“Thanks for being there for me,” she told him. “It means a lot.”
“Sure. I’ll call you later. You know—to check on Higgins.”
“Thanks.”
There was nothing wrong with Colin Grayson, she thought as he walked away. It was all her. She was confused. He’d broken her heart before, and the thought of allowing him in again only for him to realize she wasn’t the one scared her to death.
The sound of the door opening and closing brought her back to the moment. Colin was gone. And she had work to do.
EIGHT
Erin awoke to the sound of chattering teeth. It took her a second to realize she was the one making the noise. She wondered how long she’d dozed off for. She was freezing, and it was pitch-dark.
As her gaze darted around the cell, she rubbed the chill from her arms. “Garrett?”
No answer.
Pushing herself to her feet, she hoped her eyes would adjust to the dark. No such luck. She held both arms straight and stiff in front of her like a mummy in an old black-and-white movie and walked slowly across the small space. A few seconds passed before her hand came into contact with something cold and fleshy. She yanked her arm back. “Garrett,” she said again. “Is that you?”
Still no answer.
She swallowed as she reached out again and forced herself to touch whatever it was in front of her. It was definitely a human form, bony, skeletal. She held back a cry. Standing on the tips of her toes, she felt the cloth around his neck, and realized then what he’d been doing with the backpack. He’d spent hours ripping it to shreds. She’d thought he’d wanted to ruin something that belonged to the man upstairs. But she’d been wrong. Garrett had seen the backpack as his chance out of here once and for all. He’d made a rope and noose to hang himself with.
She held his wrist, felt for a pulse, but there was none.
Her stomach tightened as a sharp pain gripped her heart and squeezed.
Garrett was dead. And now she was alone with a dead man.
Her heart raced as she grabbed hold of the bars and shook them. “Let me out! I want out!”
Unable to stop the tears from coming, she crawled back to where she’d been sitting before, got down on all fours, and felt around for the pile of things she’d collected. Her mind raced as she pulled the pen apart and then hid the coins under a pile of straw.
Calm down, she told herself. You need to think. Think. Think.
She’d already eaten the granola bar and now wished she’d saved half of it for later. She would ration the water. Before she had time to plan beyond that, the door at the top of the stairs creaked open, shedding a thick stream of light across the room.
She could see Garrett now. His face was swollen and black, and he seemed to be looking right at her. She clutched her stomach as she looked away.
Footsteps sounded, prompting her to reach out and grab the Taser. Her hands shook as she held it in front of her, her thumb ready to flip the switch when the time came.
A match ignited. The oil lamps were lit, providing a soft glow.
“Oh, would you look at that,” he said, walking toward Garrett so he could take a closer look.
Don’t judge a book by its cover was the first thing that had gone through Erin’s mind when she’d awoken in the cell yesterday. She guessed her captor to be in his early thirties. He was clean-cut and newly shaved, just as he’d been when he’d offered her a ride. He was well spoken, too, and he had a nice smile. Nothing about him had set off alarms.
But now she knew better.
From outside the cell, he was touching Garrett, poking and prodding. Was he making sure he was dead? Or was he having fun with him even in death? The thought horrified her.
Although Garrett wasn’t facing him, he reached through the bars, put a finger to Garrett’s lips, and wagged his finger back and forth, making a hollow popping sound emit from Garrett’s mouth.
She held her breath.
He pulled his hand back through the bars, never taking his gaze from hers—a cold, hard stare. If there was a devil, he was it. “Such a shame,” he said. “I was going to attach electrodes to his testicles and shock him.”
Erin stiffened as she stared back at him, unblinking.
He pressed his face up close to the bars. “You would have loved it.”
Hoping to provoke him, she growled at him. “You’re a monster. A bloody monster.”
He frowned.
Come and get me, asshole. She needed to piss him off enough to get him to come inside so she could Taser him and then make a run for it. There was no way he was getting his weapon back without a fight.
“I like you,” he said. “You have spirit.”
“You are a disgusting pig.”
He smiled.
She couldn’t get over the fact that he looked like a regular guy. His light-colored hair was cut close around his ears. His bangs swept across a high forehead. Just a regular-looking guy. Had she seen him on the street, she never would have given him a second look. He could have been a professor or a grocery clerk. Nothing about him stood out.
“I can make you do anything I want.” He smiled. “Anything.”
“Fuck you.”
“Oooh. A nasty girl with a foul mouth.” He made a slurping noise and then said, “Intoxicating.”
She recalled Garrett telling her to do whatever the freak told her to do because otherwise he would get angry. And there was no telling what he would do if he was angry.
Well, she wanted to find out. Better to anger him quickly, she thought, and possibly catch him off guard. Besides, the nine-volt battery in the Taser wouldn’t last forever.
“Are you the Heartless Killer?” she asked.
“What if I am?”
She shrugged as if it didn’t make a difference one way or another. But it did matter. If he was the Heartless Killer, then that would mean he would never let her go, especially now that she could identify him.
“Everyone is talking about you,” she said after a short pause. It was true. Parents had been worrying and lecturing their kids about the serial killer on the loose for years now. Mostly they said to stay alert, never walk home alone, and, of course, don’t talk to strangers. Until she’d been brought here, though, it had been white noise. The man standing before her had been like an old folks’ tale or the bogeyman under the bed. A bad guy nobody ever thought much about until another body was found. She remembered a friend telling her that the killer chose his victims at random, taking multiple victims before disappearing for months. They called him the Heartless Killer, but she had no idea why.
“Have you watched the news lately or read the paper?” she asked when he didn’t respond. He just stood there staring at her, creeping her out, which meant he was winning. “I’ve read about the things your whore of a mother did to you,” she lied. “No wonder you’re a little messed up in the head.”
His jaw twitched. That was a good sign. She needed him to lose control and hopefully enter her cell, where she would have the upper hand.
“You need to shut that dirty mouth of yours,” he told her, “or I’ll make you eat crow. Literally.”
Erin had never personally read one word about him. She had no clue what police investigators were saying, since she’d never cared one way or another.
She cared now.
The good news was she’d obviously triggered his anger, so she stuck with it. “I read that your slut of a mother forced you to take showers with her so you could soap her up real good and make her moan with pleasure.”
He reached into his back pocket and pulled out a key.
Come on. Come on. Her gaze kept landing on Garrett. She hoped the weirdo didn’t leave him hanging there. No one should have to die like that. Tortured for months in a cold, dank cell in some creepy man’s basement.
Focus, she reminded herself as he unlocked the door. “You don’t even know who your father is, do you? Is it the postman? Or maybe it’s your next-door neighbor.”