Scarlett Red: A Billionaire SEAL Story, Part 2 (In the Shadows) (24 page)

 

A
stinging sensation burns my face at the same time my head snaps sideways. I gasp and open my eyes to see Cynthia leaning over me, her blonde hair dangling in my face.

“It’s about time you woke up,” she calls over the wind howling outside the salty-smelling building we’re in. “You know you really
should
drink more water, Talia. That’s probably why you were out longer than I expected. I want you awake for this.”

Whatever I’m laying on, it’s hard. My face still stinging from her slap, I try to sit up, but my chest and thighs are tied to—I turn my head to see—an upside down flat-bottomed canoe. My gaze darts to take in the space. Surfboards and various one or two man boats and other swimming equipment hang on the walls around us. We must be in the boathouse. “Please let me go, Cynthia. Why are you doing this to a friend?”

“Friend?” Throwing her head back in a deep-bellied laugh, her gaze locks with mine. “I was
never
your friend. Becoming your best bud was a means to an end.” Her voice is different now. Definitely harsher. Angry. Vengeful.

Is Cynthia the serial killer? I thought the suspect was a man.
As fear for my life whips through me, I try to keep my voice steady even though I’m shaking on the inside. “What do you want from me?”

Instead of answering, Cynthia sets her purse on another boat stacked on a holder next to her and opens it. When she pulls out a pair of rubber doctor-style gloves and starts to put them on, I start screaming as loud as I can.

“Scream all you want.” She raises her voice to be heard over me, the thunder, and sand rushing against the building. Pulling a small vial of red liquid from her purse, she continues, “Everyone’s inside right now. Probably already drinking and partying it up on the last day of Hawthorne’s singles’ events. You won’t be joining them, of course.”

I scream a few more times, then let my voice die out. I may as well save my lungs for running if I can wiggle my way out of these ropes she’s tied around me. Cynthia’s so blasé, her utter calmness freaks me out more than if she just railed at me. Panicky, I clench and unclench my hands, and when my fingers brush the knot next to my right thigh, I still my hands
. The knot!
I slowly move my hand to cover it.

Distract her. Keep her talking while you work on the knot.
“I don’t understand. I’ve only been nice to you. What did I ever do to you?”

“What did you do?” She gapes at me for a second, then lets out a trilling laugh. “You
seem
sweet, but…” She pauses, her blue eyes narrowing to angry slits. “I know how evil you can be. I’ve felt the sting of your hand, the burn of your curling iron, the spikes of a meat tenderizer, the deep bruising of a belt buckle…basically anything you could get your hands on. And when that didn’t work, you made sure I got to experience the darkness of the closet. So yeah, I know firsthand just how vicious and cruel you are.”

Cynthia’s eyes glaze over while she spews her anger. But it’s not me she’s looking at. She’s looking beyond me, her mind wandering in the past. “That wasn’t me, Cynthia. I’m sorry for whoever hurt you, but it wasn’t me—ow!”

She grabs a handful of my hair and yanks hard, her crazy eyes spearing right through me. “It was you! He left me because of
you
. Abandoned me to your evilness.”

“It wasn’t me.
I
didn’t hurt you. Was it your mom who hurt you?”

“What? You don’t recognize me?” She sneers, then reaches up and yanks hard at her hairline.

I suck in a gasp when her long hair pulls away. The cap underneath comes next, revealing short sandy-blond hair. After she peels off her fake eyelashes, she wipes her lipstick off on her sleeve. When she turns fully my way, Tommy Slawson’s face stares back at me, his voice turning deeper. “Do you recognize me now,
Mom
?”

My heart rate jacks and my breathing ramps. “How did you—”

“I become who I need to be,” he sneers. “I borrow, steal, kill…whatever it takes to meet my goals, Mom. Goals! Something you told me I’d
never
have.”

“Look at me,” I say. Even though I know he’s off his rocker, I try to reason with him, because self-preservation can be its own desperate form of crazy. “I’m your age. There’s no way I can possibly be your mother. I’m
not
her, Tommy.”

Hearing his name seems to snap him out of his hate-filled haze. Tommy shakes his head and scowls, folding his arms. “How do you know my name? I never told you.”

I blurt out the first thing that comes to mind. “I saw you at Columbia.”

Worry fills his expression. “But I was so careful. You didn’t see me. You didn’t! I made sure of it.”

As soon as it occurs to me that Tommy must’ve been the stalker I thought I imagined in college, he starts to pace, muttering to himself. “He told me to follow you. To find out if you were the one who wrote that article that ruined everything.”

He halts and turns back to me. “But when I saw you for the first time, I knew you were more. Honestly, I was glad I didn’t have to write those notes and deal with slipping packages in the mail anymore.” He lowers his voice, his eyes traveling over my face. “You were so much more than he ever knew. So I lied and told him you didn’t write it, even though I knew you did.”

Notes in the mail?
Oh God, Tommy must’ve been the one who put the drug packages with the drop instructions in the students’ mailboxes at school. “How did you know I wrote it?” I whisper, realizing that the “he” Tommy’s referring to had to be Professor Jacobson, the man who blackmailed his students and ran the whole drug operation at school.

As Tommy moves closer, suddenly all smiles, I try not to shrink back from him. The last thing I want to do is set him off. He’s too unstable. I can’t imagine it would take much to send him over the edge.

Stroking my hair reverently, he says, “I knew you wrote that article, because I read everything you wrote. The cadence of your voice, your word patterns, they were there if anyone took the time to read them like I did. Even after college, I followed your career at the Tribune and then moved on to your books.”

“My—” I swallow to keep my voice from cracking. “My books?” When he looks at me this time, I see the shy guy who handed me towels and water bottles these past few days. Oh God, now his comment about me drinking more water when I first woke up makes sense. He most likely drugged those water bottles with the same stuff he must’ve put in my beer at Spurred. If it hadn’t been for Sebastian, Tommy would’ve gotten to me long before now.

He nods. “I’m a huge fan,
Miss Lone
. I even joined your fan club. Following your career helped me stay focused for a while.”

A sudden dark cloud floats across his calm features as he reaches in his pocket. Pulling out a knife, he flips it open, his voice turning angry. “But then you gave the Hawthorne trip to Delia. That should’ve been mine!” Clenching his hand around the knife, he jabs the blade into the side of the canoe, rocking it under me.

I bite back my scream of terror while tears of relief silently trickle down my temples.

“So I took care of the old bat,” he continues as if the knife isn’t currently jammed just three inches from my head. “And it all worked out, because I discovered where you liked to relax, Talia. Here at Hawthorne, I knew I’d get my chance to be alone with you eventually.”

I swallow to keep the rising terror locked inside and try to sound calm. “And Mr. Sheehan?”

Tommy smirks, smugness settling on his features. “He thought he could take over the club once Delia died.” Bending close, he speaks next to my ear. “No one was going to have access to you, but
me
. Period.”

A heavy layer of guilt for Delia and Bradley’s deaths slathers on top of my fear. God, Tommy’s so unhinged! He can’t decide if he despises me, worships me, or thinks I’m his mother. One thing I know for sure. He hates her memory and has marked me as his punching bag for his abused childhood.

Distract him! Redirect.
“Why don’t you let me go and we can talk books all you want.”

“Now why would I do that?” Barking a pleased laugh, he steps back a little bit and begins to unbuckle his belt. “All the fun’s about to begin.”

“Please, Tommy!” I beg and shake my head frantically as I struggle against the rope. I’ve almost released the knot on the bottom rope. I just need to yank a little harder.

He pauses for a second, confusion in his face. “Oh, you thought I was going to…” Wrapping the leather end of the belt around his hand, he laughs. “You need to know what you did to me. You need to feel what I felt.”

Before I can say anything, he whips the belt around and slams its buckle against my hip. I scream as pain splinters through me, sobbing, “Please stop, Tommy. I’m not your mom.”

As he rolls the belt back up once more, he pauses and looks directly into my eyes. “Oh, I know that. I’m punishing
you
, Talia, for all the pain you caused me. You’re responsible for everything that happened to me.”

This time he hits the belt high on my thigh. I try to curl inward to soften the blow, but I can’t move. All I can do is moan through the pain.

Excitement fills his features. He smiles then leans close once more. “The next one will be on your bare skin. That’s when the real fun begins. The sight of your blood is what will really do it for me. The pleasure of it spewing everywhere.” He jerks his chin toward the bottle he set on the boat behind him. “Know why I bring that?”

I shake my head, hoping he’ll stop, but I know he won’t.

“When blood dries it turns dark. I want it to stay red, Talia. I want it bright. As bright red as it always felt to me when my own was spewed everywhere!” he finishes on a hateful hiss.

Straightening, he calmly unrolls the belt. “But you won’t be alive for that part. That’s the after stuff.” Stepping close, he slips his belt around my neck. I struggle against the bindings, begging him to let me go, but he puts his mouth against my cheek, his jaw holding my head in place as he slides the leather through the buckle. “I consider it my own special signature.”

When I feel the bindings on my legs finally start to give, I attempt to slide my legs off the other side of the canoe, hoping the shift in my weight will free me, but the rope around my chest continues to hold me in place.

Just as Tommy grabs my legs to keep me on the canoe, the sound of the door handle rattling jerks Tommy’s head up a second before Sebastian calls out, his deep bass overriding the howling wind. “Talia!”

Grabbing the knife, Tommy jerks back and cuts the rope around me just as the heavy metal door swings open.

Sebastian enters the room, handgun raised, his voice calm and deadly. “Let her go, Slawson.”

Tommy pulls me in front of him and jams the tip of his knife against my throat. He laughs and presses the blade just deep enough to pinch. “Back off right now or I’ll jab this deep. How will you save her while she’s bleeding out?”

Sebastian doesn’t blink. He remains perfectly still, his focus only on Tommy. “Release her or die.”

Chuckling, Tommy shifts behind me even more, using me as a shield. I can barely feel my arm where he’s squeezing it so tight to hold me in place. “She’s everything. The whole reason I’m here. I’m not giving her up. She has to die.”

Sebastian shifts his bright blue gaze to me. I see the question in his eyes. I’ve seen it before.
Do you trust me?
I hold myself perfectly still and slowly close my eyes.

Other books

CAGED (Mackenzie Grey #2) by Karina Espinosa
A Blued Steel Wolfe by Erickston, Michael
Until I Say Good-Bye by Susan Spencer-Wendel
The Dalwich Desecration by Gregory Harris
Killer Temptation by Willis, Marianne
Loonies by Gregory Bastianelli
Sound Proof (Save Me #5) by Katheryn Kiden, Wendi Temporado
Cat Pay the Devil by Shirley Rousseau Murphy