Sense of Evil - Kay Hooper [64]
“We can't interfere,” Bishop said. “We've done all we can do.”
“I know. She'd probably ignore a warning anyway.”
“Probably. She's stubborn.”
“That's one word for it.”
Tony cared about all the members of the SCU, not only his absent fiancée, and he was anxious. “What is it?” he demanded. “What did you see?”
Slowly, still gazing at her husband, Miranda said, “If it's literal and not symbolic, then Isabel is about to make a choice that will change her life. And put her on a very, very dangerous path.”
“What's at the end of the path?”
Miranda drew a breath and let it out slowly. “The death of someone she cares about.”
10
CALEB HEARD THE NEWS about a fourth woman's body being found when he stopped by the coffee shop for a cup to take home. The girl behind the counter—he couldn't figure out how on earth they could be called “sales associates” when they worked in a coffee shop—was only too happy to fill him in on the latest details while she prepared his latte.
Gory details.
“And you know the worst part?” she demanded as she put a lid on the cup.
“Somebody died?” he suggested.
She blinked, then said anxiously, “Well, yeah, but I heard she'd been dead for months.”
Caleb resisted the impulse to ask what the hell difference that made. Instead, he said, “And the worst part is?”
“She was brunette,” Sally Anne, sales associate for the coffee shop and a brunette herself, whispered.
“Ah.”
“So none of us is safe. He's not just going after blondes now, he's—he's going after the rest of us.”
Caleb paid for his coffee and said with ruthless sympathy, “If I were you, I'd leave town.”
“I might. I just might. Thanks, Mr. Powell. Oh—can I help you, ma'am?”
“One iced mocha latte, please. Medium.”
Caleb turned quickly, surprised to find Hollis there. “Hi.”
“Hi.” She looked tired and also more casual than he'd yet seen her, in jeans and a black T-shirt that demanded to know if the hokey-pokey was really what it was all about.
“You're not still working?”
“No, we've pretty much called it a day.” She shrugged. “Can't do a lot in the way of investigating the body Sally Anne just told you about until we get forensics and a postmortem.”
Something about her wry tone made him say, “You didn't expect the news to not get around, did you?”
“No. But this town sets the land speed record for gossip, I've realized that much. The unfortunate thing is that it tends to be so damned accurate.”
“I'll say. I didn't grow up here, but when I started my practice fifteen years ago, it took less than a week for everyone in town to know that my parents were dead and my younger brother had gotten his girlfriend pregnant and married her literally at the business end of her daddy's shotgun.” He paused, then added, “I told no one, absolutely no one.”
Hollis smiled slightly and paid Sally Anne for her coffee. “They do seem to find out what they want to know. Which begs the question . . .”
“How can a killer walk among us, unseen?”
“Oh, not that question. Killers always have walked among us unseen. No, the question I'm asking myself is: how is it possible that a woman's decomposing body hung inside a derelict gas station less than three blocks from the center of town for months without anybody noticing?”
Sally Anne uttered a choked little sound and rushed toward the back of the shop.
Hollis grimaced. “Well, that was definitely indiscreet. To say the least. I must be more tired than I thought. Or, at any rate, that'll be my story.”
Caleb shook his head slightly. “Look, I know you've had a hell of a day, but can we sit down here and talk for a while? There's something I want to ask you.”
She nodded and joined him at one of the small tables by the front window.
“Have you eaten?” Caleb asked. “The sandwiches here aren't bad, or—”
Hollis shook her head, almost flinching. “No. Thank you. I'm reasonably sure the coffee will stay down, but only because I was practically breast-fed the stuff. I'm not planning to eat anything for the foreseeable future.”
It was Caleb's turn to grimace. “So I take it Sally Anne's gory details about