take the skull out to the fire and get ready to toss it.
He grabbed the box, got out of the car, and strode over to the fire.
The flames were leaping high, the fiery shadows reflecting off the leaves of the surrounding trees.
One more minute and you burn, bitch.
He grabbed the skull and pulled it out of the box and held it high so that he could look at it.
Only it wasnât a skull.
It was her .
He felt as if heâd been kicked in the stomach.
Same pointed chin, same winged eyebrows.
And those green eyes, blazing at him, as bold as they had been the night he had put her in that grave. She had been afraid, heâd known she was afraid, and yet she wouldnât admit it to him. That night was suddenly right here before him.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
âYouâre going to die, little girl.â He cradled his bleeding hand where the little viper had bitten him. â Die, then Iâm going to throw you in the ground where no one will ever find you. â
â Theyâll find me. â Her eyes were glittering in her pale face. â Because youâre stupid and cruel, and theyâll want to take you and throw you in a jail where they put people like you. â
âStupid?â He lifted his hand and struck her in the face. Her head jerked back from the blow, but when she lifted it, there was still no fear in her eyes. It filled him with rage. â You bit my hand. Letâs see how you like to have your hands hurt.â
Fear. For the first time he saw fear in her. â Not my hands. I canât let youâ â She lifted her chin defiantly, and the fear was gone. â It wonât matter. Theyâll fix them. â
â They wonât bother. Youâll be dead. â He took her hand and bent back the first finger. â Tell me what I want to know. Tell me where they are. If you do, Iâll stop the pain. â He pressed the finger back until he knew it was agony. â Tell me. â
She whimpered.
Why didnât she scream?
She had never screamed.
Not even when heâd lost his temper and taken the crowbar and struck her on the temple.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
He couldnât see that wound on her temple on this damn reconstruction now. Duncan had carefully erased it. He held the skull higher.
It was as if the blow had never happened.
And those green eyes were blazing with defiance at him as they had when heâd broken her fingers.
No, they werenât. Glass eyes. They were only glass eyes. But how had Duncan known that little girl had green eyes? How had she known about that pointed chin, those eyebrows?
Guess work. It was only a lucky guess.
And in another moment, all her work would be devoured in these flames.
â No, they wonât. I wonât let you. â
He froze.
Her voice.
His eyes widened in shock, his gaze locked with the green eyes of the skullâs reconstruction.
Ignore it.
He was hearing things.
He had been concentrating so hard on that long-ago night that he had only thought heâd heard Jenny speaking to him.
Hallucination.
As soon as he got rid of the skull, heâd be fine.
â No. I told you that you were stupid. Youâll never get rid of me. â
The voice wasnât coming from that skull. It was coming from his left, over in the trees.
Donât look.
â Are you afraid of me? Iâm not afraid of you. You canât do anything to me that you havenât already done. But Iâm only learning everything I can do to you. Look at me, Walsh. â
His head slowly turned.
And then he saw her.
White dress, black, patent-leather shoes, and those eyes as green as the glass ones in this damn skull.
Those eyes that had wept but never held fear.
He could feel his heart pounding and the cold sweat break out. âIâm looking at you, bitch. Youâre not real. Youâre dead. Youâre only a damn hallucination. Once I settle this, Iâll forget
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