Get Geri Read online




  Get Geri

  Karen S. Woods

  Sleeping Beagle Books

  Jacksonville, Illinois

  Print ISBN # 978-0-9792832-4-6

  Library of Congress Control Number 2008912049

  Copyright this Smashwords edition September 2009, Karen S. Woods

  This is work of fiction. Names, places, characters, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  Any resemblance to any person, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is strictly co-incidental.

  All Rights Reserved.

  No portion of this book may be duplicated or reproduced without permission of the publisher, except for small sections which may be quoted in reviews.

  For permissions email: [email protected]

  Please do not participate in or encourage the piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of author’s rights.

  Smashwords Edition, License Notes

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then you should return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  This book is dedicated to all the families who are caring for their ill or aging loved ones.

  God bless you all.

  Trademark Acknowledgements

  Beretta is the trademark of Fabbrica D'Armi P. Berreta, S.P.A. Corporation

  BMW is the trademark of Bayerische Motoren Werke Aktiengesellschaft

  Ford is the trademark of Ford Motor Company

  Lincoln is the trademark of Ford Motor Company

  Prolog

  Oh, how she wished this was some sort of cruel April Fools’ joke. But it wasn’t. She really was walking to her mother’s gravesite, following the six pallbearers; four men who served with her on the bishop’s committee at their little Anglican storefront mission church, along with Brad, and her boss, Josh Sutherland.

  She felt the tears flow down her face and dashed them away. Be strong, Gerianne. Momma would have wanted you to be strong. You can get through this.

  The church had been full of people this morning. Momma had been a woman well and truly loved. And most of those people had come out now to the cemetery. Momma had asked for memorials to the church in lieu of flowers. Most of the people had abided by that.

  Lost in her misery, the burial liturgy was over all too quickly.

  “Geri has had a light lunch buffet prepared at her home,” Father Small, the mission church’s priest, said. “All are welcome.”

  Brad’s cell phone sounded. She looked at him.

  He shrugged and looked at that device. “I have to take this call. My secretary wouldn’t call today, unless it was an emergency.”

  She sighed. “Of course.”

  He stepped away and answered the phone.

  Less than a minute later, he came back. “I have to go get a client out of jail, Gee. Can’t be helped.”

  Geri nodded. “I know. Come by the house when you’re done.”

  “I drove you. Can you get home?” Brad asked.

  “I’ll take her home,” Josh volunteered.

  Brad smiled. “Okay. Thanks, Sutherland. I really have to go, now.”

  “Be safe, Brad,” Geri urged.

  Josh and Geri sat in the back of his Lincoln, Josh’s driver and bodyguard in the front. The privacy glass was closed between the driver and the passenger compartment.

  “You really don’t have to stay for lunch. I know you’ll want to get back to Amanda,” Geri said.

  “Mandy doesn’t know I’m there or not. It won’t be long now until we’re doing this for her. She’s not going to recover.”

  “I’m so sorry, Josh,” she said as she patted his hand.

  “I know. Me, too.”

  Geri’s phone rang. She looked at it and saw the number was suppressed. Lord, not another crank call, today of all days!

  “Are you going to get that?” Josh asked as the phone rang for the third time.

  “No. It can go to voicemail. I don’t recognize the number.”

  A minute or so later, the phone rang again.

  The number on the caller id was once again suppressed.

  “Dedicated buzzard, isn’t he?” Josh observed.

  “You have no idea.”

  “What does that mean?” Josh demanded.

  “I’ve been getting crank calls. This is probably another one of those,” Geri admitted as the call went to voice mail.

  Another call came a couple of minutes later. Geri answered this one.

  An electronically disguised voice said, “Good thing you bought several cemetery spots. You’ll need one soon.”

  Chapter One

  Geri rubbed her neck and did a couple of neck circles. Her workstation monitor said the time was 10:03 PM on this first Friday in September.

  Her gaze lingered on the small solid brass globe Josh and his late wife, Amanda, had given her for Christmas several years ago. Geri smiled, remembering how Josh had said he would like to give her the world.

  The phone rang. Automatically, she picked it up. “Erikson.”

  “You are going to die, soon. I’m going to enjoy your death, Bitch!” the all-too familiar electronically disguised voice grated. As she hadn’t heard from this man in well over ten days, she’d hoped someone might have put him out of her misery.

  Geri slammed down the receiver. Her heart raced. Normally, he called her on her cell phone. Now, he had her direct line into the office as well.

  She heard decidedly male footsteps coming down the hall. Had he gained access to the offices?

  After drawing her stainless steel Beretta 92F semiautomatic pistol from the case in her purse, she quickly checked it. The clip was loaded and a nine millimeter round was in the chamber. As the steps drew nearer, she raised the weapon, took it off safety, and trained it on the door. If this maniac was coming for her, he’d not get close enough to hurt her.

  Josh Sutherland, the corporate CEO, popped his head in the door. “Geri, you should have been…” he began in a happy tone.

  She lowered the weapon. The expression on his face changed from elation to intense concern. She put the safety on. Then she placed the weapon on her desk, pointing away from him.

  “EXACTLY what IN THE SAMHELL is this about?!”

  “I’d rather not talk about it. Please don’t push me for answers. I don’t want to talk about this, with you or with anyone else.”

  He demanded, his tone more gentle, “Just what is going on, Gerianne Evelyn?”

  The only people that she had talked to about this had been the police, her pastor, and her cousin who was also her lawyer. But she knew Josh well enough to know nothing beside the whole story was going to be a sufficient explanation of why she’d pointed a pistol at him. And if the situation were reversed, she’d want to know as well.

  So, she began, “You know I’ve had some crank phone calls.”

  “You wouldn’t react this extremely over a few crank calls,” he said as he crossed the room to sit in the chair on the other side of her desk. He unbuttoned his tuxedo coat as he sat down. Tension and concern radiated from him in almost equal measures.

  “No, I wouldn’t…It’s been considerably more than calls. After Momma’s death the harassment escalated.”

  “Escalated how?”

  “He killed Mister Snuggles, Momma’s cat, and left the carcass hanging from my doorknob. There was a vicious note.”

  His worried expression deepened. “What else? Killing
of a pet usually leads to far worse things.”

  “Gifts. Sick gifts.” She heard the pain in her voice and knew he had to have heard it as well.

  “What kind of gifts?” Josh demanded.

  “Terrible things,” she dismissed, not wanting to go into this with him, at all. But she knew she was going to have to.

  “Gerianne. What kind of gifts did he send you?”

  “You’d really be better off not knowing.”

  “Tell me anyway.”

  She sighed. “You won’t let this drop, will you?”

  “I need to understand why you had to have that pistol at work. Tell me about the extent of this harassment.”

  She sighed. “After the cat, there was a big box full of used hypodermic syringes with a typed note saying that they were all infected with AIDS.”

  “Good God! Were they?” he demanded, clearly aghast.

  “According to the crime lab, yes, they were.” She didn’t like the anger in his eyes or the set of his jaw at that confirmation.

  When he spoke, his voice was tightly controlled. She’d heard that tone only on the rare occasions over the years of his being extremely angry. “You said gifts. So, that’s not the end of it, is it?”

  She sighed at the anger she heard in his voice. She didn’t want to continue, but she knew him well enough to know he wouldn’t let this rest until he had the whole story. “I wish it had been. Next came an ax blade with dried blood all over it. The blood was human and my type, by the way. It came with a note saying all people would find of me was a puddle of blood once he was done chopping my body up.”

  “Sick bastard. Is that the whole of it?”

  “I wish. Those are representative of the kind of threat this has been. Just one thing after another. Unrelenting. Vicious.”

  “What else? Tell me the whole of it.”

  “No. You really don’t want to know. There’s been something every couple of days. Some of it was threatening on its own face. And some of it was only an implied threat. But it’s all been almost too awful for words. Anyway, it’s all sitting in an evidence locker with the Houston P.D., waiting to be used in trial if they catch the fellow.”

  “What else did he send you?”

  “Leave it alone, Josh. Please. I really don’t want to go further into this.”

  “You could have said something to me about this before now.”

  “No. I couldn’t. You’ve had your own personal hell to live through with Amanda’s final illness and death, then putting your life back together. You didn’t need my troubles on top of that. You still don’t. I’m sorry you’ve been pulled into this, now.”

  “I’m not. I’m here to help you.”

  “I appreciate the offer, Josh. But it will be much safer for you to stay as far away from this as possible. I probably ought to have just taken a leave of absence, gone to ground, and found this idiot.”

  “And done what to him when or if you found him?”

  “The only way to handle a mortal threat is to eliminate it.”

  She saw surprise, then respect, cross his face.

  He sighed and nodded. “Yeah. I believe you would.”

  “Any other questions?” she asked.

  * * *

  “Why haven’t the police done something about this?” he demanded in a much harsher tone than he had intended. Anyone else but Geri would have been a basket case by now with this intimidation. Instead, she was outwardly calm and functioning, not giving any hint aside from the gun that anything was in any way out of the ordinary. He found himself jointly admiring that strength and wishing she had trusted him enough to come to him earlier about the harassment.

  “They’re doing what they can,” she said. “They created a case file and assigned a detective. There are quite few items sitting somewhere in an evidence locker just waiting for the man to be caught.”

  “Who’s the detective?”

  * * *

  Geri gave him the name of the man who was put in charge of the case.

  Josh picked up his cell phone and punched a speed dial number. She listened to his side of the conversation. “Sis, hi, I need to speak to Dave… Dave, one of my senior people, Gerianne Erikson, has been receiving threatening phone calls, her cat has been strangled, and she has gotten threatening letters and macabre gifts. Your Detective, Leo Matthews, has been on the case for several months and she is still being threatened. What can we do about this?…Thanks, Dave, I appreciate it. Sure, she’s right here.” He handed her the receiver, “It’s the Houston Chief of Police, David Black, he wants to talk with you.”

  “Chief Black? Geri Erikson.”

  Then she listened as the Police Chief promised that whatever could be done would be done.

  “Thank you, Chief. I realize the department has done what it can do in this matter. Detective Matthews has been quite thorough in the investigation. I didn’t ask Josh to make this call. I have no complaints about the way the investigation is being conducted. But you know Josh.”

  “Yeah, I know Joshua. I’m sure Detective Matthews is doing all he can do,” the Chief, Josh’s brother-in-law, said.

  “I know that. I’m not complaining. Goodnight, Chief.”

  She looked at Josh after she disconnected the call. “I wished you hadn’t done that. Can you imagine the heat the detective is going to take tomorrow over this? I’m sure he’s already done whatever can be done within his ability. Going outside of channels is a bad thing with police departments. A profoundly bad thing. You’ve done the man a huge disservice when all he did was his job.”

  He shook his head, dismissing her comments. “Whatever heat the detective takes is not my problem. When a senior member of my staff is so frightened that she is carrying a sidearm and is prepared to use it, that is my problem. It becomes my problem if she shoots herself in the foot with an illegal weapon.”

  “Like I’d shoot myself in the foot!” she dismissed.

  “I know you hit where you aim with a rifle,” he allowed, his voice gentle. “I remember how you took down a big elk from one hundred yards on the corporate hunting retreat the first fall you worked here. You’ve always managed to take something on every retreat that we’ve gone hunting since. But, sidearms are different.”

  “I don’t miss my target with a sidearm either,” she said. “And, for your information, the weapon is legal. I have a perfectly valid permit for concealed carry of the weapon.”

  “I don’t think it is safe for you to be living by yourself, whether you shoot well or not.”

  “And just where am I supposed to live? The only family I have in the area who could take me in is just one cousin,” she challenged. “I wouldn’t endanger him anyway, even if he wasn’t out of state on business this week.”

  “For tonight, you are coming home with me.”

  “Oh, no, I’m not!” she denied. To be in that close of proximity to this powerfully attractive man would be a dangerous level of temptation she wasn’t at all sure she could manage to withstand. The last thing she needed was to give him the faintest inkling of her unrequited passion for him. She didn’t want to make a fool of herself. She didn’t think they could continue working together if he knew she loved him. She liked the job. At least she did most of the time, except at annual report time.

  * * *

  “Relax. There are ten fully furnished bedrooms at my house. I wasn’t suggesting you share my bed,” he stated in amusement. As he made that statement, he knew that he was not being fully truthful. He wouldn’t throw her out of his bed if she came to him. He wouldn’t throw her out at all. In fact, he knew in that moment he would probably do everything in his power to encourage her to come to him.

  * * *

  She felt her face grow warm and knew she was blushing, probably quite boldly. Sharing Josh’s bed, sharing his life, were the things she wanted more than she wanted anything. Well, except for catching the idiot who was harassing her.

  He smiled. “This is the first time I’ve ever seen you
blush.”

  She took off her eyeglasses and rubbed her brown eyes. “I believe it was Mark Twain who said, ‘Man is the only creature who blushes, or who has to.’”

  “Sounds like Twain. Why do you have to blush?”

  “It’s been a long day. I’m going home.”

  “Since it’s past twenty-two hundred, and I know that you were here when I came in at seven hundred, I’d say that was a good description,” he said. “Did you even leave for dinner?”

  “No. I grabbed one of my canned diet shakes from the refrigerator in the break room.”

  “Oh, that sounds tasty and filling,” he dismissed with disdain. “What are you dieting for, anyway? You can’t weigh more than one twenty-five.”

  “When I’m under stress, I tend to eat for comfort. And I put on weight fast. So, I’m trying to take off the eleven pounds I gained after Momma’s funeral. I’ve only got a couple of more pounds to go.”

  “So buy new clothes,” he dismissed. “You have a good salary.”

  She looked at him in vexation. “There is a little thing called living within one’s means.”

  “Woman! You have a good income. You can afford some clothes.”

  “I have clothes. I just need to keep myself the right size so they fit correctly.”

  “Geri, no one values hard work more than I do. But, are you putting in the hours here just so you won’t have to be alone at home, so you won’t have to be vulnerable to attacks?”

  She heard the concern in his tone. “There might be something to that. However, I did have work to do. I just finished the draft of the R & D department’s part of the annual stockholder’s report. It’s ready after another pass through for minor editing to send to legal for approval. It isn’t half-bad, even if I do say so myself.”