Sarah Varland

Alaskan Christmas Cold Case


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a man wanted to protect them. At least, that was what Noah had gathered from the movies his sisters used to watch and the way he’d seen several of his siblings fall in love. His own personal experience with love was limited. Besides one or two girlfriends in high school that hadn’t been serious, he hadn’t dated much.

      Because the only woman he was interested in dating saw him as a coworker and a friend. Nothing more.

      Protective instincts toward her aside, she didn’t needed protecting. At least not from the crime scene. If they were going to catch the serial killer responsible, he’d need every good law enforcement mind in town working on the case. And Erynn was one of the best. He couldn’t just exclude her from the investigation, which he could only if it really was a conflict of interest for her to investigate a case directly tied to her past. But technically there had been no threat directly to Erynn—at least neither she nor Janie had made him aware of that. The fact that her father had been killed did make her involvement dance close to the line of ethics, but this wasn’t a city where police and law enforcement resources were unlimited. She was far enough from the case emotionally to still be involved.

      His feelings were going to get in the way of keeping her safe if he wasn’t careful. Surely he could make it a few more weeks, till this guy was behind bars, no longer a threat.

      It wasn’t optional. Noah didn’t have a choice. Treating her like any other colleague was the only course of action that was going to work here. So he nodded. “Okay, let’s go to the crime scene.”

      They made their way through the halls. Noah was careful to look for anything that seemed out of place, but nothing caught his attention.

      “She was still locked in her cell,” one of his officers told him as they walked up to the scene. The man shook his head.

      “Do we know how she died yet?”

      “Elsie at the front desk mentioned that her lawyer came to see her. I’ll go get Clay, he probably knows the most.”

      As he started to walk away, Noah took in the body on the floor of the cell. It never stopped striking him how once a person had died, they didn’t look like they had in life. The body truly ceased to be a person and became a shell, something his law enforcement mentor had taught him when he’d first started.

      Janie was pale, her skin lacking the healthy appearance she’d had while alive. Her hair was spread out on the floor behind her, touching the puddle of blood pooled beneath her. She’d been shot in the chest, at very close range.

      Noah looked around the cell. The chair was sitting upright. Nothing indicated there had been a struggle.

      Was the killer someone she knew? Someone she’d expected to be there to help her?

      His mind ran with that thread as he reviewed what the officer had just told him, and he asked, “Janie’s lawyer came?” She hadn’t been arrested long enough for any lawyer to arrive from Anchorage or even Kenai, whichever place she’d been living. While she could have called a local lawyer...Noah didn’t think she had.

      The officer nodded.

      If his guess was right that the “lawyer” hadn’t been one at all, that explained how the killer had gotten inside. Walking in in plain sight. It spoke of a level of overconfidence that could possibly work to their advantage if they could get a step ahead. At the moment it just scared the stupid out of him. “Thanks. Yes, get Hitchcock, please. And do we have video footage?” The cameras in the jail should tell them something, even if the killer had avoided showing his face.

      Officer Smith shook his head. “Cameras cut out just before he came in. We’ve had so many issues with that old system lately that we thought it was a technological glitch.”

      Noah felt anger stir inside. Not toward his officers. Moose Haven didn’t often see crime like this—he understood how they wouldn’t have been immediately suspicious—but he hated that evil had won this battle today.

      Hated that it felt personal.

      “She was sitting in this chair when she was shot, it looks like,” Erynn was saying as she moved closer to Janie, tilted her head like she did when she was focused. “See where her body is positioned in relation to the chair? And the blood splatter?”

      “Is that significant with past cases or are you just walking through what you see?” Noah forced himself to sound professional, though at the moment he felt anything but. He didn’t want Erynn considering victims, blood splatter or anything but keeping herself safe.

      But it wasn’t his place to keep her out of this. Not when she was already involved so deep her safety was at risk either way.

      A second or two passed before she answered. “I think the second? But I’ll let you know.”

      Clay walked into the room just then, his face as sober as Noah felt. They nodded at each other and Noah was as thankful as he had been in the past that Clay had come to Moose Haven. He would need all the help he could get on this one.

      “What do we know, Hitchcock?”

      The other man shook his head. “I’m trying to go slow, not make assumptions. The fact that someone was able to get into this building and kill someone in our custody... No one even heard a shot.”

      “He used a suppressor?”

      Clay nodded. “That’s the working theory.”

      Noah understood. Hated how Janie’s death made him feel. Like he was powerless.

      “Has the body been moved?” Noah hadn’t wanted to disturb the ME from where he knelt beside the body. The man wore a look of perpetual concern on his face, though Noah guessed if he looked at dead people for a living his face might get stuck like that, too.

      “Not yet. Wanted to make sure you had a chance to see the scene if possible. I don’t want us to miss anything obvious.” Clay’s eyes moved to Erynn, who usually would have interrupted several times by now to remind them it was her case, too.

      “You okay, Trooper Cooper?” Clay asked.

      Erynn barely nodded. “Fine.”

      Noah spoke at the same time. “She knew the deceased.”

      Erynn’s eyes snapped to him and he saw what she’d tried to hide. She was close to broken by this, looked more fragile than he’d ever seen her. But what really surprised him was the expression of betrayal in her eyes. Because Noah had said she knew the victim? He wanted her on this case, but he couldn’t hide anything, couldn’t conceal the facts from his own officers.

      Still, the way Erynn looked at him, silently begging for more time...

      “How?” Clay asked Erynn, but Noah spoke up again.

      “High school.”

      Clay looked like he might ask something else, but the ME interrupted. “There’s something underneath her.”

      All three of them turned as he slid a piece of paper out from beneath her.

      “Same color. Same weight. Probably the same pen,” Erynn muttered under her breath.

      Noah hadn’t been expecting the note, but now he remembered Erynn had said that one was always left.

      “What does it say? Can you read it?” he asked the ME.

      The man read it silently. Frowned. Looked up at them. “It says, ‘One more to go.’

      Erynn’s eyes widened and Noah couldn’t stop himself this time—he reached for her hand. Held it tight.

      The man was driven and his goal was Erynn’s death. Something Noah refused to let happen.

       FOUR

      Erynn did not remember walking from the crime scene to Noah’s office,