Desperate Creed Read online




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  DAY 2 | Saturday

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  PRAISE FOR ALEX KAVA

  “Meet Kava’s FBI special agent Maggie O’Dell. But beware—it could be the start of a new addiction.” —Peterborough Evening Telegraph, UK

  “Kava’s writing is reminiscent of Patricia Cornwell in her prime.” —Mystery Ink

  “This debut thriller pumps the suspense out. Maggie is gutsy and appealing as an FBI agent facing constant danger.” —Library Journal

  “Kava proves her mastery of the thriller.”—BookPage

  “O’Dell could be Reacher’s long lost twin.” —Lee Child, bestselling author of the Jack Reacher series

  “A roller coaster read. Although your heart is in your throat the entire time, you enjoy every scary minute.” —Woman’s Own

  “Kava really does her forensic homework continuing to demonstrate her ability to create unforgettable yet realistic monsters.” —Bookreporter

  “Alex Kava is a master. Her heroine, Special Agent Maggie O’Dell, is one of the classic characters of the thriller genre.” —Steve Berry, New York Times bestselling author

  “Kava is a top-notch suspense writer. Her characters, especially the complicated Maggie, are portrayed with much depth and detail.” —North Platte Telegraph

  “This book is the classic definition of a page turner.” —The Lincoln Journal Star

  “A suspense thriller…enough twists and turns to keep the reader guessing until the last page.” —Mystery Scene

  “Alex Kava…created a winning character in Agent O’Dell.” —Washington Post Book World

  “Twisted plots, shocking characters, breakneck pacing. Guaranteed to keep you up all night” —Lisa Gardner, New York Times bestselling author

  “Maggie O’Dell…can give Patricia Cornwell’s Kay Scarpetta a run for her money.” —BookList

  1

  MONDAY, MARCH 18

  Chicago

  Frankie Russo’s head was already throbbing when her cell phone started blaring salsa music. At five 0’clock in the morning she immediately regretted the new ringtone. She tried to tamp down the dread in the pit of her stomach as she stumbled out of the bathroom.

  Nobody called at five in the morning with good news.

  Her hand swiped along the wall, searching for a light switch in unfamiliar territory. Where had she left her phone? She stumbled just as her fingers found the switch. The unpacked boxes in her new apartment made her dance through a maze. She was dripping wet, adjusting towels, and deep down she caught herself hoping she’d miss the call.

  Please just let it go to voicemail.

  If it had something to do with her father, she’d rather the news be filtered. A recording didn’t wait to hear your reaction.

  Finally, Frankie saw her phone on the kitchen counter. Before she touched it, she could see who the caller was and relief washed over her. She was relieved, but at the same time, pissed off at the request for a video chat. She adjusted the towel tighter that was wrapped around her then answered the phone.

  “It’s not funny, Tyler,” Frankie said to the smiling face. She pushed at the second towel on top of her head, and it almost threw her off balance. “You know I hate when you want to video-chat with me at home.”

  “I’ve been hoping to you catch you in a towel.” The boyish grin only broadened without a hint of apology.

  Frankie was too old for Tyler. Eleven years older. Yes, she had already done the math. And yet his inappropriate comment made her blush, just a little. Instead, of scowling at her co-worker she pretended it was no big deal, but she tilted her phone giving him only a headshot and, from what she could see of her image in the bottom corner of her own phone’s screen, a whole lot of her kitchen ceiling.

  They had gotten comfortable with each other. Probably too comfortable. For almost a year their teamwork on different advertising campaigns had spilled over into their personal lives. Frankie blamed herself for not putting up any boundaries. She was the older and wiser one, the so-called seasoned professional assigned to work with the hotshot new kid, fresh out of college. But suddenly she and Tyler became the envy of McGavin Holt. Paul McGavin, the managing partner of the advertising firm, had put the two together time after time, highlighting their successes as if it were because of his brilliant decision to make them a team. Frankie didn’t care if he bragged or took credit. What mattered more was the much needed boost to her career. And the timing helped take her mind off the recent failures in her personal life, like the reason for this new apartment.

  “You won’t believe what Deacon and I discovered,” Tyler was saying. “It changes everything.”

  She took a closer look at him and noticed his beard stubble and tousled hair. He hadn’t shaved yet, and he was out walking. She could see streetlamps, brick buildings and slices of empty streets. His eyes were bright and wild, most likely from too little sleep and too much caffeine. If she didn’t know him better she’d say he was drunk, but Tyler and his friends didn’t drink alcohol. Red Bull and Monster were their addictions.

  “Where in the world are you?” she asked. She glanced at the digital clock on the microwave. “It’s five-fifteen in the morning.”

  “I just left Deacon’s place. Remember I told you about my friend, Dek? Deacon Kaye? You said he sounded like a rapper. He loved that, by the way.” He was rambling.

  “Why are you calling me, Tyler?”

  “Remember I told you I was going to have him use one of their labs to do a chemical breakdown of those organic breakfast bars?”

  “And remember I told you we don’t get paid to do chemical breakdowns. Tyler, we’re supposed to be creating a marketing campaign.”

  “What about honesty, Frankie? There’s nothing organic about this product.”

  “Honesty?” She laughed while she put down the phone to pour herself a cup of coffee. At least she had unpacked and set up the coffeemaker. The aroma filled the kitchen, contributing a small semblance to her upside down life. “We work for an advertising and marketing agency, Tyler.” She readjusted the towel on her head and tucked the one around her body a bit tighter before picking up the phone again. “That energy drink we worked on last month doesn’t really give anyone super powers.”

  “No, but it also won’t give you cancer.”

  She frowned at him. His smile was gone, but he was still wound up.

  “Glyphosate showed up in all the samples. And that’s not all, Franki
e, the levels are pretty high, beyond the limits of safe. Glyphosate’s an herbicide. It’s found in weed killers. The World Health Organization considers it a carcinogen that can cause cancer in anybody who works around it on a regular basis. It’s not supposed to show up in food. Carson Foods has been hiding it in their research. They know about it, Frankie. If glyphosate can cause cancer from handling it, can you imagine what it does if you eat it?” He brought the phone closer and said, “And how bout if you eat it every morning for breakfast?”

  He said all this with too much bravado, reminding Frankie that he was still just a kid. He also sounded a bit out of breath but continued to walk.

  “Look, Tyler, maybe you should ask Mr. McGavin to take you off the project.”

  “Cancer, Frankie.”

  She rolled her eyes and took a sip of coffee.

  “Did you just roll your eyes at me?”

  “Do you know how many things supposedly cause cancer?” She held up her mug. “Depending on what latest survey you read coffee causes cancer. Being out in the sun causes cancer. Doesn’t mean I’m going stop drinking coffee or spend the rest of my life indoors.”

  “The breakfast bars aren’t the only things. I gave Dek samples from some of their other products. My little brother eats these cereals every morning. Sometimes a bowl after school. Regulations call for employees handling glyphosate wear gloves so they don’t get it on their skin, but Carson Mills has no problem with in being on their food. And the worst part is that the executives at the top not only know it’s showing up in their food but that the levels are too high. They’re manipulating the data.”

  Frankie held back another eye roll. She appreciated Tyler’s enthusiasm and the way he threw himself into their assignments. Everything was new and exciting to him. Fresh out of college, he really believed he could change the world. She vaguely remembered that feeling. But sometimes, being around him was simply exhausting.

  “So why isn’t anybody suing them?”

  She watched as he held the phone up closer as if he didn’t want the empty streets to hear what he was about to share. Even his voice now was just above a whisper.

  “There is a lawsuit pending. But just a few days ago the guy got hit by a car.”

  He paused like he was waiting for his revelation to sink in, but Frankie shook her head. “Tyler—”

  “Last week, Dek and I hacked into their CEO’s emails. He’s talking to a senator about some huge global deal for their products. I’ve got copies downloaded on my laptop. I sent you a copy. Listen to me, Frankie, they know. They know this stuff is bad. They’re hiding and they’re doing everything they can to keep it from coming out.”

  “Hacked?” She banged her coffee mug down on the counter before she spilled it. “Are you crazy? You could get arrested. And don’t get me involved by sending me anything.”

  “Actually, I offered to show the emails to a police detective, and he told me to forget about it.”

  “Tyler, he’s right.”

  “I know the cops aren’t interested. We need to go higher to the federal level. You told me you know someone at the FBI.”

  “I told you I know someone who knows someone at the FBI. You really do need to forget about this.”

  “This is serious stuff, Frankie.”

  “Maybe we should talk to Mr. McGavin about reassigning you to a different campaign.”

  “I already talked him. But not about being reassigned. I told him about the levels of glyphosate and that maybe we shouldn’t be marketing this stuff.”

  “You what? And when did you do this?”

  “On Monday.”

  Frankie had taken the week off to move. One week! Why the hell hadn’t he told her first? They were supposed to be a team. But instead of asking any of that, she wanted to know, “What did he say?”

  “He told me he’d look into. But I could tell he wasn’t going to.”

  “Why do you say that?”

  “Just the way he said it. Hold on, there’s a couple of guys here. They look lost.”

  Tyler dropped his hand to his side giving Frankie a view of the sidewalk and a slice of Tyler’s legs. Beyond him, she could see someone else from the knees down. Nice shiny, polished shoes unlike Tyler’s scuffed and dusty tennis shoes. She kept telling him how much shoes defined a person, especially in their business. If a marketing account rep didn’t pay attention to his own appearance how could he convince a CEO that he could be entrusted with an entire company’s image?

  “What’s up?” she heard Tyler ask, his voice muffled but calm.

  She picked up her coffee mug waiting for him while she processed how much trouble he’d gotten into. She wondered if Mr. McGavin thought she was in lock-step with Tyler. She’d put a lot of time and energy into this project. She didn’t want to get thrown off. What kind of a reputation would this get her?

  She could barely hear the other men, but Tyler’s tone suddenly changed from calm to guarded. The phone bobbed up, and she caught a glance at the two men. Both of them were white. One tall, one short. Jogging suits. Odd, considering one of them wore black, leather shoes.

  The discussion started to get heated, but their words were muffled.

  Tyler’s pitch rose. Something was wrong. His hand with the phone raised up as if he were bracing for a blow.

  “Tyler, what’s going on?”

  She heard a pop-pop, like a car backfiring. But it wasn’t a car. The street was empty. She could see it as her view as Tyler’s hand sea-sawed bobbling her view. She got a glance of his face. His eyes were wide.

  Was that blood on his forehead?

  Then the hand fell away and all she could see was the sidewalk as the phone’s screen slapped against the concrete.

  “Tyler?” Frankie shouted into her own phone. “What the hell’s going on?”

  Did he trip? But she knew he hadn’t. Had one of the men punched him? Was it really blood she had seen on his forehead?

  She needed to dial 911 but she didn’t want to break the connection.

  “Tyler, are you okay? Answer me.”

  Seconds passed. Finally a sliver of light returned then she saw the sidewalk. The phone started rising and her view pulled back up. She heard a muffled voice. But not Tyler’s.

  “Son of a bitch. He was on his phone.” A man said, his voice deep and throaty.

  The sidewalk flipped away, and a face filled the screen. Dark eyes squinted at her. A beak-like nose and thick black eyebrows that immediately reminded her of a hawk. He pulled away and turned his head and mouthed something to the other man. The movement was enough to reveal an ugly scar peeking out from under his shirt collar.

  Frankie’s coffee mug crashed to the floor and his eyes darted back to the screen. She held the phone at arm’s length while she squeezed and punched buttons. She needed to end the call. Finally, the screen went blank then returned to her screensaver. She slid the phone onto the countertop.

  She couldn’t breathe. She was shaking and wrapped the damp towel tighter around her body. Her mind raced. She needed to do something.

  The sound of salsa music vibrated against granite, and she jumped. Her phone came to life. The screen pulsed with Tyler’s number. Was it possible he was okay?

  Without picking it up, Frankie reached over making sure she was out of the camera’s sights. She tapped the button and the screen came to life. But it wasn’t Tyler’s face.

  A dark sky filled most of the screen with the glare of a lamppost. She could still see a sliver of the man who held the phone at arm’s length. His silence told her that he had called back to get a better look at her. This time Frankie could see something smeared on the bottom screen. Dark red. Not just a smear but droplets. A splatter.

  Oh god, was it blood?

  Staying out of sight, she eased her hand across the counter and tapped the END CALL button. When she was certain the call had been disconnected she grabbed the phone. Holding it as if it were a snake threatening to bite, she started to squeeze and click butt
ons until the screen went black, and until she was sure the phone was completely shut off. Not just on vibrate. Not just airplane mode, but off. Then she slid the contraption on the counter again, this time sending it away from her with such force it crashed against the stovetop.

  Still, she stared at it, almost expecting the salsa music to blare, again. She was cold and trembling. Her heart pounded against her chest. She had been holding her breath and now her breathing came in short gasps.

  She needed to tell someone. She needed to dial 911. And yet, she didn’t dare turn the phone back on.

  What the hell just happened.

  2

  FLORIDA PANHANDLE

  Ryder Creed could feel her watching.

  Water lapped around him as he held his arms under the big dog. Despite the lifevest that kept the dog afloat, and even with the security of Creed’s hands cradling him, the dog’s ears were pinned back and his eyes were wide.

  “It’s okay. You’re doing great,” Creed reassured him using a low, soothing tone that had worked before to calm the dog. But that was in a small rehab tank. Maybe it was a mistake to move to the Olympic-sized swimming pool. Perhaps it was too soon.

  The dog was a new arrival to the K-9 training facility. Creed and his business partner, Hannah Washington had agreed to take him after his experimental surgery. Knight was a two-year old, black-muzzled Belgium shepherd. He’d had lost most of his front right leg while serving in Afghanistan. His prosthetic was a marvel of science and medical technology. It still amazed Creed how well the dog had adjusted to his new artificial limb. Being submerged in the large body of water wasn’t only about adjusting to and using the new leg it was also about trusting his new handler.

  “I’m not going to let anything happen to you,” Creed was saying when he noticed the dog’s nose sniffing the air. Knight could smell her. He knew there was an intruder. “It’s okay,” Creed told him bringing one of his hands up out of the water to pet him. “Everything’s okay.”

  Out of the corner of his eye Creed could see her tucked into the shadows of the fieldhouse. His sister, Brodie looked and acted more like a little girl. In many ways she was exactly as he remembered her. For sixteen years he imagined her as that same eleven-year-old girl he’d watched skipping in the rain, across a parking lot and into a rest stop bathroom only to disappear into thin air.