
Two years ago, a major FBI undercover drug deal suddenly
went south- and special agent Dylan Shields went down in a
hail of bullets. When the dust cleared, his fellow agent
(and fiancee) Anne Marie McCall was left alone with too
many unanswered questions and nothing to do but hit the
job as hard as she could to dull the pain. Only now is she
beginning to ease up on her punishing routine as a Bureau
profiler and starting to let some light in again. and.
Detective Evan Crosby had a lot to do with drawing Annie
back into life, and she's not about to let her chance at
happiness with him slip away. But before she can embrace a bright new future, she must
grapple with the dangerous past whose demons of doubt and
suspicion won't let her sleep at night . . . and whose
dead will never rest in peace until someone digs up the
truth and deals out the payback. That means going places
where no one- including the FBI-wants Annie to be and
cutting through a minefield of smoke and mirrors, politics
and intimidation, dirty tricks and deadly threats, in
order to make a cold case hot enough to get the right
people sweating. The harder Annie squeezes, the more
blood, lies, and betrayal she wrings out . . . and the
closer she comes to connecting a face to the trigger
finger that blew away her dreams-and Dylan Shields. What
she doesn't know is that the killer she's closing in on is
lookingfor closure too. The kind that only Annie's death
can bring.
Excerpt Lyndon, Pennsylvania August, 2005 What could possibly be
going through a man's mind at the moment he decides to
take the life of a child?
Detective Evan Crosby stared down at the twisted body of
Caitlin McGill and wondered. The young girl's blank eyes stared endlessly at the sun,
her mouth open in its final scream. Her thin arms
stretched outward, bent at the elbows, to form perfect Ls.
Her feet turned in, toes touch- ing. "Pigeon-toed." "What?" Evan turned his head slightly, though his eyes
were still on the girl who lay at his feet. "We used to call people whose feet turned in like that
pigeon-toed," one of the crime-scene investigators
noted. "How old was this one?" "Not even fourteen," Evan replied. "Just like the last one." The CSI shook his head. "Crazy.
Just plain damned crazy. She was a real cute kid." "They were all cute kids." "This is what, the third? Fourth? In the past two months?" No one responded to the question, which was rhetorical.
Everyone on the scene--from the Avon County, Pennsylvania,
detectives to the CSIs to the local police to the medical
examiner--knew exactly how many others there'd been since
the first of May. Four. Jamie Kershaw. Heidi Fuhrmann. Andrea Masters. And now Caitlin McGill. All between the ages of twelve and fourteen. All pretty
girls who attended one of the many private schools that
flourished in the Philadelphia suburbs. All with dark red
stains down the front of the white cotton shirts that were
standard school-uniform at- tire. All of them barefoot. "What's up with that, anyway?" Joe Sullivan, Evan's
onetime partnerat the Lyndon Police Department, came up
the hill from the playground and stopped three feet behind
Evan. "Whaddaya suppose he's doing with their shoes?" "Your guess is as good as mine." "Poor kid." Sullivan shook his head. "What's your old lady
say about it?" "I haven't had a chance to talk to her yet. She's been
away." Evan let the "old lady" comment ride. He'd had that
conversation with Joe on more than one occasion. It had
never done any good--Joe was Joe and wasn't about to
change. "Guess they keep those FBI profilers pretty busy, eh?" "Never a shortage of psychos, Joe, you know that." Evan
nodded to Dr. Agnes Jenkins, the Avon County medical
examiner, as she hurried past. "Can't remember anything like this, though. But at least
he left them where they'd be found quickly." Sullivan's
voice was flat, emotionless. The M.E. bent over the body and began her ministrations.
Evan looked away. Over the past eight weeks, he'd had more
than his fill of young girls who'd had their throats
slashed. He took a few steps back, then turned and went
back to his car. The crime scene would be turned over to
him once the M.E. was finished, but for now, he'd use this
time to check his phone messages, return those calls he
could. Start the paperwork on this latest homicide. Get as
much work done as he could while he could. It had all the
makings of another very long night. It was well after three in the morning when Evan arrived
at his townhouse in West Lyndon. Bone weary, he left his
car parked out front, and bleary-eyed, let himself in
through the front door. He ignored the pile of mail on the
hall table--when had he put that there?--and pretended not
to see the blinking red light on his telephone. Messages
could wait. He was simply too tired to deal with anyone or
anything. Too tired, too, to make it up the steps, so he let himself
drift backward onto the living-room sofa, fully clothed.
He'd just closed his eyes when he heard the soft footfall
on the stairs. Dismissing it as little more than wishful
thinking on his part, he continued to sail toward sleep. "Evan?" a voice called from the doorway. More wishful thinking, surely. "Evan." The voice, gentle, filled with concern, drew
closer. Soft hands caressed his arm. He sighed and smiled in his
state of almost-sleep. "Evan, don't sleep down here. Come up to bed." The voice
was in his ear now. He reached out and touched skin. "Annie." He felt her weight as she sat on the edge of the sofa and
leaned over him, her lips pressed against the side of his
face. "When did you get here?" "About nine." She snuggled next to him, and he felt
himself relax for the first time in days. "Why didn't you call me?" "I heard on the scanner that another body had been found.
I didn't want to disturb you. I figured you'd be home when
you were finished with what you had to do." "How long can you stay?" "I'll be in town through Tuesday. Have you forgotten that
my sister is getting married on Friday?" "Oh, shit. I did forget." He stared up at the ceiling. How
could he have forgotten that? "It's okay. I'm here to remind you. Thursday night,
rehearsal dinner. Friday night, wedding. Saturday, sleep
until noon. Satur- day night, just me and you. Sunday
through Tuesday, I'll be staying with my niece, until Mara
and Aidan get back. Not much of a honeymoon for them, but
at least they'll have a few days to themselves." "Rewind back to Saturday. Saturday sounded real good." It
had been weeks since they'd had a night together alone.
There'd been something every weekend for the past month.
Four weeks ago, it had been Mara's wedding shower. The
past three, either Annie or Evan had been working. Maybe on Saturday night they could have dinner at their fa-
vorite restaurant, he was thinking, then catch a movie.
Or maybe they'd just stay at home, just the two of them.
That sounded even better. She lay against him, her head on his chest. His fingers
trailed lightly through her soft blond hair. "How old was she?" she asked softly. "Thirteen. Almost fourteen." "Same as the others?" "Yes." She fell silent, and he knew that she was working it
through. As a psychologist and one of the FBI's most
skilled profilers, Annie--Dr. Anne Marie McCall--couldn't
help but sort through the pieces. "Shoes?" "Missing," he told her through a fog of fatigue. "Just
like the others." "Odd trophy," she murmured. "I wanted to ask you what you thought about that." "Tomorrow." She sat up. "We'll talk about that tomorrow.
Right now, you think you can make it up the stairs?" "Doubtful." "Okay." She stood, and cool air replaced her warmth. His hand
searched for her in the dark, but she had already moved
out of reach. "Where are you going?" "I'll be right back." Moments later she returned. He felt the soft flow of a
blanket drift over him, the comfort of a pillow under his
head. Bliss. "Move over." She slid under the blanket and wrapped her
arms around him, her body molded to his in the dark. "Annie . . ." "Shh. Tomorrow. There's nothing that can't wait until the
morning." He wanted to say something, but his tired brain had
stopped communicating with his mouth. Effortlessly, he
sailed off into the darkness, where he dreamed of endless
closets filled with small bloody shoes that frantic
mothers tried to match into pairs.
Our Past Week of Fresh Picks
|