Krewe of Hunters The Evil Inside 4

Free Krewe of Hunters The Evil Inside 4 by Heather Graham

Book: Krewe of Hunters The Evil Inside 4 by Heather Graham Read Free Book Online
Authors: Heather Graham
Andres was killed, and also get into the neighbor’s house. But we need to start with Lexington House. You know that! You’re going to defend Malachi. You need to know exactly what happened. And you’re friends with Detective John Alden, so…”
    Sam sighed. “All right. Tomorrow morning. We’ll start with the house.”
     
     
    Lexington House. Jenna had never actually been in the old colonial building, but she had an idea of what the arrangement of rooms would be like; many such homes had been built in a similar manner. The porch led to a mudroom, and beyond that was an entry hallway. The hall stretched the length of the house, the staircase to one side. The first door to the right would lead to a parlor. Upstairs, there would be four bedrooms, two on either side of the house.
    Detective John Alden led the way, ripping off the crime-scene tape and unlocking the front door for them.
    As she had expected: mudroom. Work jackets hung on hooks in the small vestibule, and work boots were lined up against the wall. There was a long hallway with doors leading off to either side of the house, and a set of stairs against the left wall that led to the rooms above. They followed John Alden to the first door on the left.
    Blood remained on the walls. The spray pattern was terrifying—there was so much blood. Four people, murdered here just two days ago, two of them in this room.
    Two here, in the parlor. Mr. Abraham Smith and his wife.
    Chalk marks on the floor designated the positions where their bodies had lain.
    “You can move into the room about three feet—no farther,” Alden warned.
    “We appreciate your assistance in being here, John,” Sam told him.
    Alden was still for a minute, weighing his answer. “We do have a chief of police,” he said. “And the chief wants every possible effort made on this case so that there aren’t any more historic mysteries floating around out there. The murders are heinous, and they’re not fancy legends—it’s a seventeen-year-old boy who has been accused. I worked hard for this badge, it’s something I’ve always wanted. And I don’t want any surprises when we get to court on this one.”
    “Noted,” Sam said. “And still appreciated.”
    “Just be careful where you’re walking,” Alden said gruffly.
    Jamie took a step in to the left. Sam went to the right.
    Blood. What remained of the carnage.
    A table was knocked over. A pile of bloody clothing lay next to a lamp that had presumably sat upon the table. A quilt—covered in blood—had been ripped from the old sofa.
    The bricks of the fireplace were dotted with stains and spray.
    “Abraham Smith got it right there, in front of the fireplace. You can see where his body lay, right there, ” John Alden pointed out. “The missus was over on the floor by the sofa—looks like she dragged the quilt down and knocked over the table. She had hack marks on her arms. I think she stood up to protest, and was axed down right there. She staggered a few feet, and then died. And that pile there—that’s the kid’s clothes. And this room is only the beginning,” he said wearily.
    Jenna could barely hear him. As he spoke, she felt as if he faded away, along with the others in the room. The very color of the air distorted, taking on a gray hue. A crude straw broom appeared by the fireplace. A wire basket of wood was on the brick apron in front of the hearth. There were no lamps. Candles sat on rough wooden tables by hardwood furniture, and sconces were attached to the walls.
    There was a woman in severe, puritanical dress pacing in front of the fireplace. Once she had been pretty. Her face was worn down by weather, toil and worry. Her brow was furrowed. She kept looking toward the door.
    A breeze seemed to strike Jenna from the back.
    She turned. The front door had burst open—two youths, one perhaps ten, another twelve, came running into the room, panicked. They rushed to their mother, hugging her one by one.
    “They’ve

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