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  Also by Rebecca Zanetti

  The Dark Protector series

  Fated

  Claimed

  Tempted

  Hunted

  Consumed

  Provoked

  Twisted

  Shadowed

  Tamed

  Marked

  Talen

  Vampire’s Faith

  Demon’s Mercy

  Alpha’s Promise

  Hero’s Haven

  Guardian’s Grace

  Rebel’s Karma

  Immortal’s Honor

  Garrett’s Destiny

  The Realm Enforcers series

  Wicked Ride

  Wicked Edge

  Wicked Burn

  Wicked Kiss

  Wicked Bite

  The Scorpius Syndrome series

  Scorpius Rising

  Mercury Striking

  Shadow Falling

  Justice Ascending

  The Deep Ops series

  Hidden

  Taken (e-novella)

  Fallen

  Shaken (e-novella)

  Broken

  Driven

  Unforgiven

  Laurel Snow Thrillers

  You Can Run

  YOU CAN HIDE

  REBECCA ZANETTI

  ZEBRA BOOKS

  Kensington Publishing Corp.

  www.kensingtonbooks.com

  All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.

  Table of Contents

  Also by

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  Prologue

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Chapter Thirty-Seven

  Chapter Thirty-Eight

  Teaser chapter

  ZEBRA BOOKS are published by

  Kensington Publishing Corp.

  119 West 40th Street

  New York, NY 10018

  Copyright © 2022 by Rebecca Zanetti

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, places, events, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.

  To the extent that the image or images on the cover of this book depict a person or persons, such person or persons are merely models, and are not intended to portray any character or characters featured in the book.

  If you purchased this book without a cover you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the Publisher and neither the Author nor the Publisher has received any payment for this “stripped book.”

  Zebra and the Z logo Reg. U.S. Pat. & TM Off.

  ISBN: 978-1-4201-5434-4

  ISBN-13: 978-1-4201-5435-1 (eBook)

  This one is dedicated to the English and writing teachers I was lucky enough to learn from through the years, and while I’ve forgotten many names, these still stand out: Dr. Ken Waters, who taught me to trust my instincts when it came to writing, Eileen Bieber, who taught me to structure my writing, Mike Ruskovich, who taught me to let my imagination run wild when writing, Ardyce Plumley, who taught me to stop and enjoy the process of writing, and Ms. Wright, who taught me to diagram sentences and the importance of doing so. Thank you for sharing your love of both reading and writing.

  Acknowledgments

  Thank you to Tony Zanetti for his patience, humor, and ability to magically find lost pieces of paper throughout the house where I’ve left ideas for a book. Thank you to Gabe Zanetti for calling at the best times and right when I need a synonym for green, and thank you to Karlina Zanetti for being so creative and inspiring with her own stories;

  Thank you to my agent, Caitlin Blasdell, for knowing exactly what extra element to add to a story to make it have the magic and for working with me to balance my schedule after arm surgery. Thank you for just talking me through the stress and brainstorming ideas for both my schedule and for my stories;

  Thank you to my editor, Alicia Condon, for knowing exactly how to find the right tension to balance a thriller and for being so understanding and proactive in creating a successful schedule for my several series as I healed after arm surgery;

  Thank you to the rest of the Kensington gang: Alexandra Nicolajsen, Steven Zacharias, Adam Zacharias, Ross Plotkin, Lynn Cully, Vida Engstrand, Jane Nutter, Lauren Jernigan, Kimberly Richardson, and Rebecca Cremonese;

  A special thank you to Pam Joplin for the absolutely phenomenal copy edits;

  Thank you to Anissa Beatty, my assistant and social media expert who often texts at midnight with awesome ideas and who is always up for trying something fun and zany;

  Thank you to Leanna Feazel, Madison Fairbanks, Julie Elkin, and Katy Nielsen for your friendship, support, and all-around great times via Zoom and the Rebels. You have no idea how much I love seeing and talking with you online;

  Thank you to Rebels Jessica Mobbs, Heather Frost, Kimberly Frost, Madison Fairbanks, Suzi Zuber, Asmaa Nada Qayyum, Amanda Larsen, Karen Clementi, and Karen Fisher for their assistance with this book;

  Thank you also to my constant support system: Gail and Jim English, Kathy and Herb Zanetti, Debbie and Travis Smith, Stephanie and Don West, Jessica and Jonah Namson, Steve and Liz Berry, Jillian and Benji Stein, and the entire Younker family.

  Prologue

  He didn’t feel late January’s bite, even though he sank to his knees in the thick snow. Instead, the sparking thrill of anticipation poured through his veins with the heat of a first love. Oh, the woman in the desolate cabin was neither his love nor his first, but for now, she was his purpose.

  For weeks, she’d been his sole focus, and now he could wait no longer. Dreaming about her wasn’t enough. He knew how to calm the rage inside him. Finally, he’d learned, and it was all so clear. He had been shown the way.

  Now he knew his purpose and could be whole.

  Another siren’s song whispered on the frigid wind, and he’d already left her his calling card, which meant a new project had begun. Although he did like to have one or two projects going at a time, it was time to end this one.

  She’d cheated him out of what he needed, and she had to pay for that. She’d completely deserted him and the life they could’ve had. She hadn’t even said good-bye. Out in the middle of nowhere, she’d thought she could hide from him? Avoid the roles they both needed to play? The lover’s presents he’d planned to shower upon her had been irrelevant to her—and she must have known he’d made plans.

  He had meant nothing to her.

  He’d found her hiding place, and then he’d played a little. Leaving her an oddity here, a scary sign there. Just enough to have her catching her breath and then convincing herself that she was imagining things in the middle of nowhere. He was smarter than she was, and it was time she realized that fact. Not only smarter, but more powerful.

  Life was about power, was it not? He’d learned that the hard way.

  Darkness hung heavily above the mountains as another winter storm punished the trees. Brutal snow pummeled the over-loaded branches and assaulted the ice shielding the creek. His woman, for right now she was his, always emerged about this time to trudge around a series of rocks to the primitive outhouse. He had opened the door one night and poured water on the hinges.

  How she’d struggled to shut the door the following morning.

  He’d watched from a vantage point across the creek, nearly doubling over with silent laughter. When she’d given up the fight and just used the toilet, he’d snapped pictures with his long-range lens. His groin tightened at the memory.

  It was amusing she thought she could hide from him. Oh, she was smart enough to cower where she couldn’t be traced—unless somebody had put a tracker on her vehicle. When she’d left her compact to drive an enclosed side-by-side with tracks from the deserted public boat launch, he’d been on her tail already, easily following her trail to this hideaway.

  He wasn’t a god, but to her, he might as well be.

  His gaze caught on an ax beneath an eave near a covered pile of wood.

  That would do.

  Chapter One

  The victim’s hands had b
een removed—most likely with the ax left leaning against an ice-covered pine tree. Her wrists were bloody stumps resting on cut logs, which the killer must’ve used to position the flesh for his strike. Perfectly preserved, burgundy-colored flowers littered the ground in every direction around the body, several petals frozen solid to rocks at the edge of the ice-encrusted river. Their stark color leeched into the white snow, creating icy pools of frozen blood.

  The victim was female and naked, her flesh frozen to a grayish-blue hue, her facial structure shattered beyond recognition. Blood marred the snow all around her. The techs had worked all morning to gently uncover her and the surrounding area without causing damage.

  Laurel Snow crouched on the craggy bank of Witch Creek, a hidden tributary of the Sauk River in northern Washington State. Icy snow clung to her knit hat and pinged off her snow boots. “There’s not enough blood here. The mutilations happened post-mortem,” she murmured, looking up at FBI Agent Walter Smudgeon, who had bent to study the ax.

  He straightened. “Not much blood on the ax.” He turned, his wide cheeks ruddy, his belly hanging over his belt. “Broken face and stolen hands. Somebody definitely wanted to keep her from being identified.”

  Laurel scrutinized the ligature marks around the woman’s neck. “She was strangled. We’ll know more after the autopsy.” She studied the woman’s hair, which was black with a clear demarcation of gray—maybe three or even four weeks’ worth. “She was due for a hair appointment.”

  “What does that mean?” Walter wheezed.

  Laurel stood. “I’m not sure.” Her phone buzzed from her pocket, and she ignored the caller. Again.

  “What’s with the flowers?” Walter asked.

  “It’s interesting,” Laurel said, the wind burning the exposed skin on her face and ears. “I think these are black dahlias.”

  “Black? Those are red,” Walter said, pulling his winter coat lower to cover his wide belly, his jowls moving as he spoke.

  “They’re burgundy colored, and I believe they’re black dahlias,” Laurel repeated, a sense of isolation cutting through her, even as state crime scene personnel worked efficiently around her. She tilted her head toward Captain Monty Buckley, who was photographing the petals closer to the creek. “Did you find the personal locator beacon?”

  The victim had activated the PLB, which sent a distress call through satellite to emergency services around midnight the night before, but searchers had to wait until light because of the devastating snowstorm that had only just abated. The second search team had found the body, which had already been mostly covered with snow and ice, except for her feet, which lay in the moving creek, shoved carelessly beneath a jagged layer of ice.

  Monty looked up, his eyes blue and his hair a silvery gray that was turning more white from his recent cancer treatments. “Not yet.” He surveyed the snow still gently falling to cover the earth in every direction. “It’s a long shot that we’ll find it at all.” He grimaced at the flowers. “What’s up with the red petals? Some symbolic thing?”

  “I believe they symbolize betrayal,” Laurel said, clicking through her memory of a book she’d read years ago. “We can conduct more research later.”

  A tall figure walked between two trees, kicking snow out of the way and creating a trail with his size fourteen boots.

  “Huck,” Laurel said, taken aback. “Where did you come from?”

  “Monty called me. There’s an old forest service trail to the north, and I drove my snowmobile along that route. I’ve cut a trail from there. You’re going to want to see this,” Huck Rivers said, his eyes a whiskey brown, his whiskers a day past needing a shave, and his hat partially covering his thick black hair. His Karelian bear dog, Aeneas, bounded behind him, tail wagging and tongue out.

  Laurel blinked. She and Walter had ridden in Fish and Wildlife UTVs from the Sauk River to the creek to reach the scene, and she hadn’t realized Huck would be out there. It had been more than a month since they’d worked together, since they’d seen each other, and she’d wondered about him. Had he spent Christmas and then most of January alone in his cabin? She’d been in DC for much of January working on another case and had only been back in town for a couple of days. “All right,” she said coolly, stepping carefully over icy rocks and slippery snow to reach him. “Lead on, Captain.”

  His gaze inscrutable, he turned, his broad shoulders blocking the trail he’d created. “Follow me.”

  She’d forgotten how tall he stood and walked close to him so he could break the brutal wind. Her hands were chilled through the rubber gloves, but she kept them outside her pockets to avoid picking up trace evidence, although the snow continued to land and then melt on her.

  They walked for about ten minutes, around bushes, under boughs, and over icy brush, with snow piled on either side of the makeshift trail. Her legs ached, and the biting wind sliced to her bones, weakening her muscles.

  Huck paused and partially turned to the right. In profile, his features were more rugged than the brutal mountains around them. “If you look there, the victim’s footprints are still visible in the snow because of the tree covering above them. I’ve taken pictures, because they’re going to disappear within the hour.”

  Laurel squinted to see through the thick trees at the smaller prints, followed by much larger ones. “Are those yours?”

  “No. Mine are a yard beyond those prints. I paralleled the trail as I took pictures.” He made a hand gesture, and the black-and-white dog sat obediently. “From the spacing of the steps, they were running, and both broke several branches on the way.” He pointed farther down the snowy trail. “She fell twice but got back up and kept running.”

  Laurel could imagine the woman’s terror. “Where did she come from?”

  “This way.” He turned again.

  Aeneas sat in place, one ear up as if he wanted to ask her a question.

  She couldn’t pet him and get fur on her gloves, so she smiled. “Hi, Aeneas. Miss me?”

  Did Huck’s shoulders square at that question? They’d shared one intimate night together, and then nothing. She’d thought they might be becoming friends, but then he’d disappeared. The dog yipped and flipped around to follow his master.

  Laurel trudged behind the two males, stepping gingerly over the exposed root of a tree that rose high out of the deep snow. The pine would probably fall over in the howling wind. She turned at a bend and stopped upon spotting a dark structure that nearly disappeared into the rock wall behind it. “Incredible.”

  Huck nodded. “Yeah. It’s an old forestry cabin that was abandoned about ten years ago, according to my office. Nobody knew anyone was staying out here.”

  Weathered wooden logs created a square-shaped cabin built against a solid rock wall. A crumbled stack of planks showed what had once been a porch, leaving the door two feet above the ground, now iced over with snow. A tarp partially covered a battered old side-by-side utility terrain vehicle beneath two mature blue spruce trees to the right of the cabin.

  “I removed part of the tarp to see what was secured under there,” Huck explained.

  Laurel looked around. Her phone buzzed again and she ignored it. “I take it UTVs are the only way to access this area?”

  “Or snowmobile, during the winter.” Huck pointed to his black snowmobile with a Fish and Wildlife designation on the side. “I guess somebody could hike in during summer months. I took that old forest division trail, while you all drove along the river and then cut east along the creek.”

  A branch broke over by the tarp, the ice and wind having triumphed over the slim wood.

  Laurel jumped as ice and pinecones rained down. “Is that how the killer or killers reached this place? We didn’t see any tracks on our way in.”

  Huck wiped snow off his cheekbone. “The snowstorm eliminated any possible tracks out here, so we don’t even know which way the killer came.”

 
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