The Sarah Roberts Series Vol. 4-6 Read online

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  “No. I just … what I mean is … I’m scared.”

  “It’ll be okay, Jackie. After today, we are done here.”

  It must be something akin to how cows feel when they’re being led to the slaughter house. An innate sense of impending doom. They know their fate and are powerless to stop it. In Jackie’s eyes, she knew her time had come. But Jackie wasn’t a cow. She acted more like a squirrel stuck in a corner as a large attacker advanced. The violence he detected coming off her in waves surprised him.

  He stood three feet from her when she raised both her hands to ward him off.

  “No, please, I’ll do whatever you ask.”

  Nothing in Elmore that would be considered rational heard a word she had said. All he felt, all he saw and all he desired was an end to her. An end to the fake relationship she had made him conduct with her. An end to the wondering if someone would knock on his front door looking for her. An end. That’s what Elmore needed now.

  Jackie moved to the back wall as Elmore edged closer. He brought his hands to the lip of the underwear he wore and slowly lowered the pair to his ankles. Now with his member exposed, it hardened further with anticipation.

  Then Jackie sprung. Off the wall she flew at him with the violence of Tie Domi in his prime.

  Elmore hadn’t expected it. She caught him off balance. He faltered and stepped backwards until he hit the bars.

  Jackie’s small fist smacked him in the face, then the mouth. His response delayed, she ran past him and headed for the stairs, her flesh barely bouncing as she’d lost weight in the time she’d spent with Elmore.

  He let her go, wiping at the blood that had started to seep from his split lip.

  “This is going to cost you,” Elmore shouted.

  Jackie made it to the top of the stairs. What she didn’t know was that Elmore had locked the metal door behind him and the only way out was with the key he held in his pocket.

  He picked up his underwear, slid them back on and stepped from the cell. Pain made him angry, not horny. Jackie still had to be removed, but now it wouldn’t be because she had made him filthy with her feminine touch, but because she had hurt him.

  “It’s time to pay for your misdeeds.”

  “Noooo,” Jackie screamed from the top of the stairs.

  “Stupid bitch,” he said as he looked at his table of tools. A handsaw, a screwdriver, and many other devices she could’ve used as a weapon sat out in the open. Instead, she had run for the stairs. He knew it was the female condition. Just being born was enough to fuck them up.

  He chose the Craftsman screwdriver. If he wasn’t going to screw her, he’d let his tool do it for him.

  Jackie remained at the top of the stairs, shivering, crying, her arms wrapped around her nakedness.

  It was a sight he would remember. Jackie had served him well.

  “Goodbye, Jackie.”

  Elmore started up the stairs, one slow step at a time. His tongue came out and tasted the blood on his lip as it clotted, the slight sting of the punch lingering.

  On the fourth step, Jackie sprang into action. He’d advanced slowly. Based on her performance in the cage, he had expected it.

  Jackie screamed like a feline in a full fight with another as she jumped two stairs and dove at Elmore. He braced himself and lifted the long screwdriver, aiming for the center of her chest.

  It connected cleanly and entered her ribs between her breasts. Her weight drove Elmore back until they both fell. The hard basement floor proved unforgiving. He hit his elbow hard enough to cause pins and needles to course through his left hand.

  But Jackie hit harder. She smacked down and rolled onto her back, her mouth bleeding after making contact with the floor directly. A couple of teeth had cut through her lip. She rolled her head back and forth, moaning, crying and trying to figure out what had happened to her chest.

  He watched as she lifted her head and realized it was the screwdriver’s handle that stuck out of her skin. Her breathing becoming more and more labored.

  Elmore got up slowly and moved closer. Her eyes were wide, her nostrils flaring in their feeble attempt to claim as much air as they could catch. But it was no use. Blood began to slip past her lips. She was dying and there was nothing she could do about it.

  Elmore looked up and down her body, once pretty, now broken and dirty. He wadded up a gob of saliva and spit on her stomach.

  “That’s what I think of vermin, you fucking whore.”

  He reached over and laid his palm around the screwdriver’s handle. Both her hands came up to his wrist and her head shook back and forth fast, her eyes wide. She tried to say something, but only screamed as Elmore twisted the tool in and out.

  Jackie’s body convulsed, her hands fell away and her eyes rolled back in her head.

  In her last moment, her bowels evacuated.

  “Oh, man, you are going to pay for that. I cannot believe you soiled my floor.”

  Elmore got up, fished for the keys in his shirt pocket and headed for the stairs. He would clean up in his bathroom, get dressed in his plastic coveralls and grab a bag of lime from the garage.

  Then he’d return, take Jackie apart with his handsaw and start planting her in the field behind his house, lime coating every piece.

  No trace of Jackie would ever be found. The basement would take some cleaning, but he’d get on it and then start searching for Sarah Roberts again.

  One day he’d find her. When that day came, he’d be ready.

  If he couldn’t find her soon, he’d answer the resumes he had received for photo shoots and find another young girl to keep as a toy until he found Sarah.

  Whatever happened, his needs came first, and nothing or no one would stop him.

  Not even someone as courageous and heroic as Sarah Roberts.

  On the stairs, he stopped and said to himself, “Sarah, I’m coming for you.”

  Chapter 6

  Sarah’s headache had completely dissipated, but the back of her neck still hurt where the stitches were. While waiting for Rod to return, she had paced the room, tried to see through the two-way glass and knocked on the door enough times to make her knuckles red. Normally she would take the time they wanted to sweat her with ease, but Drake’s life hung in the balance. It was decision time. She had to do something. She couldn’t let Rod murder Drake simply because he had an agenda.

  She knocked on the glass. “Deal time. Get Rod in here. He’s got one minute, or the deal is off the table. And when I say off the table, I mean for good.”

  Sarah sat back in the chair and placed both hands in front of her. She felt anger that Drake could be killed so easily — just because she was stuck in Chicago. Why was she the only one who really cared?

  After what felt like a minute had passed, she looked back at the glass. She couldn’t believe it. The door hadn’t opened. Now she felt her anger rising to dangerous levels.

  “What are you doing here?” she asked, slamming her hands down on the top of the table where she sat. “If you want to see what I can do, get Rod in here. Now!”

  She never bluffed. This had to be it. No deal. Without a clock she couldn’t be certain, but it sure felt like a minute had gone by.

  The door opened. Rod stood there.

  “They said you wanted to talk.”

  “We’re running out of time. Sit. Listen to what I have to say.”

  Rod stepped in and shut the door. He checked the knob to make sure it held the door tight and walked over to the table. After crossing his arms, he stared down at her and waited.

  “I’m going to tell you some shit, but not because I want to and not because you made me. Because it’s the right thing to do.” She paused and waited for a reaction. Rod stood like a stone statue. “I received a message in Hungary from my dead sister. That’s why I came to Toronto. There’s someone I have to save. I’m prepared to make a deal, but it has to be on my terms. It won’t work unless I run the show.”

  Rod shook his head. “No way. Talk
first. Then I’ll decide what’ll be done.”

  She was clean out of options. He held the control and they both knew it. She had to go forward with this and deal with the consequences later. Another man’s life was at stake.

  “His name is Drake Bellamy. He knows too much about the immigration fraud group that is being dismantled in Europe and around the world as we speak. He has been ordered killed. My sister told me where and when. I’m sure she’ll give me more details as the time gets closer.”

  “Forget it,” Rod said and turned back to the door.

  “Wait. You can’t just walk away. If you do, you’re no better than the shooter.”

  “I may not be, but I’ll be smarter.”

  “How do you figure?”

  “Letting you out of this facility means you’ll escape. I can’t keep trying to lock you down. Believe it or not, that takes a lot of effort.”

  Sarah stood too fast, the back of her knees knocking the chair over. “Rod, an innocent man will die this afternoon if you don’t act. I will show you how my gift works. Isn’t that what you want? Isn’t that why you brought me here and expended all that effort? Come on, work with me.”

  He turned around to fully face her, crossing his arms again. “Then keep talking. Sell me on this idea of yours.”

  “There are going to be questions you’ll have to answer, Rod.”

  “Like what?”

  “There were people who were supposed to meet me at the airport in Toronto. After two days they’ll be going ballistic trying to figure out where I am. It won’t take them long to come snooping for you.”

  “By people, you mean Parkman. And that doesn’t matter because officially, I don’t exist. There’s nothing that a cop like Parkman could ever do that’ll get through the layers of bullshit my organization remains protected under.”

  “Then what is the purpose? You tell me. If you brought me here to examine my talents, why aren’t we doing just that? Otherwise, this is nothing better than glorified kidnapping.”

  Neither spoke. They stared at each other. Sarah waited. She wasn’t going to break the silence first.

  Rod uncrossed his arms and walked back to the table.

  “I’m listening.”

  “Drake is supposed to be at a baseball game this afternoon. The hit should happen near the end of the game. He is to be shot in the face for exposing people who were in the immigration ring. Some of those people, along with a few innocents, were killed in Toronto recently. I got this from Vivian. I always try to do what Vivian tells me to do. That’s why I’m still alive.”

  Rod placed his hands on the wooden table. “Okay, thank you. Now we can see if your prophecy comes true and we don’t have to go anywhere. Thanks, Sarah.” He stepped away and opened the door to leave.

  “Wait!” Sarah shouted. “Fuck, are you ever a hard man to deal with. Are you saying you’ll let the shooting happen just to prove that I knew about it?”

  Rod faced her. Two men stood in the hallway behind him. From where she sat she could see they were heavily armed.

  “No, I’m going to alert the Canadian authorities and tell them everything you just said. That’ll give them,” he paused and looked at his watch. “About three hours to locate Drake in the ballpark and remove him. That will save his life. I’ll have them look for a shooter. In the meantime, start giving me more prophecies to work with.”

  “What if they don’t find the shooter?” Sarah asked. “They’ll detain Drake and nothing will happen. Then, two days later the shooter catches Drake at a delicatessen buying a fucking sandwich and shoots him in the face spilling lettuce and ham all over the fucking place. You’re still the murderer in that case because you had a chance to stop it yourself by finding Drake and staying close to him and having me there. If you don’t catch the shooter today, he’ll try again tomorrow. You know that and I know that.”

  Rod looked at each man flanking him and then turned back to Sarah. She tapped her hand on the table, frustrated by his inability to see it her way.

  “Look,” Sarah continued for her last try. “The information I receive is quite accurate. You know where the shooter will be. The chances of nailing him today are much greater than on any other day. If we do exactly as Vivian says, everything will work out.”

  Rod shook his head again in that irritating way, his forehead lowered, his eyes looking up at her.

  “Everything will work out? Like how it all worked out with Gert four years ago. You almost got yourself killed. Like how it worked out with those guys who kept you prisoner in a small shed. You were shot a couple of times. In the temple at the compound you were about to be raped and murdered, but Parkman had trailed you and walked in just at the right time. But, everything will work out, right Sarah? And I work for NASA and take routine flights to Mars to negotiate territorial rights for oil in their tar pits.” He stepped into the corridor. “No go. No lies. No deceptions. No more bullshit. Just prophecies. Do that and maybe we’ll feed you today.”

  “Rod, wait,” Sarah said, her arm extended. “You can’t seriously do this.”

  “Just did.”

  He pulled the door shut. The lock clicked.

  She righted the chair, sat on it and lowered her head to the table. “I’m sorry, Drake. I tried. I fucking tried.”

  The door burst open and Sarah jumped in her seat. She’d almost nodded off.

  “What’s going on?” she asked.

  Rod stood there with at least six men behind him.

  “We’re going,” he said. “I’ve changed my mind. Get up.”

  “Going where?” she asked.

  “The stadium in Toronto. A plane is ready to take us.”

  Her head spun in circles as she loosened her neck. “What are you saying? We may be too late already.”

  “We will be if you keep hesitating.”

  She didn’t need any more prompting. Sarah got up and ran to them.

  Rod held something out. “Here, put this on first.”

  “What’s that?”

  “A GPS tracking bracelet. Whenever you leave this facility you will wear one of these the whole time. I will never have you out of my sight again.”

  “Okay, fair enough,” Sarah nodded. “But you stay out of my way at the stadium. I do it on my terms.”

  “Agreed.”

  Sarah extended her hand and Rod secured the bracelet on her wrist. She wondered why he had the change of heart.

  “The tracking bracelet beams a signal to a van that I’ll have parked outside the stadium. Even if you manage to escape our clutches, we’ll know where you are at all times. Are we clear?”

  Sarah nodded.

  “You’re not giving me much time to organize this. There’s paperwork whenever you enter another country. While I made you wait, I got the plane ready and organized everything as much as I could.”

  All seven men, with Sarah running in the midst of the group, headed down the corridor and up two flights of cement stairs. A door led them outside where Sarah had to close her eyes at the bright sun and blink rapidly to see where to go. A waiting Lear Jet sat, its engines already running.

  “We’re landing at the Toronto Island airport,” Rod shouted to be heard over the noise of the jets. “Do you realize how hard this was on such short notice?”

  “You managed to rearrange the flight plan of a major airliner and have it land in Chicago. I’m sure a little ball game in Toronto isn’t too hard for a man of your talents. Come on, it couldn’t be that hard. They’re Canadians.”

  “What does that mean?”

  “They’re nice people up there. They’re pushovers.”

  They got to the plane’s door. Two men jumped in and waited for Sarah. She looked at Rod. “Just remember. Stay out of my way. This is my gig. Get me to the stadium. I’ll handle the rest.”

  “That’s what I’m worried about.”

  Chapter 7

  The ball game was in full swing as the black SUV pulled up to the Rogers Centre. On the quick drive ov
er to the Rogers Centre from the Island airport, Rod explained that the Toronto Police already had a group of uniformed officers posted throughout the complex. Along with that they were sending over five plainclothes officers to help in the event a shooting actually takes place. All Toronto officers had been given a picture of Sarah. They all knew to allow her full access to all areas of the building and help if she needed anything.