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Stabbed

DANGEROUS PLANS | Chapter 18 | ANOTHER VICTIM | MELISSA’S TURN | MISSING | DAVE IS GUILTY AGAIN | AN INTRUDER | ANOTHER INTRUDER | THE REAL KILLER | LONG RED HAIR |


Erica yawned loudly as she pulled back the bedcovers. She glanced at the clock beside her bed.

I’m so tired. It’s so late, she thought. I’ll never be able to get up in time for school tomorrow.

Straightening the hem of her nightshirt, she eased herself into bed. The sheets felt cool. She knew she’d be able to fall asleep quickly.

She had nearly drifted off when the crackling of the intercom on the wall startled her awake. She sat up, immediately alert.

“Erica? Erica?” Rachel’s voice broke through the late-night silence.

Rachel sounds wide awake, Erica thought.

What is she doing up at this hour?

“Erica, please come brush my hair.”

Doesn’t she have any idea how late it is? Erica wondered, rolling her eyes in exasperation.

No, of course she doesn’t.

But why is she awake?

“Erica, please come brush my hair,” Rachel repeated.

Erica groaned and climbed to her feet. “I’m coming, Rachel,” she called into the intercom.

Yawning, she wearily made her way down the narrow hall to Rachel’s room. Rachel was sitting up in bed, the bedside lamp on. She smiled as Erica entered. The soft light made Rachel’s hair gleam.

“Brush out my hair?” Rachel asked.

“Rachel, it’s so late,” Erica moaned, yawning into her hand.

“I’m not sleepy,” Rachel replied.

“But I am,” Erica protested.

“Brush my hair. Just for a short while.”

Erica moaned again, but picked up the hairbrush and climbed onto the bed on her knees beside Rachel. “Why aren’t you sleepy?” she asked as she started to brush with long, slow strokes.

“I’m just not,” Rachel replied brightly. “I’m wide awake.”

“You may be wide awake now, but you’re going to be exhausted tomorrow,” Erica said wearily. She was so tired, it took a supreme effort to raise the hairbrush to Rachel’s hair.

The front doorbell rang.

“Huh?” Erica cried out in surprise, dropping the brush.

“More,” Rachel urged. “Brush some more.”

“I can’t. I’ll be right back,” Erica said, climbing off the bed. “There’s someone at the door.”

“Hurry back,” Rachel instructed.

Erica’s mother, wrapping a heavy wool sweater around her nightgown, was already at the front door when Erica got downstairs. “Who can it be at this hour?” she asked, hesitating with her hand on the doorknob.

Erica shrugged. “Rachel is awake,” she told her mother. “Strange night, huh?”

“Oh,” Mrs. McClain uttered a soft cry of surprise as she pulled the door open and saw the two police officers.

“Mrs. McClain?” the older, heavyset one asked, narrowing his eyes to peer into the entryway.

“Yes?” Mrs. McClain replied, her expression changing from surprise to fear. She pulled the sweater tighter around her shoulders.

“We need to speak to your daughter,” he said.

“She’s right here,” Mrs. McClain said, flashing Erica a bewildered glance. She opened the glass storm door to allow the men to enter.

They ducked their heads as they came into the entryway even though the ceiling was high. “Are you Rachel McClain?” the older officer asked Erica.

“Huh? No,” Erica replied, surprised. “Rachel is my sister.” She motioned up the stairs.

“We need to talk to your sister Rachel,” the officer said softly, raising his eyes to the stairway.

“But why?” Mrs. McClain demanded, pushing back a strand of hair that had fallen over her forehead.

“Well...” The officer hesitated and glanced at his partner. The younger man cleared his throat but didn’t say anything. “Well,” the older one started again, “we need to talk to Rachel in connection with the death this evening of a young man named”—he checked his notepad—“Dave Kinley.”

“Dave?” Erica cried. “Dead? How? I don’t believe it!” She covered her face with her hands and slumped down to sit on the bottom step.

“Are you okay, miss?” the younger officer asked, bending over her.

“Dave?” Erica cried. “Dave is dead?”

“I’m sorry,” the older man said softly. “I didn’t mean to shock you. I didn’t know how else to tell you.”

“How awful,” Mrs. McClain said, shaking her head, her voice a hushed whisper. “How awful.”

Slumped on the bottom stair, Erica’s hands remained over her face. “How?” she asked weakly. “What happened?”

“We found him across the street,” the policeman offered. “In the Davises’ driveway. Beside the front porch.” He glanced at his pad. “The victim was stabbed to death. Very recently, we think. Our investigators are on their way.”

“Stabbed?” Erica let out a terrified cry. She lowered her hands. Her face was bright red. “Stabbed? Just like my sister Josie? Just like me?”

Her mother leaned over and placed both hands comfortingly on her shoulders.

“May we talk to your daughter Rachel?” the younger officer, shifting his weight uncomfortably, asked Mrs. McClain.

“Rachel? Why Rachel?” Mrs. McClain demanded, holding on to Erica, who was trembling and shaking her head.

“Someone fitting her description was observed fleeing the Davises’ yard.”

“That’s impossible!” Erica cried.

Mrs. McClain’s expression hardened. She clenched her jaw. “You’ve made a mistake,” she said firmly. “My daughter could not have been the one.”

“We need to talk to her for just a minute,” the officer said, returning Mrs. McClain’s stare.

“My daughter was in an accident,” Mrs. McClain told them, her voice quivering. “Her brain was—damaged. She cannot leave the house by herself. She must always be watched.”

“I’m sorry to insist,” the older officer said softly. “But we have to talk to Rachel. We’ll keep it very brief. Could you wake her for us?”

“She’s awake,” Erica said, climbing to her feet.

“You’re wasting your time,” Mrs. McClain insisted. “Rachel was not out of this house. Rachel couldn’t stab anyone.”

“I’m sure it’s a misunderstanding,” the man said.

Erica started up the stairs, followed by her mother, followed by the two officers. The stairs creaked noisily under all the weight.

Rachel was still sitting up in her bed, the covers up to her waist, her red hair falling softly against the headboard. “Hi,” she said brightly as the officers stepped into the room.

“This is my daughter Rachel,” Mrs. McClain told them, hurrying to Rachel’s side and putting a hand on her slender shoulder.

“My sister has to be watched,” Erica said, walking to the opposite side of the bed. “She cannot go out by herself.”

“Yes, I can!” Rachel protested, smiling at the two police. “I go out all the time!”


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Chapter 27| ANOTHER BROKEN HEART

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