Free Read Novels Online Home

Touch of Red by Griffin, Laura (7)

CHAPTER 6

Roland walked in and plunked a Slurpee on her worktable. “Wild cherry.”

Brooke didn’t look up. The print she was attempting to lift required her undivided attention. “Thanks. Next one’s on me.”

“Forget it. You’ve got visitors, by the way.”

She glanced up. “Who?”

“Two detectives, a man and a woman.”

She narrowed her gaze at him. Why didn’t he just say who they were?

Roland smiled, and she knew he was needling her. Maybe he’d picked up on the weird tension between her and Sean.

As if on cue, Sean stepped into the laboratory, followed by Callie McLean. Both wore visitor’s badges.

Brooke put down her fingerprint powder. “Hi.” She didn’t bother to hide her surprise.

“We decided to stop by.”

She glanced at Callie, who was looking around the lab curiously. To Brooke’s knowledge, she’d never before been down here.

Sean stepped closer, his attention drawn to the red brick on Brooke’s worktable. “What’s that?”

“A murder weapon.”

“Don’t tell me you’re trying to get a print off that thing?” Sean said.

“You sound like a very annoying sheriff’s deputy who told me not to bother.”

“Never tell Brooke she can’t do something,” Roland said from across the room. “Only pisses her off.”

Callie stepped over to take a look. The brick had dried blood on it because it had been used to bludgeon a man to death. Brooke had already used an alternative light source to locate a trio of prints on the side of the weapon. The challenge was lifting the prints from such a textured surface. She had dusted the area with black magnetic powder and photographed it, and now came the hard part.

“You guys mind waiting a sec? I have to finish this before my casting material dries.”

“Not at all.” Sean smiled as he stood back to watch.

Brooke wasn’t used to having an audience, but she tried to stay focused as she dipped a plastic spatula into a small bowl of liquid silicone. “Right now it’s the consistency of toothpaste.” She carefully coated the area. “When it dries, I’ll be able to lift the prints. They’ll show up black against the white putty. I’ll then reverse the images using digital photography and run the prints through the database.”

“Impressive,” Sean said.

“Hopefully. We’ll know in a few minutes.” She finished applying the material and turned to look at her audience. “So. What can I do for you, Detectives?”

“We’re checking in on our evidence,” Sean said. “You managed to get to it yet?”

“First thing this morning.” Brooke stepped over to the maimed bicycle in the vehicle bay beside Samantha Bonner’s Kia. Even the kickstand was bent.

Callie circled the bike. “Wow. This thing is trashed.”

“We got transfer paint off the frame. The paint is dark red, but you knew that already. We’re waiting on a make and model of the vehicle.”

Callie glanced at Brooke. “You can get make and model just from the paint?”

“Oftentimes, yes. The sample is analyzed not just by pigment, but also the layering involved—the undercoat, topcoat, clear coat—to narrow down the particular type of vehicle.”

“What about his fingerprints?” Sean asked.

Callie looked at him. “His?”

“It’s a boy’s bike, so we’re going with that assumption.” Brooke looked at Sean, who was watching her steadily with those hazel eyes.

“No prints. It’s the same problem we had at the crime scene. Very fragile evidence, and the rain doesn’t help us.” Brooke turned to Callie. “Based on the size of the bike and the lack of fingerprints, it’s probable it belongs to a boy between eight and ten.”

“Maybe our mystery witness?” Callie asked hopefully.

“It’s possible. The timing works. A neighbor heard a screech of brakes about nine p.m. We saw skid marks leading to the area where the bike was recovered. And a close examination of some of the crime-scene photos shows a tire mark on the driveway.”

“I’ve got them here,” Roland said from his computer.

Everyone gathered around his chair as he scrolled through a seemingly endless series of photographs. The shots started at the base of the driveway, capturing the car and the house, and then nearing the back door where the body was found.

“That’s a lot of photos,” Callie said.

“Shoot your way in, shoot your way out,” Brooke said. “That’s Maddie’s motto.”

“Here.” Roland stopped on a close-up shot of the driveway near the deck. A thin brown line on the asphalt appeared to be a muddy tire track.

“Zoom in on that,” Sean said.

Roland enlarged the image. It definitely looked like a mark made by a bike tire.

“The rain washed it away before anyone got a good look at it, but at least we have it on film,” Roland said.

“Does this mark match the bike?” Callie asked.

“Hard to say ‘match’ when all we’ve got to go on is a photograph,” Brooke told her. “But I would say it’s consistent with the bike we found in the hollow, which suggests the rider of the bike was at the crime scene.”

Callie tipped her head to the side. “So, the scenario is that this kid sees something terrifying, leaves the scene in a hurry and isn’t paying attention, and gets hit by a car as he races away?” She looked at Sean for confirmation.

“You’re assuming it’s an accident,” Sean said.

“You’re not?”

“Maybe the car belongs to the killer.”

Brooke shuddered. The possibility had kept her up all night. Had Samantha’s killer seen the child witness fleeing the house and tried to chase him down? If so, had the child escaped or not? A whole team of officers had combed the area last night, but they’d recovered no further clues beyond the crumpled bicycle and the youth-size Red Sox cap that Sean had found in the hollow.

“I hope you’re wrong about this,” Callie said. “But no matter what, we need to find this kid.”

“We’re also working on a shoe impression we recovered near the trash cans,” Roland said. “The feds maintain a database, and I submitted what we have. Haven’t heard back yet, but I can tell you it’s a herringbone tread pattern.”

“We’ll be able to get a brand for you,” Brooke said. “I can send you a picture, too, when it comes in.”

The lab phone rang, and Roland reached for it. “Trace evidence.” He listened for a few moments and looked at Brooke. “Sure, I’ll tell her.” He hung up. “That was Dave upstairs. He finished with the paint sample. Comes back to a Ford pickup or SUV, dark red.”

“Damn,” Callie said. “There have to be a lot of those in town. And statewide? We’re talking about thousands.”

“Date range ’96 to ’05,” Roland added. “That should help narrow it down.”

Alex Lovell stepped into the lab and looked surprised to see so many people. Her gaze settled on Brooke. “I got those results back.”

Brooked nodded.

“Whenever you get a minute.” Alex gave her a meaningful look and slipped out.

What had Alex found? Whatever it was, Brooke couldn’t think about it right now.

She turned to Sean. “One last thing—and it may or may not help you. The bicycle is a boy’s Mongoose mountain bike, around ten years old. Given that we think the boy riding it is around that age, it’s safe to say the bike’s a hand-me-down or possibly purchased at a resale shop. I know it’s a long shot, but—”

“We’ll check into it,” Sean said.

“We need to move on this vehicle lead.” Callie’s phone chimed, and she pulled it from the pocket of her blazer. “Sorry, I have to take this. Thanks for the fast turnaround, you guys.”

Callie stepped out, leaving Sean behind with Brooke and Roland.

“Walk me out?” Sean nodded at the door.

Brooke followed him into the dim hallway. The trace-evidence lab occupied a remote part of the Delphi Center, and she wasn’t used to so many visitors coming and going.

Sean propped his shoulder against the cinder-block wall and gazed down at her. “What’s wrong?”

“What do you mean?”

“You’re tense.”

“I’m worried.” About the child, she meant, but she didn’t have to say that. Sean knew.

His gaze was steady, and she looked up into those sharp eyes that missed nothing. Was he this perceptive with everyone, or just her?

He reached over and tucked a lock of hair behind her ear. “We’ll find him, Brooke.” He rested his hand on her shoulder.

“I know you will.”

•  •  •

Brooke went directly to the cybercrimes unit on the Delphi Center’s top floor. The lab seemed strangely deserted for a Friday morning.

“Where is everyone?” Brooke asked as she approached Alex’s cubicle. A row of vintage Star Wars figures lined the wall she shared with the neighboring cube.

“We pulled an all-nighter. Child-porn ring out of Dallas.”

“God. I don’t know how you do that.”

“Same way you do.” Alex pushed over a chair for Brooke to sit in. The slender brunette had a low-key way about her that always put Brooke at ease. “I hear you caught the Samantha Bonner homicide. Sean and Ric are on it?”

“They’ve got a whole team.”

“Are we running all the evidence? I haven’t seen a computer or a cell phone, but if they send something over, I can bump it to the front of my line.”

“Thanks. I’ll tell Sean.”

“Here.” Alex nodded at the phone on her desk. “Have a look at what I found.”

Brooke eyed her phone with apprehension. It sat atop the mouse pad, and Brooke’s glittery-white phone case was off to the side. “Did you have to take it apart?”

“Actually, no. Turns out your culprit is a stealth app.”

“Stealth?”

“It’s not visible. Unless you installed it, you wouldn’t even know it was there.”

You did.”

“I know what to look for. Thwarting electronic surveillance is my specialty.”

“Electronic surveillance.” A bitter lump rose in Brooke’s throat.

“That’s right.”

Before joining the Delphi Center, Alex had run a PI firm that specialized in helping women in trouble disappear. Many of her clients were in abusive relationships and needed to drop off the radar.

Brooke had never imagined herself in that category. She wasn’t. Not really.

“Brooke?”

“Sorry, what?”

“I said, have you heard of Tagger?”

“No.”

“It’s a spying app.”

Damn him.

Damn him, damn him, damn him.

He’d gotten hold of her phone. When had he done it? And how had he known her password?

“Can you prove who put this app on there?” she asked Alex.

“That’s what sucks. We can’t. It’s completely traceless until someone comes up with a program to crack it, which hasn’t happened yet. Believe me, I’ve looked around.”

“When did he do this?”

“I can’t tell. But it could have been done remotely, so the possibilities are pretty wide-open. You think it’s your ex?”

“Who else would it be?”

Alex stared at her.

“What?”

“You’ve told me he’s controlling, but . . .”

“But what?”

“Is there anything else?” Alex asked. “Anything physical? You could press charges.”

“No.”

“You could. Trust me. I’m married to a cop, and he could help you.”

“Thanks, but it wasn’t like that. It never got to that point.” Not really. “I saw where it was heading and I got out. At least, I thought I did.”

Alex nodded. “Good for you.”

Right. Good for her.

Brooke wished she could feel good about it, but instead she felt angry. And embarrassed. Yeah, she’d gotten out, but not before he’d maneuvered himself into a position to control her life from the inside out. And he was still doing it.

Tears of frustration burned her eyes as she stared at her phone. “So . . . what does this app do, exactly? He’s able to see where I am? Listen in on my calls? What?”

“He knows your location anytime your phone is with you.”

Brooke’s chest clenched. “Son of a bitch. I hate him.”

He’d been tracking her movements when she went out with friends, or to the gym, or on a solitary run to clear her head. God forbid she ever went on a date again.

No wonder he’d been showing up all the time.

“The good news is, this app’s GPS only. He hasn’t hijacked your camera or anything.”

Her heart skittered. “That’s really possible?”

“Unfortunately, yes.”

“Guess I’m lucky, then, huh? And, hey, what would it matter anyway, since he’s seen everything already?”

“It’s your privacy, Brooke. It matters.”

She looked away. “Sorry. I’m just . . . pissed.” She wiped her cheeks, embarrassed now all over again for crying in front of Alex.

This was not her. None of it. Brooke didn’t cry over guys.

She didn’t let guys control her or jerk her around. Or tell her what to wear or how to cut her hair or what to eat, for Christ’s sake. Except that she had, and now everything had gotten so out of hand.

The crazy thing was, she’d actually thought she loved him at one point. How had she been such a terrible judge of character?

Alex focused on the phone, swiping at the screen while Brooke got her emotions under control. She’d thought she’d put all this behind her, and now it was back again.

“You’ve got two options,” Alex said matter-of-factly, as though Brooke weren’t sitting there weeping. “Option one, remove the app.”

“Sounds like a no-brainer.”

“The problem with that option is that he’ll know that you know he put it there, which could prompt communication.” Alex paused. “When it comes to cases like this, where the guy is controlling and obsessive, where there’s any sort of stalking behavior, communication is what you want to avoid. It only feeds his delusion that you’re in a relationship together. He’s trying to get a reaction out of you, and you don’t want to give him one. You’re better off ignoring him.”

Brooke’s chest burned. “So, I’m just supposed to let him spy on me indefinitely?”

“I’m not saying that. Another option is to accidentally ‘lose’ your phone. Go paddleboarding and drop it in the lake or something.”

Brooke squeezed the bridge of her nose. “Damn it, I don’t have time for this! I’m working a homicide case.”

“If he thinks it was lost or stolen, then he won’t suspect you’ve figured him out when you switch to a new device.”

“I can’t afford a new device. Anyway, I like this one. I bought this phone less than a year ago, and I paid good money.”

Alex nodded. “Okay. I hear you. But I’ve seen this before. You’re essentially calling him out on what he did, and that might spark a confrontation. Are you willing to risk that?”

Brooke wrestled with the question. What was wrong with her? She used to be so decisive. He’d undermined her faith in her own decision making.

“It’s your call, Brooke. Whatever you want me to do, I’ll do.” Alex gave her a calm, reassuring look, and Brooke had never been so grateful to have her for a friend.

Brooke stared down at the phone—her phone—and she felt a surge of fury.

“Remove it. I don’t care what he thinks. He can go screw himself.”

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Alexa Riley, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Sophie Stern, Elizabeth Lennox, Leslie North, Amy Brent, C.M. Steele, Frankie Love, Jordan Silver, Jenika Snow, Madison Faye, Dale Mayer, Bella Forrest, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Delilah Devlin, Sloane Meyers, Amelia Jade, Piper Davenport,

Random Novels

The Dom's Secret: A Light BDSM Bad Boy Romance by Cassandra Dee, Katie Ford

Good Witch Hunting (Witchless in Seattle Book 7) by Dakota Cassidy

Carnival (The Traveling Series #4) by Jane Harvey-Berrick

Hopelessly Devoted: (Sacred Sinners MC - Texas Chapter #3) by Bink Cummings

Cocked and Loaded: A Billionaire Romance (Small Town Bad Boys Book 4) by Annette Fields

A Highlander's Need (Highland Heartbeats Book 10) by Aileen Adams

The Darkest Descension (A Breaking Insanity Novel Book 3) by Courtney Lane

by Mila Young

Maybe This Summer by Jennifer Snow

The Story of Us: A heart-wrenching story that will make you believe in true love by Tara Sivec

Savage Collision (A Savage Love Duet #1) by T.L. Smith

HUGE STEPS: A TWIN MFM MENAGE STEPBROTHER ROMANCE (HUGE SERIES Book 6) by Stephanie Brother

Once Pure by Cecy Robson

Martinis & Moonlight (A Country Road Novel - Book 3) by Andrea Johnston

The Tycoon's Triplet Baby Surprise - A Multiple Baby Romance (More Than He Bargained For Book 6) by Holly Rayner

The Lovebirds by Cressida McLaughlin

Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda by Becky Albertalli

Seducing Ethan (Knight Security 6) by Carole Mortimer

Undone by Lauren Hawkeye

The Palisade (Lavender Shores) by Rosalind Abel