Total pages in book: 139
Estimated words: 128488 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 642(@200wpm)___ 514(@250wpm)___ 428(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 128488 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 642(@200wpm)___ 514(@250wpm)___ 428(@300wpm)
He stood too. “It’s okay. You didn’t really make this trip for fun. I enjoyed tonight.” He looked briefly shy, boyish. “And maybe we have another something to follow when we get back.”
He walked her to the door and then stood watching as she let herself into her room. She was exhausted, physically, mentally, and emotionally, and yet after she’d sent Paula a quick text and climbed into bed, she spent a long time staring at the ceiling, restless and sleepless and swearing she could feel Evan’s heat emanating from the wall next door.
CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE
Noelle looked around at Evan’s office. It was small, and he obviously hadn’t put a lick of design thought into it, but it was oozing potential. There was exposed brick along the far back wall, the ceiling was high and had black-painted exposed ductwork, and there were two extremely tall windows looking out onto the street that let in a ton of natural light. It had a good vibe, even if it desperately needed a throw rug and a few pieces of art.
“The typical shady PI digs?” he asked.
She laughed. “No, actually, Sherlock, I was just thinking the opposite. You need something much more dreary with less character if you’re going to uphold the shady PI role.”
He grinned. “Have a seat.” She took a few steps to the plastic chair on the other side of his wooden desk with the black leather inset. The desk was cool. The chairs looked like he’d picked them up at the local Walmart. She sat down on the cheap plastic and crossed her legs.
Evan took the seat across from her and pulled out a file. They’d arrived back in Reno the afternoon before, and she’d spent the rest of the day cleaning out the remainder of the items in the storage container. She’d scheduled a pickup with a local secondhand store that had taken the large items of furniture she didn’t want. She’d considered keeping her dad’s recliner, but there was no practical way to get it to South Carolina, and she didn’t have room for it in her cottage anyway.
She did keep one of her mother’s plates, though not the entire set. She would put it on a stand on her bookcase when she got home. And she found the box of photographs she’d been looking for and took that too. The bright spot had been calling Callie and telling her that she had photos to share with her when she got home. Photos of when Noelle was a little girl. Callie had giggled with delight, and the sweet, innocent sound had given Noelle a much-needed boost.
After returning the key to the rental office, she got her deposit back and thought, That’s it. The job had been necessary, but it was also another goodbye—a final goodbye—and she’d been exhausted when it was done. That, in combination with the poor night of sleep she’d gotten the night before, had her in bed by nine and out cold by ten after.
She’d needed it.
Evan, apparently, had spent the rest of the day doing online research into anything that might have connected to the story the man with the slight accent had told her so long ago.
Jewels.
Abducted women.
Twins.
A potential massacre.
Like the FBI, he hadn’t found any specific crimes that matched perfectly, but he told her he did have some possibilities, and so she’d met him in his office.
“What did you find?”
He opened the folder, and she could see that it was a short pile of printouts. “I have to believe that if the part of the story about abducted women is true, the man who committed the crime was never caught. Or even charged. Maybe he killed them and then died himself, and his crimes were never discovered.”
“Even a massacre?”
He shrugged. “Maybe it was a small massacre.”
She gave him a look that was the melding of a smile and a grimace. “Hmm. Okay. Well, that doesn’t help us.”
“No, but I did find a few things that might be of interest. I narrowed my search to specific dates, which made it a little easier.”
He handed her the printouts, and she took them, scanning the page at the top of the pile. She moved that one to the back and read the second one. Each page was a series of articles from different locations about local missing women who were never found. She pulled the third page forward and read that one. “Slovakia?” she said. “You went worldwide?”
“Where I could,” he said. “Because of the accent.”
“Good thinking,” she murmured, looking quickly through the rest of the stack. It was pretty depressing to know that a basic internet search pulled forth so many missing women.
“I still need to do some digging,” he said. “But it’ll take more time. As it relates to other countries, there’s not a lot in English, so I pulled what I could for now. That’s just my initial find.”