Left To Die
hadn’t done her share of weed back in the day, when she’d been a little older than Bianca, but she’d had the good sense to leave it at that. Nothing stronger. Ever. And she’d left pot alone with her first pregnancy and had never looked back.
    But these days, kids were different. Weed was different.
    “You, get your homework done, too,” she said to her sullen, beautiful daughter. “And clean your room. It’s a mess.”
    “It’s better than his ,” she sneered, arching an eyebrow toward the couch while her fingers flew over the buttons of her cell phone.
    “Yeah, I know, but he did make an effort last weekend. Believe me, he’s not off the hook; I’m just prioritizing. Living room and kitchen first, then I’ll tackle the mess in the dungeon.”
    If Jeremy heard her, which she doubted, he had the good sense to ignore the jabs about his living area. “Okay, Bianca,” Regan said, “I’m serious about the room and homework. You’re going to go to your dad’s this weekend, so everything needs to get done before you leave.”
    Bianca let out a long, put-upon sigh as Regan petted Cisco, then walked through the back door to the garage, where the temperature dropped decidedly.
    Usually when the kids took off for the weekend, she spent at least one night out, sometimes both. Being home alone wore thin quickly and she figured it was her time for a little fun. But all her plans for this weekend had been put on hold so she could be ready to report in. It was near the middle of the month, the time the psycho struck. Though the victims had always been found later, the ME and forensic techs thought that the killer’s pattern suggested that he hunted his victims a week or so before the end of the month.
    Which would be soon.
    Everyone in the department was nervous, expecting to hear a call about an abandoned car or a dead woman tied to some lone tree somewhere in the mountains.
    She wondered how many victims there might already be, women whose wrecked cars or frozen dead bodies, now probably picked at by animals, existed in the woods outside the small town where she’d lived most of her life.
    “Don’t go there,” she told herself as she backed out of the garage, barely avoiding Jeremy’s truck, then turned around and drove carefully down the lane. Her access street wound between several trees before meeting the main road, but the snow was dry, not much ice beneath, and her tires got plenty of traction.
    She and the kids lived five miles out of town, in the hills surrounding Grizzly Falls, and there was little traffic. She passed a snowplow scraping snow to the side of the road and one abandoned vehicle. She stopped to make sure no one was inside, then called it in and returned to her Jeep. With snow melting on her shoulders, she took the main road into town. The amount of vehicles increased as the road split and she headed to the part of the city located on the ridge overlooking the river. Ice had collected along the banks and the water was the color of steel as it cascaded over the steep rocks that defined the falls.
    Parking in the outside lot, she walked briskly inside, her breath misting around her, the cold air slapping her cheeks as she pushed through the glass doors, signed in, then headed toward a back hallway and the rabbit warren of cubicles and offices of the department.
    She dropped her things in her locker, grabbed a cup of coffee, made a little small talk with Trilby Van Droz, a road deputy and single mother whose only daughter was one year younger than Bianca. Trilby’s ex was worse than Lucky, skipping the state and paying child support just sporadically enough to irritate the hell out of her but keep her from running back to her attorney.
    A few minutes later, she found Alvarez at her desk on the phone, her computer screen filled with images of the victims of the first serial killer in the history of Grizzly Falls.
    “Brought you coffee,” Pescoli said, knowing that Alvarez was forever pouring

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