Lullaby for the Nameless (36 page)

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Authors: Sandra Ruttan

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BOOK: Lullaby for the Nameless
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She pulled out her cell phone and fumbled with it un
til she got it open. No service. As she flipped it shut, she looked up at him and fought the urge to reach for her forehead. The shooting pain mercifully settled to a dull ache. “Can you walk? We need—”

“Ash…”

“Shhh. Save your strength,” she said, vaguely aware of the sounds of footsteps in the forest. Someone shouted, “Over here,” while someone else called in on a radio for an ambulance, and then she felt a presence behind her.

“What the hell happened?” Winters asked.

Tain knelt on the ground beside her.

“Kur—” Ashlyn turned, the dull ache turning to a roar again with the sudden movement. The clearing was empty. “Kurdy shot Parker.”

“What?” Tain asked. “Why?”

Why. The question always asked.

The one they seldom could answer.

“How is he?” Tain asked.

She swallowed. “Clean shot through and through, but he’s lost a lot of blood.”

Craig lifted his bloody hand back up and put it over hers. For the first time since before her assault she looked him in the eyes and saw the ghost of a smile before his eyes flickered and closed.

In the aftermath of a police-involved shooting, there are a lot of questions to answer, and a lot of time is spent on paperwork and procedure, crossing every
t
, dotting every
i
. When the victim is a police officer who’s been suspended everything triples.

At least, that’s how it felt to Ashlyn. She’d been through it before, after she shot and killed Craig’s partner.

This time, she had a weapon in her possession that she claimed she hadn’t fired—gunshot residue tests had supported her claims, but that wasn’t conclusive proof,
and although none of her fingerprints were found on the gun, that was only more circumstantial evidence.

Emma Fenton had her exclusive and was only too happy to raise questions about Ashlyn’s actions and whether she was responsible for Parker’s death, but what was undeniable was the set of footprints found at the scene. Footprints that didn’t match hers, Craig’s or Parker’s.

And the skin and blood they found on the butt of the shotgun. Skin and blood that matched Ashlyn’s.

When the tests were completed, another unexpected detail emerged: the bullet that had torn through Craig’s shoulder and lodged itself in his Rodeo had been fired from the same gun that had been used to kill Hank Jeffers’s wife and children. Whatever Parker’s game, he’d used Kurdy. Maybe to try to get them involved, maybe to draw them back to Nighthawk Crossing. Kurdy had been innocent of the crime he’d originally been suspected of, but that didn’t change the fact that he’d killed Parker, and whatever he knew about the case would remain unknown until the day the police caught up with him.

Ashlyn was pretty sure it wouldn’t be anytime soon.

Tain and Ashlyn walked toward the hospital doors.

“Everything okay?” Tain asked.

She knew he was wondering how she felt about going to visit Craig, but she avoided the subject. “That depends. Are you going to quit?”

“You know me too well.”

“I think after what happened to your daughter, you thought being a cop would help you make sense of it all. That you’d be there to save other children from Noelle’s fate. When we stood over that little boy’s body last year, you looked down at Jeffrey Reimer and realized you couldn’t save them. All you could do was deal with the fallout after it was already too late.”

He didn’t respond. He didn’t have to.

“You know, Parker’s mistake was that he thought you’d want an explanation. He didn’t just want to win. He wanted you to know he’d won,” Tain said as he opened the door to the hospital.

“Sometimes, we don’t get answers, Tain,” she said as she stepped inside. She turned around to face him. “Sometimes all we do is clean up a big mess.”

He let the door fall shut behind him. “You’re okay with that? What if we’d known the truth about Millie eighteen months ago?”

Eighteen months ago, when Tain had broken through the front door of the cabin, he’d ducked just in time to avoid having a shotgun blast rip his head apart. In the seconds it took for Bobby Hobbs to realize he’d missed, Tain had lunged forward and knocked Hobbs back onto the floor. Bobby had lost his grip on the shotgun, which had gone spinning across the floor toward the back door, which Ashlyn had just entered. Craig had been right behind her.

Tain had his hand wrapped around Hobbs’s throat, and she pried him off the suspect. It wasn’t until she’d pushed him back and Craig had cuffed Hobbs and removed him from the cabin that Ashlyn had looked up, still catching her breath, to see the petite blonde girl in the corner of the room, wearing an old-fashioned white nightgown.

“Millie? Millie Harper?”

Ashlyn had reached out toward her, but the girl slid down into the corner of the room, eyes wide with fright, hands rising to cover her face.

“It’s okay, Millie. He’ll never hurt you again. We’ve got you. You’re going to be okay now.”

“Please.” The girl looked up, tears streaming down her face. “Please. Please let me die.”

Millie had been put on a psych hold hours later, when she grabbed a pair of scissors and tried to stab herself in the chest.

It made sense. After what she’d been through, Millie would struggle with guilt, would wrestle with why she’d been rescued and the other girls had died.

Ashlyn had assumed Millie never got pregnant, which was why she’d survived. It had never occurred to her that Millie had murdered her baby, a sacrifice to prove her devotion to an abductor who believed the only way she could truly prove her worth was to give up the most important thing in the world.

Her own child.

Parker had learned her secret and exploited her vulnerability. The sacrifice Millie had made to save her own life had ultimately destroyed it.

Ashlyn was torn between the guilt she felt over Millie’s death and the disgust she felt over what Millie had done. She knew she shouldn’t blame Millie; the girl had been abducted, raped and held captive for months, but that didn’t change the fact that every time Ashlyn thought about Millie murdering her own child she felt the rage boil up inside her, and when it passed she was left with nothing but her own emptiness.

She stopped outside Craig’s hospital room.

“When Noelle’s mother killed her, how’d you learn to forgive her?” she asked.

Tain pushed the door open and started to walk inside.

“Who says I have?”

 

Acknowledgments

Lullaby for the Nameless
is the title of a song by Philip Fogarty. Ken Bruen gave me the CD a few years ago, and I asked Mr. Fogarty then if I could use the title for a book. It fit this one perfectly, so my thanks to Mr. Bruen for putting the music in my hands, and to Mr. Fogarty for the inspiration.

My thanks to my agent extraordinaire, Allan Guthrie, who has always pushed me to be a better writer, first as a friend and now as my “boss.”

I realize that if I try to name everyone I’d like to thank, I’ll miss someone, but there are a few specific people who should be mentioned.

Damon, Jay and the team at BSC Review, who have supported me personally and with Spinetingler.

Russel D. McLean, Daniel Hatadi, Patti Abbott, Stephen Blackmoore, Patrick Shawn Bagley, Chris Holm, Steve Allan, James Oswald, Stuart MacBride, Anne Frasier, Sean Chercover, Angie Johnson-Schmit, MG Tarquini, David Terrenoire, JD Rhoades, Amra Pajalic, John McFetridge, Peter Rozovsky, Linda L. Richards, Duane Swierczynski, Cornelia Read, Brett Battles, Rob Gregory Browne and so many more…The online community I’ve enjoyed over the years.

Jon and Ruth Jordan and the
Crimespree Magazine
family.

4MA, for the great discussions, the community spirit and the genuine love of books that is the foundation of the list.

My editor, Don D’Auria, and the team at Dorchester, for all the support and for loving the books.

Brian, for every little thing, and all the big things too.

And my thanks to all the others, you know who you are, who have contributed to my journey.

 

Rave Reviews for Sandra Ruttan and
The Frailty of Flesh
!

“The talented Ruttan turns a spotlight on the gritty reality of law enforcement…and the result is truly convoluted and disturbing.”


RT Book Reviews


The Frailty of Flesh
tore me asunder. Rarely has a novel of such art and skill reduced me to a wreck…It’s a kick in the head that is underwrit with sheer compassion.”

—Ken Bruen, Shamus Award-winning

Author of
The Guards

“Brave, dark and utterly convincing,
The Frailty of Flesh
is guaranteed to break the hardest of hearts. An absorbing read.”

—Allan Guthrie, Theakston Award-winning

Author of
Hard Man


The Frailty of Flesh
is not only one of the best procedural thrillers I’ve read in a long time…but the ending knocked me right out of my seat. Ruttan captures the nature of crime in a way few thriller writers ever manage…this is vivid, impressive, gut-wrenching stuff.”

—Russel D. McLean, Crime Scene Scotland,
Author of
The Good Son

WHAT BURNS WITHIN

“Ruttan manages to keep multiple leads and seconds on the same page admirably: she doesn’t drop too many clues in their laps or allow the tension to flag…The straight proceduralism from Ruttan serves the story well through the rewarding climax.”


Publishers Weekly

“Well worth adding to any mystery collection.”


Library Journal

“One absolute wallop of a novel…A totally mesmerizing narrative and a plot that literally burns off the page.”

—Ken Bruen, Shamus Award-winning

Author of
The Guards

“A taut, crackling read with switch-blade pacing.”

—Rick Mofina, Bestselling Author of
A Perfect Grave

More Praise for Sandra Ruttan!

“Ruttan has a spellbinding style.”


New York Times
Bestselling Author Clive Cussler

“Ruttan’s deft touch intrigues and satisfies, making her a powerful new force in the mystery field.”

—JT Ellison, Author of
All the Pretty Girls

“A well executed procedural with a plot that twists and turns like a bad tempered rattlesnake.”

—Russel D. McLean, Crime Scene Scotland

“Ruttan clearly has the potential to be a very successful author…Lots of talent which I expect will be realized!”

—Maddy Van Hertbruggen, Mystery News

“Ruttan has made one big mistake in my eyes; she waited too long to bring her writing to us. She is talented in the way that a natural musician is talented, making all the notes seem effortless. Characters that feel very real, and a wonderful sense of timing, Ruttan brings it all and leaves it on the page. Lucky us. And unlucky me, because now I have to wait for the next one…”

—Jon Jordan,
Crimespree Magazine

“Sandra Ruttan writes with a machine gun rhythm that pulls you through every unexpected twist and dark turn.”

—Bill Cameron, Author of
Lost Dog

 

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