He
waited in the stand of poplars behind the bus shelter, his black sweats
fading into shadows cast by the midnight moon. A ski mask covered
his face.
At
twelve-seventeen, a Denver city bus approached the residential
shelter. Air brakes hissing, it rolled to a stop and Cindy
Harris, a sweater draped over her blue scrubs, stepped to the
pavement. Glass shards from the streetlight crunched under her
feet.
She
glanced at the shattered light, then to the houses lining the gloomy
street. The older frame bungalows, many with porches holding
swings and chaise lounges, stood dark and silent.
Where were
all the people? Surely someone was still awake, but there were no
lights, not even from an upstairs window. She felt like a lone
astronaut landing on a stark, barren planet.
With a whine of
the engine and a cloud of exhaust fumes, the bus pulled away. Cindy desperately wanted to run after it and beg the driver not to
leave her alone, but she'd never get home if she stayed on the
bus. And she needed to fall into her bed for at least a couple of
hours before she had to get back to the hospital for another
sixteen-hour shift. Nurse's training had been grueling, but she
hadn't known rough until several nurses called in sick and she'd had to
pull three double-shifts her first week. She would get through it
though; she'd be the best nurse County General ever had. Registered nurse, she thought, fingering her shiny new pin.
Straightening
her shoulders, she left the shelter. At least she had only two
blocks to walk. That wouldn't be so bad.
"Always
call for a guard to walk you to your car," the hospital manual
quoted for night personnel. "Or walk in groups. Above all,
think safety. If you find yourself alone, carry something for
defense and walk with determination and purpose. Do not advertise
yourself as a victim."
Good
advice, but not so easy to follow, especially on a night like
tonight. Cindy walked at a rapid clip and searched for a beacon
in the blackness, a porch light, a light in a window, any proof that
another human being was alive.
There was nothing. Even the slice of moon had disappeared behind black clouds.
Lightning streaked across the sky, followed by the low rumble of thunder. A
sudden breeze blew Cindy's blond hair back from her oval face and she
felt moisture in the air. Great. A spring storm and no
umbrella. Without slowing, she pulled on her sweater and hoped
she could make it home before the rain started.
From behind, she heard a faint rustling sound.
She whirled
around. Nothing but a few scattered leaves on the sidewalk. That's all it was. Still, she scanned the spacious lawns between
the houses and peered between the mature cottonwoods, aspens and blue
spruce.
Tree branches swayed gently in the breeze.Nothing else moved.
She
quickened her pace and tried not to look over her shoulder. Of
all times for her old Pontiac to be in the shop. It needed new
belts or some such thing. Cindy had memorized symptoms of a vast
number of diseases but the mysteries under a car hood were beyond
her. A few paychecks and she could trade her old clunker for that
sporty little Saab with the custom red leather seats.
At the end
of the block, she turned right and cut across an expanse of lawn on the
corner lot. Only half a block to go. She glanced ahead to
her apartment, hoping to catch a glimpse of her porch light, but it was
still too far. A few more steps and there! Now she could
see it through the branches of the aspen tree. She relaxed for
the first time since getting off the bus. One thing for certain,
she’d stop by that shop tomorrow and get one of those pepper sprays
just in case she worked late again.
From the depths of the yard on her right, she heard that rustling sound again, only louder.
The fine
hair on her neck and arms prickled as if the air were electrically
charged. Her heart thudded. She walked faster, almost
running. Probably a cat, lots of cats in the area. Think of
something good, something good. Nothing came to mind except her
mother’s face, beaming at Cindy’s graduation, holding back tears
because her daughter had accepted a job in Denver instead of returning
home to Pine Bluffs, Minnesota.
Behind her, a twig snapped.
That was no cat!
Heart
racing, she spun around. Her frantic gaze raked the trees, the
shrubs, the black spaces between the houses. Something moved…a
shadow, big, like a man.
It advanced toward her.
She screamed and ran. He grabbed her from behind . . .