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Next to Die: A gripping serial-killer thriller full of twists by T.J. Brearton (2)

One

Bobbi stopped at Dunkin’ Donuts for her coffee. She hoped she could stomach it because otherwise she’d develop a headache from the lack of caffeine. On the other hand, she’d been wiped out by some kind of virus. It had run its course, but she hadn’t eaten anything in twenty-four hours. Maybe coffee was a bad idea.

“Caramel latte with cream,” she said into the drive-thru speaker. Then she closed her eyes and leaned her head back on the seat. Screw it. She was young, she thought. She could handle it.

Beverage in hand, she got back on the road. Lake Haven was a charming village in the Adirondacks, a place she was still getting used to. No strip malls, no Walmart shopping center, just a beautiful pristine lake in the middle of things, houses with big, creaky porches, all surrounded by steep mountains and endless woods. Sometimes she felt cut off from the rest of society, but maybe in today’s world that wasn’t such a bad thing. Plus, there was Facebook and Twitter and Instagram – she kept tabs on all her friends from back home.

Her phone vibrated with an incoming text. She risked taking her eyes off the road and gave it a glance.

How are u feeling?

Connor. She’d respond to him once she got to work. For now, she drove alongside the sparkling lake, happy for it to be a Friday.

She’d met Connor at her karate class. Well, sort of – he’d come into the dojo to sign up his six-year-old son, but they’d eventually admitted to recognizing each other from DSS, when he’d worked as a surveyor determining property boundaries. For just a second, she thought it had to be a ploy; no guy as good-looking as Connor had a kid as cute, named for a fictional character from The Adventures of Tintin. And little Jolyon was a charmer – sweet and bashful. But it was all true, and when Bobbi had learned that Jolyon’s mother had moved far away, she’d given Connor her number.

Two dates later – one with Jolyon, one without – she knew she was falling. But she’d had to cancel on Connor the night before. As soon as she settled into her office she’d text him back, inform him yes, thank you, done puking my guts out and ready for dating to resume as scheduled.

Past the lake, she drove through the main intersection and headed out the back of town.


Emergency vehicles were parked around the DSS – an ambulance, three cop cars and a handful of others: pickup trucks with dashboard lights and a big white van, yellow crime-scene tape cordoning off a chunk of parking lot. A policeman waved his hand at Bobbi and she rolled down the window, feeling tight in her chest.

“Morning, ma’am. You work here?”

“What’s going on?”

“Ma’am, I’m going to ask you to pull over here, okay?”

Bobbi glanced at a large tent that seemed to be the center of attention – or really two tents pushed together and covering a section of parking spaces.

She followed where the policeman pointed, driving slowly toward a second cop waving her forward. She tried to focus on him but couldn’t stop staring at the people in white jumpsuits now getting out of the van. Or the conjoined black tents they slipped into.

“Hey!”

She jolted and realized she’d almost run into the other cop. He aimed a finger at a parking spot and she pulled in.

Bobbi got out and started toward the scene. The cop stopped her: “Hold on, ma’am. Please stay right here beside your vehicle.”

“What happened?” She gaped at the commotion, spotting EMTs, state troopers and local cops among the group, plus two cops in plain clothes.

“Ma’am, just sit tight. Someone will be with you in a few minutes.” He added, “There’s been a crime.”

It didn’t look like a “crime” – it looked like a bomb scare. One of the jumpsuits exited the tent, and Bobbi glimpsed the vehicle inside. It looked like it could be Harriet Fogarty’s car, which was a similar model to hers, same color.

Another vehicle arrived. The policeman at the lot entrance guided the driver in as he had Bobbi, and the second cop directed parking. Rachel Watts got out, hurried to Bobbi’s side. “What the hell is happening?”

“I don’t know.”

“What’s in there? Is that someone in there?” Rachel moved for a closer look but the local cop stopped her, said the same things he’d said to Bobbi.

“I think a car,” Bobbi said. “I think someone’s car is in there – it might be Rita’s.”

“Oh, Jesus – we’re just supposed to stand here?” Rachel had been working for DSS for just a couple of months longer than Bobbi. Bobbi liked her. It took a person with chutzpah to hold her own in a department like Adult Protective Services, which some dismissed as superfluous. She stared at Bobbi, wide-eyed. “Have they said anything to you? I’m going over there.”

“Ma’am,” the cop warned again. “You need to stay put.”

“Well, what are we supposed to… Is that Harriet Fogarty’s car in there? Where is she?”

“I can’t say anything else right now, ma’am. I’m sorry. I’m going to need your phones, though, please.”

“Our phones?” Rachel asked.

“Just for a short time, ma’am.”

“Why?”

“Ma’am, please.”

Bobbi had met most of the local police through her job, but the cop standing with them was an unfamiliar face. His name tag read Mullins. Rachel didn’t seem to know him either, and it fueled her frustration. But both of them turned over their phones, and Mullins stuck them in the bag he was holding.

Rachel asked, “Just tell me if that’s her car. Has someone called her? Or Terry?”

The cop frowned. “Who’s Terry?”

“Her husband. Can we talk to someone who knows what’s happening, please?”

She was getting loud, drawing attention from one of the plainclothes investigators. He started over, then stopped short to let another vehicle drive in from the road. Bobbi recognized Lennox Palmer behind the wheel. She’d been the first to arrive for the day, then Rachel, now the others were drifting in, filling up the back lot.

The investigator resumed his approach. He wore a gray suit and had a headful of wavy dark hair. “I’m Investigator Nelson with the state police.”

“What is happening?” Rachel was about to jump out of her skin.

“You all work here?”

“Yes,” Rachel said impatiently.

“I’d like to wait until everyone arrives, then I can speak to you all as a group.”

“Can you just – can you tell us what’s going on at least? And why you need our phones?”

Nelson held his gaze on Rachel. “Were you working here last night?”

“When? What? What do you mean ‘last night’?”

“Were you working late? Were either of you?”

Bobbi spoke up. “I was sick yesterday. Rita was covering for me.” She felt her cheeks warm as Nelson studied her with intense blue eyes. “There was an emergency placement.”

“I went home at five,” Rachel said.

He pulled a small notepad and pen from his suit pocket and jotted something down, looked at Bobbi again. “Can you tell me about the emergency placement?”

“Lake Haven Police called us when a child’s parents were both arrested. The child had no other family in the area and needed to be taken into temporary foster care. I wasn’t feeling well, so Rita was handling it.” Bobbi started to feel sick again. It sounded like that was definitely Harriet’s car. If so, where was she?

More cars were arriving, the employees all rubbernecking the scene as they lined up to park where Mullins directed. Lennox Palmer approached from his car, his face full of the questions they all shared.

“Would anyone else have stayed to work on this?” Nelson asked.

“I don’t think so,” Bobbi said. “But maybe Jessica Rankin, the other supervisor. It was my case, Rita was helping me out.”

“How was it your case if the call just came in yesterday from Lake Haven? You’re not the only caseworker here?”

“No. Um, it was my case already. I’d been working with the family.”

Rachel stepped toward Nelson. “What happened to her? Why aren’t you saying what happened to her?”

Nelson ignored Rachel, looked at Bobbi. “Your name?”

“Roberta Noelle. With two Ls and an E.”

The sickness worsened, like she was going to throw up after all. The people in white suits were still swarming the tent, going in and out. Bobbi leaned a little to the side, trying to see around them, trying to see inside again.

Then she did. A crime scene technician entered, the flap open just as a camera flashed. It was definitely Rita’s car, and something horrible had happened. Like something had exploded against the windscreen

The flap closed.

“Okay, Ms. Noelle,” Nelson said. “If you could just wait right here…”

Blood was what it was. There was blood all over the inside of Harriet’s car. A lot of it.

Bobbi turned away and ran toward the woods. She dropped to her knees as the coffee came rushing back, splattering against the green.

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