Urge to Kill (1)

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Authors: JJ Franklin

BOOK: Urge to Kill (1)
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Published by

Earth
Tiger

11 Pampas Close,

Stratford-upon-Avon,

England,

CV37 0TN

01789-267245

Email:
[email protected]

Website:
www.BMLittlewood.com

Copyright © JJ Franklin 2011

JJ Franklin has asserted her right under the Copyright, Design and Patents Act of 1988 to be identified as the author of this work.

ISBN 978-0-9571935-0-5

eBook ISBN: 978-0-9571935-1-2

Copyright © JJ Franklin 2011

This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters, and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of the author.

CONTENTS

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

CHAPTER 1

CHAPTER 2

CHAPTER 3

CHAPTER 4

CHAPTER 5

CHAPTER 6

CHAPTER 7

CHAPTER 8

CHAPTER 9

CHAPTER 10

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

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

CHAPTER 41

CHAPTER 42

CHAPTER 43

CHAPTER 44

CHAPTER 45

CHAPTER 46

CHAPTER 47

CHAPTER 48

CHAPTER 49

CHAPTER 50

CHAPTER 51

CHAPTER 52

CHAPTER 53

CHAPTER 54

CHAPTER 55

CHAPTER 56

CHAPTER 57

CHAPTER 58

CHAPTER 59

CHAPTER 60

CHAPTER 61

CHAPTER 62

CHAPTER 63

CHAPTER 64

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Without the help of the following people, I doubt that this book would have been completed. A big thank you goes to Gemma Williams, who gave such excellent advice and encouragement and to Maureen Hill, for her editing and help through countless drafts.

Thank you to all my family and friends for being so encouraging and supportive during the long process, especially Janet Williams and Diane Franklin.

Special thanks go Cathy Whittaker and the members of The Stratford Scribes Writing Group, who listened to my early chapters and gave me helpful and constructive comments.

I would also like to thank The Arvon Foundation for the opportunity to work with top writers. They gave excellent tutoring and helped me find the courage to write this book.

The Hilary Johnson Authors’ Advisory Service set me on the right track and helped me to believe in myself.

Thanks go to De Montfort University’s ‘Writing for Television’ MA programme for instilling a sense of professionalism in me.

Last but not least, Robert McKee and his story structure seminars, for inspiring me and for giving me an understanding of how story works.

CHAPTER 1

H
e chose her from the robed figures waiting in the perfumed atrium. Engrossed in the celebrity gossip magazines, no one noticed the white-suited therapist approach her. No one watched as she followed him obediently to the treatment room.

As he walked behind her down the white corridor, he assessed her figure, congratulating himself that she would be perfect for his purpose.

He held open the door for her to pass into the relaxing oasis, allowing the mingled scents of essential oils to drift out into the corridor.

She turned to appraise him, certain of her well-maintained beauty.

‘I thought it would be a lady therapist?’ she said, her voice rising in a question.

‘Don’t worry. We’ll soon have you relaxed.’ He treated her to a shy smile. ‘Unless of course, you would prefer…?’

She shrugged. ‘It doesn’t really matter.’

He closed the door behind him, and turned to watch as she moved to stand beside the therapy couch.

Taking two steps towards her, he brought up his hands as if to help her remove her robe. Her neck was warm and soft and yielded easily to his hands.

She looked surprised, flung out her arms, her long painted nails clawing at the couch as if it could give her support against his sudden assault. He smiled, relentlessly increasing the pressure, unprepared for how easy it was. Her mouth opened as if to scream but turned instead into an ugly gape through lack of air.

Before real panic could reach her eyes, she was dead. Suffering was not part of his plan.

Releasing his hands, he caught her as she sagged to the floor and lifted her gently onto the couch. When he pulled her robe open, he discovered she was naked beneath. This was good since her firm flesh did not interest him, and having to remove her underwear would just cause delay.

She was his and he was free to make any statement he wanted with her lifeless body. Now she would become the perfect expression of his pain.

He turned away from her and went to the heating panel, where he had hidden everything he needed. From the pile of clothing, he selected the little-girl knickers printed with pictures of a fairy-tale princess. Luckily, obese little girls liked to pretend they were princesses too. He lifted her limp, painted feet and inserted them into the knickers. It was no trouble to tug them up to her waist.

Next, he shook out the pink party dress with its deeper satin sash, and carefully sitting her up, he placed it over her head. Her head slipped onto his chest and, for a moment, he indulged in the great sense of power this gave him. His fingers began to tremble as he straightened the dress and fastened the matching bow in her hair. He was aware that time was of the essence and that he might be discovered at any moment.

Then he stood back to admire his handiwork. She looked perfect, just like a child going to a party. In his excitement, he had forgotten the finishing touches, so he added these, carefully placing each one for maximum effect. Until, completely satisfied, he recorded the scene on his mobile phone.

After quickly changing into his own robe, he folded the borrowed therapist suit and her robe under a towel and left the room, dropping the whole bundle into the full linen trolley at the end of the corridor, before strolling nonchalantly away. Mission accomplished in less than three minutes.

CHAPTER 2

M
att wiped the steam from the bathroom mirror and adjusted his tie. It seemed funny sharing his space with anyone, apart from a mate or two staying to celebrate the occasional rugby win. This small flat had been his home for six years, ever since he had made Detective Inspector. It was here he did his best thinking when embroiled in a difficult case.

Now he had a wife. Matt was still amazed at how easy it had been to realise that Eppie was meant to be his life-long companion. If he tried to analyse the attraction in true detective fashion, he knew he would never be able to work it out. It went beyond cerebral thinking and was something much more primitive and essential.

Eppie wasn’t beautiful, whatever that was; she was unique, the sort of woman anyone would immediately notice when she walked into a room. She didn’t give up; she could, in fact, be downright fierce, as he had found out when they first met.

He had been attracted to her from that moment, even though she had just beaten him to a rare parking place on Jury Street, and what’s more, she had left the tail end of her car sticking out into the oncoming traffic. ‘Don’t tell me you’re going to leave it like that?’ he had shouted from his open window.

She had turned in surprise. Matt thought she looked out of place in the medieval market town of Warwick. She certainly wasn’t dressed for a rainy, English summer day, the sort of day that made him want to turn on the central heating. The red cotton top had a Mexican look to it. Plus, she was getting soaked, and the thin material was beginning to cling, allowing her black bra to show through.

The woman turned in surprise. ‘Oh. Sorry, only be a minute,’ she said turning her back and striding off into the newsagent’s shop.

Matt experienced a mixture of annoyance and intrigue. He wasn’t used to being ignored, especially when he was pointing out a matter of public safety. He put on his hazard lights and got out. This woman needed sorting. Taking a walk around her car, he was disgusted to find that she hadn’t even locked it. How stupid could people be?

At least she was true to her word and came out of the shop within a minute, tearing the wrapping from a cheap umbrella. As she flipped it open, she stopped, shocked to see him. ‘Still here?’ she asked, almost poking him in the eye. ‘I’m going now, so you can have this space. You’re blocking traffic there,’ she said, nodding towards his car.

Matt felt the blood rising to his head. How dare she accuse him of causing an obstruction?

‘Excuse me,’ she said, trying to get past Matt to the door of her car.

Matt stood his ground debating with himself whether to get heavy and bring out his warrant card. She had stopped in front of him, a bundle of energy, brown eyes beginning to spark as he stood looking down at her.

‘I want to get into my car, so please move—now.’

She was obviously used to getting her own way, but so was he. ‘Can I point out that your car is parked in a dangerous position?’

‘And who are you? The traffic police?’ she snapped taking a half step forward. ‘Get out of my way.’

Matt had no doubt she would physically try to push him aside if he didn’t move. What an attitude. He admired her for it and suddenly saw how funny it must look, this pint-size woman squaring up to his six-foot-one. A smile crept into his eyes.

She picked up on this immediately. ‘It’s not funny. I have a thousand things to do: get the dry cleaning, pick up Dad and ring the agent. And this bloody rain. I thought it was supposed to be summer here.’ She frowned at him as if she held him personally responsible.

Matt felt his smile widen. ‘I’ll move only if you promise to have dinner with me.’ He felt like an idiot as soon as the words were out. She would think him some kind of pervert. He watched a range of emotions cross her face to end with the faintest echo of his smile. She was beginning to see the funny side too. Matt pressed home his advantage. ‘When you have time, of course.’

‘OK,’ she said, smiling up at him.

It had been as simple as that: dinner the following night in a small bistro in Kenilworth with the food hardly tasted as they laughed together. For now, he was just happy to accept that he was the luckiest man on Earth. Well, except maybe for having McRay as a boss.

He could hear Eppie clanking about in the small kitchen and hoped she wasn’t going to be the sort of wife who felt it her duty to fill him with greasy bacon and eggs in the morning. Matt moved across the small living room, stopping only to remove the bridal garter from one of his rugby trophies.

He came up behind Eppie and slipped his arms around her. She put down the coffee pot and turned into his arms, standing on tiptoes to reach up and kiss him. Matt loved her damp, fresh-from-the-shower smell. Eppie and hot coffee, it couldn’t get much better than this.

Eppie turned away to pour the coffee, hot and strong, reminiscent of the lazy mornings of their honeymoon in Italy. Matt took a sip and watched her as she put some bread in the toaster before reaching into the warming oven to retrieve two steaming plates.

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