Right to Life

Free Right to Life by Jack Ketcham Page B

Book: Right to Life by Jack Ketcham Read Free Book Online
Authors: Jack Ketcham
probably locked and even if it wasn't he'd catch her easily. That's why.
        She stood, already dreading what she was going to find. If this thing on the floor were a mannikin why would he call his own bluff?
        She walked over and knelt and for a moment couldn't bring herself to touch it but he was standing behind her staring, she felt his stare like a harsh command so she reached out and gave a push to the center of the thing and it was the weight of a man all right, no mannikin ever felt so heavy nor the flesh beneath the bags so giving and it couldn't be a living man pretending either because one of the bags was tied off tight at the neck and there was no way in the world he'd be able to breathe inside.
        She was kneeling next to a dead man. A man he'd just admitted killing.
        And they would do it to her, he said, if she defied him.
        If he'd raised the stakes by showing her his face he'd raised them infinitely higher by showing her this. There was no way in hell he could let her live now unless she either escaped or submitted wholly to him and to this Organization he kept talking about.
        Whether the Organization even existed or not really didn't matter.
        Though she now thought that maybe it did. Was it so far-fetched after all? Cults existed. White slavery existed. Neo-nazis existed. In the end it didn't matter. Even if it was all in his mind, even if he was crazy, what mattered was his power over her. The power to extend her life or take it on a whim.
        The back door opened and she saw the woman standing there on the landing in cutoff jeans and a baggy teeshirt. An ordinary-looking woman, in her early forties she guessed like the man appeared to be, neither homely nor pretty, braless, with long slim legs. She looked directly at Sara for a moment and then went into the kitchen. Turned on the water and began to wash her hands.
        "It's ready," she said.
        "Good. Sara?"
        She turned to look at him. She heard the water go off in the kitchen and a paper towel ripped off the roll, sandals crossing the floor toward them and knew the woman was in the room with them but didn't she didn't take her eyes off him for an instant.
        "You're going to help us bury Victor. By doing so you'll be helping us accomplish two important things. One, it'll look very good for you in the eyes of the Organization. In fact you're doing it at their direct request. Two… well, call it a kind of bonding factor. As far as the police go, should you ever decide you need to report this, you'll be an accomplice to murder.
        "Oh, I know what you're thinking. You're doing this under duress. So if you tell the police that, no problem. But the Organization has that covered too. We've done this before, you know. We've had practice. Once we finish with Victor here I'm going to sit you down with some pens and paper and you're going to write us a few letters, post-dated. They'll be friendly letters - I'll tell you what to say, don't worry - as though Kath and you and I are old buddies from way back. You'll write, among other things, about how much trouble you're having actually going through with the abortion. As though we've been advising you not to have one all along and you're slowly coming around to seeing things from our point of view. Know what I mean? Then in the final letter you'll ask us, if you do decide to keep the baby, if it's okay for you come out here to stay awhile. Y'see? You get the idea? It'll look like you're here because you want to be. Period."
        "What about the envelopes?"
        She almost bit her tongue for saying it. She knew damn well it was dangerous. But she had to try to shake him somehow. She felt trapped and resentful. She had to let him know that without defying him.
        "Excuse me?"
        "The envelopes. They'd be postmarked. Dated. You can't fake the postmarks."
        He smiled. "Who keeps envelopes, Sara? You throw 'em in

Similar Books

Hard to Trust

Wendy Byrne

Insider X

Dave Buschi

Shadow of God

Anthony Goodman

Mayhem in Bath

Sandra Heath

Noon at Tiffany's

Echo Heron

House of Evidence

Viktor Arnar Ingólfsson

Fix Up

Stephanie Witter

What He Craves

Tawny Taylor