Saturday, January 4, 2014

"Death Of A Princess", Chapter 4


Chapter 4


 

 

 

A jagged scream lodged deep in her throat, Kayleen surged straight up in bed, sweating and shaking, mere minutes before the digital alarm was set to blare out it’s warning into the pre-dawn morning.  It was 4:28 a.m.  It was pitch-black outside and Jody was still dead, but the feel of her own bed beneath her and the absolute silence within the dark corners of her room reassured Kayleen that, for the present moment at least; the monster was already gone.

Kayleen rubbed the sleep out of her eyes and then reached over and clicked the off-button on the top of her alarm.  The sun wouldn’t be up for another two hours.  Sometime in the middle of the night, Kayleen had woken up from her awkward position on the couch and fumbled her way upstairs.

Right now, her body was stiff and sore and her head was thick with the cottony-wool of a fiercely-ferocious hangover.  Her mouth was dry and sour and her stomach rumbled with the knowledge that it probably wouldn’t get fed today, either.  Her right eye felt like it had an ice pick gouged through it, and she was dizzy and nauseous as hell.  But none of that really mattered.

It was time to clear the cobwebs out of her mind, to feel the freedom of the wind on her face, and the early morning dew on her ankles.  It was time to take back the only part of the day that she still called her own.  The one time that she could push her body to the limit and push thoughts of him right out of her mind.

This was Kayleen’s favorite part of the day because now, it was time to run.

 

*

 

6:15 a.m. and she was finally back at home.  Today it was yet another breakfast of only vodka and juice.  She took her glass over to the kitchen table and sat down, wiping off her forehead with the inside of her elbow.  She wedged her small gun out of the waistband of her wet shorts and set it on the table.  She never left the house without some kind of firepower, but anything other than the .22 was too cumbersome to run with.

Salty moisture poured down Kayleen’s face and torso, saturating her white tank top and even her old, thin black Umbros, but at least this time it was from healthy exertion and not from bitter dread.  She looked down as she plucked the damp fabric away from her skin, but froze when her eyes landed on the puffy, raised welts along her chest and collarbone.  Even in this early, weak daylight, Kayleen’s scars were still hideously visible.

Kayleen had at one time inventoried them all.  That had been an egregious mistake.  The initial head-shrinker they’d assigned to her while she was still being held at the hospital had thought it would be a good idea.  He’d actually said it would be “therapeutic”.  Yeah, right.  A half-bald, twitchy son of a bitch, who had probably gotten his Doctorate degree out of a box of Cracker Jacks, had presumed to tell her what she needed to do to get over being assaulted by a sadistic serial killer.  It would have been laughable had it not just been so damned sad.

But, idiot that she was, she’d taken out her compact and then stood in front of the big mirror in the antiseptic hospital bathroom all alone; bright fluorescents blazing, door locked, completely naked.  She’d pulled down the bandages and studied herself from each and every torturous angle.  Then, she’d promptly smashed the compact, gotten on her knees in front of the toilet, and thrown up until she’d tasted blood.

Afterwards, when she was done crying, she’d picked up the phone and called her boss.  Then she’d asked the nurses to re-do her bandages and tape the bathroom mirror over from top to bottom.  The staff had been happy to oblige, and Dr. Severance, feeling that she’d been pushed too hard, too quickly after her attack, had made certain that idiot psychiatrist had never come back to see her again.  But none of it had mattered because the damage was already done.

It would’ve been much more tolerable, and much easier for her to handle, if she’d seen the horrific mutilation and destruction that had been ravaged into her skin, after it’d had more time to heal.  As it was, she’d still been freshly bruised, burned, sliced, and butchered.  The wounds had been raw and leaking.  Her chest had been a veritable roadmap of destruction.

Her body had looked to her just like those of Estes’ other victims; corpses she’d seen either in crime scene photos, or first-hand in the Refuge or at the morgue.  Her emotional state had been so fragile then, it had literally knocked her to her knees.  That day, that exact moment when she’d seen what had been done to her, had changed something deep inside of her.  And it was something that she could never undo.

In those moments she’d spent before the mirror, she’d catalogued each and every degrading horror for future ease of reference.  Even now, those memories remained within clear and unnerving reach.  Kayleen could close her eyes at will and see the serrated skin, the puffy, enflamed lines, the weeping marks, the sliced shapes; everything that Estes had incised so meticulously into her flesh.  He’d gotten her torso, her back, her shoulders, thighs, and calves.  Not one part of her body had gone unscathed.  He’d even decorated the backs of her knees.

In addition to all of that, there had also been the macerated puncture-gash in her shoulder where the bullet had gone in, and another larger one on her back where it had blown out.  His placement had been perfect - right where it had caused her debilitating pain, making her weak, vulnerable, and easily controlled.  But it had also been far enough away from any vital organs to keep her from bleeding to death or passing out before he’d decided that he was done with her.

The worst part, of course was his signature; the triangle around the crescent moon, directly over her heart, along with the flattened infinity sign right above it.  But with her, for the very first time, he’d added his entire set of initials:  R A E, for Richard Allan Estes.  Unfathomably, however, she was the only one he’d taken and marked who was actually still alive.  And no one knew the answer as to why, least of all, Kayleen.

With her, when he was done, instead of slitting her throat from ear to ear, he’d merely carved a deep cross right into the hollow of her neck there.  A constant reminder of what he could’ve done; had he only the simplest inclination.  Unable to hide that one disfigurement with most of her clothes, she typically chose to just wear a plain silver locket to cover it.  The kind you kept treasured photos in, except hers remained empty; devoid of memories, hope, or love.

Kayleen finished her drink and slammed the glass down almost hard enough to shatter it.  Then she rested her head in her hands for a long moment and sighed.  When would it get any easier, she wondered?  When would it go away?  Not the scars, necessarily - they wouldn’t ever fade.  But the way she felt about them.  It was as if each one was a physical reminder of how utterly she had eventually failed; as a person, a partner, an agent, a lover, a friend.  As long as they marred her body, their meaning would mar her soul.

She could, of course, have plastic surgery.  It would help to mitigate the butchery some.  Only she didn’t think she deserved any kind of reprieve.  Jody had lost his life that night.  She’d already gotten off too damned easy.  Angrily, she pushed her thoughts away and stood up so abruptly that the kitchen chair rocked back and forth behind her.  It was time to tend to her dog.

Harley was lying on the cool kitchen tiles, still panting like she would never stop.  The poor pooch hadn’t yet gotten used to their brutal, two and a half mile trek up the mountain and back down again.  She didn’t know if Harley ever would.

Back in the city, Kayleen was lucky if she was able to walk her more than ten or fifteen minutes a day.  Work just kept her so busy there that Harley had seemed constantly chafing at the bit for more exercise.  Now, most of the time it was she who dragged Harley along while the dog lagged behind, her long pink tongue lolling sideways out of her mouth as she struggled to keep up.

Back on the night when the Blackthorne Butcher had paid his special visit to Kayleen, Harley had still been at the vet’s office, recuperating from a recent surgery to correct a small tumor on her left paw.  Kayleen knew that if she’d been there that evening, at the very least, she’d have given an advance warning as they’d returned to the apartment after dinner.  If she hadn’t come running to the door to greet her, Kayleen would have known instantly that something was wrong.

Unfortunately, the apartment complex would not let her install any type of security system, forcing her to rely on the “intercom-buzzer” apparatus just beyond the outside door.  It had done little to save her or Jody the night that Estes had come for them; some helpful resident had buzzed him in without bothering to check who he was or what he wanted.

And here, in this old house, the electric system was so bad a security alarm wouldn’t even work.  She’d called, of course, had several technicians come out to take a look in the beginning.  But they’d all said the same thing; her wiring here was so old, so decrepit, that the sirens would go off each and every time the wind blew too hard.  Fixing it would cost at least ten thousand dollars, the payments on which, Kayleen could undoubtedly afford.  Yet that would mean having men – strange men – traipsing in and out of her house for weeks on end, ripping out plaster and stripping up floorboards.  Right now, she was not ready for that level of outsider intrusion.

So, in the meantime, Kayleen made damn certain that her dog was never too far from her side.  It was one of the few easy things she could do to protect herself.  Well, that and making sure that her gun was never too far away from her, either.  Precautions that cost her nothing, but that might one day save her life.  Of course they might not do too much to help her if Richard Estes showed back up on one of the nights when Kayleen had passed out from being blind-stinking drunk.

That realization alone ought to be enough to make her change her habits, but she already knew damn well that it would not.  Alcohol was the only thing that pushed Estes even a tiny bit away from her; the only thing that gave her a small measure of numbing distance from the confines of her own infected mind.  And regardless of the risks, she figured she’d keep right on using it as long as she needed to, perhaps even until it killed her – or until he came back to finish the job.

Kayleen walked into the kitchen now and grabbed a large can of meaty dog food from out of the cupboard and pressed it into the automatic opener.  When she hit the start button and Harley heard the grinding noise indicating that her meal was soon to come, the dog clambered heavily to her feet and then came padding over.

Kayleen snagged a big bowl out of the dishwasher and filled it with a scoop of dry chunks from a bag under the counter.  Then she spooned half the can of wet stuff on top, and jiggled the bowl to mix it in.  The rest of the can would go into the fridge for tomorrow’s breakfast.  Harley ate twice a day but her early meal was the only one where she got spoiled with canned food in addition to her regular stuff.  Otherwise, Kayleen knew from experience that with her already stocky physique, she would get rather obese in just a short amount of time.

Kayleen plopped the bowl of food onto the floor and Harley immediately stuck her face inside and began wolfing it down.  As she ate, Kayleen refilled her other bowl with some fresh water, then she left the pure-bred bloodhound to enjoy her breakfast alone.

She had just headed upstairs to jump in the shower when she heard a knock at the front door.  She was expecting her Aunt Sue that morning, but looking at her watch, she realized that her aunt was more than half an hour early.  Sue knew quite a bit about the attack; more in fact, than Kayleen would have liked.

Back when she’d been in the hospital, Sue had come to visit her over the course of a few of those hazy days.  Although most of the time she’d been covered with a blanket, Sue did walk into the room once when Kayleen had been changing, and she’d gotten an eyeful then.  Also, an overzealous, loose-lipped doctor had taken it upon himself to fill Sue in on most of Kayleen’s injuries.  He’d thought it would be okay with her since they were family, although in truth, Kayleen had been mortified.

But some time had passed since then.  She still felt self-conscious as hell, but God knows, she was tired of always having to cover up like the Hunchback of Notre Dame.  If there was ever going to be a chance that she’d one day be able to revert back to simply being herself, she’d have to somehow get comfortable in her own skin.  Practicing first on her sweet, meek Aunt Sue would be a good place to start.

Deciding on the spur of the moment to forgo throwing on a robe, Kayleen just clomped back down the stairs and reached for the door, swinging it open quickly, before she could change her mind.  She realized her mistake a half-second too late.  She heard his gasp, his sharp intake of breath, felt his eyes rove up and down the length of her.

“Jesus Kayleen, what in the hell happened to you?” Caleb asked, shocked.  His face instantly blanched, and he fell backwards a step, as if he couldn’t even stand to be close to her.  All the while, his eyes continued to make the rounds.

Everywhere they rested, Kayleen could feel his gaze like a searing-hot laser against her skin.  His eyes swept over her legs, her arms, her sternum, her throat, and despite her light garments, she still felt as if she’d somehow been laid naked and bare to the bone.  His upper lip curled and he looked positively disgusted; just as she’d somehow already known he would be.

She reacted on impulse, slamming the door in his face and thumbing the bolt.  She grabbed the chain to lock that too, but her hand was shaking so violently she couldn’t get the rounded end into the hole.  As he started banging on the door, she took several dazed steps backwards, not even realizing that she was moving until the bottom step thumped into her calf and she stumbled against the riser and collapsed onto the stairs.

When her butt hit the wooden step below her, she grabbed the railing to steady herself.  She clenched the wooden rod in her bloodless fist, frozen in place while Caleb knocked and pounded and called her name.  At some point, he left off rapping on the front door and moved around to the rear.  Kayleen heard him rattling at the door handle there, and she was relieved beyond words that she always kept it locked now.  He wouldn’t be getting in.  Not today.  Not ever again.

He banged for at least fifteen minutes more but Kayleen didn’t wait him out.  As soon as her trembling legs could support her, she hauled herself up with the handrail and then ran all the way upstairs as fast as she could; his relentless pounding resounding hollowly beneath her as she fled.

 

*

 

Kayleen had been sitting on the floor of the bathroom for nearly an hour.  When she’d first run in there, the face that had greeted her in the mirror was one that she recognized immediately; deathly white, sharply drawn, stricken and sickly.  It was the same way she’d looked when she had still been in the hospital.

Frightened by the glaring similarity, she’d grabbed a towel and covered up as much of the silver surface as she could.  Then she’d knelt down and flung the cabinet under the sink wide open.  Pawing through row after row of soft, thick towels, she’d finally found what she had come looking for.  In the back, safe as always, was her reserve.

She had grabbed the bottle of vodka, thankful that it was still three-fourths of the way full, and then had snagged a stack of Dixie Cups that were stored in one of her drawers.  They were the kind that most people used for rinsing their mouths out after having brushed their teeth.  Hers stood in for improvised shot glasses, and she’d wasted no time in getting one wet.  After the third shot, her cup got soggy.  She crumpled it, threw it onto the bathroom floor, and immediately filled another.  It seemed like a long, long time before the faint knocking finally stopped.  The sound echoed in her head long after Caleb had gone.

When she figured she’d had enough alcohol that the blessed numbness would soon take hold, she set the bottle down, kicked off her shoes, and then climbed into the shower stall still completely dressed.  She turned the water on, stripped out of her clothes under the frigid deluge, and then sank back down onto the cold, porcelain tiles, her body shuddering so hard it was like she was having some sort of seizure.

After several long minutes, the water finally kicked in hot.  But even sitting directly in the scalding, needling spray, she still was bone-deep cold.  She wrapped her arms around her knees, hugging herself as tightly as she could, her fingernails digging painfully into her chill, wet skin while she cried and cried and cried.

 

*

 

“I was really worried.  I knocked for quite a while.”  Aunt Sue’s voice was tinny and small over the extremely bad connection.  Whatever architectural visionary Astin Archer had been, his son Louis had been much less successful at improvements to the house, which is why when the electric and phone lines had been installed by him several decades after the home had been built, they’d been done so haphazardly and with varying results.

When the wind blew too hard, Kayleen still typically lost her ancient phone line altogether.  It had been that way through her entire childhood there at that house.  She knew she needed to go ahead and get it all fixed one day.  But sometimes it was nice just not being able to be reached.  When she wanted to escape from outside pressures, all she had to do was take this old-fashioned phone off the hook.  Her cell, however, was still plugged into the wall charger back at her apartment in D.C., probably ringing incessantly even now.

Kayleen was still trying politely to wrap up her conversation with Sue.  She’d already spent several minutes apologizing profusely for that morning, the mist of alcohol making it hard to focus on sounding coherent.  She had managed to come up with a half-hearted excuse; that she’d been out for a nature walk in the surrounding woods and had lost all track of time.  Truth be told, she’d probably still been in the shower by the time her Aunt had actually come by, so focused on her encounter with Caleb, that dealing with yet another visitor would’ve been the last thing on her mind.  But now, she honestly felt quite guilty over it all.

Sue was actually Kayleen’s Great-Aunt on her mother’s side, and sadly enough, she was really Kayleen’s only living relative.  She was pretty sure she had to have some very distant cousins out there somewhere, but there was no one else besides Sue that she could truly call her own anymore.  She and her aunt had never been all that close.  Yet after Kayleen’s mother had died and then Kayleen had been attacked so shortly thereafter, Sue had been making a good-faith effort to connect.

Sue was Kayleen’s grandmother’s youngest sister, and she’d just turned 65.  Her health also wasn’t the greatest these days, and Kayleen didn’t know how many more years she’d have left.  That was one of the reasons she’d asked Sue over that day.  Since Kayleen had come back to town two months ago, she’d actually hung out with Sue on several occasions.  Mostly they’d just gone out to eat, or spent a few hours together in Sue’s little cottage in town.  Today was the first time however, that Kayleen had invited Sue out to the old house, into her own private space.  And boy, that had sure gone over well.

Kayleen made Sue a promise that she’d make it up to her next time, and then she finally worked around to saying her goodbyes.  Once she hung up the phone, she sighed out in relief and then downed the rest of her small glass of vodka.  She’d run out of juice four hours ago, so she’d simply started drinking it over ice.  God, she realized, she’d been soused for over twelve hours straight.

Kayleen’s stomach growled loudly then, but the resulting thought of food made her want to puke.  She couldn’t even remember the last time she’d actually eaten.  She’d probably lost nearly twenty pounds in the last eight weeks alone.  She was getting rail-thin, her clothes falling off of her more and more.  Caleb had to have noticed how skinny she was the other night when he’d first come over.

Jesus.  Caleb.  Caleb had seen her now, too.  In fact, Caleb had seen almost all of her.  And boy would he have some questions.  Not that she’d ever entertain answering them.

She swallowed, hard, and decided that she needed a refill.  She’d left the bottle in the kitchen earlier, while grabbing the cordless phone off of the base where it had been charging.  She’d brought her glass with her to the couch, but had accidentally left the remainder of the liquor behind on the counter.

She went to stand up now so she could go and retrieve it, but her legs simply would not work.  Instead, they sent her sprawling.  The room tilted and lurched around her as she plunged down, plowing head-first into the heavy wooden and glass coffee table beside her.

The surface shattered into a wild spray of jagged cracks as her forehead punched partially through.  Pain tore into her temple, and the breath was knocked clean out of her.  Instinctively pushing herself up off of the table, she tumbled sideways and crumpled haphazardly onto the floor.

She lay there, dazed for a moment, struggling to find her breath.  Finally, her air came back to her in a big wheezing gasp.  She drew in two stinging lung-fulls, trying to comprehend what had just happened.  She blinked against the warm rivulets of viscous blood that were trickling thickly into both of her eyes.  She’d dropped her glass, smashed her face, and was now bleeding onto the floor.  She needed to get up and get a towel, before she ruined the carpet even worse than what she’d done when she’d spilled the beer yesterday.

Kayleen reached up and painstakingly gripped the side of the busted table with one hand, her fingernails scrabbling at the seam of a couch cushion with the other.  Pulling with all her might, she struggled to sit up straight.  But she couldn’t seem to lift herself up off of the floor more than a few grudging inches.

Suddenly, her eyes felt heavy.  It was all she could do just to keep them open anymore.  A comforting, sedating lull stole over her.  She was just so damned tired.  Wouldn’t it be easier for her to stay on the floor?  In fact, why bother to get up at all when she could merely close her eyes and fall asleep right where she lay, down there on the soft carpet where it was so very safe and warm?

The last thing she heard before she lost consciousness was the insistent knocking from that morning once again coming back somehow.  “Why won’t he just go away?” she thought in irritation.

Abruptly, a long, dark chasm split open beneath her.  She fell, head-long into the bottomless pit of it.  There was another last, half-formed thought about Caleb; that, and nothing more.
Hello All!

Hope that everyone had a wonderful holiday season and a great New Year's day!
I have been working diligently on "Death Of A Princess" and have set a release date of -1/15/2014.  That is subject to change only if something unforeseeable occurs.  The book itself is finished, and is in the last read-through/editing stage.  A few things need to be corrected here and there, but it is going very well!

To help build interest, I am going to publish Chapter #4 here today (I've previously published Chapters 1-3 on this Blog), as well as the book cover I have finally selected to represent this novel.

Thank you, everyone, for your support!