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  Copyright Information

  A Means to an End © 2019 by Lissa Marie Redmond.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any matter whatsoever, including Internet usage, without written permission from Midnight Ink, except in the form of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

  As the purchaser of this ebook, you are granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this ebook on screen. The text may not be otherwise reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, or recorded on any other storage device in any form or by any means.

  Any unauthorized usage of the text without express written permission of the publisher is a violation of the author’s copyright and is illegal and punishable by law.

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

  First e-book edition © 2019

  E-book ISBN: 9780738755670

  Book format by Samantha Penn

  Cover design by Kevin R. Brown

  Editing by Nicole Nugent

  Midnight Ink is an imprint of Llewellyn Worldwide Ltd.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Redmond, Lissa Marie, author.

  Title: A means to an end : a cold case investigation / Lissa Marie Redmond.

  Description: First edition. | Woodbury, Minnesota : Midnight Ink, [2019] |

  Series: A cold case investigation ; #3

  Identifiers: LCCN 2019012023 (print) | LCCN 2019013525 (ebook) | ISBN

  9780738755670 () | ISBN 9780738754284 (alk. paper)

  Subjects: | GSAFD: Mystery fiction. | Suspense fiction.

  Classification: LCC PS3618.E4352 (ebook) | LCC PS3618.E4352 M43 2019 (print)

  | DDC 813/.6­—dc23

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019012023

  Midnight Ink does not participate in, endorse, or have any authority or responsibility concerning private business arrangements between our authors and the public.

  Any Internet references contained in this work are current at publication time, but the publisher cannot guarantee that a specific reference will continue or be maintained. Please refer to the publisher’s website for links to current author websites.

  Midnight Ink

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  Manufactured in the United States of America

  For my grandfather, Joseph Kogut,

  the greatest storyteller who ever lived.

  Author’s Note

  I was born and raised in Buffalo, New York. I have never lived anywhere else and hope my great love for the city shines through. This book takes place in Buffalo, but it is a work of fiction. In the spirit of full disclosure, I took many liberties with locations in this novel. The gated community Lauren lives in does not exist. Garden Valley resembles a neighboring town south of the city, but you won’t find it on a map. Real roles—such as mayor, Erie County district attorney, and the police commissioner—are populated with fictional people who in no way resemble any living person. I took great pains to create fictional characters to populate the very real Buffalo that I love. Hopefully my fellow Buffalonians will forgive the literary license I took.

  1

  “The murder isn’t over until the killer stops deriving pleasure from the crime.”

  The eyeless skull stared off into the trees as Buffalo Police Cold Case detective Lauren Riley bent at the knee, resting her back end on her heel to get a better look. Behind her, outside the crime scene tape, a couple of deputy sheriffs talked to a trooper as they waited for the state police crime scene technicians to show up. Maneuvering herself in front of the skull’s lifeless gaze, Lauren snapped a picture with her cell phone.

  “Come again?” Shane Reese asked his partner, staring down at the remains of a body. It appeared to be a female to Lauren. It was hard to tell with that much decomposition. The clothing was really the only clue to the gender, except for the long, stringy hair clinging to the last of the tissue on the scalp.

  “It’s just something I learned at that crime scene assessment seminar you didn’t want to go to over the summer.”

  Used to blacktop and concrete, Lauren was out of her element in the woods roughly sixty-three miles south of the city. It wasn’t bitterly cold out, the weather was actually quite mild, but a wicked wind ripped through the barren trees, stinging her face and ears. The spot was desolate, a quarter mile off the New York State Thruway, deep into the scraggy tree line. Whoever had dumped the body had carried it a long way to make sure it was hidden. The clearing was small, maybe twenty feet by twenty. The state police had marked a path from the road with crime scene tape threaded between the trees, then roped the whole clearing off in a wide circle.

  Lauren had been careful not to step on any evidence, to maintain a proper distance, but she craned forward, trying to commit to memory the details in front of her. Tucking a loose strand of blond hair back up into the black knit hat she wore, she tried to make out what the dark splotches on the chest of the jacket could be. Blood? Dirt? She squinted against the wind. Crime scene photos were great, but nothing replaced actually being at the scene.

  The body lay in two pieces, the upper half lying face up, a denim jacket barely holding it together. The lower half was approximately five feet away, torn at the waist and dragged, possibly by animals. The skull had detached from the neck and was tilted to the left side. A skirt covered the pelvic area, but the leg bones were totally exposed and strewn about. The original color of the skirt was impossible to tell, as it was now a muddy dark brown from exposure to the elements. Lauren suspected it was pleather, that plastic material they called vegan leather now, but that too was just a guess. The victim’s shoes were mostly intact, the heeled mules adding more evidence that this was, indeed, a female.

  There had been a thaw, not unusual for Western New York, whose weather was famous for fluctuating wildly, especially this early in the month of March. Two hunters had come across the body while hunting rabbits. The day before, the temperature had gotten into the mid-forties. It was colder today, and there were still dirty patches of snow throughout the clearing, but the sound of running water from somewhere nearby told Lauren that it had melted enough to uncover the body.

  The young hunters were now sitting in the Chautauqua County Sheriff’s Office, giving their statements. Lauren wondered what they must have thought when they saw the skull staring past them, the way it was staring past her now. The dank smell of mud and decaying leaves filled her nose, but it was muted, the remaining snow absorbing the scents. The body itself was past the time for the tell-tale stench; it had been out there, exposed to the elements, for a long time. Except for the leather-like skin holding what was left of her scalp in place, all of the soft tissue was gone, although there might be some under the skirt or jacket. The medical examiner would cut away the clothes at the autopsy and see what was left.

  Lauren made note of a bulge in the denim jacket’s front pocket, which appeared to be the shape of a cell phone. Hearing a shrill hiss, she looked up. Nasty little black birds were cawing at the police personnel from their perches in the skeletal tree branches surrounding the body, pissed off someone was encroaching on their territory.

  “What the hell are you two doing here?”

  Lauren turned to see Cam Bates from the Gar
den Valley Police Department striding past the crime scene tape strung between two thin trees. He wasn’t dressed for the weather, wearing only a thin jacket and some gloves. Lauren knew from previous encounters with Bates that he had almost made it to the pros playing hockey until a knee injury sidelined him in college. In his early thirties, Cam Bates had the lean muscular body of an athlete not yet gone to seed. He was one of those guys who still played league hockey, still walked around with a wad of chewing tobacco in his lip, and still thought he was a super star.

  “As of January first, the Buffalo Police brass gave the Cold Case squad all adult missing persons cases. Our special offense squad was getting overwhelmed. They should have done it years ago,” Reese told him, pulling himself to his full height. While Lauren ignored Bates completely, Reese wasn’t about to be bullied by a suburban cop with an attitude. “The State Police called us because they think the body might be Brianna McIntyre. She went missing from a coffee shop on Chippewa Street last May.”

  Folding his arms across his chest, Reese locked eyes with Bates. “I should be asking you—why the hell is Garden Valley here? Last I checked a map, you were located twenty miles south of the city line.”

  “I called him.” One of the investigators for the State Police stepped up. He was a small man, with olive skin, thick black hair, and deep-set dark eyes. “I’m senior investigator Manny Perez. I was one of the first to respond when Amber Anderson’s body was found”—his round face pinched up as he nodded his head toward a large, jagged stump—“not even fifty yards from this spot.” Amber Anderson had gone missing from Garden Valley almost two years ago. Her body had been recovered sixteen months ago, dumped and decomposed, right there. The case was still unsolved.

  “How can we know for sure this is your missing person?” Bates asked, angling himself to see past Lauren, who was still hunched down, blocking his view. For someone as skinny as she was, she could be awfully opaque when she wanted to be.

  “We can’t, not until the DNA and dental results come back, but we have this.” The Chautauqua County sheriff who was in charge of the crime scene held up a plastic evidence bag. Inside was a very weather-beaten wallet. “It was found about ten feet from the body,” he said, pointing, “by that exposed rock. The hunters who found the body didn’t know enough to leave this where it was. They handed the wallet to the first officer who arrived on the scene. Driver’s license and credit cards all belong to Brianna McIntyre.”

  The sheriff walked forward and handed the bag to Lauren, who carefully examined its contents through the clear plastic. The driver’s license picture mirrored the missing person’s poster in the file: a twenty-two-year-old strawberry blonde with freckles peppered across her face. She had gone to meet a man from a dating site and never came home.

  Lauren’s stomach clenched as she thought of her own two daughters, not much younger than the victim. “Thank you,” she told the deputy, turning the wallet over in her gloved hand, looking for any hint as to what happened the night Brianna disappeared.

  “Now that we all know how we got here,” the same sheriff’s deputy said, “why don’t we concentrate on the body and how she got here?”

  Reaching back, Lauren handed the wallet to the deputy with a small, knowing smile. His crime scene was now crowded with four separate police departments and he was fighting to maintain control as the evidence techs from the Chautauqua County Forensic Investigation Team came in with what looked like oversized tackle boxes and black nylon totes to do their thing.

  Lauren knew how the body had gotten there. Twenty-year-old David Spencer had murdered her and dumped her there, just like he had murdered and dumped his ex-girlfriend, Amber Anderson. While the young psychopath had been on her radar for other crimes and Lauren had also been looking into Brianna’s disappearance, there had been no reason to tie the two of them together.

  Until now.

  Lauren stood up, gave Reese a nod, and they made their way back under the tape. He had his leather folio unzipped in his hand, opened to the yellow legal pad. He had made a rough crime scene sketch: body, trees, rock, stump, trees. Along the bottom, he had scrawled the notation: not to scale.

  “I didn’t want to ask in the middle of the pissing contest,” Lauren said, looking back at Manny Perez and Cam Bates huddled together, comparing notes, “but who’s going to do the family notification?”

  “Good question.” Reese clapped his folio together and zipped it closed. Even his cheeks were a ruddy red against the wind. With green eyes and flawless brown skin, Reese yanked his own knit hat down over the tips of his ears, which were starting to look raw. One of the black birds startled in the tree above, causing them both to jump. “I hate nature,” he added, buttoning the top button of his black wool pea coat. “This is why I live in the city.”

  “I didn’t see any obvious bullet holes to the skull,” Lauren said, adjusting her own outerwear. Four months before, she had been stabbed in her office by another cop, collapsing her lung. Though she was still not fully recovered, she had insisted on coming back to work full time.

  Reserved to the point she was often considered aloof, Lauren Riley had appreciated turning forty in February. She liked the anonymity of her now-average looks and loved the fact her dating prospects had dried up. Her life felt so much less complicated on her own. Naturally thin all her life, she had lost even more weight after the stabbing, making her appear gaunt. She’d gone from a blue-eyed, honey-blond waif, complete with a sprinkling of warm brown freckles across her nose, to just a shell of herself in a matter of weeks. Her hair was darker now, limper. Her skin had taken on a sallow tinge that highlighted the creases around her eyes. She’d gone from strikingly beautiful to barely average with one stab of a knife. Rather than mourn the loss of her good looks, Lauren took pride in it as the price of surviving.

  Lauren turned to the sheriff’s deputy in charge. She considered asking him about the notification, but he was pointing something out to Cam Bates on the ground. The deputy was someone she hadn’t met on the job before. Lauren estimated him to be in his late forties, with neatly cut dark brown hair and a kind, serious face. Watching him work his scene, she didn’t want to interrupt his flow. Instead she turned to Reese, who told her, “The autopsy will tell. I’m betting a broken hyoid bone, if the animals haven’t damaged the body too much to tell.”

  “Let’s head over to the sheriff’s department.” Lauren’s eyes followed the crime scene photographer as he snapped shot after shot of the torn upper torso. “There’s nothing left to see here.”

  2

  Despite its homey 1950s red brick façade, the Chautauqua County Sheriff’s Office was a lot more modern than Lauren thought it was going to be. She wasn’t kidding when she joked about not being a country girl to Reese, but she had forgotten one very important thing about the area: it was home to the famed Chautauqua Institution, a world-renowned center for arts, culture, and learning. That was big, big money. Any crime, no matter how small, was going to be handled with the upmost professionalism and care; at least that’s what the poster hanging in their detectives’ squad room said. Lauren sat at an empty desk across from Reese, studying the layout of this alien place. Clean open work spaces. New, modern chrome-edged furniture and natural light pouring in from the windows were as foreign to Lauren as deer tracks and bear shit.

  “I’m Manny Perez, senior investigator,” Reese mocked in a high-pitched voice as he reclined in one of the office chairs, fingers laced behind his head. “I like to throw my weight and low testosterone around at other people’s crime scenes.”

  “It’s not nice to argue at someone else’s party,” Lauren reminded him.

  “And thank you for not scaring our hosts with tales of the demonic David Spencer.”

  “You don’t think he did this? You think some other guy killed Amber and Brianna? Dumped both their bodies out here?”

  “I think we should wait for all the evidence
before we jump off the conclusion cliff.”

  Lauren’s face got hot. “After everything that’s happened, you know he did this.”

  “I think he most likely did this. Let’s do our jobs and find some good solid evidence and maybe then put him away for good.”

  He was right, she knew, but that just made her angrier. Lauren liked to think of their partnership as a codependent, verbally combative collaboration. She’d been borderline obsessed with David Spencer since they’d found ex-cop Ricky Schultz’s body in his basement with a cryptic message left on his computer screen just for her. And while the department had handed that investigation over to other Homicide detectives, she’d worked it from the wings since she came back from her medical leave.

  “This squad room is great.” Reese tried to swivel around, but the chair hit the desk with a clang. “I love the décor in this place.”

  “You want to transfer out here?” Lauren asked, thumbing through a travel brochure someone had left on the desk. A picture of a smiling family boating on Chautauqua Lake graced the cover with the words DISCOVER CHAUTAUQUA COUNTY! blazed in green letters across the top.

  “I think our skill set is better suited for the city,” he replied, sipping the Tim Hortons coffee they had stopped and grabbed on the way over to the department. Maybe the rest of the country ran on Dunkin’ Donuts or fueled up at Starbucks, but in the Buffalo area Tim Hortons coffee and donuts reigned supreme.

  “And what skills would those be?”

  He glanced around the immaculately clean office. The secretary who led them there had politely sat them down and retreated. “The ability to deal with urban problems. This here is a whole other set of rules.”

  “You think so?” She dropped the brochure back down. “I think people are the same all over.”

  “I do not think so. I mean, yeah, to an extent. I’m sure they have their drugs and domestics and drunk drivers just like we do. But the vibe is different. Can’t you feel it?”