“It’s a nasty habit, but I can’t seem to stop,” Maura O’Malley said to Katherine Harper, taking another puff from her cigarette.
Kat cinched her coat tighter, wishing she had thought to grab her mittens from her desk before heading outside. “I understand.”
Maura blew out a breath, smoke swirling in front of her. Kat could see her own breath as well, but she blamed the cold for that. It was only the last day of November, not even winter yet, and it was already freezing. It didn’t help that it had snowed all Thanksgiving weekend, the results of which now sat in heaps alongside the sides of their office building. Kat felt as if she’d been dropped into the middle of Siberia.
She needed a better coat, she decided. Either that or she would have to make sure she didn’t volunteer to accompany Maura on any more of her cigarette breaks until the first spring blossoms made an appearance in Cherry Hills, Washington.
Kat eyed her new boss, who didn’t seem bothered by the cold. Maura’s cheeks were as rosy as they had been inside, although maybe that was the result of her wearing so much makeup. Kat suspected that with Maura’s lush brown hair, green eyes, olive complexion, and wide smile she would be pretty even without the makeup.
Although, Kat couldn’t help but think, Maura would be ten times more attractive if she’d lose the cigarette in her hand.
Maura toed a patch of snow. “This will sound crazy, but I feel like smoking is part of my identity. I mean, I started when I was twenty. That’s over half my lifetime ago. How do you shake something that’s been with you your entire adult life?”
Kat shifted from foot to foot in a vain attempt to get her blood circulating. “I hear it’s a tough habit to break.”
“It’s the worst.” Maura paused, then said, “Have you noticed not many people smoke in Cherry Hills? Why do you think that is? Before I moved here I knew a bunch of smokers. We used to . . .”
Kat mentally willed Maura to stop talking and start working on getting her nicotine fix. As much as she liked her new boss, she was starting to lose feeling in her fingers and toes.
She probably wouldn’t have agreed to join Maura outside today, except it was her first day at her new programming job and she didn’t want to start off with her boss thinking she wasn’t a team player. After all, it wasn’t as if she had any assignments to work on yet. She had spent most of the morning filling out new-hire paperwork, and Maura had only just finished giving her a tour of the DataRightly offices before claiming she needed a short break.
“You don’t have to stand here with me,” Maura said, squinting at Kat. “You’re obviously cold.”
‘Cold’ was an understatement, but Kat didn’t want to admit as much. “I’m okay,” she said instead.
Maura looked around, her brow furrowed. “I wonder where Sadie is today.”
“Who’s Sadie?” Kat asked.
“Sadie Cramer. She’s another hopeless nicotine addict, the only other one working in this building as far as I know. We made a pact to quit together once, but you know how that goes.”
Kat smiled, trying to keep her teeth from chattering. “At least you’re trying.”
“Not hard enough.” Maura’s face lit up. “Oh, look at that.”
Maura jabbed her cigarette toward the side of the building. When Kat saw what had caught her attention, she jolted. The fluffy white face of a cat was barely visible above one of the snowbanks.
“He looks as cold as you do,” Maura told Kat.
“Have you seen him before?”
Maura shook her head. “First time ever.”
Kat wondered whether the cat belonged to someone or if he was a stray. His body was hidden behind the snowbank, making it difficult for her to tell what kind of physical condition he was in.
But her lack of knowledge about his health didn’t prevent her from worrying about him. As cold as it was now, the temperature would drop even more after the sun went down. This was no weather for a cat to be outside in.
“I should see if he’ll let me get close to him,” Kat said.
“What will you do if you catch him?”
“Call Imogene Little. She’ll either know how to find his family or she can take him into 4F custody.”
“What’s 4F?”
“Furry Friends Foster Families. It’s a nonprofit organization, and Imogene and I are both board members. Our mission is to help homeless animals find permanent homes and place them with foster families in the interim.”
“Hey.” Maura set her free hand on Kat’s arm. “You’re the group who took in Leo’s cat after he died, aren’t you?”
Kat nodded, feeling a pinch in her chest. She still remembered the shock she had felt upon hearing about Leo Price’s murder—a murder that had occurred in the very parking lot they were standing beside.
“How’s he doing?” Maura said. “Leo’s cat, I mean.”
“Right now Stumpy is being cared for by the Belleroses, one of our foster families.”
Maura’s lips twitched. “His name is Stumpy?”
“Yes, on account of him being a Manx and only having a little stump for a tail.”
A pained look swept across Maura’s face. “I bet he misses Leo. I know I do. I’m still getting used to not seeing him around DataRightly anymore.”
Maura’s words weighed down Kat’s heart. “I’m sorry I didn’t know him better.”
“Oh, you would have gotten along great. It was hard not to like Leo.” Maura rolled her cigarette between her fingers. “I should look into adopting Stumpy, for Leo’s sake. I’ve been thinking about getting a pet for a while now anyway. It gets lonely living all by yourself.”
Kat grinned, thinking of her own cats and how they made her laugh every day. “Well, I, for one, can attest that having a cat or two at home really makes the days brighter. And from what I’ve heard, Stumpy is a very friendly cat, once he gets to know you and comes out of his shell.”
Maura smiled. “I knew I made a good choice hiring you. You have a heart as well as a brain. I could tell when I interviewed you.”
“Oh.” Kat flushed, unsure how to respond to the praise.
“Where do you think he came from?” Maura said, jerking her chin toward the white cat.
Kat shifted her attention back to the feline hiding behind the snowbank. “I’d have to guess from one of the houses down there,” she said, pointing.
“His owner probably let him out, and he wandered over this way.”
“Or he snuck out, got lost, and doesn’t know how to get home.”
“Go see if you can catch him,” Maura urged. “Maybe he’s wearing a collar that will tell you where he lives.”
Kat started toward the white cat, moving slowly so as not to alarm him. He watched her, but otherwise didn’t seem bothered by her approach.
“Hi there, kitty,” she crooned. “What are you doing out here all by yourself?”
The cat stared at her as if he suspected she was only speaking to him because she’d lost her mind.
“So I talk to cats,” she said. “What of it?”
His whiskers twitched.
“I have two of your kind at home, you know. Their names are Matty and Tom.”
The white cat stretched his jaws into a yawn, clearly unimpressed.
“Are you going to let me pick you up?” Kat asked him.
He tilted his head as though seriously considering her offer. But when Kat bent down and extended her hand, he turned around and dashed off, disappearing behind the building.
Kat stood up and sighed. “So much for that.”
She glanced over at Maura, who was watching her with an amused quirk to her lips. Kat lifted her hands up in defeat.
She was on her way back to rejoin her boss when something in the next snowbank caught her eye. She crept closer, spotting the edge of a purple glove. She reached down to pick it up, figuring she could leave it in the lobby in case someone had dropped it. But before she could grab it she saw something that froze her whole body.
This glove looked as though it were already covering someone’s hand.
Goosebumps broke out over Kat’s skin. She forced herself to peek over the wall of snow, which was when she saw there was indeed a hand inside the glove—and the hand was attached to a woman who looked almost as pale as the snow surrounding her.