Unauthorized Obsession (Unauthorized Series Book 3) (17 page)

Chapter 27

 

Seth waited until dark, his tiny sedan parked at the entrance to Kara's subdivision, along the route she always took home. He wore the same outfit he’d worn several times before in her neighborhood. Platform boots, several pairs of pants and sweatshirts, and a shirt tied around his waist to make him look bulkier than he really was. A baseball cap pulled low over his face hid his hair, and beard dye in his goatee colored the red to black. He knew he was unrecognizable from a glance.

Kara hadn't been home all day and he wondered where she was. He berated himself for sending her the pictures that had caused her to give her phone over to tech. Now he couldn’t track her.

But he hadn’t been able to stop himself from doing it. Seth didn’t smoke, drink, or do drugs. His body reacted harshly to sugar and anything else he tried to take in made him feel only sleepy or angry. The only rush he got in life was when he contacted one of his ‘girls’ or when he played his games with the police.

He had captured that image of Kara and, seeing it, hadn't been able to help himself from sending it to her. She wasn’t one of those girls where you could find her nudes plastered all over the Internet. He'd never even seen her in a bathing suit. He knew the pictures would have an impact on her and he had wanted to see it.

He
knew
that she was not at her boyfriend’s house though. He chuckled to himself, thinking of Rowe in the cell block, being charged with murder. That would take the arrogant bastard down a peg.

When darkness fell and Kara was still not home, Seth got out of his car and walked the three blocks to her house, two of the special items he had brought with him in his hands. He did not worry that she would recognize his car because she’d never seen it. It was his second car that he only used on missions like this.

He walked up her driveway like he belonged there and dug the key to her house out of his pocket. He didn’t have to worry about the close neighbor who sometimes watched Kara's dog. He had sent her to Las Vegas on a trip she won from a radio station. Or at least that’s where she thought she won it from. In reality, he had set up the entire operation and bought the hotel and gas card out of his own pocket. Better safe than sorry. He smiled again at his own genius, unlocking the house quietly and slipping inside.

This was where it got sticky. The dog complicated everything. But the dog was only a puppy and Seth hoped he would be vulnerable to the plan. The dog was sleeping on its pillow and lifted its head in surprise, looking at Seth. “Duke,” Seth called quietly. He hoped Duke would recognize him as a friend, since he had been here with Kara, plus he had come by and fed the dog treats twice when Kara was at work. He had never been comfortable with dogs in his life, but when Kara had gotten the puppy, he had started making frequent visits to the Humane Society, under the guise of pretending he wanted to adopt a puppy. A particularly helpful volunteer there had worked with him to get him over his nervousness with dogs.

He pulled the bloody steak out of the plastic bag he was holding and held it out to Duke. Duke wagged his tail and trotted over immediately, making the steak disappear. Seth watched him eat it, then slipped the muzzle he held in his other hand over Duke's mouth easily. He fastened it around the back of Duke's head with a grin of triumph as Duke tried to back away.
Nothing could stop him now
. Seth grabbed Duke by the collar, opened the door to the backyard and pulled Duke outside into the crisp night air. He wanted to close the dog door, but he didn’t quite dare because Kara might see it when she came in the house and that would put her immediately on guard. Instead, he pulled a large planter box in front of it from the outside, so that Duke couldn’t get in, but Kara wouldn’t see anything wrong.

He went back in the house and stripped off his flesh colored gloves, uncovering another pair beneath them. He stripped off his two outer layers of clothes, revealing cargo pants and a tight exercise shirt. His body practically thrummed in anticipation. Today was the day! He'd been working towards this day for months, but it finally had all come together in a way that would keep suspicion off of him.

Now all he needed was to wait for her to get home. He pulled out his phone and typed in the code to access her cameras. As long as she pulled in the driveway like she always did, he would see her coming and be able to take up his position behind her door, then disable her as soon as she turned to put her gun in the safe.

He had watched her do it fifty or sixty times from the upstairs window of the house for sale across the street. He was a whiz with hackers and crackers. He’d gotten the code to access her cameras from the emulator software he had installed in her computer. He’d gotten a copy of her key by bumping her lock one day when she was at work and copying the spare key she had hanging on her pegboard. He’d gotten access to the house across the street by bumping the lock too, although he could have done it a dozen other ways. People had no idea how easy it was to bypass any standard lock.

Seth allowed himself to relax a little bit. He fiddled with the settings on the cameras so they would beep if anything came within their range. That way he didn’t have to watch the screen constantly. He sat down at Kara’s dining room table and thought about all he had gone through to get here. Now that he was sitting still, he could think a bit better.

Well, not just here. He had a lot that was good going on in his life right now. He had finally managed to become a cop. He smiled slyly as he thought about what Kara thought of him. He knew she thought he was a little slow. Wait until she found herself bested by him. Wait until she found herself under him as he showed her how smart and capable he really was! Her last thought ever would be how she had been so wrong about Seth.

His mind divided slightly as he thought about killing her. He had never intended to kill anyone, but sometimes things got out of hand. He thought it would be easier to do it the second time around. That douche bag, Tim Hardy, had forced his hand. The guy had caught him taking pictures of him and the girl he was cheating with. Seth had taken pictures one night, sent them to Tiffany, and then gone back for more the next night. That was one of his rare mistakes. Tim saw him take a picture and Seth saw him seeing it. Seth quickly left the bar, his mind racing, trying to figure out what to do, but Tim had followed him. They’d gotten into a scuffle in the quiet parking lot next to Seth’s car, and Seth had to resort to stabbing him.

Seth remembered that moment like it was yesterday, even though it had been eight years before. The taller man had looked down at the blood coming from the left side of his chest in disbelief. Immediately, blood had flowed from his mouth also. Seth made the knife disappear and apologized, then said
Get in, I’ll take you to the hospital.
The taller man had seemed confused and leaned on Seth for support. Seth had thrown him in the back of the car and actually headed for the hospital, knowing that wasn’t a smart thing to do, but unable to think of anything else. He'd been half-forming plans to dump the guy in the parking lot, but when the man had given a last shuddering groan and collapsed completely on the seat, Seth had pulled over and checked his pulse. There hadn’t been one. So he’d taken Tim Hardy home and buried him in the backyard, working all night to be sure it was done before daybreak.

Then he'd waited, terrified, for the police to show up at his door. He'd wanted to move the body a dozen times. Why had he decided to bury it in his own yard? What a stupid thing to do! But when the police hadn't shown up in six months, he started to breathe easier. When they hadn’t come in a year, he went back to his old ways, convinced he was invincible.

Of course there had been a few hiccups along the way. The first time he’d ever tried to become a cop here in Westwood Harbor he had failed the mental evaluations. He went two towns over and tried again, and failed again. Then he got smart about it. He studied everything he could get his hands on about tricking and beating mental evaluations and lie detector tests and eventually was able to pass the test for prison guard. Admittedly, it wasn’t as strict as the one for becoming a police officer, but he had passed it.

Being a prison guard was better than being a security guard, but not near as good as being a police officer. Every day that he got home from work he thought about how to pass the police officer mental evaluations. He had to be a cop! And he wanted to be one here, in his hometown, where people would look at him and be impressed. People he cared about impressing.

Westwood Harbor had a policy of allowing applicants to try again after a year if they failed the psychological evaluation but Seth had studied their hiring patterns and broken into their digital records. He knew there was a bias, and if there was already a notation that a person had failed once, they always were failed again the second time. Once you had failed twice, you were told you could never apply again.

That was unacceptable to Seth so he started looking for ways around it. His first thought was to delete all the hiring records pertaining to him if he could find a way to do it, but then he realized the people who had tested him before would probably remember him. He thought about going over the police department heads to get the policy changed, but threw that out, figuring it would never work. He finally settled upon deleting all of his files and then waiting until the old guys who ran the psychological evaluations retired or moved out of that section. Over the years, he had thought many times of just killing them. It had been a rush, stabbing that guy in the parking lot and then burying his body. Even though the nights spent waiting in terror for the police to come and haul him away had been awful, he still looked upon them fondly too. Anything was better than his normal state of complete and utter listlessness. He really only felt alive when he was breaking the law. The thought made him chuckle since he had always wanted to be a police officer so badly. But who broke the law better than a cop? Besides, cops were untouchable, and that’s what he wanted to be.

Just to pass the time, he had started following the mayor, then stumbled across the fact that the mayor was complete dirt. He found a dozen things to blackmail him for. Cheating on his wife. Falsifying voting records. Destroying evidence. Embezzlement. With each discovery, he got a little bolder. If he ever was arrested, he would just need to call his good
friend
, the mayor, to bail him out.

He finally made his first contact with the mayor and convinced him that it would be in his best interest to help Seth. They’d gotten his old psychological evaluation erased and then Seth just had to wait for new faces to run the psychological evaluations. All told, he’d waited twelve years until he dared try again. After seven, one of the old guys had had a heart attack and retired but the other guy was still there. Seth had thought frequently about bumping off this last guy, but instead he kept himself busy with his
girls
.

He’d gotten into some trouble as a prison guard in his first prison, so he’d moved to Worshaw, but the same prison doctor worked in both places, so even though he’d managed to get away from his old supervisors, his counseling records had followed him. Eventually, he found out good old Dr. Doctor was actually bisexual and in love with a male prisoner. Seth had planted cameras in Doctor’s office and oh how he laughed when he saw the doctor lock his door and drop his pants.

There’d been a lot of other work involved in keeping himself looking squeaky clean for the last ten years, and he’d always worried about someone putting it together, but after he took care of Kara, he was going to actually
become
squeaky clean, he swore it to himself. At least for a while.

He thought idly about his plan and how ingenious it was. When Kara came home, he would have several hours to play with her, and then he would get rid of her. Once Zane was released from prison he would lure Zane over here and make it look like they’d had a lover’s quarrel, and then Zane had killed himself. Seth thought with pleasure about his ingenious plan to plant Tim Hardy’s body in Zane’s shed. He knew they’d be able to tell that it had been moved, but he also knew they’d never be able to trace it back to him. That was all that was important.

His mouth curled into a moue of distaste. He hated the fact that Kara was fucking Zane dry, but he did have to admit that Zane would have his usefulness.

He glanced down at the computer monitors and saw everything was still clear. He allowed his mind to wander to what he would do to Kara when she got there.
Everything he’d been dreaming about for months now.

He checked the time, then pulled one of the phones off of his belt. This was the one the desk sergeant would call when Zane was released on bail. The desk sergeant thought he was a lawyer named Robert James. If Zane wasn’t released by 8:00 the next morning, he would call his good friend the mayor and ask for a ‘favor.’

He would need to get things rolling by then so he could show up on time for work at 2:45 to wait for a field training officer who would never arrive. Seth smiled hauntingly and looked at the cameras again.
Anytime now.

 

Chapter 28

 

Kara left the courthouse and headed straight back to the police station to find Joe and Ivy. They were on duty, but hopefully had managed to come up with what she needed. She called Joe on the road and he drove straight back to meet her. The patrol car pulled up in front of the receiving desk where Kara was shifting her weight nervously from foot to foot.

Joe handed her a manila folder out of the window. “This is everything that we put together. I think you can convince her with just this, but we’ve got the ringer back there,” he said, jerking his thumb over his shoulder.

Kara knelt down and peered into the back seat. A woman sat there looking nervous, her luggage next to her.

“We tracked down Ivy’s informant and found her at the bus station. She’s got a ticket to leave on the five forty-five and head back to New York. Two guesses who bought her that ticket and the first doesn’t count.”

“Howell,” Kara whispered.

Joe nodded grimly. “She doesn’t know his name, but we brought her back here to look at a picture. The description matches.”

Kara dropped her voice and whispered into Joe’s ear. “Has she admitted that it was a made up story yet?”

“Not yet, but we’re going to get her into the interview room and start working on her,” Joe said in the same low voice.

Kara gave Ivy a smile and said, “Message me as soon as you get something from her. I’m going to find Sgt. Gale.”

Joe nodded and tipped her a wink.

Kara thumbed through the manila folder and gritted her teeth. This had to be enough for Sgt. Gale to release Zane and arrest Seth. It didn’t explain everything, but it sure filled in a lot of holes.

Kara waited for Joe to pull the patrol car around to the prisoner's entrance, then walked back out to the parking lot to her car. A call up to the detective’s office had told her that Sgt. Gale was not there, so there was only one place left for her to be. Zane’s house. She drove into the subdivision and was gratified to see one of the detective vehicles out front.

Kara got out of her car and walked to the back of the house, spotting Sgt. Gale immediately. Sgt. Gale saw her too and walked over to her, a smile on her face. Kara had never seen her smile before and was slightly taken aback. She didn’t know what had caused the sudden difference in Sgt. Gale, but she was happy for it.

Sgt. Gale started talking before she even reached Kara. “You’ll be happy to know this body has only been in the shed for a few days. It was definitely moved from somewhere else. I’ll need to talk to my boss but I will probably be able to cut your boyfriend loose in six or seven hours.”

Kara’s heart fell at the word boyfriend but she ignored it. “How long will it take you to cut him loose if we can tell you who really did it?”

Sgt. Gale raised an eyebrow and Kara saw her hands twist together over an imaginary paper clip. Kara handed her the manila folder and watched silently as Sgt. Gale pawed through it. When the Sergeant looked up at her, Kara told her about the informant who was being interviewed at that very moment at the station.

Sgt. Gale’s face was hard again. She looked offended. Kara wasn’t surprised, that was the look all good cops got when one of their own went bad. “I’m going to put out an APB on Howell right now and send someone over to his house.” She thought for a second and then said, quietly, almost to herself, “I need to talk to the Chief too, right away.” She looked up at Kara, regret on her face. “I’ll still have to do an exit interview with Zane and I won’t be able to do any of that until I talk to the Chief and get moving on Howell. It’s still going to be a couple of hours.”

Kara nodded, she knew that. She wondered how Zane had done in the cell block last night. She knew he could take care of himself, but still it was a horrible place to spend the night.

Sgt. Gale was already walking away, muttering to herself quietly. Kara felt panic grip her. Zane was going to be released. Did he hate her? Was this the end of their relationship? Had she damaged his trust in her beyond repair? She thought that she knew the answer to all of those, and it was probably yes. Sadness pressed heavily upon her heart as she trudged across his yard, back to her car.

Kara looked around the street as darkness fell. Was this the last time she would ever see this house? Was she never to be invited back here? The thought caused tears to well up in her eyes. She liked him so much. And his ex-girlfriend was right, he was a good guy. But she'd lost him, she was almost certain of it.

She got in her car and drove around aimlessly for hours. She stopped at McDonald's and ate dinner, forcing herself to eat since she hadn’t all day. She chose McDonald’s, because she didn’t feel she deserved any better. She criticized herself endlessly inside her own mind for what she had done to Zane. For her moment of emotional weakness. For how easily Seth Howell had pulled her strings. 

One part of her said to go back to the police station and wait for Zane to be released, but she knew that was foolish. If he was going to scream at her, give her the cold shoulder, or otherwise break her heart, she would rather he did it in private and not in front of people she had to see every day.

Kara turned her car around finally, and headed towards home.

 

 

 

Other books

The Price of Temptation by Lecia Cornwall
Kodiak Chained by Doranna Durgin
To Rescue a Rogue by Jo Beverley
Anatomy of Murder by Robertson, Imogen
The Duke's Legacy by Wendy Soliman
Feet of the Angels by Evelyne de La Chenelière
Wolf Whistle by Marilyn Todd
His Royal Prize by Katherine Garbera