Joan Boswell

Hollis Grant Mysteries 4-Book Bundle


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zeroing in—she’s a stickler for accounting. Six months ago, when he warned me that soon, of course he didn’t say how soon, the rate would increase because every organization had to provide for inflation, I decided to kill him.”

      He bent over, and his fingers groped for her elbows.

      “That’s it. Stand up. We’re going downstairs.” His hands gripped her arms, and he grunted when he tried to hoist her to her feet.

      A flashback to her godson, Mike, as a toddler, and her attempts to dress him when he lay limp. Pushing his feet into his boots had been like trying to force cooked spaghetti to stand up. She willed her limbs to become as unresisting as a floppy doll’s.

      Knox’s fingers dug into her arms while he struggled to pull her to her feet. He shook and then dropped her. “What are you doing? Get up. When I say get up, you get up.”

      The lifting and shaking had released more of the chenille’s dust. She choked, breathed dust, and a single cough evolved into a spasm of gasping. Bile filled her mouth. She breathed through her nose, pretending to be a jellyfish stranded above the high tide mark and unable to move.

      Again Knox tried to stand her up.

      A newsreel image of Gandhi speaking about passive resistance played itself on her mind screen. She willed herself to remain as unresponsive as a bundle of laundry.

      “Hollis, if you don’t stand up, I’m going to haul you down those stairs like a sack of potatoes.”

      Remaining silent, she sensed Knox’s indecision. He wanted her to cooperate.

      She directed her thoughts first to the big toe on her right foot and visualized it relaxing. One by one she considered each toe then moved on, draining the tension from her right foot. Knox broke her concentration by stomping across the room.

      To find out what he was doing, she raised her head, but he was out of her line of vision. A squeak, an unidentifiable sound, a rattle, which sounded like hangers moving together, was followed by a thump like a door shutting.

      Knox moved toward her head. What was he going to do? Maybe he had a knife: he’d boasted about his expertise with knives. Her resolve to be brave faltered, and her body tensed as she anticipated pain.

      He squatted, bent over, hooked both hands under her body and turned her towards him. When he had her rolled on her side, he stuffed something under her, flipped her the other way onto what must be a quilt or a rug. He let her flop, lifted the sides of her wrap and tied it around her. Then he walked to her feet, grabbed the quilt with both hands and hauled her across the room.

      While her body slid along the floor, the tension on her left arm and shoulder, caught behind her when he first enveloped her in the bedspread, increased each time he yanked on the wrap. Pain seared with every jolt and jounce.

      Although she bit her lower lip until her mouth filled with blood, she couldn’t stifle her screams.

      Knox grabbed a handful of her hair, jerked her head forward and retied the gag.

      Her screams became moans.

      Knox grunted and mumbled. The prospect of hurtling down three flights of stairs horrified her.

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      Following the interview with Staynor, Rhona drove faster than she should have and hurried through the police building to her office where, before she even sat down, she punched in Mary Beth Cardwell’s phone number.

      “Ms Cardwell?”

      “Hang on. She just left. I’ll try to catch her.”

      Rhona crossed her fingers even as she laughed at herself for performing this childish guarantee of good luck.

      “Mary Beth Cardwell here.”

      “It’s Detective Simpson. I won’t keep you a minute—I’m aware you’re not allowed to tell me the name of the person in the file we discussed, and I am obtaining a warrant to have the info released, but the situation here has become critical—the killer may strike again. If I mention a name, could you tell me whether or not to keep searching?”

      “My God—another murder. I want to help. I feel guilty. But, actually I’d have to run it past my boss and she’s left for the day.”

      “It’s very important.”

      Silence. “I’m sorry.” Ms Cardwell’s voice was faint and apologetic. “Unless you send a warrant compelling me to tell you, I have to clear it with my boss. Could you call first thing in the morning, or would you rather I phoned you?”

      “I’ll have the warrant. Call me.” Rhona heard the anger in her voice and told herself to chill out—the poor woman was obeying orders.

      Rhona debated whether she should obtain the okay right away, but, if it was Staynor, she didn’t think he’d act tonight. She’d leave it until tomorrow. She was glad she’d ordered overnight surveillance on Hollis Grant’s house. She opened another file.

      At seven-fifteen, well down in the mound of paper, she unearthed Featherstone’s memo with a breakdown of statistics on the runners: names, addresses, times, and probable positions at the starting line. Featherstone had attached a memo: “We confirmed the last address and name today. Number 1457 was listed as Merrick Rideau, and the address was 922 Roxborough Avenue. That’s a vacant apartment owned by Linda Porter, who said no person by that name lived there, but suggested it might have been one of the university students who rented the place during the school year. It’s a fishy name—Merrick is the name of a town on the Rideau river.”

      The name “Porter” jolted Rhona. Linda Porter was the wife of Knox Porter, the organizer of the St Mark’s memorial refugee fund and a man who, according to Hollis Grant, had disliked Paul Robertson. Her alarm level rose. It must be the same apartment where Hollis had gone to meet Knox Porter.

      Seven fifteen—Hollis was there now.

      Last night, someone had murdered Sally Staynor. If Knox Porter had killed Sally, did he intend to silence Hollis as well?

      Rhona reached into her drawer for her service revolver and buckled her holster on her hip. She called the duty officer and requested backup. “No sirens, It may be a false alarm. If it isn’t, I don’t want him to realize we’re on to him. Have two police cars wait down the street.”

      She regretted it had taken her so long to unearth Featherstone’s report. She berated himself for assuming that because Porter had attended church the Sunday morning of the murder, he hadn’t been at the marathon. God, she hoped she was wrong—hoped this was a false lead, hoped her failure to investigate Porter hadn’t placed Hollis in mortal danger.

      Twenty

      Knox, grunting and swearing, dragged Hollis across the room. He stopped at the top of the stairs. Teetering on the brink with the prospect of a fall, she tensed. The thought of the pummelling her body would endure made her feel like a helpless terrified boater swept along in the Niagara River, aware that the increasing roar of Niagara Falls heralded the awesome plunge of water and a cataclysmic death.

      Knox dropped her winding sheet, walked to her head, placed both hands on her shoulders and shoved.

      She plunged over the edge. Her body, which she tried to keep limp, and her head, which she attempted to protect from the worst of the skull crushing thuds, registered everything.

      Stair followed stair. The arm twisted behind her wrenched farther back with each jarring crash.

      Hollis tasted bile, blood and the dryness of fear. She lost count of the number of steps she thudded down before the flight ended.

      Knox, the model Christian, swore steadily as he hauled her along the second floor hall to the next set of stairs. After a brief respite, he pushed and she crashed step by pain wracked step until she stopped halfway down, wedged crosswise in the stairwell. Knox pushed from