Die For Me: A Novel of the Valentine Killer (For Me 1)
“It’s easy to say when the blood isn’t on your hands.”
He caught her right hand. Small. Smooth. “There is no blood here. It’s all on him.”
She pressed her lips together and slipped into the house. He followed her, staying as close as a shadow as she went toward the stairs.
He wanted to be near her constantly now. She’d come too close to death, and he’d seen his worst nightmare.
The stairs squeaked softly as they climbed, and then they were in Katherine’s bedroom. The bedroom smelled of her. Sweet. Light.
He knew the worry wouldn’t stop when she left with Ross. If he couldn’t see her, then Dane knew he’d still be frantic. He’d only feel secure if he could keep an eye on her twenty-four seven.
Twenty-four seven.
Understanding hit him instantly. Dane wanted to keep a constant watch on Katherine so he could keep her safe.
Valentine…Valentine would want to keep a constant eye on her, too.
While Katherine was in her closet, he yanked out his crime-scene gloves. Carefully put them on.
He began to walk around the room, looking carefully in each corner, near each window.
“What are you doing?” Katherine asked.
He glanced over his shoulder. She stood in the doorway of her closet, frowning at him.
Cops had been in her house. Dozens of them. But they had been intent on keeping the killer out. Dane realized that the guy was already in. “He said he was watching you.”
She nodded. Her right hand had a white-knuckled grip on a small overnight bag.
“He’s obsessed, so he’d want to be near you all the time.” He kept up his slow search, letting his gaze slide carefully over every inch of the room. “And he told you to stay away from me.”
“Yes.”
Was it because the bastard knew that Dane had been intimate with Katherine? Was that what had made the guy snap and attack her?
If the man knew that, then he’d been watching, all right. Watching with a view that let him see straight into Katherine’s bedroom.
The techs had been over her house so carefully, they wouldn’t have missed a small camera or even a bug. Not if one were hidden in the obvious spots that most of that team would have checked.
Not obvious, but…
I know you’re watching.
His gaze locked on the security box on her far right wall. The green light shone, indicating the system was set. “Who installed your security system?”
“A…uh, a local company. Joe at the café, he suggested them.”
Fuck. Mac had let Joe walk from the station. The guy had undergone grilling for hours, but he’d sworn he had nothing to do with hurting Katherine. The café owner’s lawyers had pushed for him to be either charged or released.
They hadn’t possessed any evidence to charge him.
Dane’s gaze was on that security box. “Ross didn’t handle it?” The guy should have.
“He checked them out. Said they were clear.”
The box was bothering him. It was bigger than the box he’d seen in her den, bigger by at least four inches. And it was positioned at a direct angle to her bed and to the entrance to her bathroom.
He stepped a little closer to the box, eyes narrowing.
Sonofabitch. There was a small hole in the front of that box. And what sure as shit looked like a tiny camera lens peeking out at him.
He turned and headed toward Katherine. “Bring the bag, and let’s go.”
“But—”
He put his mouth near her ear. It probably looked like they were kissing, but he needed her to hear his whisper. “Don’t say anything else. He’s watching us.”
A tremble shook her body, but she nodded.
The sick prick had truly been watching her all along. But Dane wasn’t about to run over there and grab the camera. It was transmitting. If Valentine saw that they were on to him, the man would run.
But if they could trace that transmission back without alerting Valentine…
Got you.
He pulled away from her. “Let’s go.”
Katherine nodded. Her features were clear, showing no fear or anger. The woman really was a pretty fine actress. She hurried across the room, still clutching her bag, and hurriedly packed some clothes. She reached into her nightstand and pulled out—
“I won’t be coming back for a while, will I?” Katherine asked.
He shook his head.
That woman had just slipped a gun into her bag. Damn but he could love her.
Could?
“Then I’ll try to be as prepared as possible.”
Hell yes.
They left the house and went back to Dane’s car. As soon as their doors shut, he was on the line with his captain. “Harley, get a tech team working on Katherine’s house ASAP. The bastard’s been watching her. He’s got a camera in her bedroom.”
From the corner of his eye, he saw Katherine’s hands clench in her lap.
“Yeah, yeah,” he said to the captain. “I’m thinking we can trace the path of the signal. Find him. Stop him.”
Then Katherine could have her life back.
They were close. So f**king close. Valentine had screwed up. Left them a trail of bread crumbs to follow. This was the break they’d needed. This. Was. It. The techs hadn’t thought to check the security box—hell, it was the one thing most folks would assume was safe. Ross might have cleared the security company, but Dane didn’t think the guy had actually gone into Katherine’s bedroom. He hadn’t seen the box.
But all the while, Valentine had been seeing Katherine.
No more.
The techs were in a van, one with the big label of a local cable company plastered on the side. Dane crouched in that van, with Katherine seated close by.
John Baylor, the tech guru at the New Orleans PD, was typing furiously on his laptop. “It’s a short-range transmission.”
Unfortunately, that was exactly what Dane had feared.
“Short-range?” Katherine repeated.
“No more than a mile, maybe two, tops,” John said without looking up from his computer.
Katherine glanced at Dane. “He’s been less than two miles away from me? This whole time?”
Dane wasn’t sure just how long he’d been there. “When did you get your security system installed?”
“A year ago.”
Fuck.
Harley was down at the security office, questioning the manager and every person who worked there.
“Almost got the bastard…he put up some red herrings, bouncing it, but I almost…” John slapped the keyboard. “Got you.”