The Hunt


The Hunt

Touched by a killer, she feels the fire of revenge.

Twelve years ago, Miranda Moore miraculously pulled through the torture of a serial killer who was never caught. Since then, Miranda, a former FBI trainee and now a fellow member of a local search-and-rescue squad, has witnessed with horror the recovery of the mutilated bodies of seven young women, all victims of her tormentor, known as The Butcher. When another gorgeous Montana college student goes missing, the Feds get involved, and an agent, a man Miranda once trusted with her heart, arrives to take over the investigation–forcing her toward a painful choice.

Now, while Miranda battles her demons, while friends, lovers, and traitors are caught up in a frantic race versus time, a killer hides in plain sight–waiting to finish the one hunt he has left undone.

After the hunt, go in for the kill.

About the AuthorAllison Brennan is the author of ten bestselling romantic thrillers, including The Prey, Speak No Evil, Killing Fear, and Playing Dead. For thirteen years she worked as a consultant in the California State Legislature before leaving to devote herself to a complete degree to her family and writing. She is a fellow member of Romance Writers of America, Mystery Writers of America, and International Thriller Writers. She lives in Northern California with her husband, Dan, and their five children.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.Chapter One

Twelve Years Later

Nick Thomas stared at the outline of the petite body under the blinding yellow tarp. He pinched the bridge of his nose, swallowing anger so bitter he could taste it. The foul stench of death surrounded him and he turned away.

He still pictured the dead, broken body of twenty-year-old Rebecca Douglas as he’d found her only an hour ago.

“Sheriff?”

Nick looked up as Deputy Lance Booker approached. He was clean-cut, a good cop, though a mite wet behind the ears. Much like Nick had been twelve years ago when he’d been called out to his original murder scene. “Deputy.”

“Jim said there’s a guy claiming to be an FBI agent at the road wanting to be let through. Quincy Peterson.”

Quinn. Nick hadn’t seen him in years, ten to be exact, but they’d shared an e-mail kinship since he was elected sheriff more than three years ago. After the Croft sisters had been found.

Now there were seven dead girls. Seven that they knew about.

“Let him through.”

“Yes, sir.” Booker frowned, but relayed the orders through his walkie-talkie. In matters that would as a rule fall under their local jurisdiction, no law officer welcomed outside interference, and commonly Nick was no different. He didn’t mention that it was his call to Quinn last week that precipitated this visit.

Nick turned and walked away from the deputy, away from the bright tarp, down the path to where Rebecca Douglas’s last steps were evident. He squatted next to an unusable footprint, a mess in wet, hardening mud. It might have been Rebecca’ s last step. Or the killer’s. It had rained almost three inches in the last two days, a deluge that completely filled a ground lately recovered from a cold, wet Montana winter. The clouds had broken this morning, the sky such a bright blue and the air so freshening that Nick would have enjoyed it if he hadn’t been called to a crime scene.

He closed his eyes and breathed the clean, crisp air of his Gallatin Valley. He loved Montana, the tremendous beauty and sheer majesty of it is mountains, it is swift rivers, green valleys, huge sky. The persons were good, too, down-to-earth. They cared in regards to their neighbors, took care of their own. When Rebecca Douglas was declared missing, hundreds of men and women—many from the university where she’d been a student—had scoured the wilderness amongst Bozeman and Yellowstone looking for her.

Nick’s jaw tightened in restrained fury. Good people, but for one. One who had killed Rebecca and at least six other women in the past fifteen years. And other women were still missing. Would they ever find their bodies? Had the harsh Montana weather or four-legged animals obliterated their remains? He’d never forget finding Penny Thompson’s remains—nothing but a skull and scattered bones. She was identified through her dental records.

Nick surveyed the area. Tall pines grew primarily downslope; as the mountain rose the trees thinned out. The ancient, to a considerable degree overgrown road he’d driven on was unmapped. Possibly an old logging trail, it appeared to end here, in this natural clearing roughly thirty feet square. On the edge of this clearing, Rebecca’s body lay.

They’d mark off the area in grids and search for anything that might perhaps lead back to the killer. But if it was the same bastard, they’d find nothing. He was so damn perfective in his each crime that even their one surviving witness could tell them little. Defeat weighed to a considerable degree in Nick’s heart, but he would not give up.

Sometimes, he hated his job.

He turned when he heard an SUV roll into the clearing, rocks and muddy clumps of leaves shooting out from the backs of all four tires. Sun reflected off the windshield and Nick shielded his eyes to watch Quinn approach.

The SUV jerked to a stop behind Nick’s dark green police-issue truck. The driver’s door opened and Quincy Peterson jumped out, slamming the door behind him and striding toward Nick. Quinn hadn’t changed much since Nick had last seen him, still looked more like a damn cover model than a fifteen-year veteran of the FBI. Nick stood and absently brushed the dirt off his jeans.

“Rebecca Douglas?” Quinn nodded toward the covered body. His face was blank, but his dark eyes revealed the same anger and sadness that Nick felt.

“Yep. We’ll need a positive ID, but—” There was no doubt it was the missing woman. He glanced at Quinn and raised an eyebrow at the bandage over his left eye. “Bar fight?” he asked, half joking.

Quinn reached up and touched the bandage as if he’d forgotten it was there. “The last few days have been eventful,” he said. “I’ll tell you in regards to it later.” He glanced around. “When are you processing the scene?”

“I wanted you to check it out first, but I have my men waiting up on the main highway.”

Nick didn’t recognise why the Fed made him feel so inferior. Maybe it had something to do with Quinn’s quiet confidence, his knack for seeing through bullshit, always getting to the heart of the matter. Or possibly it was because Nick had puked his guts out at his original murder scene and Quincy Peterson hadn’t.

Or perhaps it was because the woman Nick loved was in love with Quinn.

Despite all that, there was no one Nick trusted more than Special Agent Quincy Peterson.

Quinn bent down, pulled on latex gloves, and lifted the tarp. His square jaw clenched and a vein twitched in his neck at the sight.

Rebecca had been beautiful. Now, her long blonde hair was tangled, matted, and caked in mud. The happy face reproduced on thousands of flyers was gone. She was swollen, bruised, grotesque in death. The recent rains had cleaned some of the dirt from her naked body, leaving her pale and blue.

Her neck had been cut, slashed deep with a sharp knife, though there was very little blood to see. Most of it had been washed into the ground by the storm, along with any trace evidence. Her body showed signs of abuse. Torture. Bruises of all shapes and hues of purple covered her skin. Her breasts had been clamped into some sort of vise. The strange marks wouldn’t have indicated that to most eyes, but both Nick and Quinn had read the coroner’s reports for each of the six other women murdered in these woods, and had grown intimate with this killer’s M.O.

Quinn got rid of the tarp to study the victim’s legs and feet, much as Nick had done when he initial arrived on scene. Her left leg was crooked, broken. Her feet were covered in raw blisters and deep cuts. From running.

She was thin, so pale, empty. Clinically, her gaunt skin told the cops that she’d bled out, her life drained from her. She’d passed from physical life quickly; not a single soul could survive long with their carotid artery sliced open. Small consolation for the former week of terror she’d lived through.

Quinn covered the body. “Coroner been called?”

Nick nodded. “He’ll be out by noon. He was in the middle of an autopsy on that hiker we found up on the north ridge the other day.”

“So who found the body?”

“Three boys—the McClain brothers and Ryan Parker. The Parkers have a disseminate three, four miles west of here. The boys took a couple horses for the day, were going to shoot their .22s at rabbits and whatnot.” He shrugged and added, “It’s Saturday.”

“Where are they now?”

“A deputy took them home. Told them to sit tight at the Parkers’ until I came by.”

Quinn nodded, surveying the scene that Nick had marked with yellow and black crime scene tape. Observing the clearing, the old path, the trees.

“It looks like she came up through that brush over there,” Nick gestured. “I checked it out, but didn’t go down the trail yet.”

“If you may call it a trail,” Quinn said, frowning at the overgrowth. “I’ll take a quick look while you call in your team. How galore people do you have?”

“I have a dozen of my own men right now, more later, and a crime scene specialist. I’ll need volunteers if we’re going to do this right.”

“Agreed. The more eyes the better, but no hotshots. We can’t have someone going off half-cocked.”

Quinn put his hand on Nick’s shoulder. “I know you were hoping the bastard dropped dead after Ellen and Elaine Croft were found. I’m sorry I couldn’t come out personally then. But Agent Thorne is good. She would have found something.”

Nick agreed, but he still felt so damn helpless. The Butcher was the only bastard who had ever gotten away with murder under his watch. “It’s been three frickin’ years! Three years since he killed. And we had not one thing then—no clues, no leads, no suspects.”

“And there are other girls missing.” Quinn didn’t need to remind him. The missing girls haunted Nick in his sleep.

“It’s been slow, but we’re gathering evidence,” Quinn continued. “We have casings, bullets, a partial from Elaine Croft’ s locket. We’ll get him.” Quinn turned and Nick watched him walk down the path. He sounded so confident. Why couldn’t Nick feel the same?

He glanced down at the outline of Rebecca Douglas. At least she would have a proper burial. Closure for her family. But not for him.

He thought of Miranda.

He started toward his truck. He’d already put in the call for all available law enforcement to head to this location. Then he heard the distinctive but intimate sound of a Jeep bouncing over the rough trail. He didn’t need to see the vehicle to recognise who approached.

The Hunt

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The Hunt

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The Hunt

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Most helpful client reviews

8 of 8 humans found the following review helpful.
4A Strong Romantic Suspense!
By Kristi Ahlers
Twelve years ago Miranda Moore escapes a serial killer who tortured her and a friend for days before letting them loose for a sick kick of hunting his wounded prey. Miranda escapes but her friend doesn’t. As a result Miranda has made it her life’s work to find missing persons and to hunt “the Butcher” and to fetch him to justice. But, when another body turns up mutilated and dead it’s apparent the killer is still active. She’s prepared to do what she ought to to catch him…at least she thinks she is. When Special Agent Quinn Preston returns to help with the case…all of the old sensations Miranda has tried to inter comes flooding back. At one time she loved Quinn-deeply. Will she be competent to work with him while attempting to stay one step in front of killer who hasn’t forgotten she is the one that got away?

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful.
4Wow!
By Armchair Interviews
Twelve years is a long time to eat, sleep and breathe revenge. But if that revenge is the result of miraculously surviving a week of rape and torture–and the loss of a friend–at the hands of a madman the world calls The Butcher, it is understandable.

7 of 8 persons found the following review helpful.
5“…a taut, well-paced romantic adventure story that will leave you desperate to read the third and final book in the series.
By Sassy Brit
“…a taut, well-paced romantic adventure story that will leave you desperate to read the third and final book in the series. Hunt it down in the shops now!”

Miranda Moore is no usual woman. Twelve years ago she escaped from a serial killer, The Bozeman Butcher, but her best friend, Sharon, wasn’t so lucky. Neither were assorted other young girls from the local college who he hunted and tortured for fun. In an crusade to control her life and deal with ‘survivors guilt’, she enrolled with the FBI underneath the watchful eye of her consultant and lover, Quinn Peterson. But when he forced her out of the programme because he felt she hadn’t joined the FBI for the right reasons, Miranda never thought she’d see Quinn again. Not that she wanted to, after how he treated her.

However, with The Butcher still on the loose, and keeping another victim captive, Miranda felt compelled to help in her capacity as a search and rrescue specialist. She owed it to the victim’s families, her dead best friend and perchance her sanity. Unfortunately she is still vulnerable, and before long Miranda and Quinn are reunited and their old sensations resurface. Is it now too late to return to how they were? With the killer back on the scene, and Miranda his latest quarry, they may never have the chance to find out.

When I picked up this book I wasn’t sure what to expect. How could it be as good as The Prey, Ms Brennan’s debut book? Nothing could beat that, or so I thought. As you may tell, I was not disappointed. The Hunt, the second book in this trilogy is just as good. In fact, in a great deal of ways The Hunt is even better. Allison Brennan has yet again pulled out all the stops to give rise to another gripping masterpiece. As an entertainer she knows how to pack a punch!

From the meaty dialog to the thrilling, nail-biting plot, Allison sends her protagonist and all those who are dear to her to hell and back assorted times. Readers who love to listen gruesome details from inside a serial killer’s mind, whilst peeking inside the forensic investigations as they unravel concealed clues, will be enthralled by her gifted storytelling capabilities.

Also, if it’s love you want, there are numerous outstanding romantic and tender scenes to keep you happy, too. What a plot! It is apparent that a big amount of planning and exhaustive exploration has been undertaken to create such a believable and stimulating story. I could rather without apparent effort imagine this being made into a film or a TV drama series. I only hope we get a probability to see it over here in the UK! This is a taut, well-paced romantic adventure story that will leave you desperate to read the third and final book in the series The Kill, coming soon!

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