The day was never-ending. Part of it was the fact that we had to start over in more than a few areas of the house after the fire. Redoing work weâd already completed felt like Sisyphus and that damn rock.
Another piece was that Owen was in a mood. Back to his petty shit and testing my authority. The rest of the crew was giving him as wide a berth as possible.
And Shep kept looking at me. Not staring, exactly, but every so often heâd glance my way with a furrowed brow. It made me twitchy and feel more than a little guilty.
What the hell was I doing?
Rho was the last person I shouldâve been getting involved with in any capacity. I gripped the crowbar tighter as I moved to the next section of drywall. I should tell her it was a mistake, that it couldnât keep happening.
The thought had me wanting to heave the crowbar into the wall and destroy everything around me. Because the moments I was with Rho, when I heard her laugh, drowned in the feel of her, they were the only times since Greta died when I felt true peace.
I couldnât give that up. Even if I should. I guessed that made me a greedy bastard. But what else was new?
I moved to the next section of wall but was so distracted I nearly knocked into Silas. Cursing, I moved out of his way. âSorry,â I muttered.
Concern seeped into his expression as he took me in. âEverything all right?â
He pitched his voice low so no one else on the crew could hear. I shouldâve appreciated that and the worry, but I was too pissed at myself to let it land. âFine,â I clipped.
Silas held up his hands. âJust asking before one of us takes a crowbar to the back of the head or Owen suffocates one of us behind the drywall.â
I sighed. I was an ass. âSorry. Not the best week.â
Silas nodded, then cracked his neck. âI feel you. Must be something in the atmosphere.â
I studied him closer and saw the shadows rimming his eyes. âYou need anything?â
Who the hell was I? Offering help wasnât exactly my M.O. But spending time with Rho was changing that.
Silas shook his head. âIâm good. Just been helping a friend with a project and not getting enough sleep.â
But as I really took him in, I wondered if it was more. I remembered Shep saying he hadnât had the best homelife growing up. That kind of thing could have long-term effects, and not all kids were lucky enough to land with the Colsons. Some just had to endure their nightmares the best they could.
âLunch,â Shep called, breaking into my thoughts. âGot subs delivered.â
There were a few cheers from the crew as everyone stopped what they were doing and made their way toward the front of the house. I let them go first, taking a moment to get my head right.
Finally, I headed outside. The moment I stepped into the sunshine, I ripped off my mask. The pine air rushed through me in a welcome, cleansing breath.
But the relief was short-lived as Shep stepped into my line of vision. He frowned at me. âWhatâs with you today?â
My jaw worked back and forth. Hell.
âYouâre edgy or something. Everything okay?â
I was edgy because I wanted another hit of Rho. Iâd gotten a taste and was dying for more, only I had to hide that because I worked with her brother.
âThe princess probably didnât sleep well since he crashed on Rhoâs couch,â Owen bit out.
The look I sent him shouldâve made Owen shit himself, but he apparently hadnât grown out of his stupid phase.
Shepâs gaze jerked back to me. âShe was still freaked?â
I shifted uncomfortably. I didnât know how to explain that it was impossible for me to leave her alone in that guest cottage. That wondering if she was okay wouldâve been torture and something I couldnât deal with. âSheâs not quite one hundred percent steady.â
It wasnât a lie. Rhoâs easy acquiescence meant she wasnât ready to stay alone. But I was still throwing her under the bus.
Shep muttered a curse. âThanks for staying with her. I donât know why, but itâs easier for her to ask you than one of us. Probably because weâve been hovering.â
âShe doesnât want you guys worrying about her,â I told him. I knew that was the truth. Rho didnât want to put her fears on anyone elseâs shoulders.
Shep lowered his voice. âIs she okay?â
I nodded. âThe fire stirred up a lot for her, but sheâs dealing.â I wasnât going to tell him about the dream. It was too personal. If Rho wanted to share that, she could.
Shep slapped me on the shoulder. âAppreciate you looking out for her.â
Guilt niggled again. I was a crap friend.
âYouâve gotta be shitting me,â Owen groused. âYou read us all the riot act about leaving your sisters alone, and then youâre just cool with him sleeping there?â
Shep turned to Owen, his expression taking on a hardness I knew meant he was at the end of his rope. âI told you to treat my sisters with respect. Which Anson is doing.â
I winced. I wasnât sure if this morning could be classified as respect, but then again, worshiping Rhoâs body had some reverence to it for sure.
âThis is a bunch of bullshit,â Owen clipped. âYou treat that prick like heâs the Second Coming. Then heâs a grade A dick, bossing us around. Wasting time when we could be making real progress.â
Shepâs jaw worked like heâd taken a chaw of tobacco. âThatâs enough.â
âWhat, we canât speak our minds now?â Owen snapped.
âYou could if you were being respectful. But you never are, Owen. You act like a three-year-old throwing a tantrum when you donât get your way. And Iâm done with it.â
Owen stiffened. âYou firinâ me?â
Shep stared him down. âIâm giving you one last shot. You get your shit together, donât cause problems or drama, and do the tasks youâve been assignedâ¦well. That, or you ship out.â
Owen glared at Shep before finally throwing up his hands. âFuck this. I can get a job with a crew who knows what the hell theyâre doing.â
âGood luck with that,â Silas muttered.
Owen made a dive for him, but Shep caught him by the shirt. âKeep moving to your truck,â Shep said, giving him a shove.
âGet off me,â Owen barked. âIâm going.â
He stalked toward his beat-up pickup, climbing inside and slamming the door behind him. The fact that it took three tries to get the vehicle going diminished a little of the effect. But he gunned the engine to make up for it.
As gravel spat, Carlos shook his head. âTiny dick disease.â
Shep barked out a laugh, and the rest of the crew joined him. âLetâs get some grub and then get back to work.â
The crew headed for the boxes and coolers of food in the back of Shepâs truck, but I waited for him. âSorry about the drama.â
He shook his head. âItâs not on you.â
âThe guy never liked me.â And I wasnât sure why. Iâd been pretty inobtrusive in terms of additions to the team. And crew members were always coming and going. That was the nature of the work.
But as I watched Owenâs truck fishtail onto the two-lane highway, I knew this was more than simple dislike. Owen was pissed as hell that Iâd come out of Rhoâs house this morning. And that set me on edge.
Shep sighed. âShouldâve fired him a long time ago. Heâs always been a loose cannon. I just hoped heâd get his shit together.â
Shep wanted to help everyone, give them chance after chanceâeven if they didnât deserve it. Especially if he had a tie to them. But that sixth sense of mine was starting to prickle. âHe grew up here, right?â
Shep nodded. âWent to school with Fallon and Rho.â
Hell. My brain flashed back to the fire at the middle school. Then the ones downtown and the river trailhead. âHe spend a lot of time with them?â
Shepâs eyes narrowed on me. âWhat are you thinking?â
âIâm taking a look at everyone whoâs been in Rhoâs orbit.â It was the truth. I hadnât been able to stop myself, even if I knew it was a dangerous road for me to go down. Rhoâs douche of an ex was first on my list, but I was adding Owen.
I shouldâve taken a second look sooner. Owen had a number of narcissistic traits, including believing that everything was someone elseâs fault, never his. But he wasnât the only one. That was the problem with looking at everyone as a profile. You realized more people than not were capable of doing very bad things.
âYou think I should float his name to Trace? Have him take a look?â Shep asked, concern bleeding into his tone.
My jaw worked back and forth as I tried to get the muscles to loosen. âWouldnât be a bad idea. Just tell him heâs been combative lately. He knows the layout of the Victorian well. Heâd be able to move through the space quickly if he set the fire.â
Shep cracked his knuckles. âHalf the town knows the layout of this place, being here for cookouts and holiday parties back in the day.â
My back teeth ground together. Youâd think Sparrow Falls being a small town would mean a smaller pool of suspects. But it was the opposite. Everyone seemed to open their homes to the entirety of the townâs population, and everyone was connected. It made pulling a single thread nearly impossible.
âJust have Trace run his alibi. Itâs a start.â
Shep jerked his head in a nod. âIâll text him.â His gaze bored into mine. âThank you. I know this isnât easy for youâ ââ
âItâs nothing,â I cut him off. I didnât want to dwell on the realities of the road I was going down, and I couldnât handle Shepâs gratitude.
He shook his head, reading the no-go zone. Instead of pressing, he slapped me on the shoulder. âCome on. Letâs get some food before those mongrels eat it all.â
I chuckled, moving to follow him, but my phone buzzed in my back pocket. Frowning, I tugged it out and stared at the screen.
The number flashing there had my blood turning to ice. It was one I hadnât seen in way over a year.
I swallowed the bile trying to make its way up my throat. âBe right there.â
Shep kept moving, and I turned to face the mountains as I hit accept on the call. âHunt.â
âAnson, itâs Helena.â
The familiarity of her voice washed over meâthat smokerâs rasp she could never kick, just like sheâd never been able to kick the cancer sticks themselves. Our job had held too much stress to give her a prayer of breaking free.
âWhat happened?â My voice didnât sound like my own. Too detached. Too empty. But I knew she wouldnât be calling for anything good.
In true Helena fashion, she didnât beat around the bush. âHeâs back.â
The ice spread, moving from my veins to my muscles and then to my organs. Everything froze to the point of agonizing pain.
âGot a note addressed to you. Opened it. Same fuckinâ clues.â
A million images flashed in my mind. The word games he loved to play with me. Box lettering that disguised his handwriting. But no fingerprints. No DNA. The guy was a ghost.
âItâs a copycat. It has to be.â There was no reason The Hangman would be back. Not now. Not when Iâd stayed gone. Lived completely under the radar.
âItâs him,â Helena pushed. âThere are too many details we never gave the press.â
My gut churned, sickness taking hold. Iâd played by his rules. Iâd stopped hunting him. Iâd hidden away. But now he was back anyway, as if he had some sort of radar that told him Iâd found a flicker of happiness. Something that gave me peace. And he couldnât have that.
âWe need you, Anson. You gotta come back,â Helena said, transforming her voice into that gentle tone she used with victims.
âNo.â It was the only thing I could say. Nothing in this world could drag me back into the hell that returning to the FBI would be.
âAnsonââ
âNo,â I clipped.
âHeâll keep killing.â
I knew he would. Now that heâd started again, nothing would stop The Hangman until death found him. And that would just be another scarred mark on my soul. Another thing Iâd blame myself for. But what was one more? I was already drowning in guilt anyway.