Page 3 of Outside the Car


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"Maybe," James replied, his tone carefully neutral in the way that meant he was trying not to discourage her while also not entirely agreeing."But standing out here in the cold isn't going to make him show himself any faster.You're running on fumes, Isla.You need rest, real food, maybe a conversation that doesn't revolve around murder."

The concern in his voice was genuine, tinged with something deeper that neither of them had quite acknowledged aloud.Their partnership had evolved over the months from professional collaboration to something more personal, marked by shared meals, late-night phone calls about cases, and the kind of easy companionship that came from facing danger together.The attraction was there, simmering beneath the surface of their professional relationship, but both were too careful, too aware of the complications, to act on it directly.

"The boot print came from Northern Star," Isla said, more to herself than to James, her mind still turning over the same facts that had consumed her for months."I know it did.The timing matches, the location makes sense.But when we checked every employee's footwear—"

"He'd already switched boots by then," James finished, his voice holding the patience of someone who'd had this conversation multiple times."Smart move for someone who's been at this as long as you think he has.Professional criminals adapt, especially ones who've managed to stay undetected for years."

Isla nodded absently, watching a security guard make his rounds near a cluster of warehouses.The man moved with the bored efficiency of someone going through familiar motions, his flashlight beam sweeping predictable patterns.The Lake Superior Killer had decades of experience making deaths look accidental, learning the rhythms and blind spots of waterfront security.He wouldn't have kept incriminating evidence lying around after leaving that print in the snow, especially not once he realized the FBI was treating Alex Novak's death as something more than an accident.

The wind picked up, carrying with it the scent of approaching rain.Storm clouds were gathering over the lake, promising the kind of spring squall that could turn the harbor treacherous within hours.Weather like this would drive most people indoors, but it might also provide the perfect cover for someone who preferred to work unseen.

"What if we're missing something obvious?"Isla said suddenly, the thought crystallizing as she watched the guard disappear around a corner."Sarah, Alex, all the others—they weren't random targets.He chose them for a reason.Location, timing, opportunity, sure, but what if there's something more?Something that made them specifically vulnerable?"

James considered this, his analytical mind already working through the possibilities."You mean beyond just being alone at the wrong time?Some connection between the victims we haven't found yet?"

"Maybe.Or maybe it's simpler than that—maybe he knows their routines, their habits.Watches them long enough to predict when they'll be isolated."The idea sent a chill through her that had nothing to do with the April wind.A predator who studied his prey, who planned each kill with meticulous care.

A fog horn sounded in the distance, low and mournful across the water.The harbor was settling into its nighttime rhythm—skeleton crews, automated systems, the kind of minimal supervision that would appeal to someone who had learned to move through industrial environments without leaving traces.Isla had studied the staffing patterns at every major facility along the waterfront, looking for gaps in coverage that might explain how someone could commit murder without witnesses.

"Everyone makes mistakes eventually," Isla said, though she wasn't sure if she was trying to convince James or herself."He left that boot print at Alex's scene.That's our first real break in years of investigating.It means he's not infallible."

"Come on," James said, touching her elbow gently through the wool of her coat."One beer, some food, and maybe we can talk through the victim profiles again with fresh eyes.Sometimes stepping back helps you see the forest instead of just the trees.The Claddagh’s got that corner booth free—I checked on my way over here."

Isla took one last look across the darkening waterfront, memorizing the positions of workers she could see, the patterns of light and shadow that might conceal a predator.A maintenance worker was checking readings on a bank of gauges near the main electrical station.A security guard was making his rounds with clockwork regularity.Normal people doing normal jobs, or was one of them something more dangerous?

Tomorrow she would return, and the day after that, until something broke loose in this case that had already consumed too much of her life.The Lake Superior Killer was out there, patient and careful, but everyone made mistakes eventually.She just had to be ready when he made his.

CHAPTER TWO

The radio crackled to life with a burst of static, cutting through the monotonous hum of the station heater.Coast Guard Petty Officer Steve McTavish's hand paused halfway to his coffee mug, fingers hovering over the chipped ceramic handle as he waited for the transmission to clear.

"Station Duluth, this is fishing vesselMary Catherine."The voice that emerged from the speaker carried the gravelly weight of three decades on Superior's unforgiving waters.Captain Pete Brennan—a man who'd weathered November gales that would've sent younger men running for shore."Got a drifter two miles northeast of the shipping channel.Small cargo ship, maybe a hundred-fifty feet.Dead in the water, no response to hails."

Steve abandoned his coffee entirely, the steam still curling lazily from its surface as he swiveled toward the navigation console.His fingers danced across the keyboard, pulling up the digital charts that painted Lake Superior's depths in blues and grays.Drifters weren't uncommon in these waters—mechanical failures struck without warning, medical emergencies left vessels helpless, fuel pumps clogged with sediment at the worst possible moments.But anything adrift near the shipping lanes was a ticking clock.Two massive container ships were scheduled to transit this exact corridor within the next four hours, each one pushing thirty thousand tons through water that gave no second chances.

"Copy that,Mary Catherine.Coordinates?"

"Forty-six degrees, forty-seven point two north, ninety-two degrees, zero-four point eight west."Pete's voice maintained its professional cadence, but Steve had known him long enough to hear the underlying tension."White hull, blue superstructure.Northern Dawnon the stern."A pause stretched across the airwaves, filled only with the whisper of radio static."Steve, she's sitting completely dark.No stack smoke, no movement topside.Been watching her for twenty minutes now—not so much as a shadow crossing a porthole."

Steve's fingers moved with practiced efficiency, cross-referencing the coordinates against the real-time traffic display.A massive ore carrier—the kind that could swallow a football field—was making its ponderous way out from the Duluth docks right now, its navigation lights visible as pinpricks against the darkening shoreline.

"Acknowledged.Launching response boat.Can you maintain visual?"

"Roger that."Another pause, this one stretching longer, heavy with unspoken concern."Steve...thirty years on this lake, you learn when something smells wrong.The way she's sitting in the water, the way the wind's pushing her—none of it adds up.Something's off with this one."

The words raised gooseflesh along Steve's arms, prickling beneath the heavy fabric of his uniform sleeves.Pete Brennan wasn't prone to dramatics or superstition.If he sensed something wrong, his instincts were usually dead-on.

Steve grabbed his gear bag from the locker, the familiar weight of rescue equipment settling against his shoulder.He pushed through the heavy steel door into the evening air, where the sun had disappeared an hour earlier, leaving the sky bruised with deep purples that faded incrementally into the black void above the lake.Navigation lights dotted the darkening water like terrestrial stars—the scattered white and red of fishing boats returning to harbor, the elegant arc of a pleasure craft's running lights, the distant industrial glow of a freighter making its way toward the Soo Locks.

The response boat's twin outboard engines coughed once, then roared to life with a satisfying growl that Steve felt in his chest.He cast off the mooring lines with quick, efficient movements honed by countless launches, then pushed the throttle forward.The bow lifted as the boat surged ahead, cutting through the light chop with determined purpose.As the dock lights receded behind him and the darkness of open water enveloped the hull, Pete's words circled through his mind like a mantra he couldn't shake:

Something's off with this one.

***

TheMary Catherine'sspotlight appeared first—a harsh cone of white brilliance that carved through the gathering darkness like a surgical instrument.The beam swayed gently with the fishing boat's motion, painting fleeting illumination across the wave tops.As Steve closed the distance, throttling back the engines to a low rumble, the drifting vessel gradually materialized from the gloom—a Great Lakes cargo ship of the smaller class, her white hull streaked with rust trails that spoke of hard seasons on the water.She rode low, too low for a vessel that should be traveling light or empty.And there was something else, something that made Steve's trained eye narrow with concern: a noticeable list to starboard, maybe five degrees, enough to be clearly visible in the spotlight's glare.

"Pete, this is Coast Guard Response.I have visual.Any change?"