CHAPTER TWO
She lasted forty-seven minutes.
Forty-seven minutes of sitting in the surgical waiting room with vending machine coffee going cold in her hand and the fluorescent lights pressing down on her like something with weight.
Forty-seven minutes of watching the clock above the nurses' station tick through increments that felt like geological epochs while behind the double doors at the end of the corridor, surgeons worked to repair the damage a killer had done to the skull of a man who had held her hand six hours ago.
Then she stood, dropped the coffee in the trash, and walked out.
The night hit her like a reprimand. She'd left the hospital through a side exit to avoid Kate's people in the lobby—an FBI field coordinator Kate had stationed there, presumably to keep Isla from doing exactly what she was doing—and the cold was immediate, absolute, the kind that crawled inside your lungs and set up residence. She still didn't have a coat.
She didn't care.
Her car started on the second try, the engine protesting the cold with a shudder that rattled through the chassis.
Isla pulled out of the parking lot and turned north, toward the industrial district, toward the scrapyard where James Sullivan was still bleeding into the ground in some version of events that hadn't stopped playing behind her eyes since Kate's phone call.
The streets were empty. Duluth at this hour—somewhere between the dead center of the night and the first suggestion of morning—was a city of absence.
Streetlights casting their amber cones over pavement that gleamed with black ice.
Storefronts dark behind frost-glazed glass.
The occasional set of headlights in the distance, appearing and vanishing like the running lights of ships passing in the dark.
She drove too fast. Knew she was driving too fast and didn't ease off the accelerator because the alternative was slowing down, and slowing down meant thinking, and thinking meant the image of James face-down on ground with his hand stretched toward a phone he couldn't reach.
So she took the turns sharp and felt the tires catch on ice and correct, and she kept her eyes on the road and her mind on the destination and she did not think about what the surgeon was doing right now to the inside of James Sullivan's skull.
Hendrickson's Salvage & Scrap announced itself first as a change in the landscape—the residential blocks giving way to warehouses and industrial lots, the buildings growing larger and less inhabited, until the road dead-ended at a chain-link fence topped with razor wire that enclosed what looked, in the darkness, like the skeletal remains of a mechanical civilization.
Two cruisers sat at the gate, their light bars dark, their engines running for warmth.
Crime scene tape stretched across the entrance in an X pattern, and beyond it Isla could see the orange glow of portable work lights deep inside the yard, where the forensics team was still processing whatever James had found.
She parked behind the cruisers and got out.
The cold clamped down on her instantly, finding every gap in her layering—the collar of her blazer, the cuffs of her sleeves, the thin spot at her lower back where the thermal undershirt had ridden up.
She ignored it. She'd been ignoring cold in this city.
It was one of the few things she'd gotten good at.
A uniformed officer materialized from the nearest cruiser as she approached the tape. Young, stocky, breath fogging around his face like a personal weather system.
"Ma'am, this area is—" He stopped when she held up her badge. Looked at it, then at her, and something shifted in his expression—recognition or sympathy or some combination of the two. "Agent Rivers. We were told you might—I mean, SAC Channing said—"
"I know what she said." Isla ducked under the tape. "I won't disturb the scene. I need to see it."
The officer hesitated. "The main scene is in the northeast corner. Follow the flags—the forensic team laid a path. There's another officer posted near the container."
"Thank you."
She left him standing at the gate and walked into the scrapyard.
It was like entering another world. The towers of crushed cars rose around her on both sides, jagged and enormous, their surfaces catching what little ambient light existed and turning it into something alien—glints and flickers that moved as she moved, as if the metal itself were watching.
The path between the piles was narrow and uneven, cold gravel crunching under her boots, and the portable work lights somewhere ahead cast long shadows that stretched and warped against the walls of scrap, like the outlines of things that weren't quite there.
Isla had walked through dozens of crime scenes.
Hundreds, if she counted the ones from her academy training and her years in Miami.
She knew the quality of attention they demanded—the way your eyes had to move systematically, cataloging everything, letting no detail pass unexamined.
She knew the clinical distance you were supposed to maintain, the professional remove that allowed you to read blood spatter and body position and wound patterns without letting the human reality of what you were seeing get inside the machinery of analysis.
She couldn't find that distance now.
Every step deeper into the scrapyard felt personal in a way that no crime scene ever had.
Because this wasn't a stranger's violence she was walking toward.
This was James. His blood on the ground, his body broken, his stubborn, selfless, maddening decision to come here alone while she slept on her couch wrapped in blankets he'd tucked around her.
She followed the orange flags. They led her through a narrowing corridor of scrap—stacked cars giving way to old equipment, rusted machinery, the accumulated industrial detritus of decades—until the path opened into a wider space near the far corner of the yard.
Here the portable work lights had been set up on tripods, their harsh white beams creating a zone of surgical brightness against the surrounding dark.
And there it was.
The blood was the first thing she saw. Not because she was looking for it—though she was—but because the lights had been positioned specifically to illuminate it, and the effect was stark and terrible.
A dark stain on the ground near the doors of a shipping container, the edges crystallized where it had begun to freeze, the center still cradling the deep, wet blackness of blood that hadn't fully surrendered to the cold.
James's blood.
Isla stopped walking. She stood at the edge of the illuminated zone, ten feet from the stain, and made herself look.
The story was there, written in the evidence the way stories always were. She could read it as clearly as if she'd been present.
The container doors, still open, their metal surfaces bearing the bright scrape marks of recent and repeated use.
James would have seen those marks—would have known they meant recent habitation.
He would have called out, identified himself, followed every protocol up to the final, critical one: waiting for backup.
The blood started at the doors. A heavy initial deposit, the kind made by a sudden wound—blunt force, something hard connecting with skull at speed.
He'd been standing right there when Brune hit him.
The impact point was close enough to the container that she could see the scenario with awful clarity: the doors swinging outward, catching James off guard, and then Brune coming through, swinging something heavy.
From the doors, the blood trail told the rest. Smears and drops leading away from the container at an angle—not a straight line, but the erratic path of a man trying to move while his body was shutting down.
He'd dragged himself. Ten feet, Kate had said, and Isla could see every inch of those ten feet mapped out in frozen red on the ground.
He'd been trying to reach his phone. Trying to call her.
Call me when you wake up.
A sound escaped her throat. Not a word—something rawer, compressed and involuntary, like the noise a structure makes in the instant before it gives way.
She pressed her knuckles against her mouth and breathed through it, the frigid air burning her lungs, until the sound stopped and the trembling in her chest subsided enough to pass for composure.
"Agent Rivers?"
The voice came from her left—the second officer, the one posted near the container. He was standing a respectful distance away, a heavyset man in his forties with the wary face of someone who'd been told to watch for an FBI agent who might show up, and might not be entirely stable when she did.
"I'm all right," she said, though she wasn't. "Has forensics finished with the container interior?"
"Initial pass, yes ma'am. They've got the major pieces tagged and photographed. They're doing a second sweep in the morning with daylight."
"I'm going to look. I won't touch anything."
He didn't argue. Either he'd heard enough about her to know better, or the look on her face discouraged debate.
He just nodded and stepped aside, and Isla walked past the blood, past the scuffed ground where James had fallen, to the open doors of the shipping container where the Lake Superior Killer had been living.
The interior was smaller than she'd expected—or maybe the evidence of habitation made it feel that way, the walls pressing closer because they held the residue of a human presence that made Isla's skin crawl.
The forensics team had placed numbered markers throughout the space, little yellow placards standing sentinel over the objects Robert Brune had left behind.