going to take some time.”
E-crimes were exploding, and the police department was still catching up with the twenty-first century. When they thought they’d gotten a handle on the casework, another cyberscam hit and they were scrambling for more computer resources.
“The answer is here somewhere.” Carina flipped through the pages of printed material from the MyJournal site. “But we need a hundred people and a thousand hours to find it.”
“Welcome to my life,” Patrick said. “I have some other ideas I’m working on, but I’ll talk to you about them tonight.”
“Tonight?” Carina hit her forehead. “Lucy’s birthday party!”
“You
“I’ll be there, but late. It’s Angie’s memorial service tonight.”
Patrick nodded solemnly. “I’ll cover for you. But I get your slice of cake.”
“Deal.”
They went back downstairs and while Will filled in the team covering the memorial service, Carina looked at Bondage’s page on her computer and Nick looked at Scout’s on Will’s.
“Bondage says he’s twenty-two,” she said as she investigated the site. “This is awful. I don’t believe in censorship, but I still don’t think this stuff should be allowed. Hey, look at this.”
Nick leaned over to see her screen. When his shoulder brushed hers, a jolt ran down her spine, leaving her with tingles and goose bumps. She licked her lips, then hoped Nick didn’t notice.
“What?” he asked, his voice low as he looked at the screen. “White nylon rope.”
On Bondage’s main page was a picture of a partially clothed woman bound by white nylon rope around her wrists and ankles. The woman didn’t look in distress; she was posed with her lips open and her tongue out, her face heavily made up.
The caption read:
“Same kind our killer used.”
“It’s common,” Nick said, “but it’s certainly damning. Any identifying information?”
Carina skimmed the personal profile. “Nothing about where he lives, what he does-wait. Here. ‘I work at a coffeehouse in a college town and the girls here are wild.’ ”
“Did Angie frequent any coffeehouse?”
“I don’t remember her friends talking about a specific place other than the Sand Shack. But I’ll ask them tonight at the memorial service.”
Nick said, “Steve’s neighbor Ava said something about how a lot of their friends hung out at the Starbucks near campus.”
“We’ll check it out. We might have time before the service tonight.”
Nick went back to his own screen and Carina felt distinctly colder with him several feet away. She glanced at his broad back, the muscles defined under his white polo shirt. He wore jeans, and wore them very well.
Her heart was beating too fast and she swallowed, turned back to her computer. It took her a moment to focus, all her senses attuned to Nick Thomas and his hot body, his low drawl, his piercing blue eyes.
Was he? Carina wondered as she debated silently with herself. She snuck another quick glance at him. Yeah, there was definitely something about Nick that had all her female hormones working overtime.
“Look at this.” Nick scooted his chair to the side so she could bring hers over.
She read what was on the screen. “What?”
“This is old. He set it up nearly two years ago, but there’s only this one post.”
“So what does that mean?”
“I don’t know. He obviously comments on other people’s pages, but he doesn’t draw people to his page.”
Heads together, they read the sole post on Scout’s MyJournal page.
Hello. I’m Scout. Why? Because I’m always looking around, you know, scouting things out. Ha.
I just got my own computer and the first thing I did was set up this MyJournal account. Everyone talks about what a great place this is and I’ve already visited a lot of the people here and they’re great.
About me? There’s really not much to tell. My life is actually boring. Not much of a life, really. But I’m going to change that. My dad always told me if I wanted to make my mark on the world, I needed to be in control and not take shit from anyone. I know I’m destined to do great things. Everyone will know my name. I won’t be a nobody forever.
“He sounds young,” Nick said thoughtfully.
“Too young. Like he’s in high school.”
“He posted this two years ago. He may be in college now.”
“Unfortunately, we can’t do anything with this information,” Carina said, discouraged. “I’d really hoped I’d see something like, ‘I killed a woman last weekend and dumped her body on the beach.’ ”
“Too neat.”
“You’re telling me.” She paused. “How long did it take you to catch the Bozeman Butcher?”
Nick tensed and she wished she hadn’t asked. “He killed twenty-two women in thirteen years. I was sheriff for the last three years of his reign. Under my watch, four women died.”
“But you caught him.”
“I didn’t have much to do with his capture,” he said cryptically.
“But-”
Will approached, interrupting the conversation. “Okay, I have eight guys in place as we discussed earlier, and two more checking everyone’s names and ID when they enter. We’ll have a list. Might not do us any good, but I’ll never forget the Fremont case.”
“What was that?” Nick asked.
“A year ago,” Carina said, “a nurse was killed in the parking lot of the hospital. We caught the case-my first as detective-staked out the memorial service, which was in the hospital chapel. The killer was cocky enough to use a stolen hospital ID and sit right up in front. We had a team of men in the next room verifying every ID and we found him, arrested him as he left.”
“Very neat and tidy.”
“Wish this case was,” Will said. He glanced at his watch. “We need to talk to the chief.”
“I’ll meet you outside,” Nick said.
“Actually, we need you to be there,” Carina said. “Will talked to Chief Causey earlier today and he wants to meet you and get a copy of your credentials.”
“Sure,” Nick said, sounding cautious. “Is there a problem?”
“No, but since the press has started making calls, Causey wants to make sure all
“Because he’s going to kill again.”
“Seems likely. But maybe if we get the manpower we need we can stop him before he becomes the textbook definition of a serial killer.”
Soundlessly, she cried as he washed her body.
“I didn’t mean to hurt you like that,” he told Becca as he washed the streaks of blood from between her legs. The water was tepid, neither hot nor cold, but her body trembled, making the water ripple.
He stroked her hair, kissed her cheek, ran a hand over her breasts. Scrubbed her body with a rag and soap, lots of soap. Rinsed her well.