
Killing Roses Book 2: Blood on the Petals
Valerie never plans for her private fantasies to land in the hands of a smug detective with abs built for daydreams. One teasing smirk later, her secret stash of scandalous books is the talk of her new housemate—the very same cop now assigned to protect her after a serial killer sets their sights on her.
He’s infuriating, magnetic, and maddeningly close, the kind of man who can turn a blush into a wildfire. But danger presses in beyond their banter-filled walls, pulling them into a deadly dance of taunts, tension, and temptation. Between playful battles of will and the shadow of a killer closing in, Valerie’s carefully built world tilts. Dreams, nightmares, and desires collide under one roof—and she’s not sure which will break her… and which might finally set her free.
Chapter 65: Skeletons in the Basement
MARTIN
The place was as black as the devil’s soul. It was like walking through hell, and yet his feet didn’t stop.
For other thirteen-year-olds, being uprooted from their hometown where all their friends were and suddenly moving to a place like the Bronx was a nightmare.
However, for young Martin Field, it was a dream come true.
Not only did his mother finally leave his piece of shit of a father and take control of her own life, but she also bought something to start her business with that made Martin extremely excited to live here.
That something was nothing other than the very building he was currently walking through.
His aunts had told her it was a bad purchase. The place had been empty for the past fifteen years, abandoned and an unlivable wreck.
An unlivable wreck that was like the mecca of Martin’s thirteen-year-old ghostbuster fantasies!
He had to explore it quickly and find any ghosts there were to be found before the cleaners swept out the whole building!
A trembling grin spread across his face as he walked through the hallway, going to the basement apartment. The first two levels were connected and seemed to have been lived in compared to the other disastrous apartments, so Martin had snuck down to the basement apartment.
He’d heard that places like this were occupied by hundreds of vengeful ghosts. Spotting just one was enough to prove that ghosts existed, as he’d always tried to tell his friends.
It wasn’t that scary since he knew that his mother was just upstairs with the cleaners on the first level. A single scream from him and she’d be down there in a second.
With that reassuring knowledge, he continued walking.
Finally, he spotted the end of the hallway and the dark pit into which it disappeared.
There were stairs going down into the darkness and ending off the hallway, which he’d so far been so confident to walk in.
Martin came to a shaky stop and stared wide-eyed into the dark space. It looked like the portal to hell.
“Lights…,” he whispered. There had to be lights, right? If it was true that the place hadn’t been occupied for over fifteen years, would the lights even work, though?
He shook his head. He had to find out because if he was going down there, he wouldn’t be doing so in the blind dark, despite being a kickass ghostbuster.
Reaching out at the brick wall on the inside of the basement opening, he felt around the rough wall for anything resembling a switch.
He flicked it and nothing happened. When he took a step toward the wall, however, he kicked something, and light flashed out of it. A flashlight!
One of the cleaners must’ve dropped it when they came down earlier.
Thanking his lucky stars, he picked up the flashlight and continued walking, forcing himself to brave the eeriness as his feet inched toward the stairs.
He counted each one as he descended: step two, step four, step six, until he counted fourteen and stood on the basement floor.
“Whoa…,” he whispered, looking at the things in the room. They were so old, it looked like the ancient Egyptians could have used them.
It wasn’t a large room, but rather uninteresting to behold.
There was a wall across from him, however, which looked like it had been put there; the door in its center made of thick and heavy metal.
Martin tilted his head in interest.
His feet went to move to the door, but stopped cold at the sudden, shaky feeling that gripped his guts.
The boy stood still, staring at the door.
Could it be? Beyond this metal portal could lie the answer to all his questions about the world of the invisible!
Biting his lip, he looked back at the basement entrance. The sound of the cleaners and his mother moving around upstairs reached him, bringing an immediate reassurance.
Martin squared his thin shoulders and shoved his glasses up his nose bridge. He would see this to the end!
With determined steps that quickly slowed and hesitated, he approached the door.
It was cold in the basement, and the metal of the heavy door was icy to the touch.
He wrapped his hands around the handle and then pushed.
Nothing happened.
Martin pushed again, with more force this time.
The door wouldn’t budge. Gritting his teeth, he gave another strong push.
Still nothing.
In frustration, he grabbed the handle and jerked it back and forth.
A loud, dragging sound suddenly jumped out at him, making Martin jerk his hands away, his heart hammering in his chest.
Biting his lip, he stood still. It would be embarrassing if he did find a ghost here, because it would mean there had been someone watching him idiotically push a pull door.
Clearing his throat, he shook it off.
There was no time to be embarrassed.
With a gut-clenching inhale, he grabbed the handle once more and, with as much strength as he could muster, pulled the heavy door toward him.
It dragged forward loudly, as though the metal was in physical pain after being still for so many years.
Finally, it was open.
That was when it hit him.
The smell.
Martin gagged and recoiled, covering his nose with his elbow as he glared at the door as if it had passed gas.
What was that revolting smell?!
Keeping his hand over his nose, he came back to the door and stood there, not really understanding what he was looking at.
His young eyes trailed slowly over the place, his knees quivering inside his dungarees.
Despite the light, he really couldn’t tell much of what was in the room. There was stuff in it, all right, but Martin just couldn’t tell what he was looking at. His brain couldn’t process it.
Was that it?
Was that all there was to it? Was it just some sort of storeroom?
He coughed. The stench assaulting his nose said this place was more than a storeroom.
But then, it could just be a couple of dead rats in here.
Pressing his elbow harder over his nose, he stepped into the room.
His movement sent light from the flashlight to different corners of the room.
The light hit something. Something he hadn’t seen before.
Martin stopped.
The sight was unbelievable.
It was horrific and drained every inch of blood from his face.
Trembling, his legs tried to move. They failed.
Martin couldn’t stop staring.
He didn’t dare look back. But the image wouldn’t leave his head.
The empty sockets. The twisted spine.
It wasn’t a ghost.
It was a rotting human skeleton.
ROMAN
Roman handed the tablet back to the officer with instructions to wait for his orders and, in the meantime, look for Rachel Finley’s missing car.
Continuing on his way, Roman could barely unclench his fists.
Things were making very little sense and spiraling out of his control in a very short space of time.
He’d thought he was going insane. Letting his gut instincts run away with him. Now his gut instincts had a video of proof on their side, and what did Roman have? Nothing but wishful thinking, prayers, and hopes that it wasn’t true.
Rubbing a hand over his forehead in frustration, he finally came to where Valerie and Michael were sitting, cops on either side of them.
Both of them stood when they saw him, Valerie scanning him for bullet holes.
“Roman.”
“Hey, you guys all right?” he asked them, his voice more tense and unstable than he’d thought it would be. He wasn’t surprised by that. The fact that he hadn’t already exploded was what currently shocked him.
“Yeah.”
“I’m sorry I was gone for so long.”
Valerie shook her head firmly. “No, don’t be. You had to work; that takes priority. Besides, Dane was here up until just before you arrived.”
She nodded. “He brought us some water.”
Roman looked at her like she was declaring the manner in which he would die slowly and painfully.
Before he could pry open his mouth and speak, his phone started to ring in his pocket.
“Your phone,” said Val.
Roman fished it out, recognizing Kacey’s number on the screen.
Immediately, he answered. “Kacey?”
“Roman,” she said.
He straightened at the grave tone of her voice. “What’s going on?”














































