her face in her hands. “This is my first
date in over four years and I'm already getting ditched.”

Mallory
stood up, grabbed an arm and pulled her back to her feet. “He's waiting for you
at the party, okay?”

“I'm not
going.” Kim picked up the red gown, returning it to a hanger in the cramped
closet. There was barely room for it, but it didn't matter. Mallory immediately
grabbed the gown and handed it back to her.
                   

“Yes. You
are. Now quit whining.”

“The guy
sounds old,” Kim continued, pleading her point. “I’m not into old guys like you
are.”

“He’s not
old, he’s seasoned.” Mallory thrust the gown in her face. Kim hesitantly took
the dress as Mallory continued. “And he has money. And he’s a doctor.”

Kim
looked at the gaudy red dress clutched in her hands, and resigned to her fate.

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