Kiss Her Goodbye (A Thriller) (7 page)

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Authors: Robert Gregory Browne

Tags: #Paranormal, #Crime, #Supernatural, #action, #Suspense, #Thriller

BOOK: Kiss Her Goodbye (A Thriller)
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 She peeled off her T-shirt and tossed it aside. Her tits probably would’ve bounced if they weren’t so pumped full of silicone.

 “Jesus, Carla. You’re gonna get your ass popped for indecent exposure.”

 “You call this indecent?”

 She turned back to the door, reached for the dead bolt, twisted it.

 The moment the latch clicked, the door burst open, knocking Carla on her ass. She yelped in surprise as a horde of federal flak jackets barreled past her and piled into the living room. “Federal agents! On the floor! Now!”

 Every one of them carried heavy firepower.

 Nemo’s hand ducked under the cushion again, but before he could reach his Eagle, three agents were on him. Big hands grabbed his shoulders, spun him around, and pushed him to the floor. He felt the pressure of a knee digging into his back as his arms were jerked behind him and nylon cuffs looped his wrists.

 The room got quiet then, except for Carla, who squealed like a terrified puppy as they dragged her naked hide outside. After she was gone, Nemo heard footsteps thump toward him across the carpet—someone with a slight limp to his gait. A moment later, an agent knelt down next to him and got right in his face.

 Jackass Donovan. Wearing a grin that Nemo felt like putting a fist in.

 “Hiya, Bobby.” Despite the grin, there was no hint of humor in Donovan’s eyes. “We need to talk.”

 

12

 

H
E IS
SO
cute,” Jessie whispered.

 She and her best friend, Laura, stood near the foot of the steps outside Bellanova Prep, trying to look nonchalant as Matt Weber strolled by. It wasn’t easy, but Jessie managed by pretending to have a sudden intense interest in the zipper of her backpack.

 Matt tossed her a quick glance as he passed.

 Jessie caught it, giving him an equally quick smile in return. He was way out of her league, but that glance meant something. She was sure of it.

 Laura thought so, too. “Did you see that?” she said, keeping her voice low. “Did you see the way he looked at you?”

 Jessie just nodded, momentarily unable to speak. She had been admiring Matt for weeks now and this was the first time he’d shown any real interest. Could she be misreading the look?

 “You’ve
got
to ask him,” Laura said.

 “No way.”

 “Come on, Jess, he’ll go. You know he’ll go.”

 She was referring to Bellanova’s upcoming Ladies First dance. Girls were expected to do the asking, a thought that terrified Jessie, especially when Matt Weber was factored into the equation. Jessie felt confident about many things, but the thought of asking him to the dance scared the heck out of her.

 She watched Matt cross the parking lot, step around a maroon Suburban parked at the curb, then dash across the busy street. Horns honked in his wake, but he ignored them and headed down an alley.

 Normally Jessie would keep her eyes on him until he was completely out of sight—staring at that tight little butt of his could easily become a full-time occupation—but something else caught her attention, and it had nothing to do with Matt.

 Her gaze shot back to the Suburban parked at the curb.

 The guy behind the wheel looked familiar.

 It was hard to tell from this distance, but she could swear he had a ponytail.

 Was it the guy from this morning? The cute one driving the Jeep?

 “Hey, Jess! Laura!”

 Jessie turned. Karen and Kathy Northam approached from the top of the steps, both out of breath.

 “Better hurry or we’ll miss our ride,” Karen said. She pointed toward the street, and true enough, their bus had already pulled up to the curb.

 Tossing all thoughts of Mr. Ponytail from her mind, Jessie ran with her friends to catch it.

 

H
OW MUCH LONGER
you stuck with your dad?” Laura asked.

 They sat near the back of the bus, close to the engine. Jessie had always liked the sound it made, a low rumble she found soothing and somehow reassuring.

 “I’m not stuck,” she said.

 “Doesn’t sound like it, the way you’ve been talking.”

 Jessie shrugged. “We’re a work in progress.”

 “Uh-huh, sure. Just be prepared for the big letdown.” Laura’s own father had been gone for years. “When do your folks get back from the Caymans?”

 “Couple of weeks.”

 “I don’t see why they didn’t just take you along.”

 Jessie made a face. “It’s some kind of second honeymoon thing.”

 “Yuck.”

 “Tell me about it.”

 The mental image of her mom and Roger doing it in their beachside hotel room was not a pretty one. Jessie couldn’t count the number of times she’d heard them moaning and groaning through her bedroom wall at home.

 Double yuck.

 Not that she had anything against Roger. He was an okay guy. He gave her space and didn’t hassle her too much about homework and grades and junk like that. He and Mom had been together since she was eleven, so she was used to having him around. He was by far the least offensive of the jerks her mother dated during the year following the divorce.

 Jessie had spent that year wondering why Mom preferred these idiots to her father. To her it wasn’t even a close call. Then Roger Nolan came along and he always had a smile and something nice to say. The next thing Jessie knew, he and Mom got married and four years passed, most of it stuck in Nebraska, where Roger worked.

 As the bus rumbled beneath her, Jessie thought of those four years, of the isolation she’d felt—a city girl trapped in a place so flat and wide and open that it had the opposite effect on her than you might expect.

 She’d felt trapped. Trapped in a town she hated, a school she despised, surrounded by kids who treated her like a freak of nature. She’d wanted so much for her father to come and rescue her, but he was missing in action at the time. A voice on the telephone. A signature on some cookie-cutter birthday card.

 But who knows, maybe it was all
her
fault. Right after the divorce she had grown cold and distant toward him, blaming him for her mother’s tears, for his inability to make her happy. When he tried to contact her, Jessie had closed him out, refusing to see or even speak to him.

 After a while, he stopped trying—which, of course, angered Jessie even more, because he’d given up too easily. The bastard.

 Why did life have to be so freaking complicated all the time? Why couldn’t it be like TV, where everything was wrapped up nice and neat in a single half hour?

 It just wasn’t fair.

 “One good thing came from moving in with your dad,” Laura said.

 “Yeah?”

 “We finally get to ride the bus together.”

 Jessie grinned and squeezed her hand. She and Laura had been close before the move to Nebraska and picked up right where they had left off the moment Jessie came back.

 They grew silent now, Laura opening her journal as Jessie watched the afternoon traffic buzz by. The bus chugged toward its next stop, the low roar of the engine vibrating against her seat.

 Bus rides always lulled her to sleep, and today was no exception. She closed her eyes, feeling the vibration play against her back and thighs, letting herself be carried into the world of the half-awake, where dreamlike images flitted through her mind.

 Matt Weber was there, walking with her hand in hand toward Bellanova. They talked and laughed and the next thing Jessie knew she was pressed against a wall as Matt kissed her, his hot tongue scraping against her teeth. She kissed him back, feeling a tingle between her legs, wanting him to put his hand there. Then he pulled away and smiled at her.

 Only it wasn’t Matt.

 It was the guy from the Jeep. Mr. Ponytail.

 Jessie jolted awake in her seat. Where the heck had
that
come from?

 Then, a sudden, odd chill ran through her and all at once she felt as if she was being watched.

 No, it was more than that.

 Something more … invasive.

 She turned, glancing out her window toward the left rear of the bus, surprised to find the maroon Suburban rolling alongside it.

 Mr. Ponytail was behind the wheel.

 Looking straight at her.

 Smiling.

 Jessie snapped her head back around and faced front, her whole body rigid with fear. Her stomach lurched.

 What the hell? What was he doing here?

 Karen and Kathy sat behind her, completely oblivious to her sudden alarm. Karen leaned forward in her seat. “You guys hear about Steve Hugard?”

 Laura, who had been writing in her journal, swiveled her head in their direction. “No, what?”

 “He grabbed Mrs. Lehman’s boobs in Health today.”

 Laura’s eyes widened. “He
what?”
 

 “Right in front of the whole class.”

 “Oh, my God, what a perv.”

 “Yeah. They’re trying to keep it a big secret, but Skinner kicked his butt right outta school. Told him he has to get therapy before they’ll let him back.”

 “I never could stand that jerk,” Laura said. “Guys like him give me the creeps.”

 I know the feeling, Jessie thought.

 Through her window she heard the muffled whine of an engine accelerating. Glancing sideways, she saw the Suburban pull up parallel to her. She didn’t dare chance a longer look, but she was sure Mr. Ponytail was still smiling at her.

 Go away, she wanted to scream.

 Leave me alone.

 She thought back to this morning, to that funky old Jeep he was driving. Had he been following her to school? Was today the first time, or was he stalking her?

 “Jess? You okay?” It was Laura. “Your face is all white.”

 Jessie didn’t answer. She’d barely heard the question. This morning she’d thought this guy looked familiar, that she’d seen him on TV, and now she remembered where it was.

 The afternoon news.

 A few weeks ago she’d come home from school, flipped on the set. Channel Two had a story about a woman in a coma being transferred to a new hospital. The woman was young and pretty, but she’d done some really horrible stuff, most of which they blamed on the Svengali-like influence of her husband—whatever that meant—a big, badass bank robber that practically every cop in the country was looking for.

 A big, badass bank robber with a ponytail.

 Knowing he was now only feet away made Jessie sick to her stomach. A dozen different scenarios ran through her mind, none of which made any sense.

 Why was he following
her?
 

 And what the hell did he want?

 Sitting here wondering about it didn’t help. She had to do something and do it now.

 One thing her dad had always drilled into her head, even when she was just a kid, was this: if you find yourself in a situation beyond your control, don’t be shy, do everything you can to regain that control—immediately.

 And that’s what she intended to do.

 Without even thinking about it, Jessie tossed her backpack off her lap and shot up from her seat.

 Laura looked up in surprise. “Jess? What’s wrong?”

 Jessie didn’t look at her. Her eyes were on the bus driver.

 “Stop!” she shouted. “Stop the bus!”

 

13

 

I
NTERROGATION ROOM 3
wasn’t much more than a table, two chairs, and four blank walls that always felt as if they were closing in on you. Whether they had an effect on Bobby Nemo was anybody’s guess.

 Jack Donovan dropped a tagged and bagged submachine gun to the tabletop. An H&K MP5. Unlicensed. Fully automatic. They’d found it under Carla Devito’s bed—part of a shipment they’d been tracing for months. They’d also found something in Carla’s bathroom, something distinctly incriminating, but Donovan was keeping it under wraps for the time being. Saving it for leverage.

 “Here’s how it plays, Bobby. Just on the HK alone, you’re looking at five in the bucket. Throw in Northland First and Trust and a handful of dead cops, and we’re talking some very serious sphincter time.”

 Nemo sat in one of the aluminum and vinyl chairs, his shackled hands in his lap. He eyeballed Donovan, but said nothing.

 Donovan grabbed his own chair, straddled it. “You hearing me, Bobby? Multiple counts means consecutive sentences, my friend, so you can kiss off any hopes of an early release.”

 Nemo remained silent.

 “I’d be happy to show you the guidelines.”

 “Fuck the guidelines. What are you selling?”

 “I think you know.” Donovan pulled a manila file folder from under his arm, flipped it open, and slid it across the table. Inside was a Most Wanted flyer featuring a grainy black-and-white photo of Alexander Gunderson.

 Nemo snorted. “This is a joke, right? You think I’m some kinda half-wit?”

 “I figure you’ve got enough rattling around in there to know when someone’s offering you the only prayer you have of ever seeing daylight. Gunderson’s underground and I’ll bet dollars to donuts you know where to find him. Help me out and I’ll talk to the AG’s office. Who knows, they might even go for immunity.”

 “Bullshit.”

 “Is that yes or no?”

 “It’s you’re outta your fuckin’ mind, is what it is. Where’s my lawyer?”

 So that’s how it’s going to be, Donovan thought. A month and a half searching for this piece of shit and the wall immediately goes up.

 “Don’t make a mistake here, Bobby.”

 Nemo shook his head. “You’re the one making the mistake. Gunderson’s had a hard-on for your ass ever since you turned his bitch into creamed cabbage. You think I’m gonna get in the middle of that?”

 “Beats the middle of a federal cellblock for the rest of your natural life.”

 Nemo eyed him dully. “You’re so anxious to find him, why don’t you give Sara a jingle, see what she has to say?”

 “Very funny, Bobby.”

 Nemo shrugged. “Doesn’t seem to be a problem for Alex.”

 Donovan just looked at him.

 “You think I’m kidding? Guy thinks he can commune with the dead, for crissakes—and I guess creamed cabbage is close enough to qualify.”

 “Uh-huh,” Donovan said. He’d heard rumblings about Gunderson dabbling in mysticism, but had never taken them seriously. Was Nemo pulling his chain?

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