An Unquiet Grave (Louis Kincaid Mysteries)

Read Online An Unquiet Grave (Louis Kincaid Mysteries) by P.J. Parrish - Free Book Online Page B

Book: An Unquiet Grave (Louis Kincaid Mysteries) by P.J. Parrish Read Free Book Online
Authors: P.J. Parrish
Ads: Link
Alice was pulling on gloves when Louis heard someone call out. He paused.
    “Did you hear that?” Louis asked.
    “Hear what?”
    Louis took a step toward the trees behind E Building. The wind was coming through the branches, and he strained to hear, but there was nothing.
    Alice came up to him. “People always think they hear voices out here,” she said.
    He looked to her. “It was real.”
    They waited a few seconds, listening, but when nothing else came, they both started down the path. But the cry came again. It sounded human, but wounded. Tearful. Scared.
    “I heard that,” Alice said.
    Louis spun and started to the woods, but he stopped suddenly. A man . . . his tall form slowly taking shape as he emerged from the deep shadows. He was struggling to walk. And he was carrying something long and limp.
    Louis took another step.
    A body . . . he was carrying a body. A woman.
    As Charlie Oberon staggered closer into the light, everything came into focus. His bloody sweatshirt. A woman’s lifeless, naked body, Charlie’s long fingers pressed into her thighs. Arms, hanging limp, shreds of dark, wet leaves stuck to them. Her hair . . . long, blond, and thick with blood.
    “She won’t wake up,” Charlie cried. “She won’t wake up.”
    Louis broke into a run toward him.

CHAPTER 9
     
    Louis reached for his gun, but he didn’t have it. It was in the glove box of the Impala. He had no cuffs either. And he had no idea what he was looking at.
    Charlie was motionless now, his face slick with sweat despite the cold, and his arms were trembling under the weight of the woman.
    The woman was naked, her skin a pasty blue gray with splotches of red, small bits of leaves and twigs stuck to it. Caked blood streaked her blond hair.
    “Set her down,” Louis said.
    Charlie’s eyes filled with tears.
    Louder and sharper. “Set her down. Now.”
    Charlie looked behind Louis at Alice, his eyes begging her for some sort of help. Louis motioned Alice forward, and as she stepped up next to him he could hear her quickened breaths.
    “Talk to him, Miss Cooper,” Louis said. “But don’t get too close.”
    When she did not speak, he snuck a glance. Her hand was at her lips, her powdered skin colorless.
    “Talk to him.”
    “Charlie,” Alice managed, “put Rebecca down.”
    “She won’t wake up,” Charlie said. “She’s cold. She’s cold.”
    “Put her down, Charlie,” Alice said again.
    Her voice was stronger now, her gaze steady on Charlie. And she took a step closer, then another. Louis started to reach for her, but she moved away from him.
    “Charlie,” she said, “put Rebecca down, please. Carefully.”
    Charlie dropped to one knee, easing the woman to the grass. She fell toward Louis, arms limp, head cocked to the side.
    Bruises. On her face and shoulders. Raw, red marks around her wrists, ankles, and neck.
    Louis forced his eyes away from the woman to Charlie. He had not moved, his head hanging low, arms at his sides. He was staring at her as if she were a broken toy he knew he could not fix.
    “Charlie, back away from her,” Louis said.
    Charlie didn’t seem to hear at first. Then he took a few steps backward, then a few more, finally collapsing on the ground about fifteen feet behind the body. He drew his legs in and crossed his arms over his belly, still staring vacantly.
    Alice edged closer. Louis caught her arm. “Go call the police,” he said.
    Alice hesitated, her head jerking from Charlie to the dead woman and back to Louis. Her makeup was streaked with tear lines, and she looked scared.
    “Go call the police,” Louis repeated. “Now.”
    Alice ran across the grass. Louis eased toward Charlie. Charlie was still frozen, huddled into himself. Louis knelt near the body.
    Her eyes were open, brown glassy pools. Her neck looked crushed, the skin reddish purple, deep finger marks clearly visible. He knew she was dead, but still he held a finger to her neck, then her wrist. But there was nothing. She

Similar Books

Switching Lanes

Renea Porter

Stranger

David Bergen

Brush of Shade

Jan Harman

The Friendship

Mildred D. Taylor

Chalker, Jack L. - Well of Souls 02

Exiles At the Well of Souls

The Welcoming

Nora Roberts

Levels: The Host

Peter Emshwiller

Ruined City

Nevil Shute