She was turning the corner from Third to Harrison Drive, her street, when a man was suddenly there in front of her. She swerved to miss hitting him and rode into the bushes, falling from her bike.
“I’m sorry, sweetheart,” he had said, rushing to her.
“I’m fine.” She tried to stand, but her ankle twisted between the bike pedal and frame and she stumbled.
He caught her and she sucked in her breath, staring into very pale eyes, eyes that almost didn’t look real. They didn’t show any feelings and they didn’t look sorry.
Something was wrong with this man, with the way he looked at her. As if he knew her. She drew in a breath to scream and his left hand covered her mouth while he turned her around so his right arm could pin her body against his.
It had happened so fast. One minute she was stumbling from her bike; the next he was moving with her across the sidewalk to a big truck she hadn’t even noticed was there.
“Nina!”
It was her friend Abby, who lived down the street.
She bit the man’s hand and he said a bad word in her ear, but didn’t let go. She kicked backward, trying to hit his private parts, which her mother told her would hurt a lot.
If anyone tries to touch you, scream and kick them in their privates. They’ll let go and you run and run fast.
But she couldn’t connect her foot with him, and suddenly her feet were no longer on the ground as he pulled her up, half carrying her, half shoving her toward the big, white truck. Her arms were pinned to her sides and she wildly kicked her legs in the air.
“Let her go! Help! Someone, help! Help!” Abby started screaming and Nina prayed someone, anyone, was around to help her.
The man pushed her through the door of the truck and slammed her head on the dashboard. Tears streamed down her face from the sharp sting, but she still struggled to free herself.
“Stop!” It was a man’s voice and sounded far away. “You! Stop! I’ve already called the police.”
Nina recognized the man-Mr. Jorge, her next-door neighbor, the one who always complained when Scrappy her orange tabby slept in his daisy bushes. He was going to help her!
Then something hit her hard on the head and she remembered nothing until now, when she woke up to the awful smell of car fumes.
How long had she been sleeping? Where was she? She couldn’t see. She squirmed and found that she could move a little. Though her hands were tied, her feet were free. She wiggled around and realized she could sit up.
The awful stench of exhaust. The bouncing, the low hum of the engine… she was in the back of the truck. The man with the light eyes had taken her, and Mr. Jorge and Abby hadn’t been able to stop him. He was going to do something bad to her. Her mom said if a man took her he’d hurt her, and so she had to run. But she hadn’t run, she hadn’t been able to, and nothing she’d been taught had worked.
She sucked back tears, her fear growing with each ping of rocks on the undercarriage. The pings were coming more frequently. Where was he taking her? What was he going to do? Was he… was he going to kill her like those other girls she’d heard her mother talking to Mrs. Vail about?
This was so bad. All the stuff her mother told her, her teachers told her, didn’t seem important at the time. Her mother worried all the time. “Yes, Mom,” she’d say after listening to another lecture about being careful and to watch out for strange men.
And she’d run her bike right into one.
She stifled a cry. She wanted her mommy so bad right now, but she didn’t want the man to hear her. She had to find a way to get out. She was all her mom had, ever since Daddy died. Nina didn’t even remember him, she’d only been two. Her mom was her only family.
Her mom did everything for her. They weren’t rich; in fact, they were always broke and they couldn’t do things like Abby’s family, like going to the movies or vacationing every summer at Disney World or some other fun place. Nina sometimes resented that Abby’s family had money to do things and Nina’s mom didn’t, but Nina knew her mom worked hard to make sure she had a college savings account and she took gymnastic lessons, which cost a lot of money. Nina loved gymnastics and she knew she was good. Her mom said she loved watching her, and her coach said she’d be able to try out for the state team next year.
The state team was one step closer to the Olympic team. Nina wanted that more than anything in the world.
Well, now she wanted something even more. She had to find a way to escape.
Nina stifled a sob. She tugged at the ropes that bound her hands. They were tight, and her fingers were numb. How-wait. She just might be able to-yes! It was just like the rings.
Though it hurt her wrists so much tears streamed down her face, Nina pushed herself up with the palms of her hands and pushed her body backward through the hole her arms made. She eased down, not wanting to make a sound, then worked her arms under her legs until they were now in front of her.
Yes!
She reached up and tore off the blindfold and blinked. She saw nothing. No light coming from streetlamps. No light from the cab of the truck. She was locked away in a camper shell, far from her mom, far from help. Her heart pounded. How would she get home? Even if she got away from the man, where was she? Where would she go?
Stop it, Nina! She couldn’t think like that. Just get away. Get away. She could figure everything else out later.
Just run away.
She used her teeth on the ropes binding her wrists, the rough fiber making her lips and gums raw. But it was working. They were loosening.
Suddenly, the truck started driving up a steep hill and she toppled over and couldn’t stop herself from crying out when her sore head hit the back gate. She righted herself and felt around for a handle on the camper shell. She couldn’t find one. She was trapped.
She continued working on the ropes as the truck slowed, winding around sharply. The air became noticeably colder.
She had to get out. As soon as he opened the gate, she had to run. As fast as she could.
And not look back.
Assistant District Attorney Ross Perdue was working late Friday night. He had no wife, no children, and lived for his job. Everyone in the courthouse predicted he’d be appointed to fill Hamilton Craig’s remaining term as district attorney and could very well be the youngest elected D.A. in county history if he ran in the next election.
Most people thought Ross was a ladder-climber, but those who knew him well-which weren’t many-knew he was motivated by far more than a title. Eight years ago, when he was a law student, his young pregnant wife was gunned down on their first wedding anniversary.
The next semester he changed his focus from corporate law to criminal law and he’d never looked back.
The nature of Hamilton Craig’s death bothered him, but he couldn’t figure out why. Maybe it was the randomness of it, that it was too much like Becky’s. There seemed to be no reason, and random violence seemed so unfair, like a tornado falling out of the sky and obliterating only one house in a neighborhood of thousands.
The knock on his door came after six, long after most attorneys had left for the weekend.
“Come in.”
It was the Redwood City Chief of Police, Bill Tuttle. Ross stood and extended his hand. “Chief. What can I do for you?”
He didn’t sit. “Gary Porter was killed sometime last night in his house.”
“Gary Porter? Do I know him?”
“Probably not. He was a detective, retired a few years ago.”
“And?” Ross prompted.
“We checked out his house this morning when his wife called from her trip to Paris and said she couldn’t reach him. He’s been on heart medication for a few years, so she was worried about him. We found him in his kitchen, shot to death.