Harlequin Intrigue April 2021--Box Set 2 of 2 by Carol Ericson (bill gates best books TXT) π

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- Author: Carol Ericson
Read book online Β«Harlequin Intrigue April 2021--Box Set 2 of 2 by Carol Ericson (bill gates best books TXT) πΒ». Author - Carol Ericson
Maybe the bomber was the same. Maybe the symbol came from a traumatic incident in his childhood and he was now marking his own crimes with it. Maybe...
Jax sighed and set aside one more case, wondering if he was wasting time. Even if he was right, the symbol could have been overlooked or never entered in the FBIβs voluntary database.
Then his pulse spiked as he flipped to the next case. Here was the symbol heβd seen at two bomb sites, staring back at him from a twenty-nine-year-old case. A murder that had happened in Texas, not far from Houston.
He read fast as Patches sat up, scooting closer and resting her head on his leg. Although the FBI database was meant for unsolved cases, the police in this case had known exactly who the killer was. They just couldnβt find him.
Arthur Margrove had been known around the community as a violent man. Prone to picking fights with anyoneβincluding his wifeβheβd been arrested repeatedly for assault. Heβd served multiple short sentences in jail, but never learned his lesson. After being fired from yet another job, heβd returned to his job site, broken in and smashed everything he could find. Then heβd gone home and murdered his wife.
Today Arthur would be in his sixties. He wasnβt the bomber.
But Jax tapped the computer screen, his fingers marking the information heβd been searching for all afternoon and into the early evening. Arthur Margrove had a son.
Todd Margrove had been five years old at the time of the murder. Heβd been standing beside his motherβs body when police came looking for Arthur, covered in her blood, probably from trying to help her. Both of them were underneath a bloody symbol drawn on the wall. A symbol that had now been replicated across the country.
Jax grabbed his phone and dialed Kearaβs number. Frustration gnawed when the call went to voice mail, and he left a tense message:
βCall me back, Keara. I know who the bomber is.β
KEARA GLANCED AT the readout on her phone as she drove down the mountain. Jax was calling.
She gripped the wheel tighter as she debated whether to answer. Sheβd spent the day running leads with her officers, the fury and frustration in her chest building and building until it felt ready to burst.
Nothing was panning out. Thinking about what had happened with Jax in the morning just added fear to the mix.
Whatever Jax wanted now, it wasnβt to tell her heβd gone home; she knew that much. She hadnβt spoken to him since sheβd left his hotel room that morning, but she had talked to the FBI agents, suggesting they get him a flight. Ben had raised his eyebrows at her and told her Jax understood the threat and was staying off the streets. The FBI didnβt believe he was in real danger. They thought if the bomber wanted him dead, he wouldnβt have missed.
They thought todayβs shooting was a message. The bomber knew what they were doing and he wasnβt falling for it.
He was having fun with them, because after all, if Jax was right, this was what he wanted anyway. A strong opponent to chase him, the thrill of getting away despite their best efforts.
It wasnβt going to happen. Not this time.
They might not have prints to give them a name, since the rifle had come up empty. But they had a partial license plate. They had a sketch.
Her phone stopped ringing as Keara rounded another bend, riding the brakes because this stretch of road was steep. Sheβd gone up to the top of the mountain to talk to the loner whoβd been at the scene of the Desparre bombing. Heβd called the station and implied he might have seen the person in the sketch. Heβd asked for her personally, and because he was a recluse whoβd opened up to her in the past, sheβd agreed.
Charlie Quinn and his FBI partner had spoken to him yesterday and reported back that he was crotchety and uncooperative, but didnβt have any useful information. It seemed unlikely heβd have something new today, but she had to check. Plus, it gave her some time to herself.
But when sheβd arrived, no matter how many ways she asked, the information heβd claimed to have didnβt surface. Instead, heβd spent the entire discussion digging for details on the case. Maybe it was because heβd suffered some minor injuries, cuts to his legs that had required stitches. Or maybe he was just one of those guys who got off on crime scene details.
He wasnβt the bomber. In his late fifties, in poor health and bad shape, not only did he not fit the description, but heβd lived in Desparre too long.
Still, Kearaβs radar was up. As soon as sheβd returned to her SUV, sheβd called the station to update them, let them know she was heading back in.
The whole thing had been a waste of time. Peering up at the sky through her windshield, she scowled at the fading light filtering through the towering trees. Pretty soon it would be dark. Her officers had been working a lot of overtime in the past four days. The shooting downtown today meant theyβd needed to spend as much time reassuring the public and keeping a visible presence there as running leads.
The more time that passed from when the bomber had shown up in the park, the farther he could run. Yes, heβd found a police departmentβand a group of federal agentsβto try and outwit. But he hadnβt made it so many years without being caught by being stupid. Maybe the shots at Jax had been his parting ones. His way of telling them theyβd gotten
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