CHAPTER EIGHT:The Hand OffGreg arrived atthe hospital for his shift at 6:40 p.m. After stopping by the nurse’s station to clock in and say hello to Janice, the Charge Nurse on duty, he headed to the break room to stow his lunch in the fridge and pour himself a cup of coffee from the pot in the corner. Lukewarm, but better than nothing. At least it was free for the nursing staff. He had a seat at the round table and settled for a moment, mentally preparing for another twelve hour shift, his fourth in a row. All he had to do was make it through one more night then he’d have the next three off.Shelia, the dayshift RN that Greg would be relieving, stuck her head in the door. “Hey Greg-arious,” she said, using the nickname she’d given him on his first day because he was so friendly. “Ready for Report?”Greg nodded then finished off the coffee before tossing the cup in the wastebasket. Report was what all the nurses called the shift hand-off, where the outgoing nurse gave the in
CHAPTER NINE:Clare’s AbductionClare paused at the open window, one leg thrown over the sill. She held her breath for thirty seconds, listening intensely for any sound, however small, that her parents might be up. The house silent, the only sounds the whirring whisper of the heat pump and the trip-hammering of Clare’s own heart. She’d waited until nearly midnight to head out, and her parents were always in bed by ten. Surely they’d be fast asleep by now, dreaming of a life in which they had a perfect daughter that never disappointed them. Much as she sometimes dreamed of a life in which she had parents who didn’t treat her like a total idiot.Once she was satisfied her father hadn’t gotten up for a midnight snack or her mother to use the restroom, Clare ducked through the window and dropped the foot to the ground below. Reaching up, she slid the window shut most of the way, leaving a tiny gap at the bottom to ensure she wouldn’t have any trouble reopening it when she returned home.
CHAPTER TEN:NightmaresPatrick jogs around the lake just before dawn. The campus is utterly deserted, and no lights shine from any of the buildings. No sound interrupts the utter stillness; even his shoes slapping the pavement are silent. He notes with no real surprise that the clock tower by the lake has been replaced by a missile, long and phallic, smoke churning up from the bottom as it prepares to be launched. Distantly he can even hear a robotic voice commencing a countdown. 10 ... 9 ... 8 ... 7 ... 6 ... As the path rises up into the wooded area at the far end of the lake, he slows his pace, lips twisting down into a frown. The trees seem to crowd closer together than he remembered, and they are larger. Monstrous in fact, thick and stretching to the heavens like redwoods. Knots and whirls in the bark look like grimacing faces. The branches reach out for him like sharp-tipped claws, scratching at his exposed skin, dr
CHAPTER ELEVEN: SuspicionSheriff Hammett lookedup at the knock at his office door. One of the newer deputies, Sanchez, stuck his head in. The man looked vaguely ill and a little nervous. “Um, Chief?”Hammett forced himself not to roll his eyes. He hated the moniker “Chief.” It made him feel like he was one of the Village People. Still, it was what most of his officers called him and he had come to tolerate it, if not accept it. “What is it, Sanchez?”After a slight hesitation, Sanchez said, “They’re back.”Now Hammett did roll his eyes. He didn’t even have to ask who theywere. Over the past few months, there had become only one theyreferred to in the office. Theyare holding on line one. Theyhave been blasting the sheriff’s department on Facebook. Theypublished another Letter to the Editor in the Greenville Newsaccusing the police of ignoring leads. Theyhave sent twelve emails in four hours.Theyare here. Again.Mr. and Mrs.
CHAPTER TWELVE:Getting Through the DoorClare stood againstthe back wall, fingers plugging her ears, as Patrick used the already dented bucket to beat on the doorknob, denting the bucket even further. A dull, hollow gong! reverberated in the air with every strike.The sound also seemed to reverberate in her bones, making her feel as if her skeletal frame was going to simply break apart and she’d collapse onto the floor, a collection of ivory shards in a loose sack of skin.Of course, she realized this was only the fear talking. Fear that Big Daddy would return and discover what had been done, the hole in the plaster wall and the damaged doorknob, and he would make them suffer for their insolence and disobedience. She realized they’d really gone too far to turn back at this point. They couldn’t repair the hole in the wall. Their best course of action was to continue forward and try to get out of this cell before Big Daddy got back.Be brave, Clare, she told herself. No givin
CHAPTER THIRTEEN:Dinner TimePatrick stood withhis back against the door, watching as Clare bent over, weeping hysterically. What are we going to do now?she’d asked, but he had no response to that one. He could feel the vibrations in the wood as the Doberman launched itself at the door as if trying to use its head as a battering ram, much as Patrick had used the two-by-four as one on the cell door.The two-by-four!He dashed down the stairs, moving so suddenly and quickly that it startled a gasp out of Clare. At the bottom of the stairs, he snatched up the beam from where it had fallen once punching its way through the hole where the doorknob had once been. He held it near one end and gave it a few test swings, as if it were a baseball bat. The thing was lighter than he would have liked, lacking substantial heft, but it did have the wicked nails sticking out of either end.“What do you plan to do with that?” Clare asked. She’d come down the stairs and taken a seat on
CHAPTER FOURTEEN:ConfrontationRobert had justleft Manly Hall a little after 8 a.m. when his cell phone rang. Glancing at the screen, he recognized Mrs. Young’s number.He answered immediately and said with desperate hope, “Any news?”Silence from the other end then a sigh. “I guess that answers my question. I was calling to see if you had heard anything from Patrick.”“No, ma’am,” Robert said, feeling near tears again. He’d been in a constant state of crying or just-about-to-cry for the past couple of days, leaving him feeling perpetually exhausted and dehydrated. “So I guess that means the police haven’t come up with anything new?”“No. Well, actually yes, but nothing that helps us. Nothing that tells us anything we didn’t already know.”Robert meandered aimlessly past the library, heading toward the front of campus with no particular destination in mind, his feet moving on autopilot. “What do you mean?”“They located a woman who was walking at the lake Sunday morning,
CHAPTER FIFTEEN:Venturing OutPatrick awoke suddenly, his head snapping up. There was no moment of blissful disorientation when he thought he was in his bed in the dorm, his biggest worry being that he might be late for class. He knew instantly where he was and how dire his circumstances were.Clare slept next to him, her head still on his shoulder. His entire body felt like one big cramp, though the worst of the stiffness and pain resided in his neck and lower back. He gently pushed the girl to the side so that she slumped against door, her chin touching her chest. He rose slowly, his muscles feeling atrophied, as if he’d been immobile in a coma for months or years, his joints creaking like rusty hinges. His left arm was partially numb, beginning to buzz with the pinprick sensation as blood returned to the limb. He turned his head far to one side then the other, trying to work out the soreness. His spine felt compacted, an accordion that had been squeezed in. He walked down two st