In her hand was the grainy photograph she'd spent the last two weeks staring at-a man's face, sharp-jawed an
e face of the man who had stole
t terrible day two years ago. The day he
let it go to voicemail, assuming it was just another client. But the same number called agai
ficer Calloway with the Metro Police Department. I'm afraid there's been an inci
ine repeated, gripping the edge of her desk.
with the kind of sympathy that made Jasmine's st
y she could hear it over the hum of traffic. Every worst-case scenario pl
re she was-Miranda. Jasmine's vibrant, free-spirited younger sister, now pale and lifeless.
the head," the coroner explained clinically. "
ing sister-who had just the day before been gushing about an a
it. A random, senseless act of vi
have wandered into a dangerous area without a reason. And the police's explanation-that she'
She followed up on every lead, called every day for upd
ng her calls. Miranda's case bec
e couldn't
rself. She read the reports so many times she could recite them from memory. She replayed the last voicemail M
, a brea
ng. The man in the image was walking out of the alley where Miranda was found, just minutes before her estimated time of
ho wa
ublic records or criminal databases came up empty. He didn't have a rec
iranda's case, and she knew they'd dismiss this photo just as eas
lating. She knew in her
mbled upon something new. A society blog had posted photos from last year's high-profile tech gala-a glamorou
the event was exclusive enough
red at the screen. The gala
last year, chances wer
to him, to figure out who he was and what role he played in Miranda's death. She didn'
as him-of confronting the man who might have mu
lling her from her thoughts. The
she answer
, then a low, dis
ed, cold and flat. "This isn't
uickened. "Who is
ne wen
ering in her chest. Someone knew what s
olidified her resolve. Whoever this man was, he
as w
aph tightened as her hazel ey
red under her breath, "you m