drawn.
He walked to the front door and knocked, then waited.
Nothing.
No sound of a television or music coming from her unit. He probably should just call the manager, or Jocelynâs sister, but decided that since he was here, heâd check her place out himself. She kept a spare key hidden in the beam that supported the roof of her porch, so he used the bench near the front door and hoisted himself upward to a spot where he could see the key hanging on a small nail.
Without a secondâs thought Trace snagged the key, hopped down, and after one more try at knocking, let himself in.
A blast of heat hit him full force, but he knew the minute he stepped through the door that he was alone in the apartment. It was just that still.
âJocelyn!â he called loudly. âHello?â But he sensed it was useless as he slowly walked from room to room, noting that her purse was on the kitchen counter, her schoolbag, filled with papers and books, on the seat of one of the two bar stools.
The bed was unmade; a half-drunk glass of water and some crumpled wrapper of over-the-counter flu medication were on the night table, next to a paperback novel and her cell phone charger. Clothes were tumbling out of a laundry basket on the open bedroom floor, and the remote control for a small television had been left on the mussed coverlet.
Suddenly music erupted.
He nearly jumped out of his skin, turning quickly. For a second he thought someone was inside; then he realized it was probably her cell phoneâs ringtone. He followed the sound to the living room and a small recliner. The music stopped abruptly, but he dug through the cushions and finally found the phone under the chair.
He checked the list of incoming call numbers on the display and saw that the most recent was unknown; prior to that, his name was listed twice, then Evergreen Elementary, interspersed with names, some of which he recognized, others that he didnât. He checked the texts and saw that all the messages asked her to text or call back.
âWhere the hell are you?â he wondered aloud, the small apartment almost echoing his voice. There was no sign of a break-in; nothing seemed out of place. Her laptop, television, and even some change left on the kitchen counter hadnât been disturbed. Wet cat food was turning dry in one of the small bowls on the floor near the garbage can.
He walked back to the living room hall, where he saw that her car and house keys had been left in a small dish by the front door.
Odd.
She left and locked herself out?
Unlikely as the dead bolt had been latched.
Nothing more to do than call her friend back and tell her what heâd found: nothing. From there, he supposed, the next step was to alert her family or maybe the police.
Locking the front door behind him, he replaced the key where heâd found it, then returned to his car and hoped to high heaven that Jocelyn was all right.
He had a very bad feeling she wasnât.
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It was after seven when Kacey turned her Ford Edge off the main road to her house. Sheâd been fighting a bit of a headache for the last couple of hours, and her stomach was rumbling.
She checked her rearview mirror, and the car that had been following her sped past, a minivan with a Christmas tree strapped to its roof, as it turned out. Nothing sinister. Unless you thought cutting a Christmas tree before Thanksgiving was a sin, and Kacey was on the fence about that.
The minivan was followed by a dark pickup, the primary mode of transportation in these parts, and a light-colored sedan, none of which appeared malevolent as they all continued on the county road leading into the hills. Most of the time she was fine, but she wondered if she would ever feel completely safe. Whenever she was alone, old memories and doubts crept in.
All your imagination. Again. Get over it! The attack was nearly seven years ago. Are you planning to live your life by always looking over your
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