Jack's Christmas Mission
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By the time she had the milk warming and the cocoa mix and two mugs sitting on the counter, Jack hung up the phone and turned to her.
“They’re sending someone over right now,” he said. “And they’ll notify Detective Gifford.”
When the milk came to almost a boil, she took the pot off the hot stove. As she spooned the cocoa mix into their mugs, she said, “I assume you’ve worked on cases like mine before, haven’t you?”
“Yep.”
She poured the steaming milk into the mugs, then hurriedly stirred the milk to blend in the cocoa. “What usually happens? Do y’all catch the stalker? Does the stalker—”
“In most cases the stalker is caught and sent to prison. In a few cases the stalker is killed by the police or by the victim. And sometimes…sometimes, the stalker kills his or her victim.”
“Things have begun progressing quickly. He’s gone from letters and phone calls to ransacking my dressing room, sending me roses that everyone knows I detest, and now leaving me this little present.” She eyed the box on the table. “So, in your opinion, what comes next? Is there a way to predict what he’ll do now?”
“You can’t accurately predict what a deranged mind will come up with, but his actions are advancing fairly rapidly now, so my guess would be that he’s building up to a more personal contact.”
Peggy Jo handed Jack a cup of hot chocolate. He accepted it, nodded and mouthed a thank-you.
“Are you talking about face-to-face contact?” she asked.
“Not at first. Not yet. But we can expect him or her to do more things to let you know that he or she can get to you. At work. At home.” Jack sipped the rich, warm drink. “I think it’s time the FBI got involved. The CPD might have been reluctant to contact the Bureau since they suspected your stalker was a publicity hoax, but I’m going to insist the Feds be brought in as soon as possible.”
Peggy Jo pulled out a chair and sat at the table, then set her untouched cocoa on the place mat in front of her. “I don’t understand how a stalking case could be a federal matter.”
“There’s a federal statute that prohibits sending physical threats through the U.S. mail.” Jack pulled out a chair and sat down beside her. “Ms. Lennard faxed the Dundee Agency several of the letters your admirer sent to you. I think both of the ones I read would qualify as physical threats. Regardless of what they suspected, the police should have already called the FBI.”
“And what can the FBI do that the police and you can’t do?”
“We each serve a different purpose. The local police are duty bound to investigate any criminal activities that fall under their jurisdiction. The Dundee Agency provides you constant protection—” he thumped himself on the chest “—in the form of yours truly. And our firm can do private investigative work that the police either can’t do or won’t do. Then the Feds add another element. Just knowing that the FBI is involved might deter the stalker.”
“I see.”
“And getting a psychological profile on our stalker could help us unearth his identity. Dundee has a psycholinguistics expert, and we can compare his finding with the Bureau’s expert. The bottom line is that the more people we have working on this case, the better our odds of finding this person and keeping you safe.”
“My life was so simple, so uncomplicated, until six months ago.” Peggy Jo stared down into her mug. “I just don’t understand why anyone would be doing this to me.”
“Believe me, he has his reasons. They may be illogical and totally insane, but to him they’re reason enough to come after you, to torment you. It could be as simple as your having said something on one of your shows that he took offense at, or something in your book.” Jack eyed the box resting on the table. “Or it could be someone you know. A rejected suitor. A guy with a sick crush on you who has grown to hate you because you haven’t responded to his advances. The list goes on and on.”
“Chet Compton. Ross Brewster. Buck Forbes,” she said. “Each one of them might have reason to hate me.”
“And it could be a woman behind the threats, so don’t rule out your TV rival, Tia Tuesday. Or a female admirer with a loose screw.” Jack gestured by tapping his head. “Your assistant, Kayla. Or if you have a fan club, someone in that club.”
“My fan club? Surely, not someone who— The president of my fan club lives here in Chattanooga. Donel Elmore. But she’s a sweetheart of a person. She sends me Christmas gifts and birthday gifts. And I trust Kayla completely. I just can’t suspect everyone I know.”
“You can’t afford not to suspect everyone—with the possible exceptions of Hetty and Wendy. And me.”
That damn don’t-you-just-find-me-irresistible grin of Jack’s all but curled Peggy Jo’s toes. This is getting ridiculous, she told herself. She didn’t even like this man and yet when he smiled at her, her knees turned to Jell-O. The last thing she needed right now, at this time in her life, was some man that made her feel like a woman. A silly, fluttering female in heat!
She cleared her throat. “Does that include everyone at the station? Are you really asking me to suspect people I trust implicitly? People like Kayla and Leda and Burt?”
“I’m not asking you to suspect them. Not exactly. All I want you to do is be careful not to trust anyone too easily. If anyone you know has done or said anything that is suspect, then I want you to tell me. I’ve begun compiling a suspects list and once we get the profile done on your stalker, we can see if that profile fits anyone on our list.”
“Mmm-hmm.” Finally Peggy Jo lifted the mug to her lips and drank the lukewarm cocoa. It didn’t matter that it wasn’t hot. It was sweet and it was chocolate. What else did a woman need during a stressful time like this?