Chained Guilt (Hidden Guilt (Detective Series) Book 1)

BOOK: Chained Guilt (Hidden Guilt (Detective Series) Book 1)
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CHAINED GUILT

 

 

 

Copyright © 2015 Terry Keys

All rights reserved. In accordance with the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, the scanning, uploading and electronic sharing of any part of this book without the permission of the author is unlawful piracy and is theft of the authors intellectual property. If you would like to use material from the book (other than for review purposes) written permission must be obtained by the author
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ISBN-10
:
1511948612

ISBN-13:
978-1511948616

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

For Jackie, Terry and Jacey

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

    
 
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Acknowledgements

 

 

I would like to thank my editor Susan Hughes who took my words and performed magic! Thank you for all of the advice, contacts and encouragement with this project. I would also like to thank Lois Benoit who pushed me to finish and share my work with the world. Last but not least I would like to thank my family and friends who have always encouraged me to follow my dreams.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Prologue

 

 

It had taken me longer than I’d planned, but I’d finally tracked the bastard down; it now appeared the odds were stacked in his favor.

“Detective David Porter!”

The voice calling out had a strong Russian accent. I knew the voice. No mistaking it. Prodinov. I looked around and tried to figure out which direction it had come from. I obviously had company in the dark, box-filled warehouse. It was late, and the temperature had continued to drop. The inside of the building was as cold as the outside. My teeth chattered and my fingers tingled in the subzero temperatures. This was one element that definitely favored the Russians; they were used to the cold. Houston was cold about one month out of the year, but it was nothing like this. I tried to block out the bone-chilling temperature and focus on zeroing in on Prodinov.

“So you come all the way to Russia to die? For me to kill you like I did your brother? Didn’t you learn from his mistakes? He never saw me coming, but he should have. You are a much better detective than he was; I’ll give you that. But you will die tonight. Shoot him down!”

Gunfire rang out across the warehouse. I dropped to the cold cement floor and rolled behind a wall. I frowned, still unable to pinpoint his location as he taunted me. I was hit in the shoulder, losing blood fast as three Russian hit men closed in on me. I had to figure out what my next move was going to be. I should have known Alexander Prodinov would have some hired goons try to take me out. No way would a coward like him let this be a one-on-one battle. But if he thought I had traveled all the way to Russia to die, he was sadly mistaken. I had also promised him when he took his last breath, I’d be standing over his cold, lifeless body. My “vacation,” as I’d told my superiors, was anything but.

“Revenge has a way of making people better at what they do. I’m a killer, Mister Porter, and a very good one. Unlike you, I do what I do for fun, not for a paycheck. They’ve written books about me, about my skills. When will you figure these things out? No matter how good you are, you lack the talent and the brains to win against me. I am simply better than you are.”

“I didn’t come here to die!” I shouted back at him. “Death will come to one of us, I promise you.”

The words had barely left my mouth when another barrage of gunfire whizzed past my head. Bullets ricocheted off several crates around me. I ducked behind one, wincing as a splinter left a trail of heat across my cheekbone. I saw the exit and, crouching now, focused my gaze on it. I sprinted for the door, hoping I wouldn’t be gunned down before I reached it. Ignoring my wounds, ignoring the cold, I charged forward. I heard the echo of footsteps behind me but knew I couldn’t stop.

“Run, Porter!” Prodinov bellowed, laughing.

With the trail of blood I left behind, I knew I would be easy to track down come daylight or flashlight. The only hope I had was the cover of night and the thick Russian forest that surrounded the warehouse and stretched on forever.  It was a bone-chilling fifteen degrees, and my body wasn’t used to this type of weather, but losing myself in the woods was my only hope.

As I ran, I heard animal sounds I didn’t recognize. Every so often I made out a set of eyes watching me. They could probably smell the blood and waited for me to keel over so they could pounce on me. I stumbled, nearly tripping over a fallen tree branch in the eerie blackness. Whether I died running or got shot down by Prodinov’s goons, they’d never find me.

I heard voices, too close for comfort, so I dove for cover behind a fallen tree stump and burrowed deeper into the thick overhang of an immense oak. Glancing over my shoulder, I was relieved when no flashlight beams cut through the darkness. They, too, navigated the woods with the help of a quarter moon. They didn’t see my tracks.

“Track him down and put a bullet in his head. Then bring his body to me,” Prodinov had ordered his men.

I held my breath as they passed by me. My heart pounded, keeping time with the throbbing in my left arm. It was a relatively clean wound, in and out, no broken bones, but I had no idea how badly I was bleeding. No time to create a makeshift bandage, even if I had the supplies. This couldn’t be the end for me. Bleeding out alone in the middle of Russia?

Suddenly I heard the low, fierce growl of a dog. Its eyes, two yellow moons, seemed to pierce my flesh as it looked at me. I could barely make out its silhouette in the dark. Maybe it wasn’t a dog but a wolf. I couldn’t be sure. Whatever it was, it sniffed and snorted like it had just found its next meal. My only advantage was my gun, which I’d already drawn. If I didn’t deal with this soon—and quietly—the animal would expose my hiding place, and we’d both end up dead anyway.  I slipped the silencer onto my weapon, controlled my breathing, and pulled the trigger. And like that, the beast was gone.

I left my dubious shelter and ran as quickly as I could. The snow, two feet deep in places, certainly didn’t offer the best conditions for making a clean getaway. Breathing heavily, quickly growing weak and tired, I forced myself on. Quitting wasn’t an option. All they had to do was hit my tracks with the flashlights, and I would be exposed. Finally, after what seemed an hour but was probably only minutes, I saw a glow of light up ahead. As I crawled closer, I realized it was a small, dimly lit log cabin. I had no idea who the owner was, but this was probably my only chance of making it out of this mess alive. I rose to my feet and staggered through the woods, weaving my way through the trees until I came to the back door. I banged weakly on it.

“Help! Is anyone home? Someone please help me! I’m an American police officer!”

I was hesitant about stating I was a police officer—even worse, an American one. Attitudes in Russia could go either way with that announcement. It would either save my life or ultimately seal my fate.

“Who’s there?”

The voice was female, soft and motherly.

“My name is David Porter! I’m an American police officer,” I explained, catching my breath. “Men are chasing me. Please help!”

Seconds later, the door opened.

“Come. Come in quickly,” the woman said, stepping back to let me in.

The cabin was sparsely furnished and quiet. A fire burned in the fireplace, producing the only light in the room.

The woman, probably in her late fifties, grabbed the straw broom leaning against the wall beside her and went out to sweep my snow tracks off her back porch. I watched intently from the window, leaning against the roughly-hewn wood wall for support.

She returned and glanced warily at me, especially at the gun in my hand.

“You’re hurt,” she said.

Despite my gratitude, I had to know. “Why are you helping me?”

“How about a thank you, American?”

“I mean, yeah, thanks, but why are you risking your life to help me?”

Before she could respond, the sound of voices approaching caused me to straighten in alarm. A fist pounded on the door several times.  Prodinov’s men. I glanced from the door to the woman, who had placed a finger over her lips, gesturing for me to remain silent.

“Shhh. I will take care of this.”

I was more than a little nervous about what was about to happen. She could easily turn me over to the Russians. I made sure my gun was ready to fire and waited. They may get me, but I would take at least one of them with me. I wasn’t afraid of dying, but I was fearful that my wife and daughters would have to live without me around to protect them.

The woman stepped toward the door and opened it a crack. As a part of my military training, I had learned several languages, one of them being Russian.

“Excuse me, ma’am,” came a gruff voice from the other side. “We are looking for an escaped convict, an American.  Have you seen anyone or heard anything tonight?”

She didn’t respond.  I was in trouble. Perhaps she was pointing or whispering something to them. I couldn’t tell from where I stood. Maybe she was afraid because the bastard had told her I was an escaped convict. I couldn’t be sure of anything.

“Ma’am, have you seen anyone out here tonight?”

The voice grew noticeably aggravated.

“No,” she replied. “It’s been quiet all night. I haven’t heard a thing or seen anyone. What does this American look like? Do you have a description? What is he wanted for?” She paused. “Should I be worried?”

“No need for you to worry yourself over the details,” the man replied. “Do you mind if we look around? It will only take a second.”

“Yes, I do mind, actually,” she said. “I have a sick father upstairs in the loft. I take care of him, and I’d rather he not be disturbed. We are letting the cold air into my house. As I said, I have seen no one! You understand that, don’t you?”

A long silence ensued. The men were probably trying to figure out if they could believe her or not. The moment of truth—my moment of truth.

I thought about waiting until the men left, but then I remembered Prodinov. I should use this chance to show him what he had gotten himself into.  I quietly slipped out the back door and made my way around the side of the cabin, staying close to the structure and wary of casting a telltale shadow in the wan moonlight. I hoped the sound of snow crunching beneath my feet would not give me away as I hid behind a car parked in the front. I ducked down behind the left front fender and waited. Why did this car have to be so damn small? Trying to hide my six-foot-three-inch frame behind a car I could probably flip over by hand would be a test in itself.  I continued to listen as the woman talked to Prodinov’s men. My wounds ached, but I had no time to cry about it. 

“If you don’t have any more questions, I’d like to get back to my father,” she was saying. She started to close the door. “I do hope you find the man you’re looking for. We don’t need criminals running around out here.”

“Yes, ma’am. Have a good night.”

She closed the door and the three men, bundled in long, heavy coats to ward off the bitter chill, stepped down off the porch and headed back the way they’d come.

I emerged from behind the car and, without hesitation, fired. One. Two. Three. Three shots, three dead Russians.  As I anticipated, they had let their guard down after talking with the woman and I made them pay. Did I feel bad about ambushing them? Not one bit. They would have done the same to me.

The door of the cabin flew open. “Oh my God!” the woman screamed.

She stared down at the bodies in her driveway, their blood creating dark pools on the pristine ice, and then looked at me, her eyes wide with fear.

“Who are you? Are you some kind of killer? Are you even an American cop?”

Wincing as I bumped my shoulder on the car as I rose, I stepped from my hiding place.               “Yes ma’am, I am,” I assured her. I reached into my jacket pocket and took out my badge, showing it to her.  “Relax. I’m a good guy. Have you ever heard of Alexander Prodinov?”

“Yes, who hasn’t?” she stammered, returning her gaze to the men on the ground. “That evil man gave Russians a bad name. He’s a vicious serial killer.”

I slowly walked toward her, not wanting to frighten her more than she already was. “Well, those men were working for him,” I explained. “They were trying to kill me. I am here in Russia trying to do the same to him. A few years ago I was tracking a serial killer in the United States, and it turned out to be Prodinov. He killed my brother in my home while he slept.” I paused, swallowed hard. It was always difficult to remember. “For no reason, other than to prove to me how good he was.  One day I will kill him.”

“I’m truly sorry about your brother,” she said. “But you know killing him won’t bring your brother back.”

I was grateful she had saved my life, but I wasn’t exactly in the mood for a sermon.  “Of course I know it won’t bring him back. My brother being murdered is just one more reason for me to do away with this monster. You know what he is. He’s killed many people, including children. He kills for pleasure. The world would be a better place without him.”

“I understand what he has done, but judgment is not yours,” she said. “You are bleeding badly.” She gestured for me to come inside. “I used to be a nurse. I can patch you up until you can get to a doctor.”

“I need to get rid of those bodies,” I remarked.

“Let’s get you cleaned up first. If you die those bodies won’t matter so much will they?” she said as she turned to go inside.

I followed and shut the door behind me. I settled in a chair near the fireplace while she gathered some first aid supplies from under the kitchen sink. The cabin was small, but comfortably warm. I found myself relaxing.

“You never answered me earlier. We aren’t the most liked here, so why did you help me?”

“Take off your jacket and shirt,” she ordered.

I did as she bade and watched as she removed packaged squares of gauze from the kit, some antiseptic, and a mesh-like bandage roll, and focused on cleaning and bandaging my arm. It didn’t appear she was going to answer my question. I didn’t really care why the woman had helped me. I was just glad I was still alive. I winced as she worked on me. She was not the gentlest nurse I had ever encountered.

“I lived in America over twenty years ago,” she finally said. “One day as I was leaving the supermarket, I had a flat tire. I was stranded on the side of the road when three men stopped to help me, or so I thought. They walked over to my car. Before I knew it, one of them hit me over the head. Luckily for me, an off-duty policeman drove by and saw this. He turned around to come and help me. He should have waited for help to arrive, but he didn’t. He acted bravely, and I owe my life to him, I’m sure. You are right, too. You Americans have many enemies here in Russia. You’re lucky you stopped at my cabin.”

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