Dead Cold Mysteries Box Set #1: Books 1-4 (A Dead Cold Box Set) by Blake Banner (best thriller books to read .txt) ๐
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- Author: Blake Banner
Read book online ยซDead Cold Mysteries Box Set #1: Books 1-4 (A Dead Cold Box Set) by Blake Banner (best thriller books to read .txt) ๐ยป. Author - Blake Banner
We got there at shortly after eight. Most of the trees were tall and spindly, naked against the frozen gray sky. The water looked black and icy, and the ground was muddy from the relentless rain and drizzle. There was a patch of grass surrounded by huts, with a few canoes scattered here and there, and a long, wooden jetty reaching out into the water. The whole thing was enclosed by trees. I could see why Zak would have favored a place like this.
Dehan walked out onto the jetty and stood staring at the trees and the obsidian water. I watched her from the shore. Now that we were here, I wasnโt sure what to do. After a moment I joined her, and we both turned to look back at the collection of huts. Dehan wiped the drizzle from her eyes and said, โSheโs here, isnโt she?โ
I could visualize the bikes. How many? Maybe thirty, forty, fifty of them. And a hundred Angels with their ladies. There would have been crates of beer, whiskey, tequila. There would have been music, mainly old music, evocative of the golden age, Van Morrison, Zeppelin, The Eagles. And there would have been a lot of weed and coke. And once Hank left, there would have been Lynda, sentenced to death and not knowing it. I said, โProbably.โ
โWhere did he do it? Right here? Or did he take her away, into the woods?โ
I pointed to a long spit that curled out into the lake and opened up into a patch of grass maybe thirty or forty feet across. โHe did it right there, while they all watched.โ
We walked back and followed the long tongue of land out into the black water. There would have been a big fire burning on the bank. They would all have followed him down, a hundred black silhouettes against the flames, standing, watching, laughing, probably not knowing yet how it was going to end. And Zak would have performed his rough and ready ritual, as he had with Hank. I pointed to the left.
โThe lake provides the water in the west.โ
I walked up to the northernmost point. It was still there. I hunkered down and Dehan came and joined me. It was a crude circle of rocks that had been filled in with earth. As I gently moved away the sand, the remains of a yellow candle appeared, burned down and melted into the earth for the last twelve years. โEarth in the north.โ
I turned and Dehan stood. โIn that case,โ she said, โthere should be something back there, in the south. Red, fire, right?โ
I followed her back. There was another circle of rocks, three or four feet across, blackened by fire, neglected for over a decade.
โAnd in the east?โ
โThe air. And probably a blue candle.โ
โIt must have been cold!โ
I shrugged. โPart of the ordeal? Too drunk and stoned to notice? Who knows? But he had sex with her right there, in the center, and then probably stabbed her in the heart. What would he do then?โ
We both stared at the lake. She pushed her wet hair out of her face. โWeighted down with rocks? They couldnโt have got her very deepโthe water would have been icy. It would have made more sense to bury her.โ
โMaybe they did both. Whatโs that?โ I walked to the center of the area where Zak had made his temple. โThe pentagram represents the head of a goat. The two horns would be there and there.โ I pointed northeast and northwest. โIts beard would be behind me in the south. That rock is dead center, between the horns, and if Iโm not mistaken, there is something painted on it.โ
The rock was half in the water, balanced on a slope where the bank dipped down to the lake. It was about three feet across and roughly spherical. As we approached, we saw that it had, indeed, a faded cross painted on it. But the cross was upside-down. I felt a sudden rush of irrational urgency, like I needed to get Lynda out of that place, that it was somehow important. I dropped on my knees and began to dig. Dehan ran, but I ignored her.
After a couple of minutes she came back, carrying two canoe paddles. Between us, we levered away the rock, wiping the water from our eyes, until suddenly it gave and rolled into the lake with a big splash. Then we used the paddles as spades and began to dig. It wasnโt a deep grave. They were too drunk, cold, and probably wet to make the effort. She was only about two feet down. The damp earth had not preserved her. It had encouraged the bacteria and she was now just a skeleton, curled into the fetal position. She was unrecognizable, but I had no doubt in my mind it was her. And she was in possession of both her arms.
Fifteen
We spent the rest of the morning with the sheriff. He didnโt seem very amused that weโd been pursuing an investigation on his patch without his knowledge. When I explained that we were just passing through, decided to have a look at the place, and noticed the stone, he was somewhat placated, but not much.
โPassing through? Youโre a hundred and fifty miles off course, Detective. That may be passing through in New York, but not here. Next time you want to go digging up bodies in Duchess County, you call me first. Are we clear?โ
โWe are clear, Sheriff.โ
Jurisdiction was an issue, but I was happy to let it slide, and by midday Dehan and I were in the Jag and headed back toward New York.
โWhether itโs Boston PD, Connecticut, or New York, that case will end
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