- Home
- Iris Johansen
Killer Dreams
Killer Dreams Read online
CONTENTS
TITLE PAGE
PROLOGUE
CHAPTER 1
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 3
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 5
CHAPTER 6
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 8
CHAPTER 9
CHAPTER 10
CHAPTER 11
CHAPTER 12
CHAPTER 13
CHAPTER 14
CHAPTER 15
CHAPTER 16
CHAPTER 17
CHAPTER 18
CHAPTER 19
EPILOGUE
BOOKS BY IRIS JOHANSEN
COPYRIGHT PAGE
PROLOGUE
I told you this was a great place.” Corbin Dunston beamed with pride as he held up the trout he’d just reeled in. “Look at this beauty. It must weigh three pounds.”
“Amazing.” Sophie grinned as she got to her feet. “Now may we go back to the restaurant and get some lunch, Dad? Michael and Mom are waiting for us.”
“Michael should have come with us instead of hanging out in the restaurant. A boy should have his time in the sun. Besides, I wanted to show off for him. It’s a grandfather’s privilege.”
“Next time. I told you he had a cold. I didn’t want to chance him getting chilled out here on the pier.”
“It wouldn’t have hurt him. Michael’s not a namby-pamby. He’s a tough little rascal.”
“He’s only eight years old, Dad. Let me pamper him for a little while longer. And it gives Mom a chance to have him to herself for a while. You and he have enough man-to-man time.”
“I guess you’re right. And it will keep her from spending all day making client calls. She might as well be in the office.” Her father threw the fish into the basket, got to his feet, and stretched before starting up the pier. “Yeah, I suppose it’s better. In between playing with Michael, she’ll get to chat with all the waitresses in the restaurant and make a few calls to keep her from feeling guilty.” He shrugged. “I told her she should retire like me, but she said she’d go nuts.” He shook his head. “You must have inherited your type-A personality from her. You’d both be better off if you just relaxed and enjoyed life.”
“I do enjoy life. I just don’t enjoy fishing. I wish you’d stop trying to convert me. You’ve been dragging me to lakes since I was six years old.”
“And you’ve let me.” Her father clapped her on the shoulder. “And most of the time you don’t even complain. I know you think I wanted a boy and maybe you’re right. But no one could have been a better companion to me than you’ve been through the years. Thanks, Sophie.”
She cleared her throat to rid it of tightness. “I’m complaining now. You caught me in the middle of a megabig project.” She smiled. “You should understand. If I remember correctly, you’ve been pretty stressed yourself on occasion.”
“Past history.” Corbin gazed out at the lake. “Lord, look at that sunset. Isn’t that beautiful?”
“Beautiful,” Sophie agreed.
“And worth coming out here and leaving your precious project behind?”
“No.” She smiled. “But you’re worth it.”
“That’s a start.” Corbin chuckled. “And you’re right. I am worth it. I’m witty and clever and I’ve found the secret of life. Why wouldn’t you want to hang out with me?”
“No reason at all,” Sophie said, gazing at him. Corbin’s cheeks were flushed with sun and his tall, muscular frame was that of a much younger man than his sixty-eight years. And God, he looked happy, Sophie thought. No tension, no sign of tiredness. “That’s why I dropped everything and came running.” She paused. “I’ve missed you. I meant to come down last month, but time got away from me.”
“It always does. That’s why I got out of the rat race five years ago. People are more important than projects. Every day should be an adventure, not a treadmill.” He sighed and reluctantly glanced away from the setting sun. “Your mother and I are going on a cruise to the Bahamas next month. I want you and Michael to come with us.”
“I can’t do—” She stopped as she met Corbin’s eyes. What the hell? She could work harder and clear her desk. Her father and mother weren’t getting any younger and Corbin was right. People were more important than projects, particularly these people she loved. “How long?”
“Two weeks.”
“No fishing?”
“Maybe a little deep-sea fishing. I’ve never taken Michael deep-sea fishing before.”
Sophie sighed. “As long as you don’t mind Mom and me drinking margaritas and lazing on deck while the two of you do your thing.”
“I don’t mind.” Corbin paused. “Bring Dave if he can make it. He needs a break too.”
“I’ll ask him. But he has a big civil suit going on right now and he’s working around the clock. It means a big fat fee for him.”
“Another workaholic.” He grimaced. “I don’t know how the two of you even had time to conceive Michael.”
She grinned. “There are always lunch hours.”
“It wouldn’t surprise me.” His pace quickened. “There’s your mother and Michael. I can’t wait to tell him about the cruise.” He waved at Mary Dunston and Michael, who’d just come out of the restaurant and were waving at them. “She’ll be happy as a clam you’re coming with us. She bet me I wouldn’t be able to persuade you.” He made a face. “If I didn’t get you to go, I promised I’d go to one of those spas with her. She wants to lose a few pounds.”
“She doesn’t need it.”
“I know. She’s gorgeous.” Corbin’s face softened as he gazed at his wife. “The older she gets the better she looks. I tell her that I don’t know why I fell in love with her when she was twenty. All that smooth skin with no character lines and not even a hint of wisdom in her eyes. She tells me to quit bullshitting her. I’m not bullshitting her, Sophie.”
“I know you’re not.” The love between her mother and father had been a fact of life to her all the years of her childhood. “She knows it too.”
Michael was running toward them. “Grandpa, can we stop at the arcade on the way home? I want to show you the new video game I found.”
“I don’t see why not. If there’s time after dinner.”
“It’s about time you got here.” Mary Dunston caught up with Michael. “I’m starved, Corbin. Did you catch anything?”
“Of course I did,” Corbin said. “Two gigantic trout.”
“Semi-gigantic,” Sophie corrected.
“Okay.” Corbin shrugged. “But definitely sizable. Finish up your calls, Mary?”
She nodded. “I may get that listing in Palmaire.” She gave him a quick kiss. “Now let’s get some food.”
“Right away.” He opened his fishing basket.
“I don’t want to see your blasted fish,” Mary said. “I’ll take your word for it. Stupendous. Gigantic.”
He reached into the basket. “No, I’m not showing you the fish, Mary.”
He pulled out a .38 revolver and shot her in the head.
“Dad?” Sophie stared in disbelief as her mother’s skull exploded. No, it had to be some kind of elaborate practical joke. It couldn’t be—
It wasn’t a joke. Her mother was falling to the ground.
Corbin turned, pointed the gun at Michael.
“No!” Sophie rushed between them as her father pressed the trigger.
Tearing pain in her chest.
Michael screaming.
Darkness.
1
Two years later
Fentway University Hospital
Baltimore, Maryland
What’s going on? You’re not supposed to be here.”
Sophie Dunston looked up from the chart to see Kathy Van-Boskirk,
the head night nurse, standing in the doorway. “An overnight apnea study.”
“You worked all day and now you’re monitoring an overnighter?” Kathy came into the room and glanced at the bed on the other side of the double glass panel. “Ah, an infant. The light dawns.”
“Not so much an infant any longer. Elspeth’s fourteen months,” Sophie said. “She’d stopped having incidents three months ago and now they’re back. She just stops breathing in the middle of the night and her doctor can’t find any reason for it. Her mother is worried sick.”
“Then where is she?”
“She works nights.”
“So do you. Days and nights.” Kathy gazed at the sleeping baby. “Lord, she’s beautiful. Makes my biological clock start ticking. My kid is fifteen now and there’s nothing lovable about him. I’m hoping he’ll turn back into a human being in another six years. Think I have a chance?”
“Don is just your typical teenager. He’ll get there.” Sophie rubbed her eyes. They felt as if they had sand in them. It was almost five and the sleep study would be over soon. Then she’d run the errand that was on the top of her list before getting to bed and grabbing a few hours of shut-eye before she had to get back for her first one o’clock session with the Cartwright child. “And he offered to clean my car last week when you had him at the office.”
“He probably wanted a chance to swipe it.” Kathy grimaced. “Or maybe he wanted the chance to score with an older woman. He thinks you’re cool-looking.”
“Yeah, sure.” Right now, Sophie felt older than her years, frumpy, and ugly as sin. She turned back the chart and checked Elspeth’s case history. She’d had an apnea episode about 1:00 A.M. and nothing since. There might be something there that would help her pin down—
“There’s a message for you at the nurses’ station,” Kathy said.
Sophie stiffened. “Home?”
Kathy quickly shook her head. “No. God, I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to panic you. I didn’t think. The message came in during the shift change at seven and they forgot to give it to you.” She paused. “How is Michael?”
“Sometimes terrible. Sometimes okay.” She tried to smile. “But all the time wonderful.”
Kathy nodded. “Yes, he is.”
“But in five years I’ll probably be pulling my hair out like you’re doing.” She changed the subject. “So who left the message?”
“It’s from Gerald Kennett again. Aren’t you going to call him back?”
“No.” She checked Elspeth’s meds. Allergies?
“Sophie, it wouldn’t hurt to talk to him. He offered you a job that will pay you more in a month than you make in a year here at the university. And he might even up the salary since he keeps after you. I’d jump at it.”
“Then you call him back. I like my work here and the people I work with. I don’t want to have to answer to any pharmaceutical company.”
“You worked for one before.”
“When I first got out of medical school. It was a big mistake. I thought they’d free me up to do research full time. It didn’t happen. I’m better off doing the research in my spare time.” She circled one of the medications on Elspeth’s chart. “And I learned more dealing with people here than I’d ever learn in a lab.”
“Like Elspeth.” Kathy’s gaze was on the baby. “She’s stirring.”
“Yes, she’s been in NREM for the last five minutes. She’s almost there.” She put down the chart and headed for the adjoining door to the test room. “I’ve got to get in there and remove those wires before she’s fully awake. She’ll be scared if she wakes up alone.”
“When’s her mother supposed to get here?”
“Six.”
“Against the rules. Parents are to pick up their children promptly at the end of the session and this one ends at five-thirty.”
“Screw the rules. At least she cares enough about the kid to have the tests. I don’t mind staying.”
“I know,” Kathy said. “You’re the one who’s going to have the night terrors if you don’t stop exhausting yourself.”
Sophie made the sign to ward off demons. “Don’t even talk about it. Send Elspeth’s mom in as soon as she gets here, will you?”
Kathy chuckled. “Scared you.”
“Yes, you did. There’s nothing scarier than night terrors. Believe me, I know.” She went into Elspeth’s room and went over to the crib. It took only a few minutes to remove the wires. The little girl had dark hair like her mother and her skin was a silky olive now flushed with sleep. Sophie felt a familiar melting as she gazed at her. “Elspeth,” she called softly. “Come back to us, sweetheart. You won’t be sorry. We’ll talk and I’ll read you a story and we’ll wait for your mama….”
She should get back to work, Kathy thought as she looked through the glass at Elspeth and Sophie. Sophie had picked the baby up, wrapped her in a blanket, and was sitting down in the rocking chair with the baby on her lap. She was talking and rocking the child and her expression was soft and glowing and loving.
Kathy had heard other doctors describe Sophie as brilliant and intuitive. She had a double doctorate in medicine and chemistry and was one of the best sleep therapists in the country. But Kathy liked this Sophie best. The one who effortlessly seemed to be able to reach out and touch her patients. Even Kathy’s son had responded to that warmth the one time he’d met her. And Don was definitely a hard sell. Of course, the fact that Sophie was blond, tall, and slim and bore a vague resemblance to Kate Hudson probably had a lot to do with her son’s admiration. He wasn’t into the maternal types. Unless Madonna was the one on the album covers.
But Sophie didn’t look like Madonna any more than she did the statue of the Holy Virgin. In this moment she was very human and full of love.
And strength. Sophie would have had to be strong to be able to endure the hell she had gone through in the last few years. She deserved a break. Kathy wished she’d take the Kennett job, scoop up the big bucks, and forget about responsibility.
Then she shook her head as she glanced at Sophie’s expression again. Sophie couldn’t shun responsibility, not with this baby, and not with Michael. It wasn’t in her nature.
Hell, maybe Sophie was right. Maybe the money wasn’t as important as the payback she was getting in there with that kid.
“Bye, Kathy.” Sophie waved as she headed for the elevator. “See you.”
“Not if you have any sense. I’m on night duty all this month. Did you find any cause for the increase in apnea?”
“I’m changing one of the meds. It’s mostly trial and error at Elspeth’s age.” She stepped inside the elevator as the doors opened. “We just have to monitor her until she grows out of it.”
She leaned back against the wall of the elevator as the doors shut and closed her eyes. She was too tired. She should go home and forget about Sanborne.
Stop being a coward. She wasn’t going home yet.
A few minutes later she was unlocking the door of the van. She avoided looking at the gun case with the Springfield rifle in the back of the Toyota. She’d checked it earlier to make sure it was in order. Not that she really had to do it. Jock always took care of the weapons and he wouldn’t let her go with a faulty rifle. He was too much the professional.
She wished she could say the same for herself. She’d blocked the thought of Sanborne all night but she was trembling now. She leaned her head on the steering wheel for a few minutes. Get over it. It was natural that she’d feel like this. Taking a life was a terrible thing. Even vermin like Sanborne.
She drew a deep breath, raised her head, and started the van.
Sanborne would be arriving at the facility at 7:00 A.M.
She had to be there waiting for him.
Run.
She heard a shout behind her.
She skidded down the slope of the hill, fell, picked herself up, and flew down the bank of the creek.
A bullet whistled by her head.
“Stop!”
&nb
sp; Run. Keep on running.
She could hear a crashing in the brush at the top of the hill.
How many were there?
Duck into the bushes. The van was parked on the road a quarter of a mile from here. She had to lose them before she reached the van.
The branches were whipping her face as she tore through the shrubbery.
She couldn’t hear them anymore.
Yes, she could. But they sounded farther away. Maybe they’d gone in another direction.
She’d reached the van.
She jumped in the driver’s seat and threw the rifle into the back before she peeled out onto the road.
Her foot stomped on the accelerator.
Get away. It could still be okay. If they hadn’t gotten a good look at her.
If they weren’t close enough to put a bullet through her head….
Michael was screaming when Sophie came into the house an hour later.
Shit. Shit. Shit.
She threw her bag down and raced along the hall.
“It’s okay.” Jock Gavin looked up when she ran into the room. “I woke him as soon as the sensor went off. He didn’t get much of it.”
“Enough.”
Michael was sitting up, panting, his thin chest heaving. She flew over to the bed and gathered him into her arms. “It’s okay, baby. It’s over,” she whispered. She rocked him back and forth. “It’s all gone.”
Michael’s arms tightened desperately around her for an instant before he pushed her away. “I know it’s okay,” he said gruffly. He drew a deep breath. “I wish you wouldn’t treat me like a kid, Mom. It makes me feel weird.”
“Sorry.” Every time she swore to herself that she wouldn’t act this emotional, but she’d been caught off guard. She cleared her throat. “I’ll watch it.” She smiled shakily. “But some people would think you were a kid. Imagine that.”
“I’ll go make you some breakfast, Michael,” Jock said as he headed for the door. “Get a move on. It’s seven-thirty.”
“Yeah.” Michael got out of bed. “Cripes, I’ve got to get ready for school. I’ll be late for the bus.”
“No hurry. I can drive you if you miss it.”