In Sheep's Clothing

In Sheep's Clothing by Susan May Warren Page A

Book: In Sheep's Clothing by Susan May Warren Read Free Book Online
Authors: Susan May Warren
Tags: Suspense, Mystery
Ads: Link
painful, began at Gracie’s toes. By the time it had worked into her chest, she was shaking.
    Gripping the sides of the tub, Gracie sank into a ball and wept.
    Evelyn deserved better than this. After everything Evelyn had done for God, didn’t that guarantee her some safety? It felt as if Gracie had been kicked in the chest. “Is this how You protect those who serve You?”
    What did it mean to be a Christian if she couldn’t count on the Almighty for the one thing she needed from Him—protection? Why had she poured out her life for a God who so obviously didn’t care?
    Gracie curled her arms over her head, kneaded them into her wet hair and rocked. Evelyn’s face, white and horrified, stared at her. She pressed her fists into her eyes. She heard herself moan, and gulped it back.
    If Evelyn’s sweet life devoted to God couldn’t protect her from a brutal murderer, then where did Gracie, a soiled failure, stand in God’s eyes?
    Memory hit her like a fist and she heard laugher.
    Tommy’s laughter. She pushed away the feeling of his hands on her body, his roughness. Had she seriously thought that an escape across the ocean might free her from the nightmares?
    She got out of the tub, toweled off and grabbed a robe. Shivering, she realized she’d come full circle.
    She was alone. Just as she had been the night three years ago when she’d gone home with the campus jock.
    No wonder God had abandoned her. What a farce she lived.
    Better than anyone, she knew she didn’t deserve God’s forgiveness, let alone His protection.
    She pulled the robe tight, trying to warm herself, but it was quite possible she’d never be warm again.
    The ringing phone sliced through her despair. Gracie’s heart stopped. Who knew she was here?
    No one.
    The only people who would call her now were…dead.
    She dried her hair with the towel and dashed to her room, panic making her muscles pulse. She tugged her sweater over her head and was pulling up her jeans when the ringing finally stopped, leaving an eerie silence in its wake.
    Gracie abandoned her apartment moments later, to the sound of the murderer—she was sure it was him—again ringing her line.
     
    Vicktor flipped on the siren. Somehow the rhythmic whine slowed his heart beat and enabled him to sling his car safely around traffic toward Leningradskaya Street.
    The Wolf had returned. Vicktor’s knuckles blanched white on the steering wheel as he tried to corral his racing thoughts. The implications of the Wolf appearing again after nearly a year meant he hadn’t moved on to Moscow, as informants had speculated. Vicktor’s pulse hammered in his ears.
    Maybe he could finally put right what went wrong and atone for his mistake. And it all hinged on him finding a woman covered in blood, stumbling around Khabarovsk.
    How hard could that be?
    Vicktor screeched onto Leningradskaya, nearly dropping his cell phone. “Yanna, you still there?”
    “We just got the file from Passport Control, Vicktor. It’s loading. Hold on to your shirt.”
    Vicktor slowed and turned into the rutted courtyard of Grace Benson’s apartment. Please, please let her have returned home. He’d spent the last hour walking through the crime scene with Arkady, reliving every crime that bore the Wolf’s mark. TheWolf’s first victim had been a girlfriend of a KGB colonel. Ten years hadn’t erased from Vicktor’s memory her glassy eyes, or the wound across her throat. No forced entry, no obvious struggle. Medical Examiner Comrade Utuzh had dubbed the killer “the Wolf,” like the Siberian dogs who stalked their prey, then pounced without mercy. This was a lone wolf, however—cruel, maybe desperate.
    And an American woman might be Vicktor’s only lead. While Vicktor scoured the scene with Arkady, Yanna had pulled the FSB file on the victims—Dr. and Mrs. William Young. Evidently, they had one emergency contact, a woman who just might match the description offered by the local neighborhood watch, an

Similar Books

The Red Bikini

Lauren Christopher

Three and One Make Five

Roderic Jeffries

Honey on Your Mind

Maria Murnane

Sweet's Journey

Erin Hunter

Defying Fate

S. M. Reine

Wish Upon a Star

Mindy Klasky

Trevor

James Lecesne