“You won’t get over it. Every time you try to burn this reconstruction, I’ll be there. It will get worse and worse.” Her voice followed him. “And maybe by that time, I’ll find out what I have to do with you. How you have to be punished…”
“You’re not real.” He didn’t look over his shoulder as he jumped into the car and threw the box with the reconstruction on the floor of the backseat. But he couldn’t resist one last glance after he started the car and pressed the accelerator.
She was still standing there by the fire.
Her dark hair shining in the firelight, her eyes staring at him with that fearless boldness that made him want to kill her all over again.
Not real. Not real. Not real.
But his hand still throbbed and hurt the way it had when she’d bitten him.
He had to get away from her.
His foot stomped on the accelerator, and the car lurched forward. He wanted to throw the damn reconstruction out the window, but he couldn’t do it. Too dangerous. It mustn’t ever be found.
Get rid of it later.
Get away.
He’d show her.
But maybe not tonight.
*
“At last,” Eve said impatiently, as Nalchek finally picked up her call four hours later. She hadn’t been able to get past Nalchek’s voice mail until now, when she was on her way to the airport. “I’ve been trying to reach you.”
“Sorry. I was in a town meeting trying to soothe down a bunch of very nervous citizens. In this town, everyone knows everyone else, and Ron Carstairs’s death sent everybody into a tailspin.”
“I can see how it would. First, you find a murdered little girl, then a deputy is killed. Any developments?”
“No,” he said tersely. “What can I do for you?”
“I just wanted to tell you that Joe and I are going to be on our way out to Sonderville today.”
Silence. “Why?” he asked warily. “You can’t do anything that I can’t.”
“That’s what I’ve been telling myself since I started the reconstruction. It’s not working for me any longer.”
“It’s true. You did your job, and it’s not your fault that you lost that reconstruction.”
“Well, then why does it feel like my fault?” she asked fiercely. “I should have been able to do something. I shouldn’t have just waved good-bye to that FedEx truck and thought everything would work out. I was uneasy when I did it, and I should have paid attention to instinct.”
“And I’m paying attention to instinct, and everyone in town thinks I’m nuts,” he said dryly. “I know my job, Ms. Duncan. I don’t need you wandering around my town and searching for that bastard who killed Ron. You stay where you are and let me do it.”
“Too late. I’m on the way to the airport.” She paused. “You’re afraid I’ll get in your way.”
“You’re damn right.”
“I won’t do that. I’ll be careful not to step on your toes. I’m bringing Joe Quinn, and he has a tendency to take over, but I won’t let that happen. However, you must have some knowledge of Joe’s capabilities. He’d be an asset to you.”
“I don’t need a big-city detective to barge in—” He stopped. “I sound like a belligerent ass. I guess I’m being defensive.” He was silent. “Yeah, he’d be an asset as long as he doesn’t try to pull rank.”
“It’s your town, Sheriff. And you might find I could be an asset, too.”
A very skeptical silence. “Not without a skull to re-create that little girl’s face.”
“That’s still a possibility. We don’t know that the killer destroyed the reconstruction.”
“If he took it, he destroyed it,” he said flatly. “Nothing else makes sense.”
“Killers aren’t always sensible or logical.” She added bluntly, “And we need to work together if we’re going to blow him out of the water. I have a couple things to ask you about Jenny’s body.”
“Her body?”
“I saw the wound on her temple; did she have any other wounds or signs of torture?”
“Why do you ask?”
“What does it matter? Is there any reason why her hands would hurt?”