Chapter 29
The bookstore was closed.
Noah stood on the sidewalk and looked at it. The green awning. The hand-painted sign in white letters on dark wood. The display window filled with books arranged in neat rows, spines facing out, the kind of careful presentation that suggested someone who cared about what they were selling.
The lights inside were off. A small handwritten sign in the window read CLOSED until further notice. The ink looked fresh.
It was just after noon. Elizabethtown's Main Street was quiet.
A few cars lined the road. A woman walked a dog past the courthouse.
The brick facades and old maples and the mountains beyond the rooftops — all of it looked the way it had the day he stood here after visiting Kline and felt something pull at him through the glass.
Now he knew what it was.
The side door was to the right of the storefront. A narrow entrance with two buzzers mounted on the frame. The top one had a faded label that read APT 2 with no name. The bottom one read APT 1 - MGMT. Noah pressed the top buzzer and waited.
Nothing.
He pressed it again. Held it for three seconds. The sound was faint through the door, a distant electronic whine somewhere above.
Nothing.
He was about to step back when the door opened from inside. A man in his sixties came out carrying a bag of recycling, keys in his other hand. He glanced at Noah without interest and held the door with his foot while he shifted the bag.
Noah caught the door before it closed and stepped inside.
The stairwell was narrow and dim. The carpet was worn on the steps. It stank of old wood and dust and something else, coffee maybe, hours old. He climbed to the second floor. Two doors. Apartment 2 on the left, closed, a television murmuring behind it. Apartment 1 on the right.
Noah knocked.
The sound was flat against the wood. There was no movement inside. No footsteps. No chair scraping. He knocked again, harder.
Nothing.
He tried the handle.
It turned.
The door opened into a small apartment that was neat in the way places are neat when someone has stopped caring about mess and started caring about something else.
The kitchen was clean. A single mug in the sink, rinsed.
A coffee maker with a cold pot. The living area had a sofa, a desk, a bookshelf packed tight.
The bed was made. The curtains were drawn.
Someone had been here within the last day, maybe less. But they weren't here now.
Noah closed the door behind him.
He moved through the apartment the way he moved through crime scenes. Slowly. Looking at everything. Touching nothing. The habits of twenty years didn't disappear because someone took the badge.
A desk was against the wall near the window.
A laptop, closed. A notepad with a pen clipped to the spiral.
A stack of papers sat beside it. Noah leaned closer without touching them.
He scanned the printed pages. One top was a DMV record.
A vehicle registration document. His eyes moved down the page.
Make: Ford. Model: F-250. Year: 2012. Color: Black.
Registered owner: Hugh Sutherland. Address: Mirror Lake Drive, High Peaks, NY.
Noah stopped breathing.
He stood over the desk and stared at the name.
His father's name. On a vehicle registration that matched the black truck Connor had seen driving past Rebecca Hale's house for years.
The truck that the Cascade Ski Center camera had captured.
The truck that a twelve-year-old had filmed with a camcorder.
The truck with the dealer decal from Saranac Lake Motors.
Liam had found it. He had taken the decal, traced it to the dealership, and found the records. And at the end of that chain was Hugh Sutherland.
The rest of it slammed into place behind his ribs. Noah took out his phone and snapped a photo of the paperwork.
He straightened and turned away from the desk. His hands were shaking. He put them in his pockets.
The second room was small. It might have been a bedroom once. Now it was something else.
The wall facing the door was covered.
Not with mugshots. Not a serial killer's shrine.
It was quieter than that and worse. There were newspaper clippings, some yellowed with age, some printed from online archives.
Photocopied pages from the Hale case file, the kind you could request through public records.
Handwritten notes in blue pen. Photographs cut from the Adirondack Daily Enterprise.
Names written on index cards and pinned to the wall with thumbtacks.
There were lines drawn between them in red marker. Connections. Overlaps. The same web that Noah had built on the task force board, built again here by someone working alone.
Four names had a single line drawn through them.
Maggie Coleman. Burt Halvorsen. Michael Torres. Richard Kline.
Below each crossed-out name, a date. The dates of their deaths.
Noah stood in the doorway and looked at the wall. The room felt colder than the rest of the apartment. The curtains were open in here and the afternoon light fell across the display in a way that made it look clinical.
On the desk beneath the wall, an open box of .308 ammunition. Federal Gold Medal Match. The box held twenty rounds. Several were missing.
Beside the ammo box, a photograph. Old. Faded at the edges. Rebecca Hale standing on a porch with the light on behind her. She was smiling at whoever was taking the picture. Her hair was dark and her face was young and the light from the porch lamp made a halo behind her head.
The porch light.
Noah picked up the photograph. He held it for a moment and then set it back exactly where it had been.
On the corner of the desk, half buried under a stack of articles, a folded piece of paper. Noah lifted the edge of the stack. It was a flyer. Full color. Luther Ashford's face above a campaign slogan.
LUTHER ASHFORD FOR MAYOR Community Reception and Fundraiser. Olympic Museum, Main Street, High Peaks. Thursday, October 19th, 12:30 PM
The date was today.
Luther's face had been scratched out with a pen. Not a casual mark. He'd pressed hard enough to tear the paper.
Noah checked his watch. He still had time.
He pulled out his phone and called McKenzie.
It rang twice.
"Noah."
"Where are you, Mac?”
“At the station. Why?"
"Luther Ashford's fundraiser is today. The one at the Olympic Museum. Is there security?"
"I don't know. It's a campaign event. Local PD would handle it. Why?"
"Get there. Get whoever you can. I think he's going to try again today."
“What? Who?"
“The shooter."
He almost said the name. But he was a fired investigator who had just entered an apartment without a warrant. If he was wrong, McKenzie's career went down with his. He needed to be there. Needed to see it himself before he put a name on the radio that couldn't be taken back.
The line went quiet for a second.
"Noah, what are you into?"
"I'll explain when I get there. Just get people to that event. Now."
He hurried out, down the stairs, through the door, onto the sidewalk. The afternoon was bright. Noah got in the Bronco and started the engine.
High Peaks was thirty minutes away.