ONESerenity, Tennessee
Mounted police officer Foster “Silver” Williams killed the engine, stepped into the crisp mountain air and surveyed the dilapidated cabins. The waning light cast a pinkish haze over the squat, weathered structures and deepened the shadows in the stagnant woods. Camp Smoky, a recreational property used mostly for church and sports groups, had welcomed thousands of young campers over the years, but those glory days were long past. Why would Lindsey exchange his thriving vacation rental business for this forgotten relic? He’d thought she was satisfied with their working relationship. Happy, even. He put the bulk of his time and energy into his law enforcement career, leaving her to manage his properties. She made reservations, oversaw routine cleaning and maintenance, and handled guest complaints. If an issue arose that Lindsey didn’t feel comfortable dealing with alone, she involved him.
Had she felt unappreciated? Had the work become routine? Had she craved a challenge, and that’s why she’d chosen to revive the camp? Silver had pored over these questions and more in the two weeks since she quit. His patience had reached its expiration date, and now he wanted answers.
Her red Mini Cooper was parked near the first of six cabins—reserved for staff, if memory served. Perpendicular to those cabins, a long building housed the office, dining area and kitchen. Gravel crunched beneath his police-issue boots. There was a strange fluttering behind his breastbone. Surely, he wasn’t nervous? This was Lindsey, his capable, conscientious employee, the one who’d swooped into his life eighteen months ago and assumed operation of his side venture as if she had built the business from scratch herself. She was so good at her job that he’d begun to take her presence for granted. He’d assumed she’d always be there to command the ship.
Approaching the cabin, he rubbed at his chest to banish the unsettling sensations. He wasn’t nervous. He was worried. Worried he wasn’t going to convince her to come back. She could be infuriatingly strong-willed at times.
Scowling at the gaudy snowman wreath covering the top half of the door, Silver rapped on the frame. Everything was quiet inside the one-room cabin. Quiet and dark. Unless she was napping, which he’d never known her to do, she was somewhere else on this sprawling, hundred-acre property.
Silver fired off a text to her number before following the stepping stones around the side of the cabin toward the office. A covered walkway stretched along the back side of the building and connected to the side porch overlooking the distant basketball courts. The windows shone like yellow squares in a brown quilt, and he was sure he’d find her hunched over a desk or fixing a snack in the kitchen.
He was about to step onto the walkway when something in his peripheral vision snagged his attention. The back of his neck prickling, he pivoted toward the patchwork of sickly green-and-brown grass behind the cabins. The sight that greeted him leaked acid into his veins. A woman lay facedown in the grass, motionless, an arrow sticking out of her back. Her brown hair covered her face, but he recognized the cheerful ivory blouse studded with pine trees.
Silver raced to her side and dropped to his knees, ripped off one of his gloves and felt for a pulse. There, weak and rapid, but there.
“I’m here, Lindsey.” He started to inspect the wound, but the pounding of feet had him removing his service weapon from his holster.
He ordered the brunette racing toward him to stop. A second later, his brain registered her identity. “Lindsey?”
“Why are you pointing that thing at me?” Her brown eyes blazed at him from behind her glasses. “Help Thea!”
Thea? He glanced down. Lindsey’s close friend was also a brunette and about the same size. Before holstering his weapon, he scanned the spindly trees for a sign of the arrow’s owner. Seeing no one, he put it away and examined the wound.
“How did this happen?” Lindsey demanded, going on her knees beside him.
“You didn’t see anything?” he countered, the terror slowly receding and his customary focus clicking into place.
“I was in the kitchen when I got your text.”
Silver contacted Dispatch. Lindsey gingerly pushed the hair off Thea’s face. “Thea? Can you hear me?” She bent closer, her features a cloud of worry. “Help is on the way.” She turned to him. “Should you pull it out?”
“This is a hunting arrow, and in all likelihood, the arrowhead is a bullet shape. But I’m not about to risk pulling it out and inflicting more damage.” The arrow’s deep penetration was also keeping blood loss to a minimum.
“Is her unconscious state a good thing?”
“She might’ve passed out from the pain,” he suggested, immediately regretting it. Lindsey’s face went as pale as her friend’s.
“Has the camp owner given anyone permission to hunt on this property?” he asked.
“Not that I’m aware of.”
“Have you had any trespassers? Bored teens looking for something to do?”
“No. It’s just been me, the odd repairman and a handful of deer.” Her brow creased. “I invited her to come up here. She doesn’t like to drive curvy roads, so I offered to pick her up. We were making fried chicken and mashed potatoes. She spilled gravy on her shirt and went to borrow one of mine.”
“You’re not responsible, Lindsey.”
“I—I know. This was an unfortunate accident.”
He didn’t comment, preferring to reserve judgment until he could get a clearer picture of what had transpired.
“Silver.”
Lindsey’s big brown eyes locked onto his face. His discarded glove lay in her outstretched palm. He was tempted to dare her to look down, to bare his scarred flesh to her censure and inevitable questions. He’d worn long sleeves and gloves year-round since his teens, to hide the twisted, puckered skin. Rumors swirled around his odd fashion choices, but no one had yet to broach the subject with him.
He snatched the still-warm leather. “Thank you.”
He wasn’t ready to share his secret with her. Maybe he never would be. His father’s abuse had spoiled more than just his skin.
Lindsey Snow refused to let her burning curiosity pull her gaze away from his face. And what a face it was... Foster “Silver” Williams was as unique as his nickname. The thirty-year-old officer and businessman was like no one else she’d ever met, an intriguing figure with pristine milk-white skin, moonbeam-gray hair, and features that were both elegant and harsh. He was almost always wearing navy, slate gray or black, in or out of uniform. His mesmerizing eyes shifted between purple and blue, depending on his mood, and she often got the feeling he could read her thoughts. Scary proposition, considering she was keeping important information from him.
Thea stirred suddenly, gasping and moaning. “It burns. Get it out!”
Silver reached for her wrist, preventing her from clawing at the arrow. “Try to remain calm, Thea. The paramedics will be here any minute.”
Lindsey’s heart leaped into her throat. Her friend was suffering, and she couldn’t help feeling at fault. Thea continued to thrash about, repeating the same words. Her eyes were glazed, and her complexion splotchy.
“Thea, please.” Lindsey stroked her cheek and hair. “You’re going to make it worse.”
“Did you see who did this to you?” Silver prompted.
She didn’t seem to hear the question, let alone understand what he was saying. The paramedics arrived a tortuous fifteen minutes later. Lindsey and Silver waited off to the side as they administered fluids and loaded her onto a gurney.
When Lindsey started for her car, Silver blocked her path. “I know you want to be there for her, but the detective will expect to speak with you.”
“Thea is the closest thing I’ve got to a best friend in Serenity. I’m going.”
He grasped her upper arms. “Of course, you’ll go. First, we have to discover who’s responsible for her injury and if charges will be brought. We need you for that.”
Her gaze was drawn to the retreating ambulance and the pair of official law enforcement cars approaching. “I don’t have a choice, do I?”
“The property owner doesn’t reside in Tennessee, and you’re the sole employee. You can take us through this afternoon’s events and provide information that might help us put the puzzle pieces together.”
Lindsey understood what they needed from her and didn’t like it.
His hands slid lightly down her arms and squeezed her fingers. “She’ll likely be taken in for surgery. You would be in a stale waiting room reading out-of-date golfing magazines and drinking terrible coffee.”
Silver didn’t often initiate physical contact. His leather gloves were supple and soft, but she wished the barrier away.
“And I would be in that waiting room with you, and I happen to despise golf,” he added, one gray brow slanting in a familiar, sardonic angle. “Being forced to read about it would be worse than a dentist visit.”
He wouldn’t be this nice if he knew she’d been sent to East Tennessee to spy on him. He wasn’t her true former employer. Her name was on Williams Industrial’s payroll, a successful media company owned and operated by Gordon and Astrid Williams—Silver’s estranged parents. They’d been monitoring his movements from their home base in Nashville and, when he’d advertised for an administrative assistant, they’d seen an opportunity. Lindsey had scored the position, moved to Serenity and set about making herself indispensable. How could she have guessed she’d start to care about him? That feeding his parents information would make her feel like a criminal? She’d come to a place of such internal conflict and conviction that she’d resigned from both the parents and the son’s employ, without giving specific reasons to anyone. Silver deserved answers. She’d sensed God’s prompting to confess everything, but she had yet to gather the courage.
“I’ll cooperate,” she said at last. “After I call Thea’s mom.”
He nodded and released her, striding away to greet the patrol officer and detective. She could feel their group assessment as she spoke to Thea’s mom, Gail, on the phone. The conversation was brief and emotional, and she took a few moments to collect herself before joining the trio.
Silver gestured to the patrol officer. “You already know Officer Bell.”
The reserved, dark-headed man attended the same church as she, Silver and the rest of the mounted patrol unit. He’d been at several of the unit cookouts, as well, which were held at their stables each week.
“This is Detective York.”
Lindsey had seen the older gentleman around town with his wife. He wasn’t a talkative sort, probably because it was his job to notice things and absorb information.
“I didn’t see or hear anything useful,” she informed him. “I was inside cooking, and I had music playing.”
“Why don’t you tell me about your day?”
“I’m in charge of the camp’s renovations. I spent the morning getting estimates on the most pressing repairs. Thea texted that she was having a tough day. She and her boyfriend recently split, and she’s heartbroken over it. I invited her to spend the afternoon and evening with me, and she agreed. I picked her up between one fifteen and one thirty—”
“Which would put you here at what time?”
“About ten minutes after two. I gave her a tour of the camp. We hung out in my cabin for a while and discussed our holiday plans. We started preparing dinner about a half hour ago.” Lindsey had been consumed with this new job the past two weeks. A good thing, because she hadn’t had time to dwell on her guilt or how much she missed Silver. It had been good to see Thea. She’d succeeded in getting her friend to smile and laugh and forget her romantic troubles for a short time. “Thea spilled gravy on her shirt, so she went to my cabin to borrow one of mine. The next thing I know, Silver is here and Thea is...”
The image of her friend lying so still and lifeless was a jarring one.
“Have you had any altercations or problems with anyone?”
“No.”
The detective gestured to the cabin. “Let’s have a look at the scene.”
She led them to the grassy spot and almost bent to pick up Thea’s discarded shoe. Silver uttered a warning. “Leave that for evidence.”
“Oh.” Jerking her hand away, she studied their grave faces. “You’re assuming Thea was hurt intentionally?”
“We have to be prepared for any scenario,” York said.
Officer Bell put on disposable gloves and placed the shoe in an evidence bag. Detective York studied the area with an experienced eye, mentally cataloging the scene.
“You mentioned an ex-boyfriend,” he said. “Who ended the relationship?”
“Thea.”
“How did he take it?”
“Royce didn’t agree with her decision, but he respected it.”
Detective York called out to Bell, who’d been slowly inspecting the tree line and had crouched down. “Find something?”
Bell held the object up for them to see. A second arrow.
York jotted something down in his notebook. “Is Royce a hunter?”
“He’s not what I’d call an outdoor enthusiast,” Lindsey replied. “Royce isn’t behind this. Not only because he’s a nice guy, but because he’s on the other side of the country and has been for a week.”
“I’ll have to confirm his alibi.” His phone chirped.
While he took the call, Bell brought the arrow over for Silver to inspect. “What do you think?”
“Looks like the one that hit Thea,” Silver confirmed, the corners of his mouth turning down. “Careful, there’s a substance smeared on the tip.”
Bell proceeded to place it in an evidence bag. York ended his conversation.
“Officer Weiland is at the hospital. It’s been confirmed that the arrow that hit Thea was tipped with a toxin.
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