Skeleton King Read online




  TABLE OF CONTENTS

  Part I – Murder/Suicide: Chapter 1Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Part II – Missing: Chapter 11Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Part III – Kidnapped: Chapter 25Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Part IV – Welcome to the Swamp: Chapter 41Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Part V – A Past to Remember: Chapter 53Chapter 54

  Chapter 55

  Chapter 56

  Chapter 57

  Chapter 58

  Chapter 59

  Chapter 60

  Chapter 61

  Chapter 62

  Chapter 63

  Chapter 64

  Chapter 65

  Chapter 66

  Chapter 67

  Chapter 68

  Chapter 69

  Chapter 70

  Chapter 71

  Chapter 72

  Chapter 73

  Chapter 74

  Epilogue

  END

  More by Patrick Logan

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  Prologue

  Part I – Murder/Suicide

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Part II – Missing

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Part III – Kidnapped

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Part IV – Welcome to the Swamp

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Part V – A Past to Remember

  Chapter 53

  Chapter 54

  Chapter 55

  Chapter 56

  Chapter 57

  Chapter 58

  Chapter 59

  Chapter 60

  Chapter 61

  Chapter 62

  Chapter 63

  Chapter 64

  Chapter 65

  Chapter 66

  Chapter 67

  Chapter 68

  Chapter 69

  Chapter 70

  Chapter 71

  Chapter 72

  Chapter 73

  Chapter 74

  Epilogue

  END

  Father

  Family Values Trilogy

  Book 2

  Patrick Logan

  PROLOGUE

  Lacy McGuire held her breath and listened as the footsteps in the hallway neared her room.

  Go away, she pleaded.

  The footsteps slowed, and then stopped completely when a pair of legs blocked most of the light spilling in from the crack beneath the door.

  Go away—please, just go away.

  Lacy stared at those legs with wide eyes for nearly a full minute, listening to the sound of the blood rushing in her ears and her heart beating in her chest.

  To her, it sounded like one of the drums that she had seen the boy in the funny hat banging on before the football game.

  Even when the legs moved away from the door and the light from the hallway spilled in again, she didn’t dare take another breath. And even when the footsteps receded down the hallway, Lacy sat as quietly and as still as possible. Only when she heard the door to her father’s room open and then close did she finally let the air out of her lungs in a whoosh.

  She gulped in a fresh breath, and a small smile crept onto her four-year-old face. Feeling daring, she pulled the sheet back up over her head. This part almost always made her giggle, as it reminded her of a scene in the movie that Daddy had told her wasn’t for kids—that it was too scary—and that she should go to bed.

  But Lacy had crept back down and watched between the bars of the railing.

  Daddy was wrong, she wasn’t scared. She was a big girl—even if she had bad dreams every once in a while.

  In fact, she thought the ‘ooglie-booglie,’ as they called it in the movie, was funny. And that was what she felt like now, what with the sheet over top of her head.

  An ooglie-booglie.

  Lacy wondered what would happen if her dad quickly left his room and opened her door wide and saw her like this.

  He would be soooo scared.

  Lacy stifled a giggle with a cupped hand.

  But Daddy never came back, not until morning. Every single night he would walk up to her door, listening maybe, or just waiting to see if she would call to him as she occasionally did, needing to pee again, wanting a glass of water, or just for another hug and kiss, before heading back down the hallway to his room.

  And then he would sleep, and so would Lacy… eventually.

  Every night, it was always the same.

  Routine, he called it. He said it was for him, that he was an old man (he wasn’t really that old) and that he had to keep a routine or else he would fall apart.

  But she knew that it wasn’t for him, not really.

  It was for her.

  Because of her dreams… the bad ones that had kept her up so many nights even before Mommy got sick.

  Dreams of a fire, of a woman screaming, of…

  Lacy swallowed hard and forced these thoughts away. Instead, she tried to think of the ooglie-booglie again, because that was funny.

  The burning woman was not.

  She flicked on her headlamp and opened the Curious George book in her lap, taking a quick peek to make sure that wit
h the blanket pulled up over her head the light didn’t leave beneath the door the way that it came in.

  Daddy never came back, but if he saw the light, then maybe…

  The last thing Lacy wanted was to get in trouble, but she just had to read a little bit more… even though she only made up the words and stories herself while she looked at the pictures.

  The first image was of George, that silly monkey, in an apron, making pizzas of all things.

  Lacy started to read, barely whispering the narrative that came into her head, using some of the words that Daddy used when he was reading to her, but mostly just making up the story as she went along.

  Lacy was on the third page when she heard the footsteps again.

  As before, her heartrate quickened and she held her breath.

  But this time, her brow tightened in confusion.

  He’s coming back? He never comes back.

  Lacy reached up and switched off her headlamp and sat in the darkness, the sheet still forming a makeshift tent over her head.

  After listening for a moment longer, she realized that the footsteps weren’t coming back, as she had first thought, but instead they were coming from the other way, from the stairs again.

  Did Daddy go back downstairs while I was reading?

  Lacy slipped the sheet off her head and lay down, making sure to keep her head propped on the pillow so that she could still see the light coming from beneath the door.

  Daddy always kept the hallway light on, in case she had to pee in the middle of the night.

  And it also helped keep the dreams away.

  As usual, the footsteps slowed as they approached the door, and then came to stop directly in front of it, the two feet again blocking out half the light.

  Lacy closed her eyes, and pretended to sleep, practicing just in case her father came in the room (which he never did unless she called).

  She couldn’t hold her breath any longer, so she let herself breathe again, but tried to do it slowly, the way that Daddy did it when he occasionally fell asleep on the couch.

  Time passed, and when she didn’t hear her father continue down the hall to his room, she risked opening one eye.

  The legs were still blocking the light.

  How long is Daddy going to stand there?

  Lacy always assumed he just stood and waited to make sure she wasn’t reading or talking to herself. But this time he had been standing there for… well, she didn’t know how many minutes, but it seemed like a lot.

  She was debating whether or not she should call out to him, weighing the need to see if he was okay with getting in trouble for being up so late, when the doorknob started to turn.

  Lacy squeezed her eyes closed and went back to pretending to sleep.

  The pressure in the room changed as the door was silently pushed open.

  Sleeping, sleeping, sleeping… I’m sleeping.

  She repeated the words over and over in her head, as if to convince her father and herself that she was indeed asleep.

  And she also used this technique to keep her mind from wandering, from going back to the nightmare that been haunting her for so long…

  Why is Daddy in here? He never comes back… not unless I call for him, and I haven’t done that in a long time.

  Lacy swallowed hard and squeezed her eyes together even more tightly.

  Sleeping, sleeping, sleeping…

  There was a long, slow footstep, followed by another.

  And another.

  Then Lacy’s nose picked up a strange smell. It wasn’t her dad’s—what does he call it? His shave after?—which she didn’t really like that much but lied when he asked.

  It was something else. Something worse.

  Another footstep, and the smell intensified.

  Sleeping, sleeping, sleeping…

  Two more footsteps, and then the smell was so strong that she couldn’t help but scrunch her nose.

  It smelled like… campfire.

  It smelled like burning.

  It smelled like her dream.

  Little Lacy McGuire couldn’t keep up the charade any longer. Her blue eyes popped open and she whispered into the near darkness.

  “Dad?”

  The response was unexpected: three quick steps and then someone’s face came into view.

  But it wasn’t her father—she had never seen this man before.

  Lacy’s eyes widened and she opened her mouth to scream, but the man slipped a dirty hand over her mouth.

  He wasn’t smiling—if anything, he looked sad.

  “Dad!” she tried to yell, but the hand across her mouth tightened.

  The man’s fingers tasted of dirt and ash.

  Lacy tried to sit up, but the man was too strong.

  “I’m sorry,” he said in a gruff whisper. “I’m sorry, but a promise is a promise…”

  And then Lacy started to kick and punch, trying to break away from the man with the sad eyes and the strong grip.

  PART I – MURDER/SUICIDE

  ~

  CHAPTER 1

  FBI AGENT KENDRA WILSON PUT a hand over her nose and mouth even before pushing through the front door.

  Instinct and experience told her that the smell would be bad.

  That and her partner, Agent Brett Cherry, had told her that there were three bodies inside. He didn’t have to tell her that they had been mutilated.

  Instinct told her that, too.

  And experience.

  “Where are the bodies?” she asked a uniformed officer who stood on the stoop outside the door, his face an off shade of green.

  The man, who had a thick brown beard and thicker bags under his eyes, swallowed hard.

  “Kitchen,” he said, averting his eyes.

  Kendra acknowledged the man with a nod. He looked like he was going to vomit, and considering that there was barely enough room for the two of them on the cement stoop, she knew that some would land on her.

  And her loafers.

  Three bodies.

  She used the hand not covering her nose and mouth to push her way through the half-opened door, quickly leaving the nauseated officer behind. Even between the fingers of her gloved hand, her nose picked up the unmistakable, coppery scent of blood.

  Kendra’s eyes immediately tracked the blood smear that ran from a foot inside the door, across the linoleum entranceway, before tracking all the way down the hallway and into what she presumed was the kitchen.

  Even before she had entered the house—truthfully, even as she had parked her car on the opposite side of the street and first laid eyes on the single-story home—her mind had been whirring.

  Like a computer, pragmatic, calculating, scouring her neurons for similarities with past cases, Kendra’s brain had started to mentally collate facts and theories, to put things into place.

  It was the call that had first set things to motion.

  The director had called her, which was in itself a rarity. Most of the time, her cases were fed to her by her senior partner, Brett Cherry, who had a direct line to the director. Not that it mattered—she didn’t have any ego in this. It was about solving the case for her, about making sure that the bad guys got what was coming to them.

  So what did it matter if she lived and breathed in a masochistic, sexist world?

  Everyone did, after all. She wasn’t unique.

  As her eyes followed the trail of blood, noting such details as the finger patterns in the tacky, almost completely dry liquid and the lack of footsteps, she replayed the conversation with the director that had roused her from her slumber.

  ‘Yeah?’ came her groggy, sleepy voice.

  ‘Agent Wilson.’ Alert, already on his third cup of coffee voice, most likely.

  ‘Yeah?’

  ‘Three dead in Missouri—husband, wife, and young girl.’

  Those fateful words rattled the comforting numbness of sleep from the last of her gray matter.

  She hated criminals, hated them all. But what really got her
blood boiling were crimes against kids.

  Especially young girls.

  ‘Murder/suicide?’ she asked, her voice hardening.

  ‘Suspected. I’ve sent the details to your cell. Agent Cherry is off on another case—you’re alone on this one.’

  ‘Thanks,’ she said, but the director had already hung up.

  And that had been three hours ago. It had taken her roughly fifteen minutes to shower, put on her black slacks and white blouse, and leave the house. She had done her hair and put on the minimum of makeup acceptable in this man’s world, and then she’d been off.

  And now she was here, inside this house that stank of blood, her mind already formulating a schema of what had taken place.

  But before she could re-enact it all, she needed more answers.

  Patience.

  The questions would come, and the answers would follow.

  They always did.

  Strafing the wall, making sure that her flats didn’t disturb the foot-wide streak of blood, Kendra’s suspicions that the trail led to the kitchen were confirmed.

  And it was there, in the small kitchen with dark wood cabinets that contrasted heavily with the white appliances, that she found the bodies.

  The three of them were stacked on the floor, all nude—from what she could make out, anyway.

  The man was on top, his throat cut in a ragged smile. His wife was beneath him, but the man was so much larger that Kendra couldn’t get a good idea of what had caused her death.

  If she had to guess, she would have said throat slashing as well.

  It was the girl that gave Kendra pause. She was so tiny that only her hand could be seen beneath her parents’ collective bodies, the pale digits speckled with blood, the fingers spread out as if she had been crushed while trying to claw her way out. However unlikely this scenario—blood that had poured from the man’s throat and pooled around the sides of her body suggested that all three were dead when he had finally laid on top—it was still vivid in Kendra’s mind.

  She swallowed hard, trying to put some distance between herself and the crime. She was here to figure out what had happened, not to play the sappy housewife.

  There was a uniformed officer, a stronger-stomached twin of the man outside, leaning over the bodies, and a few more uniforms milling about the kitchen, going through the dead family’s possessions.

  Kendra turned to the nearest officer.

  “Where’s the coroner? How come they haven’t moved the bodies off her?”