

Prologue
I don't want to die.
Her breath came in shallow gasps, her mouth gaped
open as she violently pulled air in and pushed it out. In. Out.
Focus. Run, Miranda, run! But be quiet. Left foot. Right foot. Left
foot. Wasn't that a Dr. Seuss book? A hysterical giggle threatened
to escape but she swallowed the sound. Quiet. Above all, breathe
quietly.
Miranda grimaced at the thrashing behind her. A
sob escaped from her friend. Sharon, shut up! she wanted
to scream. He'll hear you! He'll kill us!
She ran faster even though Sharon was falling farther
and farther behind. Daylight was scarce. One, two hours left at
the most.
If they didn't make it to the river, he would find
them.
I don't want to die. I'm too young. Please God,
I'm only twenty-one. I won't die! Not here, not like this.
Miranda's sight blurred as sweat dripped into her
eyes. She didn't dare wipe her face for fear of losing her balance
on the rocky terrain. Her bare feet ached with each step, but they
were so cold only the sharper rocks cut through the numbness. Watch
where you're going! One wrong step and you'll break your leg and
he'll find you . . .
A faint, familiar echo reached her ears. She wanted
to stop and listen but didn't dare slow her pace. She scurried another
hundred feet before putting a name to the sound.
Water! Running water.
It had to be the river. What she'd promised Sharon
would lead to freedom. She silently thanked Professor Austin and
his tedious geology class. Without it, she wouldn't have known where
to run, wouldn't have recognized the signs indicating a river was
close. After the miles she and Sharon had already covered, surely
now they would make it.
From behind, a shriek.
Miranda stopped at Sharon's startled cry, whipped
around, her heart gripped with dread. Sprawled on the hard ground,
Sharon lay half obscured by undergrowth, sobbing in pain.
"Get up!" Miranda urged, panic clawing her.
"I can't," Sharon sobbed, her face buried in decaying
leaves.
"Please," Miranda begged, not wanting to backtrack.
She glanced over her shoulder, toward freedom. The water so close.
She looked back at Sharon and bit her lip. He
was still out there. If she stopped to help her friend, he'd kill
them both.
She took a step toward the river. Guilt tickled
Miranda's spine. She knew she could make it.
"Go," Sharon said.
Miranda almost missed the single word. Her eyes
widened at the implication. "No, not without you. Get up!"
For a moment, Miranda thought Sharon hadn't heard
her, whether by choice or distance. Then, slowly, the blonde pushed
herself up on all fours. Sharon's terrified eyes locked with Miranda's.
Please, Sharon, please, Miranda willed. Time is running
out.
Sharon grabbed a small sapling and braced herself.
"Okay," she said. "Okay."
Miranda sighed in relief as Sharon took a shaky
step forward. She began to turn toward the river, toward freedom.
Whap-whap!
The shot echoed in the forest. The flutter of wings
and squawking of startled birds seemed to move the sky. As Miranda
watched, Sharon's chest opened. Deep red, darkened by shadows of
dusk, spread across the filthy white shirt. In the moment between
life and death, Miranda watched Sharon's stunned expression turn
to bliss. Relief.
Death was better than suffering.
"Sharon!" She covered her mouth with her hand,
tasting and smelling rotting dirt. The coppery scent of blood hung
in the air. Her chest heaved with mute sobs as she watched Sharon's
body fall to the ground.
"Run."
That voice. Bloodcurdling in its dry, grave
monotone. The same emotionless pulse he'd used when he fed them
and whipped them; when he touched them or raped them.
She trembled even before she recognized his silhouette.
In camouflage pants and a thick black coat, he stood among the trees,
face obscured by a cap and the darkening sky. Three hundred feet
away? Two hundred? Closer? She would never make it. She would die.
"Run!" His shout echoed through the mountainside.
He took one step forward, cradling a rifle. He brought the stock
up to his shoulder.
Miranda ran.
Chapter One
Twelve Years Later
Nick Thomas stared at the outline of the petite
body under the blinding yellow tarp. He pinched the bridge of his
nose, swallowing anger so bitter he could taste it. The foul stench
of death surrounded him and he turned away.
He still pictured the dead, broken body of twenty-year-old
Rebecca Douglas as he'd found her only an hour ago.
"Sheriff?"
Nick looked up as Deputy Lance Booker approached.
He was clean-cut, a good cop, though a mite wet behind the ears.
Much like Nick had been twelve years ago when he'd been called out
to his first murder scene. "Deputy."
"Jim said there's a guy claiming to be an FBI agent
at the road wanting to be let through. Quincy Peterson."
Quinn. Nick hadn't seen him in years, ten to be
exact, but they'd shared an e-mail relationship since he was elected
sheriff more than three years ago. After the Croft sisters had been
found.
Now there were seven dead girls. Seven that they
knew about.
"Let him through."
"Yes, sir." Booker frowned, but relayed the orders
through his walkie-talkie. In matters that would as a rule fall
under their local jurisdiction, no law officer welcomed outside
interference, and usually Nick was no different. He didn't mention
that it was his call to Quinn last week that precipitated this visit.
Nick turned and walked away from the deputy, away
from the bright tarp, down the path to where Rebecca Douglas's last
steps were evident. He squatted next to an unusable footprint, a
mess in wet, hardening mud. It might have been Rebecca's last step.
Or the killer's. It had rained nearly three inches in the last two
days, a deluge that saturated a ground recently recovered from a
cold, wet Montana winter. The clouds had broken this morning, the
sky such a vivid blue and the air so refreshing that Nick would
have enjoyed it if he hadn't been called to a crime scene.
He closed his eyes and breathed the clean, crisp
air of his Gallatin Valley. He loved Montana, the vast beauty and
sheer majesty of its mountains, its swift rivers, green valleys,
big sky. The people were good, too, down-to-earth. They cared about
their neighbors, took care of their own. When Rebecca Douglas was
declared missing, hundreds of men and women--many from the university
where she'd been a student--had scoured the wilderness between Bozeman
and Yellowstone looking for her.
Nick's jaw tightened in restrained fury. Good people,
but for one. One who had killed Rebecca and at least six other women
in the past fifteen years. And other women were still missing. Would
they ever find their bodies? Had the harsh Montana weather or four-legged
animals obliterated their remains? He'd never forget finding Penny
Thompson's remains--nothing but a skull and scattered bones. She
was identified through her dental records.
Nick surveyed the area. Tall pines grew primarily
downslope; as the mountain rose the trees thinned out. The ancient,
heavily overgrown road he'd driven on was unmapped. Possibly an
old logging trail, it appeared to end here, in this natural clearing,
roughly thirty feet square. On the edge of this clearing, Rebecca's
body lay.
They'd mark off the area in grids and search for
anything that might possibly lead back to the killer. But if it
was the same bastard, they'd find nothing. He was so damn perfect
in his every crime that even their one surviving witness could tell
them little. Defeat weighed heavily in Nick's heart, but he would
not give up.
Sometimes, he hated his job.
He turned when he heard an SUV roll into the clearing,
rocks and muddy clumps of leaves shooting out from the backs of
all four tires. Sun reflected off the windshield and Nick shielded
his eyes to watch Quinn approach.
The SUV jerked to a stop behind Nick's dark green
police-issue truck. The driver's door opened and Quincy Peterson
jumped out, slamming the door behind and striding toward Nick. Quinn
hadn't changed much since Nick had last seen him, still looked more
like a damn cover model than a fifteen-year veteran of the FBI.
Nick stood and absently brushed the dirt off his jeans.
"Rebecca Douglas?" Quinn nodded toward the covered
body. His face was blank, but his dark eyes revealed the same anger
and sadness that Nick felt.
"Yep. We'll need a positive ID, but--" There was
no doubt it was the missing woman. He glanced at Quinn and raised
an eyebrow at the bandage over his left eye. "Bar fight?" he asked,
half joking.
Quinn reached up and touched the bandage as if
he'd forgotten it was there. "The last few days have been eventful,"
he said. "I'll tell you about it later." He glanced around. "When
are you processing the scene?"
"I wanted you to check it out first, but I have
my men waiting up on the main highway."
Nick didn't know why the Fed made him feel so inferior.
Maybe it had something to do with Quinn's quiet confidence, his
knack for seeing through bullshit, always getting to the heart of
the matter. Or maybe it was because Nick had puked his guts out
at his first murder scene and Quincy Peterson hadn't.
Or maybe it was that the woman Nick loved was in
love with Quinn.
Despite all that, there was no one Nick trusted
more than Special Agent Quincy Peterson.
Quinn bent down, pulled on latex gloves, and lifted
back the tarp. His square jaw clenched and a vein twitched in his
neck at the sight.
Rebecca had been beautiful. Now, her long blonde
hair was tangled, matted, and caked in mud. The happy face reproduced
on thousands of flyers was gone. She was swollen, purple, grotesque
in death. The recent rains had cleaned some of the dirt from her
naked body, leaving her pale and blue.
Her neck had been cut, slashed deep with a sharp
knife, though there was very little blood to see. Most of it had
been washed into the ground by the storm, along with any trace evidence.
Her body showed signs of abuse. Torture. Bruises of all shapes and
hues of purple covered her skin. Her breasts had been clamped into
some sort of vice. The strange marks wouldn't have indicated that
to most eyes, but both Nick and Quinn had read the coroner's reports
for each of the six other women murdered in these woods and had
grown familiar with this killer's M.O.
Quinn removed the tarp to study the victim's legs
and feet, much as Nick had done when he first arrived on scene.
Her left leg was crooked, broken. Her feet were covered in raw blisters
and deep cuts. From running.
She was thin, so pale, empty. Clinically, her gaunt
skin told the cops that she'd bled out, her life drained from her.
She'd died quickly; nobody could survive long with their carotid
artery sliced open. Small consolation for the previous week of terror
she'd lived through.
Quinn covered the body again. "Coroner been called?"
Nick nodded. "He'll be out by noon. He was in the
middle of an autopsy on that hiker we found up on the north ridge
the other day."
"So who found the body?"
"Three boys--the McClain brothers and Ryan Parker.
The Parkers have a spread three, four miles west of here. The boys
took a couple horses for the day, were going to shoot their .22s
at rabbits and whatnot." He shrugged and added, "It's Saturday."
"Where are they now?"
"A deputy took them home. Told them to sit tight
at the Parkers' until I came by."
Quinn nodded, surveying the scene that Nick had
marked with yellow and black crime scene tape. Observing the clearing,
the old path, the trees.
"It looks like she came up through that brush over
there," Nick gestured. "I checked it out, but didn't go down the
trail yet."
"If you can call it a trail," Quinn said, frowning
at the overgrowth. "I'll take a quick look while you call in your
team. How many people do you have?"
"I have a dozen of my own men right now, more later,
and a crime scene specialist. I'll need volunteers if we're going
to do this right."
"Agreed. The more eyes the better, but no hotshots.
We can't have someone going off half-cocked."
Quinn put his hand on Nick's shoulder. "I know
you were hoping the bastard dropped dead after Ellen and Elaine
Croft were found. I'm sorry I couldn't come out personally then.
But Agent Thorne is good. She would have found something."
Nick agreed, but he still felt so damn helpless.
The Butcher was the only bastard who had ever gotten away with murder
under his watch. "It's been three frickin' years! Three years since
he killed. And we had nothing then--no clues, no leads, no suspects."
"And there are other girls missing." Quinn didn't
need to remind him. The missing girls haunted Nick in his sleep.
"It's been slow, but we're gathering evidence,"
Quinn continued. "We have casings, bullets, a partial from Elaine
Croft's locket. We'll get him." Quinn turned and Nick watched him
walk down the path. He sounded so confident. Why couldn't Nick feel
the same?
He glanced down at the outline of Rebecca Douglas.
At least she would have a proper burial. Closure for her family.
But not for him.
He thought of Miranda.
He started toward his truck. He'd already put in
the call for all available law enforcement to head this location.
Then he heard the unique but familiar sound of a Jeep bouncing over
the rough trail. He didn't need to see the vehicle to know who approached.
"Damn."
The red Jeep jerked to a stop behind Peterson's
rental. Almost before the truck halted, Miranda Moore jumped out,
the mud no match for her heavy boots and confident stride. Deputy
Booker approached her, and she glared at him without stopping as
she pulled a red down-filled vest over her black flannel shirt.
In any other situation, Nick would have grinned at the way Booker
backed off.
Then she focused her sharp blue eyes on him.
His heart quickened and his stomach lurched. If
only he'd more time to prepare for her inevitable arrival. If he'd
been warned she was on her way, he could have steeled himself for
the confrontation.
"Miranda," he said as she approached, "I--"
"Damn you, Nick!" She poked a finger at his chest.
"Damn you!" Nothing intimidated Miranda. Though she was tall for
a woman--at least five-foot-nine--he had six inches and a hundred
pounds on her. You'd think he'd intimidate her, that any man would
frighten her after what she'd gone through, but he guessed he shouldn't
be surprised. She was a survivor. She didn't expose her fear.
"Miranda, I was going to call you. I didn't know
for certain it was Rebecca. I didn't want you to have to go through
it again."
Her darkening eyes told him she didn't believe
him. "Screw that. Screw you! You promised you'd call."
She brushed past him and strode over to the tarp, staring at the
covered body. Her fists clenched, her shoulders reverberated in
tension.
Nick wanted to stop her, to protect her from seeing
another dead girl. Most of all, he wanted to protect her from herself.
And she'd always been perfectly clear that she
didn't want Nick's protection.
Miranda worked to control her temper. She shouldn't
have yelled at Nick, but dammit! He'd promised. For seven days she'd
been searching for Rebecca, the nightmares destroying the few hours
of sleep she allowed herself. He'd promised she'd be the first to
know when they found her.
Neither she nor Nick had expected to find Rebecca
alive.
She stared at the sunny tarp in the middle of the
quiet earth tones of the land and inhaled sharply, her throat raw
with hot anger and unwanted ice-cold fear. Her fists squeezed into
tight balls, her nails digging into her palms. She knew it was Rebecca
Douglas. But she had to see for herself, force herself to look at
the Butcher's latest victim. For strength, for courage.
For vengeance.
She pulled latex gloves over her long fingers, knelt
beside the still woman, and fingered the edge of the tarp. "Rebecca,"
she said, her voice a whisper, "you're not alone. I promise you
I'll find him. He'll pay for what he did to you."
She swallowed, hesitated, then drew back the tarp
to reveal the girl she'd been searching for, twenty hours a day
for the last seven days.
At first, Miranda didn't see the swollen face,
the slit throat, or the many cuts washed clean by the rain. The
image of the twenty-year-old in Miranda's mind was beautiful, as
she had been when she was alive.
Rebecca had a contagious laugh, according to her
best friend Candi. Rebecca cared about those less fortunate and
volunteered one night a week reading to the infirm at Deaconess,
according to her career counselor Ron Owens. A straight-A student,
Rebecca had wanted to be a veterinarian, according to her biology
teacher Greg Marsh.
Rebecca hadn't been perfect. But no one had shared
the less attractive stories while she'd been missing.
No one would ever repeat them now that she was
dead.
As Miranda watched, the image of Rebecca she'd
held so close to her heart during the hours and hours of searching
morphed into the broken body before her.
"You're free," she told her. "Free at last."
Sharon. I'm so sorry.
"No one can hurt you anymore."
She reached over and touched Rebecca's hair, brushed
a matted piece to the side, cupped her cheek.
Stay in control.
She repeated her mantra. How many times would she
have to go through this? How many dead girls would they bury? She'd
thought it would get easier. But if she didn't keep her emotions
tight and protected, she feared she'd collapse under the enormity
of the Butcher's continued success--and her own failure to stop
him.
She eased the tarp over Rebecca's face, hating
to do it. The act of covering the body reminded Miranda of the other
dead girls they'd found. Of Sharon.
The morning Miranda led them to Sharon's body was
so cold she shivered constantly under the half dozen layers of clothing
she wore. She'd wanted to return the day after she'd been rescued,
but she hadn't been allowed to leave the hospital. When she tried
walking on her own, her damaged feet had failed her.
She'd been too numb to cry, too tired to argue.
She mapped out the location as best she could remember, but the
search team couldn't find Sharon.
Miranda couldn't bear the thought of her friend's
body exposed for yet another night. Leaving her to the grizzlies
and cougars and vultures. So the following morning she withstood
the pain in her legs and led the search team and law enforcement
back to where Sharon lay. She had to see her one last time.
She might have been in shock; that's what the doctors
said. But she walked with help. She knew where Sharon had fallen,
would never forget it. She brought them to the spot, and there Sharon
lay. Exactly how she'd fallen when the killer shot her.
Silence filled the air, birds and animals mourning
with the humans. Even the spring wind held its breath; not one leaf
rustled as everyone finally grasped exactly what had happened to
Miranda and Sharon.
The sudden cry of a hawk split the stillness, and
the wind gently blew.
The medic covered Sharon's body with a bright green
plastic tarp while the sheriff's team started searching for evidence.
Miranda couldn't stop staring at the tarp. Sharon was dead underneath
it, reduced to a lump under a sheet of plastic. So wrong, so inhuman!
It was then that Miranda had first broken down
and cried.
An FBI agent carried her the three miles back to
the road. His name was Quincy Peterson.
-- The Hunt, Copyright © 2006 Allison Brennan