Kiss the Girls
to the hospital write-up, she’d lost a tooth, too. Apparently, it had been knocked out at least two days before she was found in the river. He’d beaten her. Casanova. The self-proclaimed
Lover.
I felt bad for the young intern. I wanted to tell her it would be all right somehow.
I rested my hand lightly on hers, and repeated the same sentences over and over. “You’re among friends now, Kate. You’re in a hospital in Chapel Hill. You’re safe now, Kate.”
I didn’t know if the badly injured woman could hear me, or even understand me. I just wanted to say something consoling to her before I left for the night.
And as I stood there watching the young woman, the image of Naomi’s face flashed before me. I couldn’t imagine her dead.
Is Naomi all right, Kate McTiernan? Have you seen Naomi Cross?
I wanted to ask, but she couldn’t have answered, anyway.
“You’re safe now, Kate. Sleep easy, sleep well. You’re safe now.”
Kate McTiernan couldn’t say a word about what had happened. She had lived through a horrifying nightmare that was worse than anything I could imagine.
She had seen Casanova, and he had left her speechless.
Chapter 47
T ICK-COCK.
A young lawyer named Chris Chapin had brought home a bottle of Chardonnay de Beaulieu, and he and his fiancée, Anna Miller, were drinking the California wine in bed. It was finally the weekend. Life was good again for Chris and Anna.
“Thank God this godawful workweek is over,” sandy-haired twenty-four-year-old Chris exclaimed. He was an associate at a prestigious law office in Raleigh. Not exactly Mitch McDeere in
The Firm
—no German-made convertible to sign on—but a good start on his lawyering career.
“Unfortunately, I have a paper on contracts due Monday.” Anna grimaced. She was in her third year of law school. “Plus, it’s for the sadist Stacklum.”
“Not tonight, Anna Banana. Screw Stacklum. Better still, screw me.”
“Thank you for bringing home the vino.” Anna finally smiled. Her white teeth were dazzling.
Chris and Anna were good for each other. Everyone said so, all their lawyer pals. They complemented each other, had pretty much the same worldview, and, most of all, were smart enough not to try to change each other. Chris was obsessive about his job. Okay, fine. Anna needed to go antiquing at least twice a month. She spent her own money as if there were no tomorrow. That was okay, too.
“I think this wine needs to breathe a little while longer,” Anna said with an impish grin. “Uhm, while we’re waiting.” She slipped down the straps of a white lace demibra. She’d purchased the bra and matching lace strip at Victoria’s Secret in the mall.
“Yep.
Thank God,
it’s the weekend,” said Chris Chapin.
The two of them fell into an all-purpose embrace, playfully undressing each other, kissing, caressing, losing themselves in the sexy moment.
In the middle of their lovemaking, Anna Miller had a strange feeling.
She sensed that someone else was in the bedroom.
She pulled away from Chris.
Someone was standing at the foot of the bed!
He was wearing a grimly painted mask. Red and yellow dragons. Fierce ones. Angry and grotesque figures that appeared to be clawing at one another.
“Who the hell are you?
What
are you?” Chris said in a frightened voice. He searched for the ball bat they kept under the bed and found the bat handle. “Hey, I asked you a fucking question.”
The intruder growled like a wild animal.
“Well here’s a fucking answer.” Casanova’s right arm came up holding a Luger. He fired once, and a large red hole opened in Chris Chapin’s forehead. The young lawyer’s naked body slammed back against the bed’s headboard. The ball bat in his hand dropped to the floor.
Casanova moved quickly. He whipped out a second gun, and shot Anna in the chest with his stunner.
“I’m sorry about this,” he whispered softly as he carried her from the bed. “I’m so sorry. But I promise, I’ll make it up to you.”
Anna Miller was Casanova’s next great love.
Chapter 48
A DIZZYING medical mystery began the following morning. Everyone at North Carolina University Hospital was baffled, especially me.
Kate McTiernan had begun to talk very early that morning. I wasn’t there, but apparently Kyle Craig was in her room at daybreak. Unfortunately, our valuable witness was making no sense to anyone.
The highly intelligent intern raved incoherently throughout most of the morning. She seemed
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