“What’s wrong with
you? Stop calling me, Gwen. Just STOP.” The breakup was a week ago, the text
was three hours old, and her response was already percolating.
An
agitated Gwen Lundgren shuffled through design printouts next to her laptop as
she waited for a Skype call scheduled for 9:30 Minneapolis time, 3:30 London
time. After several seconds, the ruddy, smiling face of Tykon’s International
Marketing Director Erick DeMint flittered up on the screen. He was a
personable, handsome thirty-something with vibrant hazel eyes and an unruly
shock of straw-colored hair. And although she had never seen the entire man
from head to toe, that didn’t stop her from fantasizing. There was something
different about the background today.
“Gwen? How are you?”
His accent made her shift positions in her chair. “Erick, I’m great. Happy
Friday. Where are you?”
“Took a day off. Can you believe it? So I’m working from home. This is my
lovely office. Out that window is my lovely yard where I plan to spend the rest
of the afternoon. And later my brother Timothy is coming over for dinner. Oh,
and tomorrow morning my wife and I and Samantha are going north to spend the
week at a country inn we love near Northampton.”
The mention of his wife and daughter grated what she hoped was an imperceptible
degree of enthusiasm off her voice. “You’re a busy person. Sounds great. How
old is Samantha again?”
“Nine, but of course she thinks she’s nineteen. Had the nerve to ask us if she
could get her eyebrow pierced the other day. Nine years old.”
“My sister is going through the same thing with her two girls. They both want
to be Miley Cyrus when they grow up.”
Genuine laughter. “God, no. Tell her we feel her pain.”
“I’m sure you’re a great father.”
“Oh, I have my days, but thanks. What about your weekend? Taking the boyfriend
out on the town?”
“Unfortunately there’s no one special in my life right now. Well, there was,
but….I don’t know. Not the luckiest person in the world when it comes to
relationships.”
“An attractive young woman like you? That’s hard to believe. Stay positive.
You’ll find someone or someone will find you.”
“Thanks.
Well, so, should we go over the concepts I sent? You’re making me feel guilty
about talking business on your day off.”
“Don’t worry about it. This was on my calendar long before I decided to…” Erick
turned in his chair and then turned back. “Sorry. Thought I heard something.
Anyway, back to the concepts. Okay. I really liked number three. Nice work. I
felt it captured what we were trying to….” He turned again. “There. Did you
hear it that time?”
“Sorry. Is anyone home?”
“No. Kara’s at work and Samantha doesn’t get home… I apologize, but let me go
check. I’ll just be a second.”
“Not a problem.”
One of life’s great mysteries was solved as Erick stood up and walked to the
office door. He was trim with a very cute butt, just as she had imagined. She
could hear his footsteps as he walked through rooms in the house and conjured
up an image of him coming out of the bathroom wearing only a small white towel
and a tender smile, approaching the bed and…Erick popped back into the room
shaking his head.
“It’s an older home,” he said, sitting down. “I know it doesn’t sound very
macho, but sometimes I get a little freaked out when I’m here by myself. Okay,
where was…I was commenting on design number three and why I was really drawn to
this one.”
Although her attention was focused on Erick’s face as he talked, Gwen caught a
glimpse of a quickly moving shadow cross the window over Erick’s right
shoulder. Most likely….obviously a bird, she concluded, and chose not to say
anything. She really didn’t want to be distracted from the praise he was
lavishing on her design, her abilities to capture just the right tone, how
clever she was to distill a complex concept into a few beautiful images. She
was wading in his warm words.
There was a distant clang, as if something metal like a pan had fallen to the
hardwood floor.
“I heard it that time,” she said.
Erick’s expression became one of concern and he turned around several times.
“I…I think someone’s in the house. I can hear footsteps.”
“You’re sure your wife didn’t come home early?”
“Duh. That’s probably it. Like I said, I get a bit spooked here sometimes.” He
turned and called out. “Kara? Hey, is that you?” There was a muffled but
discernable “Yes,” from another room in the house. Erick’s body relaxed and he
smiled nervously. “Sorry about all the drama. I’m just going to see what’s
going with my wife and then we can finish up here. Hold on.”
As much as she enjoyed her conversations with Erick, this was taking longer
than she had planned and it was bumping into another meeting that was about to
start. Gwen leaned back in her chair and toyed with a pen while waiting. A
shadow moved across the hallway beyond the office threshold followed by a
murmur of voices and then two loud thumps, which sounded like someone pounding
a fist on a countertop. She leaned forward, eyes now zeroing in on the hallway.
There was another flitter of a shadow and then a door closed somewhere in the
house. This was followed by unnerving silence.
“Erick? Hey, what’s going on? Erick. Are you okay?” Gwen took in a
breath and held it. Someone sneezed in a nearby cube and her muscles clenched
up as if she’d been stuck with a pin. “Erick?”“No. I’m okay. Everything is
fine.” It was Erick’s voice coming from somewhere in the house. “Made a mess I
need to clean up.”
She waited a minute, her heart racing, then called Erick’s name
several more times, but there was no response, no movement in the house at all.
Do I call 911, she wondered? What’s 911 in London? Maybe he just decided to
go…no. He didn’t…he wouldn’t just leave me hanging. Would he?
A passing cube mate made the un-asked for observation that she
looked pale and asked if she was okay. Distracted, Gwen nodded and then, part
hurt, part still concerned, terminated the call. The screen went dark and there
was only her own vague image floating in the blackness of the monitor. An hour
passed, then another. Too unnerved to work, she began making inquiries as best
she could from another country. She was finally able to track down Erick’s boss
at Tykon, who said he’d gone on holiday with his wife, which was actually a
plausible explanation after what he’d told her, but still….
Three weeks passed. Gwen emailed and called Erick every day, but
received only “out-of-office” replies or was dropped into voicemail. Her time
at home was spent checking London newspapers online for any crime that might
relate to Erick or his family. She knew that something was not right with
Erick’s sudden disappearance, that possibly a crime had been committed, but she
had no evidence and could not find anything concrete on which to base her
feelings. She called his boss again and was told Erick had taken a brief leave
of absence for personal reasons. Personal reasons? Like being dead?
It was a chilly late fall afternoon as Gwen strode along Nicolette
Mall in downtown Minneapolis in the direction of the Dakota when she heard a
familiar voice rise above the din of traffic and call out her name.
“Gwen.”
She spun around and to her astonishment saw Erick walking across
the mall in her direction smiling and waving. He was wearing a long black coat
with a red scarf around his neck and his hair was shorter, but she knew it was
him from the instant their eyes met. Stunned, she stood like a boulder in a
river of pedestrians flowing by, her attention fixated on the approaching man.
“Oh, thank God I found you,” he said, putting his arms around her
and squeezing tight.
For a moment, she was too shocked to react, but then quickly
wrapped her arms around him and pulled him even closer. “My God, Erick. What
the—“ Before she could finish he put his lips to hers and kissed her
passionately. She responded without hesitation. Several moments later they
separated, and Gwen tried to formulate a coherent question from the dozens that
were swirling around in her head.
“What’s going on, Erick? Why are you here? What about Kara?”
“There’s plenty of time to talk about all of that. Right now,
however, I would like to take you to my hotel room.”
Two hours later Gwen sat on the edge of a bed, a sheet draped over
her naked body, pleasantly exhausted, but still shell-shocked. The sex had been
loud and satisfying, but perhaps lacking a degree of…intimacy. She looked
toward the bathroom door where Erick was taking a shower and tried to imagine
various scenarios that ended with Erick coming to Minneapolis from England
alone to find her after having disappeared for three weeks. None of them made
any sense.
Wearing only a white towel and a wicked grin, Erick set down on
the bed next to Gwen and kissed her cheek.
“That was unbelievable,” he whispered.
Gwen blushed, but remained guarded. “Can we talk about what’s
going on, Erick?”
“Over dinner. I promise. Let me get dressed and we’ll have a quick
drink from the mini bar and then go downstairs. I’ll tell you everything.
Promise.” Eyeing him sideways, Gwen got up to dress.
The bored waiter set their entrees in front of them and walked
away without a glance. “Bloody moron isn’t very interested in a tip, is he?”
said Erick just a bit too loud. “How’s your martini?”
“Too good. I might have to order another one. So….”
“So. Well, it’s not really all that complicated, although it is
rather depressing.” His expression darkened. “That day of the call—“
“The video call?”
“Right, video call, Kara came home early, as you know, and then
confessed to me she’d been seeing another man for several months and that she
wanted a divorce. That was, of course, a huge shock. I felt like I’d been run
over by a tram, but the part of her story that sent me entirely over the edge
was that the other man was my brother. The…bitch had been screwing my brother.
Well, I was in complete and utter insanity mode. It’s horrible to say, but I
wanted to kill them both. Honestly, I had no idea this was going on. Call me
stupid or blind or whatever, it came as a total shock. Anyway, I simply
couldn’t deal with it and left the house immediately. I’m so sorry, Gwen. I’ve
just been in a state of absolute inner turmoil the past few weeks, I can’t even
tell you. But then I thought about you and the feelings I had felt whenever we
talked and realized it was the perfect opportunity to get out of London for a
while and see if my intuitions about you were correct. And it seems they were.”
“Wow. So where’s your daughter?”
“Samantha's with my Mum until I get back..
Gwen looked down at her salmon and shook her head not quite sure
that all the dots connected, but considering the man of her dreams was sitting
across the table from her, she swept her doubts into a dark corner of her mind
and looked up, meeting Erick’s piercing eyes. “I’m terribly sorry for
everything. It must be a nightmare.”
“It was,” he said. “Until now.”
Staggering and laughing arm in arm down the hallway of her
apartment complex, Gwen and Erick made up lyrics to “The First Cut is the
Deepest,” which had been playing in the elevator on the way up. “The first cup
is the cheapest….” A wobbly Gwen apologized for the mess as she led Erick
through her apartment to the living room. She dimmed the lights, poured them
both a glass of wine and joined him on the couch, curling up next to him and
nuzzling his neck.
“What are you thinking?” she asked.
“That I’m so glad I found you,” he said.
They talked for another half hour until Gwen heard a familiar ping
coming from her bedroom.
“Sorry,” she said, gently brushing the back of her hand across his
cheek. “Need to use the bathroom. Would you pour us another glass?”
Erick smiled. “I’d like nothing better.”
Not sure why she thought she needed a subterfuge to check her
computer, she slipped into the bedroom, sat at her desk and tapped the space
bar. The screen quickly brightened and up popped a news alert. She opened the
email and scanned several recent headlines from The Telegraph. One caught her
eye.
Murdered Family
Members Identified
London — Scotland Yard was finally able to positively identify the
remains of three family
members brutally murdered in their Hampstead residence three weeks
ago. The victims were 35
year old Erick DeMint, 34-year old Kara DeMint and their daughter,
9-year old Samantha DeMint.
The police still have no solid leads…
A shadow enveloped Gwen from behind.
“Don’t turn around.
“Erick? What’s going on?” she asked with a growing sense of alarm.
“Remember several weeks ago during your little teleconference or
video call or whatever you call it when I said I had a mess to clean up.
“Yes?”
“Well, I’m taking care of that now.”
“I don’t understand.”
“Erick told you he had a brother. What I think he failed to
mention was that he has…had an identical twin brother.”
The razor-edged knife slid effortlessly through Gwen’s neck
muscles in a long red arch, releasing a burbling cascade of blood that flowed
down her chest like warm red honey. Grasping a handful of her hair, Timothy
held her head back until the spasms ended.
“Erick
was quite fond of you, Gwen. I’m so sorry, but I’m afraid you had a crush on
the wrong man.”
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