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An Excerpt From: CHASING SHADOWS
Copyright © ERIN RICHARDS, 2008
All Rights Reserved, Ellora's Cave Publishing,
Inc.
Juliana tossed and flailed about on the disheveled bed.
The sheets wrapped around her, binding her like a mummy. “No, no!” The
uninvited words jolted her awake.
Her head throbbed with the intensity of a full-blown
migraine. The malevolence permeating the dream sank deep into her soul.
Goosebumps broke out over her body as her skin crawled with his exhilaration
and satisfaction.
The kidnapping had happened.
She’d managed to claim a few hours’ sleep before the
vision played through her head. Juliana had witnessed the crime along the
fringes of the kidnapper’s mind.
Morning sunlight streamed through her bedroom window, seeping
through the sheer bed enclosure. The warm summer rays offered a sliver of
relief. But she knew she wouldn’t see a moment’s peace until the child was
returned to her home, safe and sound, however long it took. Even though
yesterday she had known the actual kidnapping would follow her premonition,
the reality never ceased to fill her with sorrow and dread.
Juliana leaned against the carved headboard, tugging at
the entwined sheet and throwing it off. She grabbed the TV remote from the
night table and punched the “on” button. After flipping through several
satellite channels, she found a local news program. A commercial break
ended, and the news team returned with day’s top story. The abduction. No
surprise there.
Her Persian cat jumped on the bed, craving attention.
She absently hugged his silky, fluffy body to her chest, engrossed in the
unfolding news story.
The newscast reported the details of the crime before
proceeding to the child’s identity and background. “Lisette
Chamber is the six-year-old granddaughter of billionaire Grantham Chamber
II, founder and chairman of GC Media Corporation.”
Juliana could barely concentrate on the victim’s name
and her family as the kidnapper’s leftover taint dissolved. Her headache
receded, but her blood flowed icily. She squeezed her cat until he squealed
and squirmed for freedom.
“Sorry, JB.” She released her hold and set him on the
bed. He arched his raven-black body and rubbed his head against her bare
thigh, purring madly. The unconditional love of her cat relaxed her for a
heartbeat, until she began searching her mind for details of the crime,
particulars from the kidnapper’s mind.
The more deeply she delved into his mind, the more she
realized he possessed strong electrical currents in his brain. He had
connected easily with her powerful and receptive mind. It wasn’t unusual
for her to think or to see everything a perpetrator did while in an excited
state, when his transference was the strongest. But it was rare that she
felt his emotions, felt what he felt. This man reached out to her in all
ways possible¾the
strongest psychic connection. She didn’t like it one bit. Fear chilled her
thoroughly, and she pulled the comforter over her.
Juliana wished she could determine the kidnapper’s
identity, but the puzzle pieces only trickled into her mind. At least she
could appease herself with the fact that consistency patterned her
premonitions and visions. She‘d eventually dream enough to ID him.
An unwelcome thought surfaced, and she rolled on her
side to the edge of the bed. Pushing her hand past the bed skirt, she
groped on the floor until she felt cold, hard steel. She pulled the gun out
from under the bed and examined the .38 revolver. It was loaded, safety
catch on. Frowning, she returned the weapon to its hiding place.
She exhaled deeply, expelling the taint from inside. She
hated guns, hated the reasons she possessed one.
*
* * * *
The phone’s jarring ring scarcely registered in Alex’s
brain. As much as he willed it, the sound refused to stop. His head
throbbed and lava spread through his gut.
Three beers and a night obsessing about Juliana had
reduced Alex to shambles.
Muttering, he fumbled for the cordless phone on the
nightstand, knocking the lamp against the wall. “Shit,” he groaned. His
mouth tasted like sawdust, his throat scratchy.
He grabbed a bottle of antacids from the nightstand and
dumped a couple in his mouth. The phone continued to ring until he finally
clicked it on. The antacid bottle dropped out of his uncooperative hand. He
cursed as the multicolored tablets scattered across discarded clothes
carpeting the floor.
“Better be damn good,” he managed to say between bites
of the bone-dry tablets.
“Alex?” a familiar high-pitched female voice questioned.
Gravity pulled at his lethargic muscles and his arm refused
to cooperate with his brain. “Yeah?” Alex reclined back on the bed and
wedged the phone between the pillow and his ear.
“It’s Sharon Douglas.” Urgency vibrated in her voice.
“You need to get over here. Lisette’s missing.
Andrea—”
The words shoved Alex fully awake. He leaped from the
disheveled bed, stumbling on a pair of jeans pooled on the floor. He caught
the nightstand with his free hand, preventing a head-first crash into the
wall.
“What do you mean, missing?” Cold iron edged his words
as terror gripped him. He grabbed his rumpled pants and pulled them on
one-handed.
“Andrea woke up this morning and found Lisette’s bed empty and her window wide open. Matthew
and I heard her screaming and rushed over.”
The last vestiges of sluggishness cleared from Alex’s
mind. Andrea’s hysterical crying in the background on Sharon’s end nearly crushed him. With
fierce determination, he forced the experienced cop in him to take over and
grab the reins.
“Listen to me, Sharon,” he said in a level,
authoritative voice. “Don’t let anyone inside the house or backyard. Stay
out of Lisette’s bedroom. Don’t call anyone. Can
you stay with Andrea until I get there?” He waited for her affirmative
response, then flung the phone on the bed and shouted for James.
“I’m up, man.” James sauntered out of the bathroom, hair
wet and a towel wrapped around his waist. “You look like shit.” He laughed,
but stopped when he caught sight of Alex’s grim expression. “What—”
“Lisette’s gone.” Alex
snatched a clean black polo shirt off the top of his laundry basket, not
bothering to waste time dressing in his usual suit and tie.
Color drained from James’ face. “What?”
Alex wasn’t going to sugar-coat it, knowing that James
harbored a crush on Alex’s widowed sister and loved Lisette
perhaps as much as Alex himself did. He seized his service revolver tucked
in its holster from the headboard shelf.
“Andrea found Lisette’s bed empty, window open.” Surprisingly, he
managed to maintain his cool. His sister would need to depend on his ability
to remain the composed professional, despite his overwhelming desire to
torture the SOB who had snatched Lisette.
“Juliana Westwood’s dream came true.” James’ voice
sounded faraway.
CLOSE WINDOW
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