"No bodies have been found yet," I said. "The second girl disappeared on a walk, like Sammi. He seems to prefer quiet, private kill sites. But that could just be a response to circumstances. After he kills the girl, he's stuck with a crying baby. As great as it is to have similar cases, I'm not sure how much they'll help in narrowing down who's doing the killing."
"Got some ideas. Run past Evelyn."
Jack consulted Evelyn. I wasn't thrilled with that, but it was the fastest way to narrow down the list. From her, he got the names of two hitmen possibilities, with the more likely one having moved to Toronto recently.
"Great," I said as I cleaned up after the sunset canoe ride. "This week looks slow for guests, so I can take off and - "
"I'll do it."
My hands tightened around the paddle I was lifting into its berth. Something pricked my hand. I stared at the welling blood.
"Nadia?"
"Hmm?"
"I'll go after him."
"N-no." I fumbled the paddle into place and swiped my hand across my jeans. "You can't, not with your foot. I'll - "
"No, Nadia."
"I can - "
"Shouldn't."
I swiped my fingers again, harder, wincing. Jack caught my hand and lifted it into the dim light of the boathouse.
"Got a sliver."
I balled my fist. "I'll be careful. I'll do proper reconnaissance work and make absolutely certain this is the guy. You can come if you want, and I'll let you make the decisions. I just need to see this through."
"You will. It's him? I'll call. Bring you in. He's all yours."
I opened my fist and stared at the blood, my heart hammering. As much as I wanted to find Sammi's killer myself, he was right. Scouting didn't require my personal touch, and it was better if I stayed put for a little while.
When my hand started curling again, he pulled my fingers flat.
"Only making it worse. Come on. Get it fixed up."
Jack went to Toronto alone. When the guests opted out of the bonfire, I drove him to Peterborough and let him take my work car from there. He promised he'd check in with updates a few times a day. He called the next morning, then afternoon, then evening. He didn't have much to say, just, "I'm looking," "Found him," "Following him," "Cased his place." The calls were a waste of his time, and I knew he was only doing them for my sake, but I wasn't sure what would be more frustrating: his single-sentence updates or none at all.
As for the person he was following, I knew only that he was male. Before he'd left, Jack had sidestepped my questions with "tell you later."
Finally, Thursday afternoon, I heard the words I'd been waiting for: "It's him." Then, "Need you here."
"In Toronto? Sure, I can be there in - "
"No. On the move. Heading your way. Can you meet up?"
"You're coming back?"
"He is."
It took me a minute to decipher his shorthand: Sammi's killer was heading out of Toronto, coming this way. On the move. After another girl.
For a moment, words wouldn't come. All I could see was Sammi's corpse, streaked with dirt, staring up in outrage.
"You there?" Jack said.