CHAPTER ELEVEN
The drive to Flagstaff gave Kari time to think.
Maria's files had confirmed what she'd suspected: all three victims had moved in the same circles, trained in the same communities, chased the same impossible goals.
If Kari wanted to understand who might have targeted them, she needed to understand that world—the culture of ultra-marathon running, the relationships between competitors, the places where their paths might have crossed.
Jessica Ramirez had listed a Flagstaff address on her race registration, but her actual training had taken her across Arizona.
According to her social media, she'd been a regular at several running stores and training groups in the region.
The closest to her listed address was a place called the Dusty Trail Running Store, which hosted weekly group runs and served as an informal gathering spot for the local ultra community.
Kari had called ahead, explaining that she needed to speak with anyone who knew Jessica, and the owner—a woman named Connie Marks—had agreed to gather some of Jessica's training partners for an informal meeting.
The store occupied a strip mall on the outskirts of Flagstaff, sandwiched between a yoga studio and a shop selling crystals and incense.
Kari arrived to find four people waiting in the back room, surrounded by racks of running shoes and shelves of energy gels.
They sat in a loose circle on folding chairs, their faces carrying the particular mixture of grief and disbelief that Kari had seen too many times before.
Connie made introductions. There was Derek, a lean Black man in his forties who taught high school biology and ran ultramarathons on weekends.
Cora, a physical therapist with sun-damaged skin and nervous hands.
Miguel, barely out of college, who kept glancing at his phone as if expecting bad news.
And Rachel, an older woman with silver hair and the kind of quiet intensity that came from decades of pushing physical limits.
"Thank you all for coming," Kari said, settling into the remaining chair. "I know this is difficult, but anything you can tell me about Jessica might help us understand what happened to her."
"What happened to her is someone killed her." Rachel's voice was flat, hard. "Just like Jennifer. Just like Jordan. Someone's hunting us."
The words landed heavily in the small room. Kari saw the others flinch, saw the fear, now given voice, ripple across their faces.
"You knew the other victims?" she asked.
"Everyone in the ultra community knew them.
It's not that big a world." Derek leaned forward, his elbows on his knees.
"Jennifer Hayes was a legend—she'd won the Badwater 135 twice, Western States once.
Jordan was newer, but he was talented. Coming up fast." His voice cracked.
"And Jessica... she was one of the best desert runners I've ever seen.
The heat didn't bother her the way it bothers most people.
She used to say she was born for the Sonoran. "
"They were all training for the Sonoran 100," Kari said. "Is that correct?"
Nods around the room. Cora cleared her voice and spoke up. "We all are. Or were." She glanced uncertainly at the others. "I don't know if I can do it now. Every time I think about going out for a training run, I imagine..."
She didn't finish the sentence.
"Tell me about the race," Kari said. "What makes it special? Why would all three runners have been focused on this particular event?"
Connie answered from her position by the door.
"The Sonoran 100 is one of the most brutal ultra-marathons in the country.
A hundred miles through open desert in June, when temperatures can hit 115 degrees.
Most races that distance are run on trails, through mountains or forests.
The Sonoran is different—it's exposed, relentless, no shade for miles at a stretch.
Finishing it is a badge of honor in the ultra community. "
"The race attracts elite runners from around the world," Rachel added. "People who want to prove they can handle anything. The entry is limited, the standards are high. Getting in is an achievement by itself."
"And all three were serious contenders?"
"Jennifer was favored to win the women's division," Derek said.
"Jordan had a shot at top five overall. And Jessica.
.." He shook his head. "Jessica had been training for two years specifically for this race.
She'd restructured her whole life around it—quit her job, moved to Arizona to acclimate to the heat.
She used to say the Sonoran 100 was going to be her legacy. "
Kari let that sink in. Three elite runners, all preparing for the same grueling event, all dead within two weeks of each other. The connection was obvious, but the motive remained obscure.
"I need to ask something that might sound strange," she said. "Were any of them seeking advice from other runners? Experienced desert runners who might have helped them with training routes or survival techniques?"
The group exchanged glances. Miguel spoke for the first time, his voice uncertain. "I mean, everyone shares information in the ultra community. It's part of the culture. You ask questions on forums, swap tips at races, that kind of thing."
"But specifically for the Sonoran 100," Kari pressed. "Anyone who was particularly helpful? Anyone who reached out to offer guidance?"
Rachel frowned. "There are a few old-timers who've done the race multiple times. People seek them out for advice on pacing, hydration, route selection. It's pretty common."
"Can you think of anyone specific? Anyone who might have had contact with all three runners?"
Silence. The runners looked at each other, searching their memories, but no one seemed to find what Kari was looking for.
"The community is small," Derek said finally, "but it's not that small.
Hundreds of people train for the Sonoran 100 every year.
Any of us might have crossed paths with Jennifer, Jordan, and Jessica at various points, but I can't think of anyone who stands out as having a special connection to all three. "
Kari tried a different angle. "What about competitors? Anyone who might have seen the victims as threats? Someone who wanted them out of the race?"
"That's not how ultra running works." Cora shook her head emphatically. "We're competing against the distance, not each other. Most of us are just trying to finish. The idea of someone killing competitors to improve their chances..." She trailed off, looking nauseated. "It's insane."
"What about the financial side?" Kari asked. "Is there prize money for winning the Sonoran 100?"
Derek and Connie exchanged a look that was almost amused, despite the circumstances.
"You're thinking of road marathons," Derek said.
"Boston, New York—those races pay out six figures to the winners.
Ultra running isn't like that. Most hundred-milers don't offer any prize money at all.
You win Western States, you get a belt buckle.
Same buckle they give everyone who finishes under twenty-four hours. "
"The Sonoran 100 started offering a small purse a couple of years ago," Connie added. "Ten thousand for the overall winner, five for second, smaller amounts down through fifth place. It's one of the bigger purses in the sport, but it's not exactly life-changing money."
"What about sponsorships?" Kari pressed. "Endorsement deals?"
Rachel leaned forward. "That's where it gets more complicated.
A handful of elite ultra runners have deals with gear companies—shoes, hydration packs, GPS watches.
Winning a race like the Sonoran doesn't pay much on its own, but it can open doors.
If you're trying to build a career as a professional runner, a big win at a prestigious event is how you get noticed. It's your résumé."
"So for someone trying to go pro," Kari said, "eliminating the top contenders could mean the difference between obscurity and a career."
The runners shifted uncomfortably. Derek rubbed the back of his neck. "I guess, theoretically. But the sponsorship money we're talking about—even the best-paid ultra runners are barely scraping together a living. We're not talking about NFL contracts. Most of us have day jobs."
The room fell silent again. Kari could feel the weight of what she was suggesting pressing down on the group—the idea that someone within their community, someone who shared their passion and their culture, might be systematically murdering their friends.
"Is there anything else?" she asked. "Anything unusual that any of the victims mentioned in the weeks before they disappeared? Strange encounters, unexpected messages, anything that seemed off?"
Rachel stirred. "Actually, I just remembered something Jessica said about a week before she vanished.
We were doing a training run together, and she said she'd gotten some advice from another runner about a route she should try.
She seemed excited about it—said the guy really knew the desert, had given her some insights about heat management that she hadn't heard before. "
Kari's attention sharpened. "Did she say who this person was?"
"No. I got the impression it was someone she'd connected with online, through one of the running forums. She was going to try his suggested route that weekend." Rachel's face paled as she made the connection. "That was the weekend she disappeared."
"Do you know which forum? Did she mention any other details about this person?"
"I'm sorry, I don't. We talked about it for maybe five minutes, and then we moved on to other things." Rachel's voice trembled. "If I'd known... if I'd asked more questions..."
"You couldn't have known." Kari kept her voice gentle but her mind was racing. Someone had made contact with Jessica, had offered advice, had suggested a route—a route that had led her into the desert and to her death. If the same person had reached out to Jennifer Hayes and Jordan Rodriguez...
"One more question," she said. "The Sonoran 100—how does registration work? Is there a list of participants that's publicly available?"
"The race posts a roster on their website," Connie said. "Names, bib numbers, sometimes previous race results. It's meant to build community, let people know who they'll be running with."
A public list of targets. Kari made a mental note to get a copy of the registration roster as soon as possible.
She thanked the group for their time and handed out her card, asking them to call if they remembered anything else. As she headed for the door, Rachel caught her arm.
"Detective." The older woman's grip was surprisingly strong. "Catch whoever's doing this. Before they kill again."
"I'm going to try."
"Don't try. Do it." Rachel's eyes burned with a mixture of grief and fury. "Jessica was like a daughter to me. She had her whole life ahead of her, and someone took that away. Find them. Make them pay."
Kari held the woman's gaze. "I will."
She walked out of the running store into the afternoon sun. Someone, she believed, wanted to win the Sonoran 100 very badly. So badly they were willing to kill the competition.