When he returned his attention to Jill, he left his computers unlocked and available for her to use.
“Why do you have so many computers?” Jill asked. She had her hand perched near the wobbly can of soda.
“Work. Stuff,” Mitchell said. “Anyway, that baby rap thing can wait, but this can’t.”
Mitchell grabbed hold of Jill’s waist and pulled her toward him. He kissed her on the lips as he ground into her.
Jill could feel him becoming aroused, and she didn’t want things between them to progress. With a flick of her fingers she sent the Coke can tumbling over. Brown liquid spilled out from the open top and pooled dangerously close to Mitchell’s electronics.
“Shit,” he breathed. He bent down and picked a rumpled shirt off the floor to use as a towel. “Mom will get the stain out,” he said.
“Oh, I kind of wanted that Coke. Could you grab me another one?” Jill kissed him, hoping that would seal the deal.
Mitchell shrugged. “Yeah, back in a minute. Might as well help my dad with the wireless printer while I’m down there. Won’t take long.” He used the shirt as a dam and left the can where it had toppled over.
“Can I check my Facebook while you’re gone?”
“Sure.”
Mitchell fired up a Web browser for Jill to use. Jill followed Mitchell to the entrance to his computer room.
“Back in a bit,” Mitchell said.
As soon as he left the room, Jill was back inside his computer room. She figured she had five, ten minutes at best to make a quick search. Perhaps she’d get a lucky strike, but that was doubtful. Still, she had gone this far and couldn’t back out now. If nothing came of it, Jill would be fine with making out with Mitchell for a while, but nothing more. She’d ask him to drive her home, and she’d never come back here again.
Jill knew how to search a computer for files. Thirty seconds after Mitchell departed, she typed the word “Lindsey” into the file system search field and ran the query. She didn’t know how else to go about looking for evidence; since Lindsey was at the center of this, her name seemed a perfectly good place to start.
No results.
She tried a couple variations of Lindsey’s name.
Still nothing.
On a whim, she typed in the number twenty-seven, which was Lindsey’s jersey number.
Seconds later a group of files returned. Jill was somewhat taken aback, having fully expected to get nothing from that effort as well. She clicked on one of the files in the returned result set. It opened an image program. When the image appeared on the screen, her breathing momentarily stopped.
Jill gazed wide-eyed at a picture of Lindsey lying naked on her bed. Apart from Lindsey being naked, the composition of the image looked similar to other pictures her friends had taken of themselves and posted to Facebook. Jill clicked on another of the images from the batch that her quick search had returned and saw more pictures of Lindsey.
Jill ran another search, this time for the number thirty-four—
A new thought sent a shiver rippling through her.
Wasn’t Tanner Farnsworth at that party that night?
Jill looked around Mitchell’s computer and noticed a flash drive lodged in the USB slot. She dragged a bunch of the images onto the desktop icon for that storage key.
As it copied, she opened the folder where all the images seemed to be stored. Hundreds of pictures were listed within. She opened one and saw a naked picture of Gretchen Stiller—one of the witches. Like Lindsey, Gretchen looked proud to be taking her own picture. Unlike Jill, Gretchen was wide awake and smiling at the camera. Jill dragged a bunch of those images onto the flash drive as well.
She took the storage key from the key slot and put it in the pocket of her jeans. She took out her cell phone, thinking she’d text Lindsey to ask what she should do next. Her hand brushed up against the rippled metal of the toppled Coke can. The contact summoned her back into the moment. God, how had she lost track of the time!
Jill was in the process of shutting down the image application when Mitchell entered the room.
His mouth fell open when he saw what she was looking at. “What are you doing?” he asked.
Jill’s heart pounded so fast that she felt it might burst. She set her cell down on the table. She wanted to look as innocent as possible. But she felt the flash drive in her pants pocket, with all the images that she copied to it, like a hot coal searing the skin of her leg. “I was just trying to check my e-mail,” she managed to say.
“Don’t lie to me,” Mitchell said, closing in. “I can check the recent activity, you know.”
“I didn’t see anything,” Jill said, though her voice wavered the way it did just before she cried.
Mitchell, undeterred and unconvinced, stepped even closer. Before she could slip past him, he had his hands wrapped around her neck. Jill’s eyes bulged in their sockets as he began to squeeze.
“What did you see?” he growled in her ear. “You were just supposed to be using the Web browser, not snooping around my files.”
With one hand Jill tried without success to push Mitchell away from her. She stretched the fingers of her other hand and hoped beyond hope to find her phone still in reach.
Mitchell tightened his grip around Jill’s neck. He didn’t seem to notice her hand, and she found her phone. She tried to relax as she brought the phone to her side and out of Mitchell’s view. Mitchell wasn’t squeezing her neck anymore. But he kept his hands there, holding her immobilized.
Jill felt the ridges of the phone. By touch and memory she pushed the right button to redial the last number called. Jill almost never used her phone to make phone calls. Texting had become her communication method of choice. But she remembered whom she last dialed. The phone began to ring in her hand, but Mitchell didn’t hear it, because he was yelling at her again.
“Did you see anything? Answer me?”
“No.”
The phone rang and rang.
Mitchell let go of her throat. “I need to think… need to think….” Mitchell let out a heavy breath. He was still blocking her way out of the alcove.
The phone kept ringing. Jill covered the speaker with her hand. Mitchell was still pacing. He didn’t hear the rings.
“Just take me home, okay?” Jill said.
“I can’t do that yet. I gotta think. That was really stupid of you, Jill.”
Mitchell turned around and put his hand to his head. He walked out of the alcove and back into his bedroom.
Jill faked a move to her left and went right, emulating her best soccer technique for getting by an aggressive defender. Mitchell wasn’t fooled and positioned his body in such a way that he effectively blocked the door—her only exit out. Jill knew there was no way she’d get by him.
She heard a click and a voice, which gave her a pulse of hope that she’d escape from this alive.
“Jill? Honey, is that you?”
She didn’t answer her father, though, because Mitchell had turned around. He was coming toward her again.
Chapter 53
