Read Captured Again Online

Authors: L.L. Akers

Tags: #cop romance, #Captured Again, #Romantic Suspense, #Mystery & Suspense, #Contemporary, #Romance, #Let Me Go, #New Adult & College, #Women's Fiction, #Suspense, #new adult, #Literature & Fiction

Captured Again (4 page)

BOOK: Captured Again
12.32Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Olivia didn’t give her a chance to answer. She walked out of the bedroom and into the kitchen, deciding to attack the mound of dirty dishes that Gabby had let stack up.

Geesh, Gabby,
Olivia thought to herself,
looks like you’ve been living on two-minute food... No wonder you’re so thin. One minute to open and put in a bowl, one minute to heat.
There were dozens of bowls and plates with remnants of canned Spaghetti-O’s and ravioli... and soup. It was unlike Gabby to even have a dirty dish; her home was usually immaculate.
It looks like I got here just in time. If you’re letting the house go, it won’t be long before you follow.

T
wenty minutes later, Gabby came into the kitchen with a towel wrapped around her hair. Although she was now at least five or ten pounds underweight, she looked shiny and new and smelled fresh and clean.

“Hey, you didn’t have to do that,” she said as she noticed the absence of the mess.

Olivia folded the dish towel, hanging it over the cabinet door to dry. “I know I didn’t have to. I wanted to. Looks like you could use a little help catching up around here. Let me warm up our tea.”

She poked at the on button on the microwave, leaning against the counter to wait while Gabby looked around the clean kitchen, then quickly grabbed a handful of paper towels and Windex and took a swipe at the water splatters on the window in front of the sink.

Olivia had splashed the window while washing the dishes. Gabby rubbed hard at the splatters, embarrassed that Olivia had cleaned up her messy kitchen and trying to find anything left undone. Gabby knew she hadn’t thanked her yet, but the words stuck to her tongue and refused to come out.
Suck it up, Gabby. You’d do the same if you found Olivia in a mess at her place. Put your pride aside,
she thought to herself. She tossed the wad of paper towels in the trash and turned around, leaning against the counter facing Olivia.

“So Emma’s drinking again?” Gabby asked, trying to divert the subject to their little sister.
She’s in a bigger mess than I am.

“Yeah. Sounds like it... but I’ll deal with her in the morning. They said there’s nothing we can do until then anyway. You can have a pass on this one if you’ll talk to me tonight.” Olivia negotiated.

The microwave dinged and Olivia opened it, handing Gabby one cup and carefully taking the other to the living room, where Gabby followed her. Gabby saw her glance at the couch, covered in a nest of throws and pillows haphazardly thrown all over, with her stack of books teetering beside it on the floor. She stepped past the mess and took the only other chair in the living room.

Gabby set her tea on the table between her and Olivia and plopped down on top of the throws, pulling one over her legs before picking her tea back up and blowing away the tendrils of steam. She peeked at Olivia over the top of her cup, studying her.
Maybe I can get away with just taking a shower and sharing tea if I can keep her talking about Emma. Then I can climb back into bed,
Gabby thought.

Olivia cleared her throat and shook her head. “Gabby, I know that look, and I know what you’re thinking... but there’s no getting around it this time, sister. Spit it out. What’s holding you back?”

Gabby rolled her eyes and took another sip of her tea, then stared straight ahead trying to sort out her thoughts.
Why is this so hard to say? That night should be easy to describe,
Gabby thought.
It isn’t like I don’t replay it in my mind at least a dozen times a day.
She swallowed and cleared her throat and then tried to begin. The words stuck again. She took in a deep breath, looking up at the ceiling, and slowly let it out.

She made eye contact with Olivia again, staring without blinking. “Okay, Olivia, but this stays between us. Promise?”

Olivia gave a nod. That was enough for them both.

“The night of the accident...” Gabby began. “That night, I told Jake everything about René, all the missing pieces. He didn’t ask me—and he never pushed me to tell him—but until then, all I’d really told him was about how it first happened... and then about the last time it happened. So after freaking out at the restaurant, I needed him to know. I wanted him to understand how I could be so manipulated and scared that I let it go on six months and why I’m still so paranoid and afraid, even though it’s over.”

Gabby paused. Olivia sat quietly, blowing and sipping her own tea. Gabby knew she was trying not to interrupt. She also knew Olivia wanted to know about that night, and Gabby wanted to tell it, get it off her chest. Why not to Olivia? They were close, best friends who could talk about anything—had always talked about everything—since they were old enough to talk. But so far, since the accident, she’d been unable to tell Olivia, or anyone, what really happened. Olivia deserved to know. She’d put in enough time babysitting Gabby since then. It was only fair.

She took another deep breath and began. “We’d planned our regular date night, dinner and a movie. But Jake wanted to go to the city for a change. He unintentionally chose a restaurant near my old job, the same job where René used to work. I didn’t mention it, and I tried not to think about it. I thought I’d put it behind me. I’d been doing good for so long, Olivia. But at the restaurant, I thought I saw him—René.”

Gabby felt a chill run down her spine, remembering her shocked fear from that night. She wrapped her fingers tighter around her warm cup.

“The waiter brought out our entrée and set Jake’s on the table. Then he reached to put mine down, and I thought I caught sight of René a few tables behind the waiter, staring dead at me. I panicked and jumped up, knocking the food out of the waiter’s hand, and I ran.”

Gabby shook her head. “It was a disaster. I could hear the plate hitting the table, glass breaking—people gasping out loud—but I kept running. I just left Jake sitting there alone and probably embarrassed to death. He paid for the meal and then came outside to find me. I didn’t have the keys so I couldn’t get in the car.”

Gabby looked at her sister.
She probably thinks I’m crazy,
she thought. “I was so scared, Olivia. I just knew it was René. I acted like a complete idiot. Jake walked all around calling out for me, and when he finally got close enough, I answered him. He found me hiding behind the dumpster on the side of the building, shaking and sniveling like a baby.”

Gabby paused again and took a shuddering breath. She unwrapped her wet hair, taking a few long moments to furiously finger-comb through it—pulling out knots—as if she were pulling on the tangles of the bad memory. She balled up the towel, hugging it to herself as she began again.

“Jake was almost as upset as I was to see me that way again. I wouldn’t leave the dumpster. I refused to walk to the car. I was convinced it was René, and I didn’t want him to see what kind of car we got in. Jake didn’t know if it was or wasn’t him; he hadn’t seen him at all. So he waited there with me, all dressed up, hiding behind that stinky trash for almost an hour, holding me while I blubbered and sniveled that René was following us, that it was all going to start over again. I was convinced he was going to get me and take me to that damn wooden box in his cabin he’d threatened me with—or hurt Jake. I was a mess.”

Gabby took another deep breath and slowly blew it out through her lips, settling her nerves a little.

“Jake kept trying to reason with me, so then I got angry. I thought he wasn’t taking me seriously, that he thought I was being melodramatic. I kept peeking around the dumpster to see who was leaving every time I heard something. Finally, the man I thought was René came out, but I’m still not sure it was him.”

Olivia looked shocked. “Oh, Gabby. That’s horrible. I’m so sorry.”

Gabby shook her head, thinking if Olivia thought that was bad...

“That’s not the worst of it. There’s more. We finally got in the car—we still hadn’t eaten—and Jake said we’d go somewhere else. I refused, saying I just wanted to go home. He said he couldn’t let me go back to hiding. That I needed to accept it was over and that René wasn’t looking for me. He got onto the interstate and started driving, and I started talking...”

Gabby’s voice faltered as she realized she was about to tell Olivia things she’d only said out loud once before, and that had ended tragically. She took another long drink of her tea to wet her dry throat.

“Olivia, I told Jake details I’ve never said out loud... even in group. I told him about how I continued to come to work. I was so confused and afraid not to... because of the book he threatened me with,
The Girl in the Box.
Jake knew about the book. He’d found it after that night in the hospital and hid it from me. But he never read it. I explained to him how that girls’ captor tortured her into submission with live spiders thrown into her box... and René had mirrored the threat in his own way, knowing I had probably read the book the weekend before, by throwing a huge live spider on my desk as he walked by my office.”

Gabby’s entire body shuddered. “You
know
how afraid of spiders I am, Olivia. René did too. I’d always freaked out when anyone found a spider at the office.
Everybody
there knew I was terrified of spiders.

“It was only a few days later he got the opportunity to corner me again, this time in the back of the stock room while the guys were out to lunch. No one could hear me back there. He sent me an instant message from the shipping guy’s computer, asking me to come back there for a moment to answer a question. When I walked back to the warehouse, it was René. He asked me how I liked the spider. I tried to get away from him, but he was too strong...” Gabby’s voice trailed off as she stared into space, and a silent tear raced down her face, dripping off in escape.

“The sick bastard threatened me constantly—threatened to burn my face or burn all my hair off... blind me... He told me if I didn’t continue to come to work and keep our secret, he would do all sorts of horrible things. At that point I was numb, and I think he knew he was pushing me so far I didn’t care about myself anymore, so then he started threatening to do things to Jake. I was more scared for Jake than I was myself. He was like a Jekyll/Hyde. He said he’d mail Jake a graphic letter about having an affair with his wife, twist it to make it sound like I was willing and wanted it. I believed he’d do it... and I’m ashamed to say I was worried that Jake would believe him. Or worse, he said he’d arrange an accident for Jake or make him disappear. Olivia, this man was truly a sociopath, maybe even a psychopath. He was a monster, and I truly believed he would do everything he said.”

Gabby finished her tea and uncovered her legs. She knew Olivia could see she was working up a sudden sweat, reliving the night of Jake’s death, but she silently thanked Olivia for keeping quiet, giving her the space to talk it out.

“So I explained all this to Jake... why I kept going to work. I was too scared not to. But I tried other ways to keep him away from me or to make him lose interest. I really did. I started wearing dress slacks every day—never skirts. He still managed. I quit bathing, thinking I would disgust him. He didn’t care. He said if I was in the box I wouldn’t smell too clean anyway. I tried to get out of it, to make it stop before Jake found out and I lost him forever. I tried to find a way out that would make
him
choose to stop, to not want
me
... but he was a disgusting, vile man.

“I even scheduled that surgery on my feet that I really didn’t have to have—at least not right away. I thought if I asked for time off, instead of quitting or telling, that I could get six weeks away from René, and I could figure something out during that time. My medical leave was approved, but he didn’t leave me alone. Three weeks after the surgery, he came to the house. He was standing right there on the front porch with a bunch of flowers. Jake was at work. He beat on the door and threatened to stay there until Jake came home and tell Jake we were having an affair if I didn’t let him in. I didn’t know what to do. I let him in. I thought he wouldn’t do anything to me in that condition. But I was wrong. He wouldn’t stay away. He forced himself on me here... on this floor, Olivia. It’s not like I could’ve run away from him. He was there just to remind me he knew where I lived. And that if I didn’t come back to work after my medical leave, he’d just come get me—or Jake—so I went back.”

Gabby took in another deep breath and held it a moment and then let it out. “That’s why I tried to kill myself.”

Olivia raised her eyebrow, her forehead crinkling together, making three long worry lines. Gabby wondered if her forehead looked just like Olivia’s right now. She wished she could just think the rest of the story from her mind across the lines on her face and have Olivia read it across her head; the rest would be the hardest to say aloud.

“I told Jake all of this while he drove. He had no idea before then that René had ever been to our house. I kept talking and crying, and crying and talking, while Jake drove on, looking straight ahead. I was rambling on about all the horrible things René had done and all the terrifying threats he had made against Jake and me, and I didn’t shut up. I probably gave him too many details. You know how I get. Once I start, I just keep on talking and talking and talking... I was finally getting it all out. I didn’t ever pause, and I was too ashamed to look at him while talking about it. I was so full of that shame and needed to get it out, share it with Jake, so there was nothing left unsaid between us. If I had only looked at him... before it was too late.”

BOOK: Captured Again
12.32Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Broken Bear by Demonico, Gabrielle
Swingin' in the Rain by Eileen Davidson
Tortuga by Rudolfo Anaya
Death in Autumn by Magdalen Nabb
Memoria del fuego II by Eduardo Galeano
Forever Kiss by Dawn Michelle
Edward Is Only a Fish by Alan Sincic
Garrett's Choice by A.J. Jarrett