CHAPTER 2 - KIMBERLY
“MA’AM, ARE YOU awake?”
Define awake.
I could hear a man talking, but I wasn’t entirely sure he was real. Nor did I know where I was, how I’d gotten there, or what the incessant beeping in the background was.
A car. I’d been in a car. With a murdered girl and possibly her killer, and now my head felt as if it’d been run over by a truck and squashed like a cantaloupe. Was I dead?
“Ma’am?”
I made an effort to pry open one gummy eyelid, light hit me, and I leaned to the side and threw up.
“Dagnabbit!”
The grey-haired man standing beside my bed staggered back three feet, and I groaned as I took in my surroundings. White blankets on a metal-framed bed, monitors next to me, and a green curtain all around. This was no hotel room.
“Sorry,” I croaked.
“How are you feeling?”
“Who are you?”
“Officer Leopold with the Montgomery County Police Department.”
“How did I get here? This is a hospital, right?”
My voice came out croaky, and I spotted a jug of water on the nightstand next to me. Thirsty. So thirsty. I reached across, but the stupid wires tugged at the back of my hand and stopped me. Leopold stepped around the pool of vomit and helped me out.
“Here you go.” He passed me a glass. “A motorist found you passed out drunk at the side of the road.”
“How long ago?”
“Wait a moment—I need to find a cleaner for…” He waved at the mess on the floor. “For that.”
When he pulled the green curtain back, I got a glimpse of the hallway beyond. Stark white with a gurney parked in it, the occupant waiting for a bed and a massive bill, no doubt. The curtain swung back into place, and I tried to fit the jigsaw pieces together in my head. Had I been drinking? I usually limited myself to one glass when I was out. After all, I didn’t want to do anything stupid. Hold on—didn’t my ghostly companion mention drugs?
Officer Leopold came back with a shorter man in tow, who set to work with a mop and bucket. Guilt washed over me because he had to clean up after my bad judgement. Why on earth had I gotten into a stranger’s car?
“Last night,” Leopold said.
“Huh?”
“You got picked up last night.”
“What time is it?”
Leopold glanced at his watch. “Almost noon.”
Oh, shiznits. I’d already missed my first appointment today. And the second. And Sara Hawkins was getting married in a week and needed daily pep talks so she didn’t back out. She loved her husband-to-be, but the idea of being stared at by three hundred guests, including her future mother-in-law, made her break out in hives. Literally. Last Tuesday, I’d driven her to the doctor for treatment.
And then there was…Georgina? Georgia? Georgette, that was it. More memories filtered back, of her telling me to escape, to jump from the car. Usually I ignored the dead, but last night she’d saved my life. It could have been my body in the back seat, my father getting informed of his daughter’s sad demise. And then there was the bigger question—what would have happened if I’d died without passing on my strange ability? Would the buck stop with me? I had to hope so. Ghosts had been part of my life for years, you see, ever since my mom passed the gift on to me. Or rather, the burden. The first time I’d seen one, I’d been spooked so badly I hid in my room for three days, but now I’d gotten used to their presence.
Why? Because lucky old me was one of only a handful of people on earth who could communicate with the dead, and not just any old dead, but those who’d had their lives cut short by another. Murder victims, accidental deaths, casualties of war. I saw them all, going back centuries. And the worst part? They knew I could see them.
That meant everywhere I went, men, women, and children begged me for help, and I never got a moment’s peace. I was the supernatural equivalent of a rock star without having sung a single track.
Usually, I blocked them out. Ignored them. I’d become quite proficient at it over the years, but now I had a problem.
I owed Georgette.
Part of me wanted to apologise to the medical staff and Officer Leopold for my mistake and walk right out of the hospital, because who would believe me if I tried to explain I’d been drugged by a murderer? He hadn’t laid a finger on me. All I had was Georgette’s story, and my memory was shaky on that at best.
But what if he tried to abduct another woman and she wasn’t so lucky? If three months down the line, I caught sight of a newspaper and realised a girl just like me had disappeared on an evening out, only for her body to be found dumped in a forest or by a lake or beside a quiet road? Or worse, never found at all.
Could I live with myself if that happened?
The answer was no. This was the first time a murder had gotten personal for me, and even now, as I lay safe in the hospital with a policeman at my side, a shiver ran up my spine.
I had to do something, but what?
Officer Leopold smiled down kindly. “Now you’re awake, the doctor needs to check you over, and we’ve arranged for a representative from Alcoholics Anonymous to stop by with a few pamphlets.”
“I’m not an alcoholic!”
He shifted from foot to foot, uncomfortable. “Ma’am, you were unconscious when they brought you in, and when you woke up, you spent half the night vomiting. Then you locked yourself in the bathroom, and it took the nurses twenty minutes to convince you to come out. They almost broke the door down.”
Really? I didn’t remember any of that.
“That was…”
Dammit, how was I supposed to explain my escape? I could hardly admit to my deep and meaningful conversation with a dead girl, could I?
“That was what?”
“That wasn’t like me at all. I…I think I was with a man. In his car.”
“The person who called 911 was a woman, and she didn’t see anybody else around.”
“I think he drugged me. Honestly, I don’t normally drink that much, and I’ve never, ever passed out.”
Okay, so I threw up after prom, but I’d been eighteen. It was practically a rite of passage.
“That’s a serious allegation, ma’am.”
Leopold didn’t groan out loud, but his reluctant expression said it all. How far off retirement was he? A year? Two years? The last thing he wanted was a tricky case to interrupt his coffee-drinking time.
“I know it is, but what if there’s a man out there hunting innocent women? Do you have a daughter? A granddaughter?”
Reluctance turned back to sympathy. “Two granddaughters.”
“I’m in a hospital. Can’t you run a test to see if he gave me anything?”
“I think they run a drug screen as a matter of course. I’ll ask a doctor.”
“Thank you.”
Even though I’d been unconscious for hours, a wave of tiredness washed over me, and I yawned. Leopold patted me awkwardly on the shoulder.
“I’ll leave you to get some rest. Is there someone I can call? You’ll need clothes to wear home, I guess. And shoes.”
Shoes? I’d lost my favourite LK Bennett kitten heels? The news brought tears to my eyes, which was stupid considering everything else that had happened. I’d loved those damn shoes with their little white bows.
“C-c-can you call my friend Annie?”
“Do you have her number?”
“It’s in my phone.”
“You didn’t have a phone with you when you arrived.”
“No purse?”
“Sorry.”
More to do—cancel my credit cards, get a new phone, replace all my make-up. Just what I didn’t need at such a busy time of year. Then it hit me.
“I left my purse in his car! It had my phone, and my wallet, and my driver’s licence. He’s got my address.”
“You’re sure you had the purse with you?”
“Well, no, but I’d never have left it behind in a bar.” Would I? I didn’t recall leaving the bar or the restaurant or wherever I’d been. “At least, I don’t think so. I suppose it’s possible.”
“I’ll look into it, ma’am. Perhaps somebody handed it in. Now, about this Annie. How can I contact her?”
“We work together at Just Imagine Events. She’ll be in the office by now.”
Placating our clients, no doubt, and cursing my name in her sweet southern accent as she paced the meeting area with its white-and-silver furniture and artfully arranged flowers. Always fresh, never artificial.
The curtain moved back again, and I pretended not to care as Officer Leopold and the doctor held a whispered conference, probably about me peeing in a cup. After this, I was never drinking again. Not even a glass of champagne at the many, many weddings I had to attend. New, teetotal Kim had been born, and maybe I should start going to the gym too.
Tomorrow. I’d go to the gym tomorrow when my limbs stopped feeling like overcooked soba noodles. The doctor nodded a few times then fussed around, checking out the beeping machines and making notes on my chart.
“How are you doing, Miss…? Well, we’ve got you down as Jane Doe at the moment.”
“Miss Jennings. Kimberly Jennings. I just want to go home.”
“We need to run some more tests first, but as long as you’re feeling okay, you should be able to leave this afternoon.”
This afternoon? Annie was going to kill me. But I smiled and did my swan impression—you know, all serene above the water but frantically paddling underneath.
“Thank you. That sounds perfect.”
The doctor disappeared, and Officer Leopold stepped closer once more.
“They’ve taken a urine sample, but nothing showed up apart from alcohol.”
Was he kidding? “I’ve never passed out from a glass of wine, or even two. What drugs did they test for?”
“They did a standard screening. Amphetamines, benzodiazepines, m*******a, cocaine, that sort of thing.”
“What about roofies? Did they test for roofies?”
“I believe those fall under benzodiazepines.”
“Well, he must have given me something else. I’ve read tales of those fancy club drugs on the internet. Please, you have to look for this man. If he incapacitated me, he could just as easily do it to another woman tomorrow.”
“Any idea where you might have met him?”
“I was exhibiting at the Big Day Bridal Show, so I guess in the hotel where it was being held. The Park Plaza. I certainly didn’t plan on going anywhere else afterwards.”
“I’ll ask one of my colleagues to take a look, see if they can find any witnesses.”
“They have security cameras. There’s a little sign in the lobby saying ‘Smile, you’re a movie star.’”
Leopold smiled too. I amused him.
“I’ll make sure I relay that information, ma’am.”
“I know how this looks. That I’m just a stupid girl who made a bad error in judgement. But I assure you that’s not who I am, and it makes me sick to think there’s a man out there preying on women.”
His smile faded. “And I assure you we’ll investigate. Honestly? I wish we had the manpower to chase down every lead, but the department budget’s been pared to the bone over the last few years, and the new mayor’s on our backs at the moment because burglary rates are so high. Half of the officers are investigating crimes against property. Not saying I disagree with that, but…”
“Have you ever heard the name Georgette Riley?”
Riley was her surname, wasn’t it? My mind was still hazy.
Leopold looked at me sharply. “What’s she got to do with this case?”
So he had heard of her.
“Nothing. Nothing at all. I just heard a friend mention her name as an unsolved murder the other day, and while you’re here, I thought I’d ask.”
“Georgette Riley disappeared from Arlington, Virginia…two, maybe three years ago. My cousin’s a cop there. But there’s no evidence she was murdered. Between you and me, most of the investigating officers thought she ran away.” Leopold’s voice dropped to a conspiratorial whisper. “Boyfriend trouble.”
“It’s still an open case?”
“Can’t see it ever being closed unless she reappears. Or a body turns up, I guess.” He checked his watch. “I need to go, ma’am. Shift change.”
Who was I to keep him from his coffee and donuts?
“Will you call Annie?”
“Right away. And you’d better write your contact details down too.”
With the formalities taken care of, I flopped back against the pillow as Leopold’s rubber-soled shoes squeaked their way along the hallway. I knew what the police didn’t—that Georgette had died. The question was, how did I convince them of that fact without either implicating myself or coming across as a crazy woman, and more importantly, how could I prevent her murderer from killing again?