The Shark (Forgotten Files Book 1)

She stared at the box, frowning. She didn’t like surprises. Thanks. See you in twenty.

She moved to the fridge and grabbed a diet soda. Popping the top, she turned back toward the box. She unclipped her gun and set it in a lockbox on top of the refrigerator.

Picking up the package, she shook it gently. It wasn’t her birthday. Duke would have texted her if he were sending over something. And seeing as her dating skills had atrophied, it wasn’t from any secret admirer. Or Bowman.

As Cooper settled on his dog bed by the couch, she sat and dug her fingernail under the tape securing the end. She ripped open the tape and pulled the paper apart, revealing a simple brown box. No label. Plain. She hesitated. It was likely nothing special. Still, she retrieved latex gloves and slipped them on her hands.

Lifting the lid, she moved slowly as if she half expected a snake to jump out. Instead, she found a DVD in a case nestled in a bed of white tissue.

She lifted the DVD and removed it from its case. The disk was neatly marked with a white label reading “Round Five.”

Holding up the DVD, she checked the back for any identification, but there was none. She moved to a small TV. She didn’t have cable, and on the rare times she watched television, she streamed it live through her computer. But inserting a strange DVD into her computer was not an option, so she popped it into the old DVD player and switched on the television. The image was gray and grainy, and for a ten-second count she saw nothing. She leaned forward, ready to switch off the television, when the image of a room came into focus. It was a nice room. Thick, lush carpet, cream drapes in the background that pooled at the bottom. The camera panned toward a chair. Slowly the cameraman moved around it.

She hit “Pause,” her heart hammering so hard she thought it would crack her sternum. Memories, distant and forgotten, moved and stretched as if they had slumbered for too long a time.

Sitting straighter, she hit “Play” and watched as the image slid around the tall chair. From this angle, the cameraman shot from above, enough to see that someone sat in it. Long brown hair. Female. The photographer panned around the room, lowered the camera, and shot directly toward the girl, whose head slumped, dark hair draped over her face.

Riley turned up the volume and leaned closer. She glanced behind her at the clock and noted that Hanna would be home soon. Whatever was on this disc was not good. Hanna would never see it.

She leaned toward the image, studying every detail. The female’s wrists were bound to the arms of the chair. Vicky too had marks on her wrists. This girl on the television wore a lovely yellow dress that hugged her narrow waist and skimmed her calves. Like Vicky. She wore a gold locket around her neck. Like Vicky.

She then remembered the car she’d spotted while she was running the other day. Was the driver Vicky’s killer and had he sent this to her?

On the video, a man’s hand entered the right side of the screen. His fingers were long, the nails buffed, but rough skin and deep veins suggested he was older. He traced a finger slowly along the girl’s hair, and then reached for her chin. Gently, he lifted her head back until the hair fell away from her pale, angled face.

The girl in the chair wasn’t Vicky.

“Shit! It’s me.”

Blood rushed from her head and her heart pounded. Oh my God! Tears burned her eyes, and she thought about the cards and the missing days from her life. Seconds ticked as she stared until the image ended and there was gray static.

A car pulled in the driveway as she tried to process what she saw. A car door slammed.

Wiping away a tear, Riley shut off the television. She ejected the disc and with trembling hands, replaced it in the case and shoved it in her purse. Moving fast, she scooped up the box, hurried to her room and laid it on the floor under her bed. She stripped off her gloves and threw them beside the box. Later, she’d dust the box for prints.

Standing, she smoothed her hands over her jeans, dug deep, and pulled up a smile that she hoped warmed her face. “Hanna!”

“How was your day in investigator land?” She dropped her gym bag to the floor and kicked off her shoes.

“I’m not an investigator.”

“Bet that didn’t stop you from asking questions.”

“True.” Riley moved into the kitchen and retrieved her cell out of her back pocket. Fingers poised over the keypad, she was grateful her hands had stopped trembling. “How about pizza? I can order it right now.”

“That would be great. I ate at Duke’s, but that was around four.”

“No worries. I could use a few slices myself.” Her brain on automatic, she called in the pizza, pepperoni with extra cheese. Not Riley’s favorite, but Hanna loved it and it was easy enough for her to pick off the pepperoni and scrape off most of the cheese.

She reached in the fridge and handed Hanna a flavored water.

“You okay?” Hanna asked.

“Just a little tired. Wondering why you like this water. If you were going for chemicals, go all out and get the diet soda.”

Hanna rolled her eyes. “It’s more healthy because it has vitamins in it.”

“As long as you like it.” The flavored water was one of the few things she could do to spoil the kid, so she picked up a couple of cases whenever they were on sale.

“Catch any bad guys?” Hanna asked.

Riley laughed, doing her best not to look upset. “At least eight.”

“Only eight? Ahh, don’t feel too bad.”

Her heart slowed, but her nerves were on edge. “Better luck tomorrow.”

“When do you get back on patrol?”

“Tuesday.”

Hanna held up her vitamin water. “Here’s to catching bad guys.”

Riley’s poker-face grin hid her swirling thoughts, which shifted back to the image of her own seventeen-year-old face. Eyes barely open, her mouth pouty and slack-jawed, her long hair threaded through the hands of a stranger. The DVD was a link to the missing days of her life and a calling card from the Shark.

She nodded as Hanna prattled on about her day. They talked about the college applications over pizza. All normal. And yet the images burned in her mind. The past was not dead and buried as she had hoped.