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TRACELESS.
Debra Webb.
DEDICATION.
This book is dedicated to my family.
Nonie, my husband, without whom I would be lost. I would not have wanted to take this journey with anyone else. You truly are the reason I live and breathe.
My daughters. Erica, who has given my life depth and meaning and whose unfaltering determination inspires me to carry on no matter how insurmountable the task before me. Erica's soul mate, Ashley, a man who makes her happy and to whom I will always be grateful for doing so. My baby girl, Melissa, who has infused excitement and possibility into my very soul, and whose dreams remind me that our dreams are an open window to our futures where anything is possible if we only believe.
My niece, Tanya, who is like my daughter and who is always there when I need a backup plan, and who will forever-more be my traveling partner and partner in crime far and wide. Ray, Tanya's husband, for being the man of her dreams and whose dedication and genuineness is so rare in this life.
My brother, John, whose resiliency and resolve have my undying respect, and for loving his big sister even when, at age nine, she satisfied her curiosity about flying by talking him into jumping off the roof with only a towel for a Superman cape. Our childhood adventures will always live in my heart.
My nephews, Robby and Chad, two totally handsome guys whose love and respect and compa.s.sion give me hope for the world's future. Chris, my youngest nephew and the "baby" of the family, who is as smart as a whip and who never fails to keep life interesting.
To my extended families, the Wrights and the Allens. You are special people in our lives... true friends which are so very rare. Thank you for taking Missy into your families like one of your own. A special thanks to Jimmy and KarenSue Allen for giving this story an early nod of encouragement.
Last, but never in a million years least, to my dearest friend, Donna. We are as different as night and day and yet the same somehow. My life would not be complete without you in it.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS.
First, I must thank Stephanie Kip Rostan, my agent, for her relentless faith in my ability to make this leap. Her expert guidance, keen eye for detail, endless patience and outstanding grasp on the industry amaze me. She is simply incredible. I will forever be in her debt.
Jennifer Weis, wow! It is an honor to have her as an editor. Her enthusiasm and vision are remarkable. The sheer excitement she generates inspires me to reach deeper, to push the limits of the creative process. Working with Jennifer and the team at St. Martin's is truly a privilege.
I sincerely want to thank teachers across America. As a dedicated parent volunteer for a number of years in the public school system, I am keenly aware of the hard work and dedication required to be a teacher. You are the people who shape our future, you have the most important job of all: teaching our children. I am ashamed of those who pretend to be one of you and who dare to harm a child.
Small-town law enforcement is another group of sometimes overlooked heroes. Not often in the limelight, the village chief or sheriff carries an awesome burden: keeping the citizens safe. More often than not, this burden is carried with insufficient resources. I salute all who take on that burden. Though we rarely say so, we need you, we thank you.
I have a few friends in the business I must thank. Vicki Hinze, for being so much more than a critique partner. You are an extraordinary woman. You reminded me that I could. Rita Herron and Julie Miller, for being wonderful friends who listen without judging and who never fail to make me feel better no matter what is going on. Stephanie Hauck Bond, for being an endless supply of encouragement and knowledge. You are an inspiration to us all. Beverly Beaver Barton, for being you. Your work ethic and love of the craft and willingness to share is a pattern by which all should follow. Don't ever stop being you. Linda Howard, for forging the way. We all owe you.
This lady has to have her own paragraph. Rhonda Nelson. We began this journey together. You have always believed in me and cheered me on. Thank you. The trip would have been so boring without you.
Lastly, to my readers, thank you. You have given me this opportunity. You make the stories come to life.
CHAPTER ONE.
Holman Prison.
South Alabama.
Monday, July 15, 8:05 a.m.
The gray prison walls loomed behind Clint as he moved forward, his steps hindered by the manacles connecting his wrists and ankles with lengths of chain designed to impede movement. The shackles had been one last humiliation. For old times' sake, the warden had said. The guards on either side of Clint had snickered and snorted as they carried out that final order. Clint had simply stood there and allowed the b.a.s.t.a.r.ds to do what they would.
For more than ten years his choices had not been his own. Accepting that reality had equated to survival.
No more.
The early-morning sun drew his gaze to the sky. Clint closed his eyes a moment to relish the welcome warmth. He couldn't remember the last time he'd been allowed to come outside. It had been months, at least.
The law said he got one hour a day in the fresh air, but that privilege had been cut long ago with a sham of an excuse. The guards liked putting pressure on inmates, amping up their anxiety level. They especially liked doing it to Clint. Just another attempt at causing him to f.u.c.k up.
Clint hadn't let the b.a.s.t.a.r.ds get to him. He'd taken the punishments, the beatings for no apparent reason, the forgotten meals, all of it... without so much as a word in argument or the slightest effort in retaliation.
He'd played by every single rule. Now his freedom was so close he could taste it... smell it. There was nothing anyone could do to stop him from walking away.
As if to deny that certainty, fear, bone cold and irrational, trickled inside him.
A muscle in his jaw jerked with the pressure of holding back the questions about what happened next that he suddenly wanted to ask. The parole board had made its decision. He was free. The guards, the warden, no one here could prevent Clint from leaving. The affirmation rang hollowly inside him.
The command was given and the twelve-foot-high gate topped with its concertina wire yawned open, creaking and groaning as if it, too, was reluctant to permit his long-awaited departure. The boddom, the pits of h.e.l.l called Holman Prison, didn't like vomiting back up the men it devoured. At least not until they were properly punished as G.o.d and the warden saw fit.
That trickle of fear widened into a stream of pure panic, knotting Clint's gut, clamping around his chest like unyielding arms. He'd waited for this moment for so long. The blood rushed to his brain and exploded there in a burst of sheer terror, urging him to go back... to seek the security and sanctuary of that five-by-eight cella"the only place he'd felt the least bit safe for so d.a.m.ned long.
Fighting the impulse, he aimed his attention on the hope that open gate presented. His hands clenched into fists as the muscles in his legs cramped with the compulsion to run, but the shackles and the fear kept him paralyzed. Sweat squeezed from his pores as the air sawed in and out of his lungs. He ordered himself to be still. To focus. No sudden moves. The remembered pain from far too many reminders of that hard-earned lesson stung through his body.
The guard on Clint's right unlocked the cuffs around his wrists, then gave him the key. He bent down, his hands shaking, and released the steel bands circling his ankles. As he straightened, he handed the key back; then he froze.
What now? He'd been given no specific exodus orders, no directions on how to proceed. Reason had deserted him, leaving his already raw senses cluttered with confusion and doubt.
"What the h.e.l.l you waitin' for, Austin?" The guard on Clint's left nudged him in the spleen with his baton. "Get the f.u.c.k outta here before we decide to keep your sorry a.s.s."
Clint's heart rammed against his chest, urging him to act. Another prod from the baton ignited his long-slumbering fury, fueling the courage that had betrayed him this morning. He stepped away from the impotent shackles, resisted the temptation to break loose and run without ever looking back.
The guards would be watching, hoping he would make a move of aggression ... itching to use the weapons stationed at their hips. The snipers in the towers would be clocking his every move through the scopes of their high-powered rifles, praying for the opportunity to rid the planet of one more worthless piece of s.h.i.+t. It didn't matter that he was unarmed; they would have a story to cover up whatever played out this morning.
Not going to happen. He was out of here.
Clint took the four paces necessary to put him beyond the boundary of the fence that surrounded what had been his home for an eternity; then he stopped stone still. He turned around slowly, his hands hanging loosely at his sides in the expected submissive stance. His gaze met the warden's where he stood s.h.i.+elded by the guards, and Clint felt himself smile for the first time in over a decade.
He didn't say a word, didn't bother with any dramatic offensive gestures, no matter how deserving; he simply stared at the man, forced him to face the cold, hard truth ... he had lost this battle. Those three or four brief seconds almost made the years of pain and suffering worth it.
Almost.
Turning his back, Clint walked, his steps measured and deliberate, toward the visitor's entrance where his ride out of here waited.
The feel of unwashed denim and stiff polyester chafed his skin. His toes were stuffed into the cheap shoes that had no doubt been ordered a size or two too small for the sole purpose of ensuring his discomfort. It was one of the perks of surviving an Alabama prison. When and if you were released, you left wearing new clothes and in possession of whatever personal items you'd surrendered upon arrival. In Clint's case it wasn't much. His wallet that contained an expired driver's license and twenty bucks.
There wouldn't be much in the way of financial a.s.sets waiting for him back home. But he would have full access to the one thing that he wanted nearly more than his next breath....
The people who had stolen his life.
Samford Medical Research Facility Birmingham, Alabama 9:15 a.m.
Your concerns were duly noted, but the decision has been reached and executed.
Emily Wallace sat at her desk, her fingers clenched on the arms of her chair, as the words reverberated inside her.
How could the parole board let this happen?
A convicted killer was being allowed to walk after only ten yearsa"-half his sentence.
Unwillingly, she filled her lungs, the repet.i.tive action suddenly a burden. Medical records and reports that needed to be filed stood in mounds on her cluttered desk, vying unsuccessfully for her attention. She hadn't been able to concentrate on work for the past week. Hadn't been able to think of anything but the results of the hearing.
And now it was over.
She thought of the somber faces on that board as she'd offered all the reasons for Clint Austin's continued incarceration. Not so much as a flicker of emotion had slipped past those unfeeling masks as Heather's father had echoed those same pleas. They didn't care. It wasn't their daughter or friend who had died. One board member had gone so far as to say that she had read the trial transcript and felt the preponderance of evidence had been insufficient for a conviction in the first place. She'd gone on to toss out scenarios suggesting Clint Austin's innocence, each one a slap in the face to those who had loved Heather Baker.
Only moments ago the district attorney's office had called to confirm Emily's worst fears. She hadn't been able to move since dropping the receiver back into its cradle.
It was official now.
He was free.
The wail of Emily's own remembered screams filled her head, drowning out all other thought. She told her mind to quiet, but it refused. Like a faulty fluorescent light, images from that night flickered one after the other. Her old room in the house on Ivy Lane with the retro sixties stripes and the posters of her rock star idols plastered on the walls. The tie-dyed comforter on her bed... and Heather lying there in a pool of blood. Gaping wounds marring her beautiful face ... her slender arms.
He was there. His hands on Heather's throat, blood all over him. Emily had tried to pull him off, but he was too strong. Beyond the horror in her room she had heard the sirens in the distance ... so d.a.m.ned far away. Finally she'd managed to push Clint Austin aside and then she'd seen the other wound on her friend's throat. Nothing Emily had attempted had stanched the flow pulsing from that fatal gash ... all that blood had just kept seeping out around her fingers.
And then the police were everywhere ... the paramedics had urged Emily out of the way. Everything had happened so fast and yet it was all loo, too late.
Heather was dead.
The room tilted and Emily's stomach churned violently. Moving with extreme caution, she stood, her legs trembling, then walked stiffly, slowly, to the ladies' room.
Fortunately, all three stalls were empty. Having anyone bear witness to her breakdown would only lead to questions. Questions she couldn't bear to answer. She went into the first stall, closed the door, and dropped to her knees in the nick of time. Her stomach heaved viciously. She vomited until there was nothing left before wiping her mouth with the back of her hand and collapsing on the cold tile floor.
She couldn't be sure how much time pa.s.sed, but she cried until no more tears would come, until pain had gathered in a fierce band around her skull. Each breath proved a monumental task with the weight of guilt crus.h.i.+ng against her chest.
She had failed.
Her friend was dead. Emily hadn't been able to save her all those years ago and now hadn't been strong enough to keep her killer behind bars.
Emily had failed her friend twice.
A decade's worth of rage lashed so abruptly inside Emily that she twitched with the force of it. The fury obliterated the weaker emotions in an instant. She sat up straighter and leaned her throbbing head against the wall of the stall.
He was out.
How the h.e.l.l could she sit here wallowing in self-pity like this? There was more she could do. More she had to do.
The law could set him free, but that didn't mean she had to give up for one second on proving what she knew in her heart.
He was guilty.
He would pay for what he'd done. A mere ten years wasn't nearly compensation enough. There had always been the possibility that this day might come. All she had to do was be strong. It wasn't over until she said it was over.
Emily braced a hand on the toilet seat and levered herself to her feet. Still feeling a little unsteady, she flushed the toilet and pushed out of the stall. She washed up and headed back to her office, mentally ticking off the list of things she would need to do before leaving: clear her desk, transfer her calls to the switchboard, and divide up her workload between two of the file clerks in her department.
In a few hours she could be on her way to Pine Bluff to do what had to be done.
Clint Austin would not be free for long.
CHAPTER TWO.
Jackson County.
11:18 a.m.
Clint took in the familiar pa.s.sing landscape like a starving man introduced to an all-you-can-eat buffet for the first time. A h.e.l.l of a lot had changed in ten years, but the closer they got to Pine Bluff the more things looked the same, as if the hole-in-the-wall that was his hometown had been frozen in time. Equal parts dread and antic.i.p.ation coagulated low in his belly.
"You listening to me, Clint?"
Clint aimed one of those cold stares that had backed down more trouble than he cared to recall at the driver. "Yeah, sure."
Three hours on the road and Chief of Police Ray Hale had tried initiating a conversation several times, but Clint had no desire to talk or even to make the effort. The idea that Ray was likely the only friend Clint had should have but didn't arouse the necessary motivation.
He and Ray hadn't actually ever been friends, just acquaintances. Ray had graduated from high school the year before Clint. He'd been a green recruit on the Pine Bluff police force a decade ago, but now he was the chief and, truth told, he was probably the main reason Clint was free.
He was free.
He inhaled deeply. Even the air smelled different outside those d.a.m.ned prison walls. Gone was the heavy stench of days-old sweat and perpetual fear. A shudder rocked through him before he could stop it. He was never going back there.