Sleep Tight

Sleep Tight by Anne Frasier Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: Sleep Tight by Anne Frasier Read Free Book Online
Authors: Anne Frasier
Tags: Crime
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    He laughed at the loss of control he'd caused. "A lot of women don't want anything to do with a guy who's been in prison. Except for your sister."
    The pain in her shoulder didn't subside, and she visualized ripped muscles and nerves. She tried to push her physical discomfort aside to focus on the man next to her. The son of a bitch was baiting her, toying with her. He smelled like grease, and oil, and hot metal. She imagined him behind heavy iron bars painted with layer upon layer of institutional green.
    "You've probably heard about the three murders that have recently taken place in the area." A good agent never jumped in with the prime question. A good agent went for the slow build, getting the suspect to relax, gaining confidence—then hit him. She didn't have the luxury of that kind of strategy. Hitchcock could bolt at any second.
    He laughed and shifted in his seat, getting more comfortable. "I've wanted to tell you something for a long time. Your friend, Fiona. She liked to portray herself as a goody-goody, somebody as pure as a nun, but let me tell you, she was no nun. But then maybe you knew that. Maybe you were whoring it up, too."
    He was trying to throw her off, distract her from the real reason she'd come.
    "Are you like your sister?" He reached over and put a hand on her bare knee. His fingers were rough and hot. "Do you get off on guys that've been in prison?"
    A drop of sweat trickled down her forehead, catching on an eyebrow. It took an amazing amount of willpower to keep from pulling out her gun.
    "Get your hand off me."
    He removed it, but not before giving her knee a little caress. "Behavioral Science, right?"
    How much had Gillian told him about her?
    "That means you hunt down serial killers, right?" When she didn't answer, he repeated his question. "Right?"
    "Yes."
    "Child molesters? How about child molesters?"
    "Those too."
    "I have a theory about why people like you go into such disturbing fields," he said. "Want to hear it?"
    She shrugged. "Sure."
    "Because you're obsessed with death."
    She wasn't going to let some killer psychoanalyze her. "If I'm obsessed, it's with finding the people who are causing death."
    "No, you're obsessed with death itself. You have to see it, have to be around it."
    "Is that the way you feel? Is that how you've come to this theory? Because you've killed?"
    "I'm not talking about me. I'm talking about you. How old were you when you found your friend's dead body?"
    He was talking about it so calmly, as if it were something he'd read about, not participated in.
    She wanted to look away, but she forced herself to keep her eyes on him. "Seventeen."
    "An impressionable age, wouldn't you say? A time when everything can turn upside down, when good can suddenly be bad, and bad good."
    Not wanting to miss the opportunity to keep him going, she allowed herself to be pulled into the conversation. "Seventeen is the age you were when you killed Fiona Portman," she said.
    "I think that once somebody sees death, feels death, sees death's emptiness, they want more. Suddenly life's biggest mystery is an even bigger mystery. And that mystery is something you were a part of and want to be a part of again."
    Was this his twisted way of telling her he'd killed the three girls? Was it a sick plea for help? "Are you seeing a psychiatrist?" she asked, hoping she wouldn't lose him by introducing a new topic.
    "Not since I got out of prison. I don't need one. Haven't you heard? I'm a new man."
    "You should be under psychiatric care."
    "I've had enough of shrinks."
    "Do you have urges to see dead bodies?" she asked carefully.
    "Right now I'm imagining what you'd look like dead."
    "Is that a threat?"
    "How many dead people have you seen in your life? Other than Fiona Portman? I'll bet you've seen a lot."
    "Too many."
    "How many?"
    "Over a hundred."
    "I'll bet you like that, don't you?"
    "Of course not."
    "Oh, come on. Why don't you admit that when you aren't around death, you aren't whole? You

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