Too Close to Home

Read Online Too Close to Home by Linwood Barclay - Free Book Online Page A

Book: Too Close to Home by Linwood Barclay Read Free Book Online
Authors: Linwood Barclay
Tags: Fiction, Suspense, Thrillers
Ads: Link
yet.”
    I threw back the covers and, wearing only a pair of dark blue boxers, slipped out the bedroom door. “Be careful!” Ellen whispered.
    I whispered back, “Call the police.” If by some chance we were being visited by the same folks who’d gone to the Langleys’ the night before—my theories of the afternoon seemed pretty pitiful all of a sudden—the time to call for help was now, not later. I didn’t know what had happened to the cruiser up by the highway, whether it was still posted out there or not, and there was no way to tell, standing outside our bedroom door in the dark of night.
    As I went by Derek’s door I noticed it was closed, which suggested to me he was in there, asleep, although Derek didn’t exactly keep us posted as to his comings and goings. I went down the stairs, feeling naked not so much because I was in nothing but a pair of shorts, but because I had nothing in my hands. We don’t keep guns in the house, but right about then I’d have been happy for one. I’d have settled for a baseball bat, but we didn’t have one of those either, at least not anyplace handy. Down in the basement, maybe, tucked away behind the furnace. Perhaps, if I could make it to the kitchen without running into anyone first, I could arm myself with a cast-iron frying pan, or the fire extinguisher that hung on the wall right next to the stove. You wouldn’t want to get hit in the head with that sucker.
    As I reached the first floor I could hear Ellen on the phone upstairs, whispering urgently. Across the living room I spotted a poker hanging among the tools next to the fireplace. That would do.
    I crept over toward it, delicately slipping the pointed iron bar out of its holder. I liked the heft of it in my hand and felt, while not relieved, at least slightly better prepared.
    I moved through the darkness into the kitchen, and my eyes went to the deadbolt latch. It was in the vertical position, unlocked. There was no way Ellen had forgotten to lock that door. If she checked it once, she checked it three times.
    Was someone in the house? Or had someone already been here and gone back out?
    I froze, held my breath, listening for anything. I thought I could hear some murmuring, voices, but not inside the house.
    Outside, on the deck beyond the back kitchen door.
    I moved up to it, put my hand around the knob ever so carefully, twisted it silently to the left until I could turn it no more, confident now that the latch had cleared, then swung it open as swiftly as I could. I wanted the element of surprise on my side.
    And I had it.
    There was a scream, a woman’s scream, and that was followed by a man shouting, “Jesus!”
    Upstairs, Ellen screamed, “Jim! Jim!”
    My heart still pounding, I reached for the switch by the back door, casting light across Derek and his girlfriend, Penny Tucker. I’d met her enough times to recognize her, even in this limited light.
    Evidently they’d both been sitting on the deck steps that led in the direction of the shed, just talking, but when I’d made my entrance they’d both jumped to their feet and Derek had reached out to steady Penny, who’d nearly stumbled over.
    “Jesus, Dad, you scared us to fucking death!” Derek shouted at me.
    Penny, who had enough sense not to use profanity with her boyfriend’s father, caught her breath and said, “Mr. Cutter, hey. It’s, like, just us.”
    That was when we started hearing the sirens coming down the highway. And the car that had been parked up at the end of the lane was racing toward the house, then skidding on loose gravel as the driver hit the brakes.
    “Shit,” I said.

SIX
    S O, THIS LITTLE MATTER of the mayor’s nose.
    I think it was the kind of thing employment consultants refer to as a “career-limiting” move. “Career-ending” would be more accurate, but the thing is, given the chance to do things over again, I can’t see what I might have done differently. Although it would have been nice to actually break

Similar Books

Black is for Beginnings

Laurie Faria Stolarz

Weston

Debra Kayn

The Yggyssey

Daniel Pinkwater

An Undying Love

Janet MacDonald

Soul Fire

Nancy Allan

Hunter Moran Hangs Out

Patricia Reilly Giff

Out of the Sun

Robert Goddard

Rushed

Brian Harmon