Sharee Stover

Silent Night Suspect


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though agitated, wasn’t irate. “I suppose there’s the possibility that Quenten attacked her first.”

      Perhaps his boss would give Asia the benefit of the doubt. “Then it would be self-defense.” Slade inhaled and launched into his practiced speech informing Oliver about the scopolamine.

      Oliver’s pause hung between them for so long that Slade held his breath, expecting the worst. “I see. I’m not even going to ask how you obtained results that quickly.”

      Whew. “Sir, Quenten should also be tested for drugs. Something that might explain immobility? How else was he shot square in the forehead? There are seasoned troopers who lack that type of accuracy. I’m sure there’s more to this than we’re seeing. It would be easy to book her and call it a done deal, but my gut says Asia’s innocent. What if the murderer’s intention was to lure me there and take out both of us?”

      “Don’t get ahead of yourself. Listen, I’m not heartless. I feel for her. Asia’s had a full plate longer than anyone should have to. I’ll request the tox screen on Quenten. In the meantime, ensure she’s safe and keep me posted.” Oliver disconnected.

      Relief and a second wind had Slade rushing through the hospital doors. He paced in front of the elevator while his brain raced out of control. He had hope again, and that was huge. Dad always said hope was like blinders on a horse—it focused a man’s attention and eliminated his peripheral vision. Of course, he’d been talking about falling in love, not battling murder charges. If only they had a clue in her favor.

      All of this was connected to Zander. Even in death the guy hurt Asia, and he’d never deserved her. Although Slade had ample opportunities to tattle about Zander’s extramarital activities, he refused to break Asia’s heart. He’d also feared losing her friendship, or worse, having her hate him. Oh wait, I’ve accomplished that. Score one for overachievers.

      Slade punched the elevator button again, rehashing Oliver’s instructions.

      Asia deserved justice. That was his sole objective, and if they found her guilty, he would do what was required of him. But only if and/or when he was certain, beyond any reasonable doubt. He wanted facts and evidence—neither had anything to do with personal feelings. Slade had buried those long ago.

      The elevator dinged like a timer on his thoughts, and the doors opened. Slade’s heart was convinced of Asia’s innocence, and maybe—just maybe—proving it would ease the guilt that had haunted him since Zander’s death.

      He’d failed once to save a life. Never again.

      “Hello, Mrs. Stratton,” a man’s voice hissed in greeting.

      Asia jerked upright in the hospital bed, stopped short by the bindings encircling her wrists and ankles. Pain radiated up her shoulder, and something covered her mouth, muting her cry. Terror gripped her chest, a tightening vise that restricted each breath. Against common sense, she tugged harder. The burning sensation confirmed her escape efforts had torn through her skin while the restraints remained unrelenting.

      “It is useless to fight.” The baritone voice sent a shiver down Asia’s spine.

      Streetlamps outside cast dim light through the partially closed slats of the white plastic blinds. Asia blinked, willing her eyes to focus in the dark. She scanned the room in search of the intruder. How had he gotten in? Where was Slade?

      Her perusal stopped short on the form in the corner chair. The same place where Slade had perched all evening. Now a woman sat slumped there. Recognition came to Asia—the female trooper assigned outside her door. Frazer? No, Fisher.

      Asia froze, and her muffled gasp caught in the sticky substance covering her mouth. She inhaled the stench of glue, and sharp edges pulled the tender skin near her nostrils. Tape. Relieved the person wasn’t Slade, she prayed Fisher was unconscious and not dead.

      “Cooperate and this will go well for you. I do not want to hurt you.”

      Asia turned and startled at the black gorilla mask inches from her face.

      “Your husband was a stupid man. He could’ve survived if he’d given us the card. Make a smarter choice and I’ll let you live. Tell me where it is.” The man crept around the foot of her bed, sliding his fingers along the white blanket.

      Card? What was he talking about? She blinked several times. Had she heard him correctly? Asia’s mind raced. Since the intruder had disguised himself, that must mean he had no intention of killing her since she couldn’t identify him. But what card did he want?

      He stepped toward the trooper and pressed a hand against the woman’s shoulder. “It’s too bad the cops are incapable of protecting you. But that’s the kind of danger you’re up against.”

      Asia’s breaths came faster, caught in the tape. The threats sent fear oozing through her veins. She shoved against the bed with her heels, digging the plastic restraints harder into her skin. What would he do to her to get the information he wanted? Terrifying images passed through her mind. Please, God, help me!

      Fight! The word bounced to the forefront of Asia’s brain, giving her the snap-out-of-it kick she needed. Think. The creep would have to remove the tape in order for her to speak, and when he did, she’d scream with everything in her.

      Asia forced herself to inhale through her nose and commanded her racing heart to obey. A sliver of light shone beneath the closed door. Would anyone hear her? Where are you, Slade? She sensed impending doom, but annoyance pricked at the corners of her mind, providing momentary relief from her fear. He’d let her down again and proved, once more, Slade Jackson could not be counted upon.

      The gorilla-masked man returned to Asia’s side. “Are you ready to talk?”

      He ran a finger along her cheek, jolting her back to the present. The quick movement perpetuated the agony in her shoulder, coordinating a throbbing rhythm with her heartbeat. She groaned.

      The man tsked. “Careful. Don’t hurt yourself.”

      Darkness disguised the intruder, and only his heavy breathing reverberated beside her. Sweat beaded on her forehead, trickling down her face.

      The man leaned closer, his dark eyes unblinking behind the gorilla mask’s eye holes. “I’m making a good-faith effort by keeping my identity hidden. Once I remove the tape, you’ll have one chance to return the favor.” His voice was muffled by the mask. “If you scream, I’ll kill you. I only want the card, Mrs. Stratton. Do we understand each other?”

      Fury and fear warred within Asia, and she stubbornly refused to break away from his gaze. She’d call his bluff because the man wanted something more than he wanted her dead; otherwise he’d have killed her while she slept. That was her assurance. At least she prayed that was true. Her gaze drifted to the trooper slumped in the chair as confirmation. Please let her be alive.

      Asia returned her eyes to the masked man. She had no clue about this card he referred to, but he seemed convinced she possessed it. She nodded and her cooperative gesture had the assailant patting her head like a dog. “Good girl.”

      He moved to the right, remaining in the shadows.

      She flattened her hand under the blanket, ignoring the burn in her injured shoulder and allowing her fingers to roam.

      She grazed an object. He hadn’t taken the bed’s remote control! Asia slid her palm over the box, keeping her body as still as possible. There were several buttons. Which would call the nurse? If she pressed the wrong switch, it would send her bed’s foot or head into motion and eliminate any chance for help. Two toggles. Those must move the bed. Fingering the device, she searched for a single button and paused.

      “Remember, I will give you only one opportunity to tell me where the card is.” He returned to her side and flipped open a switchblade, then pressed the cold steel along her neck.

      Asia