personal crimes, and every other kind of crime. She got her information from Mr. Blue, who, though a loner and hermit by all accounts, had a satellite dish and Wi-Fi stick that allowed him to access the Internet and God knew what else. He was a study in contradictions. A guy who knew a hell of a lot about a hell of a lot. Lucky considered him the first true friend sheâd ever really had.
Now she turned off 26 to the long, rutted access road that wound to Mr. Blueâs house and the hot springs beyond. She bumped along, mentally crossing her fingers that the old truck would make it. To date, it hadnât failed her, but vehicle maintenance did not seem to be Blueâs priority.
When she reached the house, she parked on one side where several rusting appliances had come to die. She had a room that jutted out the back of the house from the garage, which had been turned into a greenhouse/storage room of sorts for Mr. Blueâs various herbs and plants and other items for sale of varying degrees of legality. There was a bathroom just inside the main house from the garage that was mostly for her use; Mr. Blueâs rooms were at the opposite end of the three bedroom ranch. Sometimes Lucky didnât see the man for days because he kept himself burrowed in his rooms with his books and computer. Other times, they met in the middle and shared meals together and short conversations about what he needed her to do, or what she might need from him. Neither of them was much of a conversationalist and they appreciated that about each other.
She literally owed Mr. Blue her life as heâd effectively saved it after sheâd been brought to his doorstep, burned, feverish, and exhausted. Those weeks of him spoon-feeding her herbs and broths and then applying salves to her back were a misty haze of pain and gratitude.
She wasnât sure what he would think of her mission to rid the world of abusers and pedophiles who crossed her path. He might applaud her, but he might also think her methods too dangerous and turn her out. Once or twice it had been on the tip of her tongue to tell him about her special ability to sense an abuser, how brushing up against them sent her a message so loud it was almost as if the guy had blurted out his guilt in a scream. But she wasnât certain he would believe her, and she had no explanation for her âsixth sense,â the same sense that told her time was running out. The hourglass had been turned over and the sands were slipping through. The showdown was coming. She was either going to die soon or be arrested, and if it were a choice, she would take the former.
To that end her mission was everything to her. Before she was through she planned to take out as many perverted bastards as she could.
Which was why she was still mulling over her decision to let the sick fuck whoâd tried to nab the girl at the mall live. The weather wasnât cold enough for him to die. Sheâd left him with an admission of his guilt hung around his neck, but that was only part of it. The humiliation. There would be lots of questions directed at him, too many for him to come up with answers for.
But she should have killed him. She should have. Sheâd done it before, and she was undoubtedly going to do it again before her mission was complete. So, why had she left Harmak alive?
The scent.
Climbing out of the truck, the memory made her nose twitch. It wasnât a true scent exactly. It was more a feeling. Sheâd had to drag Harmakâs dead weight to the basketball pole outside the school and sheâd been glad it was pitch black because it was hard work and took longer than sheâd suspected. With Ballonni, sheâd just pulled up to the flagpole, dumped him out and tied him up, but with Harmak sheâd had to traverse the basketball court and some grounds before she got him where she wanted him.
It was then the scent distracted her. Sheâd been tired and breathing
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