She turned to Ollie. âDid your future mother-in-law convince Maria that youâre a workaholic since you were gone for the whole weekend?â
âNo, I blamed it on the chief. I told her that Agent Savich would kick me into the street if I didnât go with him. Then Iâd be blackballed and permanently on unemployment. She backed off.â
Savich just laughed and walked back to his office. Lacey saw Hannah Paisley rise quickly and follow him. To her surprise, Ollie was watching Hannah, a frown on his face.
âWhatâs wrong?â
âNothing really. I just wish Hannah would be a little more cool about Savich.â
Lacey didnât say a word; she didnât want to know anything personal about anybody. It was safer that way. But Ollie didnât notice, just said thoughtfully, âI heard Savich and Hannah dated before she came to the Unit. Then when she joined the Unit, word was that Savich called it off. I heard him say that no one in the Unit should dip his Bureau quill into Bureau ink.â
âNow that was sexist, Ollie. You think Hannahâs still interested, then?â
âOh yeah, just look at her. She canât keep her eyes off him. Why donât you talk to her, Sherlock? Maybe sheâd listen to you. Savich isnât interested, or if he is, he still wouldnât go near a woman agent in his unit.â
Lacey just shook her head as she punched up one of the forensic reports. She didnât care what Savich did with hisBureau quill. Goodness, she thought. Sheâd just made a joke to herself. It had been a long time. She saw Hannah come out of Savichâs office, her face set. She wasnât about to say a word to that formidable woman. She sincerely doubted that Hannah Paisley would listen to Laceyâs opinion on the time of day. She went back to work on the Ghost.
Â
Lacey unfolded the Boston Globe , the last large city newspaper in her pile. She was tired of scouring the ten largest city newspapers every day of the week, but she couldnât stop. Sheâd done it for nearly seven years. It cost a fortune for all the subscriptions, but she had enough money from her trust fund so sheâd never have to worry about feeding herself and buying as many subscriptions as she wanted. She knew he was out there. She would never stop.
She couldnât believe it. She nearly dropped her coffee cup. It was on page three. Not a big article, but large enough to immediately catch her eye. She read:
âYesterday evening at 6:30, Hillary Ramsgate, 28, a stockbroker with Hameson, Lyle & Obermeyer, was found brutally murdered in an abandoned warehouse on Pier Forty-one. Detective Ralph Budnack of the BPD said that she had apparently been led through a bizarre game that had resulted in her death from multiple stab wounds to her chest and abdomen. A note tied around her neck said that she had lost the game and had to pay the forfeit. At this point, police say theyâre following leads.â
He was back. In Boston. Heâd begun again. She prayed that this poor woman was his first victim of this new cycle, that she hadnât missed others, or that he hadnât murdered women in small towns where the AP wouldnât pick up the story.
Hillary Ramsgate. Poor woman. She reread the newspaper article, then rose from her kitchen table. She had died just as Belinda and six other women in San Francisco had seven years ago. Theyâd all lost the game.
What the newspaper article didnât say was that her tongue had also been cut out. The police were holding that back. But Lacey knew all about that. Sheâd been brutally stabbed and her tongue had been sliced out.
The bastard.
She realized then that yesterday had been the seventh anniversary of the last murder.
Seven years. Heâd struck seven years ago to the day. The monster was back.
Â
Lacey was pacing back and forth in front of Savichâs office when he came around the corner.
Grace Draven
Judith Tamalynn
Noreen Ayres
Katie Mac, Kathryn McNeill Crane
Donald E. Westlake
Lisa Oliver
Sharon Green
Marcia Dickson
Marcos Chicot
Elizabeth McCoy