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Authors: Carol Ericson

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Chapter Two

The scream chilled his blood. It was the sound of a terrified woman—Scarlett.

Why had she stopped following him? Why had he let her?

“Scarlett?” He reversed course, staggering and tripping through the underbrush, cursing his bum leg. Cursing the men who’d caused it.

She screamed again, just as loudly but with a little less edge. His flashlight flickered on the path ahead of him as he charged back the way they’d come.

He plowed through the tree branches back onto the trail, which allowed him to move faster. “Scarlett?”

“I’m here, Jim.”

His light picked her out, crumpled on the ground at his feet, and he jerked to a halt. He grabbed on to a tree branch to stop himself from falling on top of her.

“What happened?”

She pointed into the underbrush beside her. “There. It’s a man. H-he’s injured or...”

Jim crouched beside her and aimed his flashlight at the bushes, where it illuminated an outstretched arm, hand fisted into the dirt.

He pushed aside the foliage that covered the man and reached out with two fingers to feel the pulse at his throat.

“He’s dead. How did you even see him there without a light?”

She gasped, covering her mouth. “He grabbed my ankle. Are you sure he’s dead?”

“What?” He scooped aside more of the underbrush and flattened his palm against the man’s chest. Blood seeped through his shirt, moistening Jim’s hand with its stickiness. He bent forward, putting his ear close to the man’s nose and mouth.

“Call 911.”

“I can’t get reception out here. I’ll have to at least walk down the access road to the front.”

He gestured to the man’s body. “He’s dead. He’s not going anywhere. I’ll come with you.”

“What happened to him?” She clambered to her knees, and he held out the hand that didn’t have blood on it.

“He has a chest wound. I can’t tell what did it, but he lost a lot of blood. I’m surprised he had the strength to reach out and grab you, or even the wherewithal to realize anyone was passing.”

She grabbed his hand, and he pulled her up beside him, where he could smell her musky-sweet scent.

“He must’ve been the one moaning out here. Maybe he lost consciousness and then came to when we passed him. He reached out to me as a last-ditch effort.” She bent her leg at the knee and rubbed her ankle.

“Let’s go.” He tugged on her hand to get her away from the dead guy in the bushes. “From the looks of the blood pumping out of his chest, he was fast on his way out and wouldn’t have survived even if we had discovered him when he was moaning.”

As they burst onto the access road, he aimed his light at the ground and hurried across the gravel and dirt, practically dragging Scarlett behind him as she kept trying her phone.

He didn’t want to run into whatever...or whoever that man had encountered.

When they reached Scarlett’s mailbox on the road, she nudged his arm. “Got it.”

“Let me report it.” He took the phone from her and spoke to the emergency operator, giving her what he could. When he finished the call, he dropped the phone back into Scarlett’s palm.

She asked, “Did you see his face? Do you know him?”

“I didn’t get a good look at his face, but I doubt I know him. It’s been a while since I’ve been back to Timberline.” He held out his hand in front of him and lit it up with the beam from his flashlight. “I got his blood on my hand, though.”

“Ugh. Do you want me to get a towel while we wait for the cops? I have paper towels in my car.”

“I’ll leave it until the sheriff’s department can have a look at it.” He jerked his thumb over his shoulder. “What happened back there? Why’d you stop following me?”

“I—” Her eyes darted to his pocket where he’d stashed his weapon. “I didn’t want to go any deeper in the forest.”

Especially in the company of a man with a gun—a man she’d just met even though they’d been high school classmates years ago. Smart girl.

“And then the guy just grabbed your ankle? Hard?”

“Not that hard but enough to surprise me and trip me up.”

“When did you realize he was hurt?”

“I kicked out when I fell, to loosen his hold. I’d already had my cell phone out for the light. When I was on the ground, the little beam of light illuminated his hand, and I could see that it was limp. His arm wasn’t moving, but I screamed again just in case.”

“I heard you, loud and clear—both times. You didn’t see his face?”

“I wanted to run the hell out of there, but I couldn’t move. My muscles froze. I certainly didn’t want to look at him. Did you see his face?”

“Nope.” He shook his head. “Maybe you know him. Maybe he was a friend on his way to visit you.”

“Me?” Her dark brows shot up. “I don’t think so. The only people who come out here to visit me are my cousins, Jason and Annie. And that wasn’t Jason’s hand.”

“We’ll find out who he is soon enough.” He held up one finger. “Sirens.”

The revolving lights on top of the emergency vehicles cast an eerie glow in the misty air as they flew down the small road to Scarlett’s cabin.

Jim waved the flashlight in the air to flag them down.

The vehicles—one ambulance, one fire truck and a squad car—squealed to a stop in front of Scarlett’s mailbox.

Jogging next to the squad car, Jim knocked on the passenger window, and the deputy buzzed it down. “You can go up the access road. The body’s in the woods, just off the trail.”

The deputy gestured out his window for the ambulance to make the turn onto the access road, and then he followed it.

Jim and Scarlett caught up just as the officer was getting out of his cruiser. “What’s going on, Scarlett? More shots fired out here? More bear traps?”

Jim shifted his gaze to Scarlett’s face. She hadn’t told him about any shots being fired out here or any bear traps. That’s all he needed for his other leg—a bear trap.

“Cody, you remember Jim Kennedy, don’t you?” She swept her arm in his direction.

With his left hand, Jim shook Cody Unger’s hand. Must be Deputy Cody Unger now. He’d been the high school quarterback and an all-around good guy. Jim hadn’t known him well—different circles.

“Kennedy.” Unger nodded. “Did you find him?”

“Scarlett did.” Jim held up his right palm. “But I checked him out. He has a wound to the chest and lost a lot of blood. This way.”

As Jim led the way with his flashlight, Scarlett asked Unger, “Where’s Sheriff Musgrove?”

“I called him. He’s not feeling well, told me to handle it.”

Jim stopped and pointed to the arm flung out on the trail. “That’s him. The rest of his body is beneath those bushes. I don’t know how he got there, but both Scarlett and I heard a scream or a cry earlier. Must’ve been him.”

“I have a couple of other deputies en route. They can canvass this area.” Unger squatted down next to the body and pushed the bushes away from it while shining his flashlight on the man’s face. “Doesn’t look familiar. Let’s get out of the way and let the EMTs do their thing.”

The EMTs squeezed past them as Jim and Scarlett followed Unger back to the access road.

“Do you mind if we talk inside your cabin, Scarlett?”

“I was hoping you’d ask.” She sniffled. “It’s cold out here.”

They ran into the other two deputies in front of Scarlett’s cabin and Unger instructed them to look for evidence in the area and to check for the man’s ID.

Once inside the cabin, Unger pulled a kit out of the black bag slung across his body. “I’m going to scrape some of that blood from your hand and get it on a slide. Then you can wash it off.”

Jim held out his hand, palm up, and Unger ran a stick over his skin to collect a sampling of the blood. He transferred it to a slide, sealed another slide on top of the first one and dropped it into a plastic bag. “You can clean up now. Thanks for preserving the evidence.”

Scarlett tapped his arm. “Bathroom’s the first door on your right.”

The art gallery spilled over to the bathroom with a border of flowers and cupids painted on the wallpaper and a mirror that looked fit for a wood sprite, with carved leaves and flowers curling around its edges.

Jim soaped up his hand and removed the blood. He didn’t want to mess up any of Scarlett’s artfully placed towels with residual blood, so he plucked a couple of tissues from the box and wiped off his hands just in case. He dropped them in the toilet and flushed.

He hunched forward, studying his reflection in the mirror, and grimaced. How the hell had he gotten mixed up with a dead body his first week back in Timberline? Not exactly the way to keep a low profile.

When he returned to the front room, he interrupted Scarlett reenacting the moment when the man grabbed her ankle.

“So, I kicked out, fell on the ground and screamed, just not sure of the order of those actions.”

Unger turned to him, his notebook in hand. “That’s when you returned? When you heard Scarlett scream?”

“I ran back, she pointed out the body and I felt his pulse and his chest.” He wiped his damp hand on his jeans. “That’s how I got his blood on me. I felt for a pulse first and listened for his breath, too. He was dead.”

“You ever had any CPR training, Kennedy?” Unger tapped his pencil against his pad.

“Six years as an army ranger sniper. I know the signs of a dead body when I see ’em, and I know when it’s too late to render aid.”

As he held Unger’s gaze, he heard Scarlett’s sharp intake of breath.

A slow smile spread across Unger’s face. “I guess you know what you’re doing. Did either of you recognize him?”

“I didn’t get a good look at his face and Scarlett didn’t see his face at all. He had a beard. I felt that when I listened for his breath.”

Scarlett asked, “Did you recognize him, Cody? You looked at his face, didn’t you?”

“Older guy, beard, long, reddish hair. I haven’t seen him around, but the conditions out in the woods are not optimal for identifying a body.” He shoved his notebook in his pocket. “I got your stories. If I have any other questions, I’ll let you know. It could just be an accident. I don’t know yet what caused his wound, but if it turns out to be homicide, we’ll call in the boys from county and they might have additional questions for you.”

Jim followed Unger to the front door and stepped out onto the porch with him. Scarlett tagged along, slinging her jacket over her shoulders. Did she plan to go out again?

Unger pointed to the trees crowding close to Scarlett’s cabin. “You should get those removed, Scarlett. Most cabins out here have some sort of clearing around them. I don’t know why the Butlers never did it when they had the place.”

“It’s one of the features that drew me to the cabin—the privacy. I need it for my work.”

Jim crossed his arms. “Don’t artists need natural light?”

“Not for the kind of work I do.”

He knew nothing about art or artists, except the kind that did tattoos, so he’d keep his mouth shut.

Scarlett gasped and grabbed his arm. “They’re bringing him out.”

Peering through the trees that ringed Scarlett’s property, Jim could make out the EMTs wheeling a gurney from the woods onto the access road.

They all made their way down the path, through the trees, and stopped short of the gurney at the mouth of the ambulance doors. The EMTs had yanked the white sheet over the dead man’s face.

One of the guys turned to Unger. “Looks like he succumbed to a stab wound to the chest—multiple stab wounds.”

Scarlett swayed beside him, and Jim put a steadying arm around her shoulders. “Did it happen here, on Scarlett’s property?”

The EMT shrugged. “I can’t tell. That’s for those deputies thrashing around out there to figure out.”

Unger whistled. “I’ll call Sheriff Musgrove right away. We’re going to need county out here now.”

“Should we wait for the county coroner?”

“Take him to the morgue at the hospital. The county coroner can work there.”

Unger turned to go back into the woods and Jim held up his hand to stop him. “Is Scarlett safe here? The guy could’ve been murdered twenty-five yards from her front door.”

Scarlett’s body stiffened beside him and he drew her closer.

“I’m calling the county sheriff’s department right now. They’ll probably be here the rest of the night. I don’t think Scarlett has anything to worry about.” Unger charged off toward the crime scene.

As the EMTs adjusted the straps on the body, Scarlett said, “Wait. C-can we see his face? I just want to make sure it’s not anyone I know, although if Cody didn’t recognize him I doubt I will.”

“Sure.” The EMT whipped back the sheet from the man’s face.

Jim clenched his jaw as sour bile rose from his gut. Scarlett and Unger might not know the murdered man, but Jim did.

And if the man hadn’t already been dead, he might’ve killed him himself.

Chapter Three

Scarlett swallowed as she studied the dead man’s face, half obscured by his bushy beard and mustache, some sort of tattoo creeping up his neck with an
L
and a
C
intertwined. She’d never been a portraitist, but if she had been she’d want this guy’s likeness on canvas. Even in death, he wore his life story on his face, etched in every line and wrinkle.

She blew out a breath. “I don’t know him. Jim?”

“Never saw him before in my life.”

The EMT tugged the sheet back over the man’s face and loaded him into the ambulance.

Unger returned with his deputies. “The county sheriff’s department should be out here shortly, Scarlett. They don’t need to disturb you tonight, but the lead detective will probably want to talk to both of you tomorrow. Going anywhere, Kennedy?”

“I’m staying at my...my place.”

Scarlett glanced at him out of the corner of her eye. The Kennedy cabin had been the closest residence to hers, but nobody had lived there since she’d bought the Butler place. Apparently, Jim Kennedy, the town enigma, had been off to war with the army rangers all these years.

When the EMT had lifted the covers on the dead man, Jim had moved away from her. She hadn’t minded his arm draped over her shoulders or the solid presence of his muscular frame, although she’d never been one to lean on a man. Her own father had died in a car accident along with her mother, and her uncle had been a black sheep, ostracized from the reservation.

She scooped her hair back from her face. “I’m going to call it a night. Tell those county deputies they can talk to me anytime they want, but mornings are best, before I get to work.”

Unger smacked the side of the ambulance as its engine started. “I’m going to back out and let these guys out of here, but I’m sticking around to wait for the county guys.”

“Okay if I leave, Unger?” Jim shoved his hands into his pockets where he must’ve still had his weapon stashed.

If the man had been shot instead of stabbed, would Jim have told Unger about his gun? If he had a gun, maybe he had a knife.

Scarlett closed her eyes and dragged in a deep breath. Nothing about Jim screamed cold-blooded killer, but she couldn’t shake the coincidence of his appearance followed by the discovery of a dead body on her property.

“You can leave. Again, just be available in case anyone wants to ask you any more questions.”

Scarlett pivoted on the gravel. “Hope you can figure out what happened to that poor man.”

Jim drew up beside her with his flashlight. “I’ll walk you back to your place, if that’s okay.”

“If you want, but I think I’ll be fine with half the Timberline Sheriff’s Department on my property and the county sheriffs showing up in a few.”

“I can take a look around and check your doors and windows—for when all those deputies leave.”

A little chill zapped the back of her neck, and she hunched her shoulders. “That’s a creepy thought.”

“Not my intention to scare you, but sometimes a little fear is a good thing.”

They returned to her cabin and Jim flicked the broken dead bolt. “You can start here by getting this replaced, and you might want a peephole in the door so you don’t have to look out that window.”

“Funny enough, I noticed those deficiencies myself when you banged on my door.”

“Why don’t you give me a tour?”

She spread her arms. “This is the great room, perfect for entertaining three guests at one time.”

His lips twisted as he checked the front window. Then he moved to the other two. “At least they all have working locks.”

“At least?”

“Anyone can smash a window.”

“Thanks for that.”

“But then you’d wake up and the intruder would lose his advantage, and you could always come at him with this.” He strolled to the fireplace and replaced the poker she’d snatched for her defense when he’d first come to her place. “Do you have a gun?”

“A gun? I hate guns.”

He pulled his own gun from his pocket and caressed the handle. “You hate guns because you’re afraid of them. If you learned how to take care of a gun and all the safety measures associated with gun ownership, you might feel differently.”

Shaking her head, she gritted her teeth. “I doubt it. Almost everyone around here has at least a shotgun and spends a lot of their time hunting defenseless animals.”

“I agree. You don’t have anything to fear from a wild animal.” He returned his gun to his pocket. “I spent my time in the army hunting a different kind of animal—definitely not defenseless.”

“You used to hunt, though, didn’t you?” She snapped her fingers. “That’s why you became a sniper. You were a great shot.”

“Something like that.” He pointed toward the kitchen. “Do you have a back door?”

“Two of them—a side door off the kitchen and then a back door from the addition. That’s another thing I liked about this cabin. The Butlers had added a room to the back of the house, which made a perfect studio.”

He checked the kitchen door and tapped the wood. “You need a dead bolt on this door, too.”

“I’ll get someone out to do both doors, same key.”

He stood in the middle of her kitchen, dwarfing it. He’d even been buff as a teenager. Instead of playing team sports for the high school, Jim had spent his time working out and lifting weights.

From the way his shoulders filled out his jacket, he hadn’t given up the weights.

“You know what you need in this kitchen?”

“Besides a twenty-four-hour chef?”

“A landline telephone. You can’t keep running to the end of the road in an emergency.”

She hunched over the kitchen counter, planting her elbows on the tile. “I came back here, bought this cabin to get away from it all, to work, not to get all plugged in.”

“After what just happened out there—” he jerked his thumb over his shoulder “—you need to think about your safety.”

She widened her eyes. “Why? Do you think there’s a serial killer on the loose or something? I’m not happy that someone died outside my cabin, but I don’t think it has anything to do with me. From the looks of the guy, it could’ve been a bar fight or drug related.”

Jim straightened up so fast from where he’d been bent over looking for a phone jack, he almost hit his head on the bottom of the cabinet.

“Why would you say that?”

“I don’t know. He looked a little rough around the edges, could’ve been using.”

“The point is, we don’t know his story.” He limped from the kitchen and tipped his chin toward the short hallway. “Okay if I take a look in the other rooms?”

“There are just the two bedrooms. You already visited the one bathroom, and then the room at the end of the hall—my studio.”

He pushed into the bathroom and placed his palms flat against the small, beveled-glass window. “Someone can slide this up and out. You can buy a rod to put across the top of the slider to prevent that, or you can even use a pencil.”

“Good idea. I never realized how unsafe I was before.”

“You never found a dead body on your property before—have you?”

“That was a first, although I guess it’s not all that rare for Timberline cabins to be housing dead bodies. Did you hear about Jordan Young killing his mistress twenty-five years ago and stuffing her body in the chimney of his cabin?” She sucked in a breath between her teeth and shivered.

“I read about the whole thing online when I got here. So much for peaceful little Timberline.”

He checked the windows in the guest bedroom, and then she led him to her own room. As he took a turn around the bedroom, she actually blushed—not out of modesty but because she’d just had a sudden vision of this man spread out on her bed.

“You should keep these closed at night.” He yanked the curtains together and she jumped. “Are you still nervous?”

“It’s not every day someone is murdered in your neighborhood.” She caught her lower lip between her teeth. She should be feeling more anxious about that instead of daydreaming about Jim Kennedy in all his naked glory. She’d put it down to shock.

He tilted his head and that lock of dark hair fell over one eye—just like in high school. “Let’s take a look at that back door.”

As she led him to her studio, she clasped her hands in front of her, twirling her ring around her middle finger. She usually didn’t invite people into her inner sanctum, unless they were other artists. Not even potential clients saw her workspace.

Dragging in a breath, she threw open the door and flicked on the light.

Jim froze at the doorway, his mouth hanging slightly ajar. “I’ve never seen anything like this before in my life.”

“Well—” she waved her arms around “—it’s an artist’s studio.”

“You’re very...productive.” He swiveled his head from side to side, taking in the work on the walls, canvases stacked in the corner and unfinished pieces languishing on easels stationed around the room. “And kind of schizophrenic.”

“I guess that’s one way of putting it.”

“You’ve got normal stuff over here—” he flung out his right arm “—and...different kind of stuff over here.”

“Landscape watercolors on the right and modern, abstract oils on the left.”

“Let me guess.” He pointed to a painting comprising of skyscrapers, a pair of eyes and a wolf head. “This is the expensive stuff.”

“Good guess.” She held her breath waiting for him to ask her to explain the painting.

He studied it for several seconds with his head to one side and then shrugged. “This room isn’t secure at all.”

She released the breath. “Because of the glass wall.”

“It must look incredible during the day, but at night anybody could peer right into this room. If you keep expensive work in here, I’d think you’d want to protect it better.”

“This is Timberline. I really didn’t expect to move back here and experience a crime wave.” She rapped on the glass. “What do you suggest?”

“This is the back door?” He navigated through the easels and stands and yanked on the handle of the sliding glass door. He crouched down and inspected the track. “You can put a rod in here for an extra measure of safety in case someone breaks the lock. A camera wouldn’t be a bad idea, either.”

Twisting her braid around her hand, she sighed. “I might as well go back to the big city.”

“That man who died tonight probably has nothing to do with you.”

“Don’t try to make me feel better now after you just did a security check on my home...and found it woefully inadequate.”

“Problem is, we don’t know what he was doing out there, why he was killed or who killed him.”

He straightened up, grasping the door handle for support. She would’ve offered a hand, but Jim didn’t seem like the type of man who would accept assistance easily.

“Hopefully the county sheriff’s department can figure that out. I don’t need any more people lurking around my cabin, causing trouble.”

“Jordan Young was after that TV reporter, not you, right?”

“Jordan turned out to be Beth St. Regis’s biological father. He’d murdered her mother, his mistress, twenty-five years ago and sold Beth on the black market when she was a baby. He just turned his attentions toward me because I was helping Beth.” She shivered and pressed her hands against her stomach. “Pure evil.”

“He figured if anyone noticed his daughter’s disappearance, he could pass it off as another Timberline kidnapping?”

“Something like that, but nobody noticed the disappearance of mother and daughter since Beth’s mother had moved away after the pregnancy and had just returned to Timberline. Young had kept them hidden away in his cabin until he killed Angie, Beth’s mother.”

“Makes you wonder.” He shoved one hand in his pocket and stared out the wall of windows at the forest lurking in the darkness beyond.

“Wonder what?”

“If there was an active black market for children, maybe that’s what happened to the Timberline Trio.”

“Not you, too.” She shut off the light in the studio. “Ever since Wyatt Carson kidnapped those three children to recreate the Timberline Trio so he could play the hero, everyone and his brother have been snooping around looking into the Timberline Trio case.”

“You think that’s a bad idea?” He’d turned from the window and his eyes glimmered in the dark room.

“It’s over.” She’d never admit to him that she had her own reasons for finding out what had happened twenty-five years ago. She’d never admit that to anyone, since curiosity about the case seemed to put a target on your back.

He said, “I suppose it’s never over for the families. Look what it did to Wyatt Carson. Losing his younger brother like that must’ve jarred something loose in his psyche for him to go on and kidnap those children years later.”

“You’re right.” She stepped back into the light from the hallway. “I don’t mean to be insensitive, but...”

“You’re Quileute.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?” She jutted out her chin.

“Just that I know your people had some fears and superstitions around the whole Timberline Trio case.” He held up his hands. “Hey, they weren’t the only ones.”

As far as she could recall, Jim never had a problem with the Quileute, but his father was another story—loudmouthed bigot. Members of her tribe had been in a few barroom brawls with Slick Kennedy.

He’d gotten the nickname Slick because of his movie-star handsomeness and pumped-up physique. Her gaze tracked over Jim as he stood in the middle of the room, and she swallowed. The apple hadn’t fallen too far from
that
tree.

But Jim had never been in any trouble with her people, although all the guys her age had been wary of him because of his father, his brother and his father’s buddies—beer-drinking, bigoted bikers.

She lifted and dropped her shoulders quickly. “Yeah, there were some crazy stories going around at the time.”

He crossed the room and joined her at the door. “Anyway, you might want to look into securing this place better—at least until the deputies can figure out why that man dropped dead in the woods outside your cabin.”

“I’ll do that, thanks.” She closed the door to the studio. Halfway down the hallway, she turned suddenly and Jim bumped into her. She placed a palm against his chest where his heart thundered beneath her touch. “Sorry.”

BOOK: Army Ranger Redemption
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