Truman had stayed silent, knowing there were no words that would help.
After Ollie was more composed, he’d walked the investigators through his steps from the previous hour. Embarrassment flushed his face as he admitted he’d vomited in the sink. “Most people would have done the same upon finding this scene,” Bolton had told him.
Truman agreed. Even with Bree on the way to the hospital, the cut ropes and drying blood on the floor, chair, and table were enough to give his stomach a solid churn. He tried not to imagine how it’d been with her sitting there, dripping and unconscious, with her loose fingers on the table.
“What was the clamp for?” Truman had asked, pointing at the C-shaped piece of metal on the floor.
Ollie’s shoulders quaked once as he answered. “It fastened her hand to the table.”
Truman wished he hadn’t asked.
The teen had showed them the open back door, and then Bolton drove the three of them to where Ollie had seen a truck. It was gone. “Those are my truck’s tracks.” Ollie pointed at the soft dirt. “You can see how I went in and then backed out to turn around. It looks like the other truck backed out over my tracks.”
“It was quick thinking to snap a picture of the truck,” said Bolton.
“I’m sorry it didn’t help.” Ollie’s shoulders sagged.
The license plate had been stolen a month before.
“That’s where you’re wrong, Ollie,” Truman told him. “We’ve got the make, model, and color. We’ll find him.”
Truman had sent Ollie home with a county deputy and was glad Mercy was spending the night at his house. The teen shouldn’t be alone. Truman hadn’t wanted him to drive, and he knew Bolton would want to look over Ollie’s vehicle.
As Truman steered up the driveway that early morning, Ollie’s old red truck sat in front of Bree’s house, silently waiting for its owner.
Truman was pleased to see a county vehicle had parked all night at the home. The county deputy’s head jerked forward from his cruiser’s headrest at the sound of Truman’s vehicle. The now-awake man raised a tired hand in greeting, and Truman wished he’d thought to bring the deputy some coffee and breakfast. The county evidence team, their detective, and Truman had worked the Ingram home until three in the morning. Truman now had two hours of sleep under his belt and a drip coffee with three shots of espresso in his hand. Truman parked his Tahoe next to the county deputy and downed the last of his espresso-choked coffee, grimacing at the bitter flavor.
After a few words with the deputy, Truman went to the stables. Horses nickered as he entered, sticking their heads out over their stall doors, dark eyes eager for attention. Or food. Truman nosed around until he found an open bale and then tossed a flake of the alfalfa hay in each stall. A bin of good-smelling grain was next to the hay, so he gave each horse a big scoop, having no idea if he was over- or underfeeding. By the pleased snorting of the horses as he dumped the grain in each feed bucket, he suspected it was more than they were accustomed to.
Lucas can handle the feeding after today.
Right now, Lucas was with his mother in the hospital. She’d had a midnight surgery to reattach her fingers, and the surgeon had been optimistic, stating the cuts had been clean and the fact that the fingers had immediately been placed on ice had made the difference.
Ollie did good.
Truman trudged along the gravel road from the barn to the house, weighing his Ollie issue. How do I tell him he did good when he purposefully disobeyed? “We just had that discussion yesterday,” he complained to the morning air. “Was I wrong to tell him to stay away from Bree?”
It’d been the right thing to say.
“But if he’d obeyed, Bree would be dead.” His words dissolved in the quiet morning, and he shuddered. If Ollie had done as Truman commanded, they’d be getting ready for a funeral.
Raising a teenager—a unique teenager—brought up issues Truman had never dreamed of. He’d known it’d be a challenge to acclimate Ollie back into society, but he hadn’t expected the boy’s protective instincts to override acceptable behavior.
What’s acceptable and normal? Maybe Ollie’s way is the way it should be.
“Fuck me,” Truman muttered. His brain was starting to hurt. There was no getting around the fact that he had to praise and reprimand Ollie at the same time.
Poor kid will be even more confused.
“I can’t let him run wild.” Truman went up Bree’s steps, put on booties and gloves, and studied the front door.
Technically the investigation belonged to Deschutes County. But he and Bolton had come to an understanding after working several shared jurisdiction cases together: two heads were better than one.
No sign of forced entry.
Did Bree know her attacker? How many hours was she tied up?
Truman entered the home. It looked different in the daylight, but the metallic odor of blood still hovered in the air.
The house was meticulously clean and showed Bree’s love for horses. Horse decor was everywhere. Prints on the walls, bookends, and even a lamp with a rearing horse for the base. He moved into the kitchen and stopped. Morning sun streamed through the windows, providing perfect light for breakfast at the table in Bree’s kitchen’s nook.
A brutal attack had clearly taken place. Dried blood covered the table and had pooled on the floor.
I’ll never stand in this room again without remembering it this way.
He was determined to have it cleaned up before Bree returned. He’d do it himself if necessary.
The knife was noticeably absent. It’d been sent for processing. Print results could be available in a matter of hours. Ollie had picked up the knife, so his prints had been taken. Truman crossed his fingers that the attacker’s prints showed up in the first database search. Assuming he’d left prints . . .
Loud voices came from out front.
Truman left the kitchen and discovered Sandy arguing with the county deputy.
“Truman! He won’t let me come in. I need to get some stuff for Bree.” Sandy was indignant, her hands on her hips as she stared down the deputy.
“It’s a crime scene, Sandy.”
Dark circles under her eyes marred her fair skin. He knew she’d been at the hospital all night with Bree.
“Detective Bolton told me most of the evidence had been collected overnight.”
“That’s true, but—”
“Then I’m good to go in.”
Her eyes pleaded with him, desperation in her expression. She was a woman on a mission for her nearly murdered best friend.
“I’ll stick with her,” Truman told the deputy. “Make a note that she went in with me.”
Hopefully Bolton won’t have my head.
Enthusiasm made Sandy leap up the stairs, and Truman stopped her on the porch, handing over booties and gloves. As she put them on, he noticed her enthusiasm rapidly waned; she’d realized what she was walking into.
“How bad is it?” Her eyes were nervous, and he wondered if she would change her mind.
“Bad. We’ll avoid the kitchen. How is Bree this morning?”
“Still unconscious. Her face and entire head are so swollen.” Sandy took a deep breath. “He really beat on her. I hope she doesn’t have a serious brain injury. They say her brain has swelled too,” she said softly. Moisture glittered in her eyes. “Lucas is with her, so I came to get some clothing and other stuff. She’ll appreciate it when she wakes.” Her voice broke on the last word.