Chapter One
Fifteen years later
Wake up.
Julie Carlson's eyes blinked open. For a moment she lay still, heart racing,staring groggily into the darkness, not sure what had awakened her or why shefelt so frightened. It took only a moment or so for her to realize that she waslying in her own bed, in her own bedroom, listening to the familiar hum of theair conditioner as it kept the sweltering heat of the July night at bay andsmelling the comforting aroma of her own smooth clean sheets. Her potbelliedteddy bear, a poignant memento of her late father, sat stolidly in itsaccustomed spot on the bedside table. She could just see the comforting shape ofit by the faint glow of the alarm clock.
She must have had a nightmare. That would explain why she was curled up in atight little ball under the bedclothes when she usually slept sprawled on herstomach; it would account for the now-slowing thud of her heart; it wouldexplain her sense of there was no other word for it dread.
Something's wrong.
Although the words were distinct, the urgent whisper was in her head. She wasall alone in her bedroom, all alone in the whole huge upstairs of her house.Sid, the dog, was obviously spending another night in the guest room.
At the thought, Julie felt her stomach knot. She had gone downstairs aroundeleven, to find her husband sitting on the couch in the den watching TV.
"I'll be up after the news," he'd said. Not wanting to start a fight all theydid lately was fight she'd crossed her fingers and gone back upstairs to bedwithout uttering so much as a cross or demanding word. But here it was shefocused on the clock at two minutes after midnight, and she was still alonein their bed.
Maybe maybe he was still coming. Maybe he was watching Letterman. Maybetonight Leno had an especially fascinating guest.
Get real, she told herself, uncurling her arms and legs as anger edged out fear.And maybe the Pope was a Protestant, too.
Listen.
Her attention immediately refocused. Trying not to be creeped out, Julie put outa hand, groping for the switch to the bedside lamp.
Then she heard it, and froze.
The distant sound vibration really of the garage door going up made hereyes widen and her fists clench.
Her heart gave an odd little leap. Her stomach heaved. She forced herself totake a pair of deep, calming breaths.
Despite all her hopes, all her prayers, it was happening again.
Oh, God, what should she do?
Julie Carlson didn't know it, but she had less than an hour left to live.
Other than a single light in a downstairs room, her house was dark. It was a bighouse in an exclusive gated community just west of Charleston, and, if all wentaccording to plan, in a few minutes she was going to be all alone in it.
Then he would emerge from the shadows beneath the rustling palmettos in her sideyard, break in through her back door, and creep up the stairs to the first dooron the left. That door opened into the master bedroom, where she should already it was a few minutes after midnight be sound asleep.
Surprise, surprise.
Roger Basta allowed himself a small smile. This was going to be fun. The thoughtof what he was going to do to Julie Carlson made his breathing quicken. He'dbeen watching her for weeks, getting the household schedule down, making hisplans, anticipating. Tonight he got to enjoy the fruits of all that labor.
Sometimes, and this was one, he loved what he did for a living.
The light went out downstairs. The house was now totally dark.
Just a few minutes more.
He fingered the snapshot in his pocket. It was too dark for him to be able tosee it, but he was nearly as familiar with the image on it as he was with hisown face in the mirror. Julie Carlson in a white bikini, slim and tanned andlaughing, poised to dive into the swimming pool in her own backyard.
He'd taken it himself three days before.
One of the quartet of garage doors that faced his position rose, and secondslater a big black Mercedes purred silently down the driveway. The husband wasleaving, right on schedule.
The garage door closed again. The Mercedes turned left at the end of thedriveway, and drove away toward the interstate some five miles distant. Thehouse was once again dark and quiet.
Everything was going down as expected.
The burglar alarm would be off, which made his job just that much easier. He hada window of maybe three and a quarter hours to get in and out before the husbandreturned. He would need far less.
Although he might want to linger over this one. Remembering the picture, hesmiled. He definitely wanted to linger over this one.
Julie Carlson was a babe.
His instructions had been to make the hit look like anything but theprofessional, targeted job it was.
His reply had been, Can do.
Crouching, Basta set the small black satchel he carried on the carpet ofgolf-course-quality grass that covered the lawn and unzipped it. The steamy Julyheat, complete with swarms of hungry mosquitoes and a faint fruity scent,wrapped uncomfortably around him. It reminded him that he was wearing long pantsand a cotton turtleneck, both black, on a night that cried out for shorts andnot much else. A quick rummage through the contents reassured him thateverything he might need was in the bag: burglary tools, duct tape, a smallflashlight, a thin nylon cord and a pencil to use as a garrote, a box ofsurgical gloves, another of condoms. He touched his knit cap, making sure it fittightly around his head and over his eyebrows. He'd shaved his body completelyso as not to leave telltale hairs at the scene, but shaving his head andeyebrows would, he feared, make him too memorable to those who might bequestioned in the aftermath of the crime. The last thing he wanted was to bememorable.
Besides, his thinning gray hair gave him an innocuous look, he felt. Countlesspeople usually saw him in the days before a hit neighbors, passersby,convenience-store clerks, trash collectors but nobody ever remembered him,because he looked like a fifty-something Joe Average. DNA notwithstanding, thecap worked. The first two hadn't had time to dislodge it before he'd had themduct-taped into immobility, and Julie Carlson wouldn't either.
He was that good.
Sliding the flashlight into his pocket, he rezipped the bag, picked up hispistol, stood up and headed around to the back of the house. The swimming poolsparkled in the moonlight. Lush pots of tropical flowers gave off a heady scent.Cicadas and crickets and tree frogs sang.
South Carolina would be one of his favorite states, he thought, if only itwasn't so damned hot and humid in the summer.
The back door, the sliding one opening onto the stone patio and the swimmingpool, was his target.
In a matter of minutes he'd be inside.
Piece of cake. The alarm was off, the locks were laughable, the woman was alone,and they didn't even own a dog. Might as well hang out a sign: Come and getme.
A light came on downstairs.
Basta froze in his tracks in the act of reaching for the doorknob, frowning atthe window that was suddenly glowing warmly from within. This was unexpected. Heretreated a few stealthy paces to the concealing shadow of an enormous magnolia,his senses on high alert. He'd been casing the house for three weeks, and she'dnever once turned on a light after her husband was gone. Was she sick? Did theyhave company? No, he couldn't have missed that.
What gave?
The light went off as suddenly as it had come on, and the house was dark andstill once more. He stared meditatively at the looming facade, the shiny blackwindows, the two doors that he could see, probing the darkness for her withevery instinct he possessed. He was so attuned to her now as predator to victimthat he fancied he could almost hear her breathing through the brick walls.
Where was she?
A sound made him turn his head sharply. It came from the side of the house wherehe'd waited until just moments before. Alert as a dog on the hunt, taking careto stay deep in the shadows, he retraced his steps until he once more stoodbeneath the palmettos. His eyes widened as he saw that another of the garagedoors was open now.
His pistol came up, but there was no way he could use it.
He could do nothing but watch as Julie Carlson's silver Jaguar nosed out of thegarage, gathered speed going down the driveway, then turned left at the streetand vanished like a bat into the night.
Just as quick as that.
He was left to look blankly back at an empty house as, with a barely audiblethump, the garage door closed again.
She was gone. It took a minute or so for that incontrovertible fact to sink in.When it did, he felt empty, cheated. A surging anger at having his careful plansdisrupted threatened to swamp his previously good mood.
Could she have somehow known he was there? Basta looked quickly around, wary ofa trap. Given the group he worked for, a double-cross was never beyond the realmof possibility.
Then good sense reasserted itself. There was no trap; he was too valuable to theorganization for that. And she could not possibly have known he was there unlessshe was psychic.
The most logical explanation was that some sort of emergency had arisen. What,he didn't know, but then, he didn't need to know. The pertinent thing was that,sooner or later, she would be back.
And he would be waiting.
The certainty of that was calming. Glitches of this sort happened even toconsummate professionals such as himself.
Acknowledging that, Basta felt better. Circling back around behind the house, heeven began to hum. When he realized what the song was, he felt a spurt ofamusement at the sheer appropriateness of it.
"Ti-i-ime is on my side...."
Continues...
Excerpted from To Trust a Strangerby Karen Robards Copyright © 2002 by Karen Robards. Excerpted by permission.
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