Bolton raised a brow, meeting Mercy’s gaze. I don’t know what to think.
“What made you decide to run out to the road?” Bolton asked. “It was awfully dark and cold.”
“I didn’t know what else to do. I couldn’t help her, so I needed to find someone who could. I know the woods and can’t get lost even in the dark. If a car didn’t stop, I was going to walk to someone’s house.”
“Whose house?” Mercy asked, knowing there were few homes in the area.
“Any house. I don’t know anyone’s name, but they’d me help, right?” She looked up at Mercy. “But I heard your engine before I reached the road, so I ran faster. I didn’t know if I’d make it to the road before you passed.”
“I nearly hit you.”
“Morrigan.” Bolton drew the girl’s attention back to him. “Has anyone visited your grandmother in the last few days?”
“Not for a week or two.”
“What does your mother do?” asked Bolton.
“Do?”
“Her job,” he clarified.
“She sells stuff on the Internet.”
“What kind of stuff?”
The girl shrugged. “She makes stuff in the craft room.”
“The room with all the knives?” asked Mercy.
“Sometimes. Most of it is in her barn room.”
“I don’t think I’ve ever seen so many knives in one place,” Mercy prodded. “Some were very fancy.”
“I’m not allowed to touch them. They’re sharp. And some have stuff on the blades.”
Alarm rose in Mercy. “What kind of stuff?”
“Poisons.”
Bolton rose and dashed into the house.
Jesus Christ. What if one of the techs accidentally cut themselves?
She thought of how she’d touched Olivia’s wounds without gloves. What if there’d been poison on that blade? Mercy stared at her hands, looking for inflammation or redness. She’d used her stash’s baby wipes to clean off Olivia’s blood instead of washing in the bathroom, not wanting to destroy any evidence that might be recovered from the home’s sinks.
Her hands looked fine, but her heart raced erratically. Did I absorb something into my skin? She closed her eyes and took deep breaths, willing her heart to slow. Opening her eyes, she found Morrigan staring at her with concern.
“Are you okay?”
“Yes.” She forced a smile.
“Who’s going to watch me now?” Her eyes were large in her elfin face.
Mercy brushed her unruly hair off her forehead. “Until your mom comes back, a kind woman from the . . . agency that helps kids will take good care of you.” Please be a kind person.
“Oh.”
“Hopefully your mom won’t be gone for very long.”
“She only took the small suitcase, not the big one.”
That’s reassuring. “Good.” Her heart rate felt nearly normal. Both she and Morrigan looked in the direction of the road at the sound of a vehicle. Mercy recognized the black Tahoe with a light bar.
Relief and a spark of happiness filled her.
Truman could find her in any crowd.
Mercy drew his attention as if she harbored a homing beacon and he were internally wired to the frequency. His nerve sensors locked on her as she sat in the yard and wouldn’t let go. His brain instantly calmed. Being unable to reach her had left him feeling disjointed and empty. Not to mention very worried.
She stood, a tall, slim figure all in black, her long, dark hair only a shade lighter than her clothing.
He frowned. She wore the backup gear from her bug-out bag. What happened to her clothes?
Her hand was held by a small girl in a brown coat and jeans that were too short. Truman assumed she was the granddaughter the deputy had mentioned and was stunned that the child had made it all the way out to the main road to flag Mercy down.
He parked and strode across the snow, his boots crunching, his eyes never leaving Mercy’s green gaze. She gave a wide smile as he walked directly into her arms and held her tight. “You’re going to get a mass of text messages from me when you get your cell service back,” he said into her hair. He inhaled, catching the faint lemon scent from her hair, and the bulk of his anxiety floated away. His arms tightened slightly and he relished the solid feel of her.
“I’m sorry. I knew you might be worried.”
He pulled back, took her face with both hands, and kissed her, not caring about their rule against PDAs when on the job. Four months earlier she’d walked into his town, and he’d known his life would never be the same. In the best way possible. They argued. They made up. They butted heads. But damn, it was fun. Life before her had faded from his memory, and now it felt as if she’d always been with him.
“Yes, I worried.”
“Who told you where to find me?”
“I just followed my nose.”
She scowled.
“I was headed to your cabin to see if you were still there and spotted county waiting at the end of this drive. He told me you were here. What happened?”
The story she recited made him shift his attention to Morrigan. “You went all the way out to the road in the dark?” he asked, holding tightly to Mercy’s hand.
The girl pointed. “There’s a shortcut through there.”
Truman turned around and eyed the dense woods. I wouldn’t walk through there at night. “You’re very brave.”
“I know,” she answered with a shrug.
The home’s front door opened and a man in a bright-blue coat stepped out. Mercy dropped Truman’s hand as the man’s gaze went from Truman to Mercy. He joined their group, and Mercy introduced the detective. Truman noticed the small, wry twist of Bolton’s lips as they shook hands.
Thought she was single, did you?
Think again.
“Have the crime scene techs gotten to the knives yet?” Mercy asked Bolton.
“Not yet. And I talked to the ME. Told her there was a chance some poison could have been on the blade that—” Bolton stopped, his gaze shooting to Morrigan, who stood just outside their group, listening intently.
Mercy laid a hand on Morrigan’s shoulder and looked around. Spotting a deputy in the doorway, she waved him over. “Morrigan is giving tours of her animals. Have you seen them yet?” she asked the deputy, who quickly got the message.
“Nope. I’d love to see them,” he told Morrigan. “Do you have any rabbits?” Truman heard him ask as the two of them walked away.
“Did Natasha say that poison would be visible on the wounds?” Mercy asked Bolton.
“I didn’t ask.”
“The answer is, ‘It depends,’” said Natasha Lockhart as she stepped out of the home. Truman liked the small medical examiner. She was witty and generous with her smiles for a person who daily worked with death. She joined them in the snowy yard. “Hey, Truman,” she greeted him. “Did the two of you try that Thai place I recommended?”
“We did,” he answered. “We’ve been three times already. I don’t know how it stays in business. No one is ever eating in the restaurant.”
“I think most of their business is takeout. Did you try—”
“What were you going to tell us about the poison, Dr. Lockhart?” interrupted Bolton. Mild impatience shone in his eyes.
“Right,” she said. “Some poisons can cause cauterization at the edge of a wound, but it depends on their strength and type. Her wounds bled heavily, so I can’t see much on the tissues, but I’ll look for it and run some tests when I get her on the table.”