Read Entanglements Online

Authors: P R Mason

Entanglements (13 page)

“Last night. She was on a date with Billy Broadrick.” I knew my face had the tendency to show my emotions. Let’s just say I had the anti-poker face. So I needed to keep my answers truthful.

“Your mother said Juliette told her she’d be studying with a friend.”

I shrugged my shoulders. “Juliette and I don’t really hang together.”

“How about Franky Abbott?"

“I do hang with Franky. He’s a friend.”

The detective ground his teeth in frustration. “I meant do you know where he is?”

“Omigod. Franky is missing too?”

“Yes.” The detective’s eyes narrowed and he leaned forward in his chair. “Billy Broadrick and Quinn O’Neil also.”

“Billy and Quinn?” My eyes widened in surprise as I processed their disappearance. The two, in freak out mode, were probably hiding somewhere. “Do you think they're all together?”

“Do you?”

“I doubt it,” I scoffed. “Franky hates Billy and Quinn. They bully him quite a bit.”

“A couple of Mr. Broadrick’s friends were picked up the night before last for trespassing at the old hospital. They said you were there too.”

“I’m not surprised,” I said.

The detective’s eyes gleamed.

“Billy’s friends would say anything to get me in trouble,” I continued.

The gleam left his eyes.

“Did they say Billy was there?” I asked.

“No, but—”

“Isn’t it more likely their friend was there with them than someone they don’t like?” I interrupted the detective.

“Are you saying you weren’t there?” the detective asked.

“Are you trying to get me to incriminate myself for trespassing?” I wondered aloud. “Maybe I need a lawyer so I can ask him.”

The detective’s hand gripped his pen so tightly I thought it might break. "You are free to have an attorney, Miss Taylor."

"I do want to help find Juliette," I said, happy that I'd diverted his questions.

 
“Do you know anyone who would want to hurt Juliette or any of the others?”

“Not really.”

“How about these men. Do you recognize either of them?” The detective removed sketches from his file folder. Unfortunately, I did recognize them. One sketch resembled the big hairy monster man and one the aristocratic horseman.

Mom peered over my shoulder at the sketches and quickly drew in a breath.

“They don’t look like men,” I said. “They look like something out of a monster movie. What do they have to do with Juliette and the others?”

“Have you ever seen them before?”

I half nodded and half shook my head. “If I had I would remember it, don’t you think?”

“All right. You can go.” He gathered the sketches back into the file. “If you think of anything that might help us find Juliette or the others call me.” He handed me a card with his name and a phone number on it.

“Please,” I said with all the urgency I felt. “What do these two have to do with Juliette and Franky?”

The detective glanced from me to Mom. He seemed to consider for a moment before speaking.

“Last night two vagrants were killed by these men. We got these sketches from witness accounts. The —um —manner of the deaths indicate the perpetrators are extremely mentally disturbed individuals. Naturally, we are concerned about the missing teens and whether they could be undiscovered victims.”

“Manner of deaths?” I asked.

He was silent for a moment then said, “You’ll hear about it on the news anyway.” He stared straight into my eyes. “The victims looked like they’d been torn apart by animals.”

 

* * * * *

 

“Where do you think you’re going, Kizzy?” Mom asked as I put my hand on the knob of the front door of our house late that afternoon.

“I’m going with Rom.” Actually, I had no plans to see Rom but she wouldn’t exactly be on board with the idea that I was going to try to convince a whacko gun-toting historian to help me find Juliette and Franky.

“I thought you two had a fight.”

I shrugged. “You know how these things are. We made up.”

“I’m glad but I don’t want you to go out tonight, honey,” she said. “I can’t worry about you too.” Her eyes teared and her face crumbled into a sob.

“Rom is going to help me look for Juliette and Franky.” Lord where had I come up with that?

“Oh no.” She shook her head. “I don’t want you running into those killers.”

Walking her into the living room I sat with her on the sofa. It cut me up that she was so upset.

“Don’t worry, Mom.” I put my arm around her shoulders and she leaned into me. “The police don’t think those weird guys have anything to do with Juliette.”

She pulled away and blinked at me.

“If they did they’d have everybody in the city doing some kind of grid search,” I explained.

Mom nodded. “The detective said their primary theory is that Juliette ran off somewhere with Billy and since they're both over sixteen..."

“See,” I said with false cheer. “They're thinking she’ll come home any minute.”

"I don’t think the cops are getting serious enough.” Mom's eyes welled and she sniffed. “I’ve called everyone I can think of. I even drove around earlier but I don’t really know where she hangs out.”

 
“Rom’s got a car. We’ll hit the hangouts.” I placed a reassuring hand on her shoulder.

Mom shook her head. “No. Those killers are still out there.”

“We’re going to be in a car,” I said. “Besides, have you seen Rom? He’ll protect me.”

A knock on the door startled us.

“Maybe that’s her.” Mom jumped up and ran to the door.

She swung it open and Rom stood on the front porch.

“Oh come in, dear. Kizzy’s in the living room.”

Rom stepped over the threshold with a smirky smile and walked toward me.

I leaped to my feet and hurried to his side, not wanting him to say anything that would reveal my lies.

“I’m ready to go.” I linked my arm through his and turned him around before proceeding back to the door.

“Was a date already planned?” he asked in a whisper. “This plan seems to have eluded my notice." He arched an eyebrow and smirked again.

“Kizzy, no,” Mom said. “I meant it. You can’t go out. I’d be too worried.”

“There is no need." Rom turned a brilliant smile on Mom. "I will attend her presence every moment.” Charm oozed from his every pore. “I vow she will come to no harm while I have breath.”

“We’ll just be driving around in his car, Mom. If we see anybody weird, we’ll drive away and call the police.”

Mom sized Rom up for a few seconds. “All right." She sighed. "I’m trusting you with my baby. Don’t let me down.”

An indecipherable expression crossed Rom’s face before he nodded.

Mom turned to me. “But ten p.m. curfew. Not a minute later."

“K,” I said with a smile and kissed her cheek. I scooted us out of there before she could change her mind.

Rom walked me to the passenger door of his car and held it open.

“You don’t have to drive me,” I said, hesitating. “That was just an excuse to tell my mom so she’d let me out of the house.”

“I came to you because your presence is my desire.” He swept a hand toward the open car.

I tried to hide my pleased smile as I got in. But before he could close the door, Petra’s Buick came screeching to a halt beside us. The window lowered.

“Hey, where you two going?” Chase asked through the passenger window.

“And can we come along?” Senji requested from the backseat.

“Yeah.” Petra leaned over Chase to yell out the passenger window. “We wanna come.”

The bad news was the three of them would be a buffer between Rom and me. The good news was the three of them would be a buffer between Rom and me.

“Whether there is room is uncertain,” Rom commented.

“Sure. Get in.” I nodded. “You three can cram into the back right?”

“As long as I don’t have to sit on Senji’s lap,” Chase jumped out of the Buick.

“Don’t worry, sweetie. I’ll sit on your lap,” Petra said.

Judging by the scowl on his face, Rom wasn’t exactly thrilled about the company. He wasn’t any happier about going to Harold Anderson’s house, but he did it anyway.

The historian’s old farmhouse didn’t appear any more inviting at dusk. The five of us mounted the stairs and the dogs I’d heard earlier barked again. This time when I knocked, Anderson opened the door almost immediately. I would have considered this progress except he stood there holding a revolver.

“Kizzy Taylor,” the historian greeted me. “Born October 26, 1995. You have a 3.2 GPA. Mother is Sarah Taylor now Moreno.”

I’d left this guy my name and telephone number. Apparently, he’d been doing a little homework.

“You had a brother named Adam. Your father is Stephen Taylor now in jail awaiting trial for—“

I held up a hand to ward off his words. “That’s enough,” I said.

 
He turned his gaze on Senji.

“And you, Senji Matsuki, were born on October 11,1995. Your dog’s name is Pokemon and you have a 3.9 GPA.—”

“Woohoo! 3.9? Way to go, bro.” Chase gave him a high five.

“My father doesn’t think it’s so hot,” Senji muttered

“What?” Petra said. “It’s practically perfect.”

“Hello? Japanese,” Senji drawled. “He wants perfect not practically.”

“Are we gonna keep talking about this guy’s GPA?” Anderson asked. “Don’t we have better things to talk about?”

“You’re the one who started it,” I retorted “What’s the point?”

“The point is I know about you,” he said to me. "And I know about you, and you, and you,” he said pointedly to Senji, then Petra, then Chase. “You don’t want to mess with me.”

“What did you find out about me?” Petra clapped her hands while giving an eager hop. “Am I adopted? That would explain why I’m treated like Cinderella BP at home.”

“BP?” Anderson's brows converged in confusion.

“Before Prince.”

“You’re not adopted,” Anderson replied.

“This man can provide us no assistance,” Rom said with disgust. “This exercise has the ridiculous about it.”

Anderson walked onto the porch and stood directly in front of Rom. “I don’t know about you, though.” He examined Rom from head to foot. “Why don’t I know about you?”

“Listen. We’re here because we need help with some monsters. Not to indulge in some kind of paranoia fest. Can you help us or not?”

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