Snow Creek(74)



I smile. “I thought I smelled something wonderful.”

A half hour later, I sit across the table and look at this kind and generous woman and wonder how it was that she was able to rescue me.

And how it was that I could doubt her.

She tells me about her life, her pet iguana, her recent trip to Hungary and the Czech Republic. There is very little shop talk between bites of pasta and sips of cabernet. I tell her that I have the occasional bad dream and some generalities about the Wheaton case.

“You’re doing what you’re supposed to do, Rylee.”

“I think so,” I say.

“I know so,” she says.

I give her a warm smile.

If I had a pet iguana or a pet anything, I would have told her about that too.





Fifty





He wanted me.

As I drive home, those words from my taped session with Dr. Albright play in my mind. Actually, it plays at me. Like a cat, claws out, toying with a small bird. It wants blood. It wants to win. I know it’s the reason I felt the need to see Dr. Albright after all these years. I would like to tell the world that there is great help in psychotherapy. It’s what we tell everyone we see as they struggle through things, visible and invisible.

I remember everything about that moment when my aunt told me. She changed from rose dusting powder to a lilac scented one. It was strong, but pretty when she left the room. At least it wasn’t wintergreen. The clock over the mantel chimed. I could smell the cinnamon rolls she’d baked that morning.

Everything.

The drive is long. Each flashing headlight is the beat of a drum. It’s foiling my efforts to move my mind to another topic.

When I get home, I feel defeated somewhat. I try to shut the past away by getting something to drink. I stream Maren Morris’s first album. From the refrigerator, I pour some orange juice. And then I do what zillions of other people do when searching for a distraction, I stare down at my phone.

I’m unable to resist.

I check my email. Of the fourteen new ones, one has to be from my brother.

Shooting in Denver. Fire in downtown Portland. A protest for the homeless in LA.

I immediately start to delete.

I hesitate on one. It sends a chill down my spine.

Its subject line:

It’s You, Rylee.





It seems non-algorithm created, not spam. The spelling of my name is a challenge for just about everyone as they always assume RILEY. I don’t recognize the sender. It’s a guy named “Wallace”.

I open it anyway.

And I forget to breathe.

Saw you on the news. Good work. How’s the weather there in Port Townsend? Maybe I’ll come by and we can talk about what you did.





I snap my phone to the table so hard that it tumbles to the floor. The glass face shatters.

I’m shattered.

Someone knows.

God, help me. Someone knows.





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Books by Gregg Olsen





Detective Megan Carpenter series

Snow Creek





Lying Next to Me

The Last Thing She Ever Did

The Sound of Rain (Nicola Foster Thriller Book 1)

The Weight of Silence (Nicola Foster Thriller Book 2)





A Letter from Gregg





I want to say a huge thank you for choosing to read Snow Creek. If you enjoyed it and want to keep up to date with all my latest releases, just sign up at the following link. Your email address will never be shared and you can unsubscribe at any time.

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I come from the rainy and murderous Pacific Northwest near Seattle. We know a thing or two about serial killers here because we’ve had some of the most notorious call our neck of the woods home. I can look across the water from my home and see the city where Ted Bundy first killed a girl. Gary Ridgway, the Green River Killer, dumped several bodies in a cluster within a mile or two of where I worked at the time. Robert Lee Yates, a serial killer from Spokane dumped a body one road over from where I live today.

Here’s the thing… my characters, like brilliant but damaged Megan Carpenter in Snow Creek, are rooted in experiences I’ve had as a true crime writer. Hanging out with cops, talking to victims of crimes, and living in an atmospheric and rugged Pacific Northwest, are genuine creative forces behind my novels. Megan’s only getting started. And so am I.

I hope you loved Snow Creek, and if you did, I would be very grateful if you could write a review. Reviews are your way of introducing others to books that have intrigued or maybe even scared you. I’d love to hear what you think, and it makes such a difference helping new readers to discover one of my books for the first time.

I love hearing from my readers—you can get in touch on my Facebook page, through Twitter, Goodreads or my website.

Gregg Olsen's Books