Die for Me: A Novel of the Valentine Killer

Read Die for Me: A Novel of the Valentine Killer for Free Online

Book: Read Die for Me: A Novel of the Valentine Killer for Free Online
Authors: Cynthia Eden
speed meant.
    Why did that piss him off so much?
    Dane clenched his jaw. He had no claim on Katherine. If she wanted to screw her shrink, then she could screw him all night long.
    The thought burned right though him, but Dane locked his muscles and didn’t move from his now-parked car. He’d found an old dirt road that ran alongside Katherine’s property. A perfect place from which to watch and not be seen.
    Katherine got out of the sports car. The shrink followed her. They went up onto the porch. The shrink pulled her close.
    Asshole.
    The guy put his hands on Katherine’s smooth skin. Curled his palms over her shoulders.
    Bastard.
    Dane ground his teeth together.
You don’t know her. She can have sex with whoever she wants.
    And she probably did.
    But not that night.
    Katherine pushed away from the shrink with a sad shake of her head. While the guy’s hands fisted, she turned away and headed into the house alone.
    Dane started breathing again.
    The shrink watched her for a moment or two longer. Glared at the closed door.
    Keep moving, jerk. Nothing to see here
.
    The shrink went back to his fancy ride. Cranked the engine. Drove away a little too fast.
    Dane smiled.
    The lights flashed on inside Katherine’s house. Good. She was in safe for the night. Now maybe the tight tension that coiled his muscles would go away.

    That had been awkward, but at least Trent knew where they now stood. It wouldn’t have been fair to lead the guy on, not when she couldn’t make herself
feel
anything for him.
    But then, she hadn’t felt very much in the past few years. Half the time, it seemed as if she were wrapped in some kind of fog, moving slowly through life.
    You felt something when you were with the detective.
The whisper slid through her mind. Katherine swallowed and turned toward the stairs. Right then, she didn’t want to think too much about the dark and dangerous detective. Instead, she wanted—
    She came to an abrupt stop.
    There were roses on the stairs.
    The breath froze in Katherine’s chest.
    Once upon a time, roses had been her favorite flowers. Then she’d learned just what Michael had been doing with the roses.Buying a dozen roses…then leaving one with his victim and bringing the remaining eleven to her.
    He brought them to me after each kill.
    Her cheeks were wet now. Her hands were shaking.
    And there were fucking roses on her stairs.
In my house.
“No,” Katherine whispered. This could not be happening.
    But there was something beside the roses. A small box. It almost looked like a candy box from one of those fancy chocolate shops that she’d seen in the French Quarter a few times. Slender, long…
    She was walking toward the box. She should be getting the hell out of there, but it was as if she were being pulled forward, forced toward that box.
    I’ll look inside. It will just be chocolate. Trent could have left the candy and the flowers when I wasn’t looking. He dropped them off when he was here earlier and I was getting my purse.
    It didn’t
have
to be from Valentine.
    But he always sent me flowers after each death.
She just hadn’t realized that fact until it was too late. He’d sent her eleven roses, and his victim—each time his victim had the twelfth rose.
    Her breath sawed out of her lungs as her gaze locked on those roses. Helplessly she began to count them.
    One, two, three…
    The scent of the roses was sickly sweet.
    Four, five, six…
    There were thorns on the roses. Thorns that would draw blood.
    Seven, eight, nine…
    Her heart beat so hard that it hurt her chest.
    Ten. Eleven. Dear God, only eleven.
    The twelfth rose was missing.
    She picked up the box. Nearly dropped it because she was so scared and nervous. Then her shaking fingers lifted the lid off the box. Rose petals fell onto the steps. Then she screamed, a long, desperate sound, but one that also burned with rage because the sick bastard was back. He was playing his games with her—with his victims—all over

Similar Books

The Marching Season

Daniel Silva

The Englor Affair

J.L. Langley

Impulse

Candace Camp

Poison

Leanne Davis

Randoms

David Liss

Lando (1962)

Louis - Sackett's 08 L'amour

Imitation

Heather Hildenbrand

Earth's Hope

Ann Gimpel

Fighter's Mind, A

Sam Sheridan