“Hey!” he said loudly, so he could be heard. “In here!”
A moment later two uniformed officers came through the trees and into the little clearing. They were competent and compassionate at the same time, the first checking the victim and securing the scene, the second speaking with Rocky and Devin Lyle. It was while they were in the midst of the conversation that more sirens sounded, and Rocky was surprised to look up and see that a third officer, this one in plain clothes, was coming his way.
He was even more surprised to realize that he knew the man.
“Hell, Rocky—you’re back in town?” the newcomer demanded.
“Jack Grail,” Rocky said, shaking Jack’s hand. “And you’re still here.” He grinned; it had been a good ten years since he’d seen Jack.
“Come on, I moved a bit. This is Salem, not Peabody.”
“Right. You working these murders?” Rocky asked.
“This one, anyway,” Jack said. They looked at each other for a long moment, both of them remembering a long ago day.
When they’d stared at the same scene that was before them now.
Rocky arched a brow. “Just like Swampscott, right?”
“Don’t go talking that way, Rocky. People will think we have a serial killer on our hands, and the last thing we need is mass panic. Kind of suspicious, though, isn’t it? You leave town not long after Melissa Wilson dies, and now you’re back and we’ve got two more dead women.”
Rocky stared at him and realized Jack wasn’t serious—not about that, anyway. He was serious that he didn’t want anyone yelling “serial killer” right now.
No, he didn’t seriously suspect Rocky.
But they knew. They both knew. They had been there. They had seen Melissa’s body, and they couldn’t deny the eerie similarity of the newest murders.
“So you grew up to be a detective with the county?” Rocky asked Jack. “Good going.”
Forget the past. They both had to shake off this feeling of déjà vu. They’d been boys back then. Now they were men—and the men assigned to work these newest killings.
Jack nodded. “And you just happened to discover this body, too?”
Rocky shook his head. “I just got back into town. Jack Grail, this is Devin Lyle.” He nodded toward her. “She found the body. She flagged me down in the road.”
“My house is over there,” Devin said, pointing through the trees. “I heard a noise and ran out without my phone, and when I...when I saw her, I ran for the road to get help. I guess I should have gone back in and called, but...I just ran for the road,” she finished lamely.
Jack turned his attention to Devin. As he spoke to her, the crime scene techs got to work and the night seemed to come alive with flashes as pictures were taken.
Rocky waited while Jack talked to Devin and let his mind wander.
Jack looked good. Funny, Rocky had always thought that he’d wind up flipping burgers by day and smoking pot by night.
Finally Devin’s interview was finished and an officer escorted her back through the woods to her house.
“So I heard you’re a fed, like you planned,” Jack said.
“Yeah. And it’s good to see you, Jack. Bad circumstances, but it really is good to see you.”
Jack grinned. “You, too, Rocky. Last I heard, though, you were working the mean streets of L.A.”
“I just transferred to a new unit.”
“We have a unit here?” Jack said, frowning.
Rocky smiled. There were field offices all over the country, with the one in New York City being the largest. “I was assigned to a behavioral unit out of Boston, but we go all over.”
“And you were sent here?” Jack asked him. “To work this case?”
Rocky wasn’t sure the assignment was official yet—whether Adam Harrison had cleared the way for FBI involvement—but he decided to be honest.
“I read about the woman in Swampscott,” he said.
Jack looked grave as he lowered his head and nodded. “Yeah. Freaked me out,” he admitted quietly. He looked at Rocky again. “None of us ever got closure, did we?” he asked.
“Not me, that’s for sure,” Rocky said. He studied Jack. “That why you became a cop?”
Jack nodded. “Yeah—worked my way up from the streets to make detective.” He hesitated. “I study the old case sometimes. Okay, a lot of the time.”
He looked at Rocky with an odd mixture of emotions, shrugged and started toward the crime scene. He turned back. “You coming?”
Rocky followed him. They hunkered down by the body and the medical examiner.
“Dead about four hours—give or take thirty minutes. Not too cold tonight, but not hot, either, so I think we’re looking at just about five o’clock,” the M.E. said.
“Broad daylight,” Jack muttered. “Sexual assault?”