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He was halfway out the door before he thought about the boys, and he paused just long enough to bellow over his shoulder, “Don’t move from this spot, do you hear? And don’t open the door to anyone except me! And call your damn parents, damn it!”

Later, he wouldn’t remember very much about the drive uptown, but the expression on the face of the willowy blonde who was sharing Brendan’s bed that night would stay with him for a while. Mutt didn’t help, prowling next to him, ears lying back, fangs slightly bared, and an expression in her great yellow eyes that was not at all human.

Brendan took one look at Jim’s face and said, “What?”

His response was not adequate to the occasion, evidently, because Mutt leapt up on his table and barked once right in his face.

“Holy Mary Mother of God,” Brendan said. The blonde screamed and slammed the bedroom door.

“They took Kate,” Jim said tightly.

“Who took her?” Brendan said, but he knew as well as Jim did.

“I’ve a got tag number,” Jim said, and reeled it off.

A laptop sat on a crowded desk, and Brendan booted it up. “It’ll be stolen,” Brendan said over his shoulder.

Jim paced up and down in an agony of suspense. Mutt stood stiff-legged in the doorway, glowering and occasionally growling, although apparently just on general principles. Brendan cast an unfriendly eye in Jim’s direction. “And where the hell were you when she got took?”

“Asleep,” Jim said.

Brendan looked at him.

“Just find the fucking van!”

The computer beeped and a screen popped up. Brendan scrolled down. “Your van is registered to a Paul Cassanovas. And lookie here-it has in fact been reported stolen. Let me pull up the police report.” Brendan tapped some keys, another agonizing wait, and a second screen popped up. “Mr. Cassanovas reported it stolen yesterday when he parked it at the Dimond Fred Meyer and forgot the keys in the ignition when he went inside to buy groceries.”

“He left the car running in August?” Jim said.

“It happens, only usually it’s the driveway, when they run back inside in the morning. But you’re right: Usually you run across this kind of thing in the winter, when its cold and they want to come back to a warm car. Hmmm. Let’s do a search on Mr. Cassanovas in the corrections database, shall we?”

A minute later, Brendan said, “Bingo. Mr. Cassanovas has served time for B and E, burglary, theft.”

“Has he got an address?”

“Yes, but wait.” Brendan tapped a few more keys. “Last known address was a boarding house on Ingra. Here.” Brendan scribbled the number down. “Call them, see if he’s there.”

Jim snatched up Brendan’s phone and punched in the number.

“Not only does Mr. Cassanovas have an address-” Brendan said.

A sleepy, surly voice swore at Jim but answered his questions before the receiver slammed down. “He checked out last week,” Jim said.

“-he has known associates.”

“Who? Names, addresses.”

Brendan’s lips thinned. “The only one who matters is Ralph Patton.”

“Son of a bitch,” Jim said, “they’ve got her, goddamn it, they’ve got her.”

“Son of a bitch,” Brendan echoed, still looking at the computer screen.

“What?”

“Guess who Mr. Cassanova’s counsel was?”

“Son of a bitch,” Jim said again.

“Well, yeah,” Brendan said, “but he’s also known as Oliver Muravieff. Wait a minute. Where are you going?”

“I’m going to talk to Oliver Muravieff about a little matter concerning his billable hours.”

Moving faster than anyone had a right to expect of a man of his size, Brendan was up and had his hand around Jim’s arm. “Wait a minute,” he said. “Let’s think about this. And after we’ve thought, let’s call the cops.”

The next thing Brendan knew he was slammed up against the wall. “Take it easy, Jesus, Jim,” he said. A door cracked open and the frightened face of a neighbor peeped out. “It’s okay, Mrs. Hartzberg,” he told her. “Everything’s fine. Just go on back to bed.”

It wasn’t easy to be serene with two hundred pounds of pissed-off trooper in his face, not to mention the snarling, snapping half wolf next to the trooper, but, to his credit, Brendan managed it. “Just calm down a minute,” he said. Brendan let go of Jim’s wrists, where his hands weren’t doing much good anyway, and raised both hands, palms out. “Just take a beat here and think this through.”

“There’s nothing to think about, Brendan. We can’t call the cops.”

“Why not?”

“Because they’re his family’s cops,” Jim said. “They let Patton go on command. They’re not going to help us.”

“Come on, Jim, you don’t really believe that. Jim. Jim!”

Jim let Brendan go and walked out, Mutt moving like the hunter she was at his side.

He was conscious enough of what he was going to do to stop at the town house to pick up shirt, jacket, and his sidearm, although the latter was too big not to attract too much of the wrong kind of notice. It would have to go in the glove compartment. His backup piece, a.38, he strapped to his ankle.

He looked in the mirror and saw a grim-eyed civilian staring back at him. Whatever happened next, the troopers were going to come in for as little blame as possible. He looked up Oliver Muravieff in the phone book and copied down the number.

He went back downstairs and told the boys, “Pack up your stuff. I’m taking you home.”

They were frightened and silent during the ride. As he pulled into their driveway, he said, “Can you get in?”

“We hide a key outside,” the older one said as the younger one slid from the Subaru. “Mister?”

“What?”

“Could you… could you maybe call us when you find her?”

The forlorn little voice pierced Jim’s self-absorption the way nothing else could have, and he looked at the kid, really looked at him for the first time since he’d gotten back from Brendan’s. “Yes,” he said. “I will. Better, I’ll bring her here so you can talk to her yourselves.”

“Thanks,” the kid said, and trudged after his brother.

Jim watched them for a second, and then he got out of the car. “Hey,” he said.

The boys stopped and looked back at him.

“You did good, getting that license plate number,” he said. “You’re the reason I’m going to find her.”

The kids’ faces lightened a little, and he climbed back in the car and drove downtown, where he found a parking space within walking distance of Oliver’s building. He got out to case it. It had an underground parking garage, so he would have to do it the hard way. He went back to the Subaru and waited with hard-won patience for the clock to read 8:00 a.m.

At 8:01 A.M., Oliver Muravieff arrived, his silver Miyata disappearing into the underground parking lot.

At 8:05 a.m., Jim dialed Oliver’s office number from Kate’s cell phone. “Yes,” he said in a voice from which any trace of impatience or worry had been completely erased. “I’m an old friend of Mr. Muravieff’s from law school, and I’ve got an eight-hour layover before I head for Barrow. I just wanted to know if he was in his office. I’d like to drop in and say hello… He’ll be there for the next couple of hours? Splendid, I’ll see you soon.” He dropped his voice to what he’d been told was a sexy baritone. “Listen, do me a favor. Don’t tell him I’m coming. I want to surprise him. Thanks.”

He disconnected. “Stay,” he said to Mutt.

She wasn’t having any.

“I mean it, goddamn it,” he said. “Get back in that fucking truck!”

A couple of young attorneys who hadn’t been practicing long enough to take such scenes in their stride scurried by, not making eye contact.

Jim squatted down on his haunches and took Mutt’s head in his hands. She was alternately whining and growling. “She’s not here,” Jim said, trying to shake some sense into her. “She’s not here, damn it, but the guy I’m going to see will know where they’ve got her, and that’s when I’ll need you. Mutt, please, get in the truck.” He stood up and held the door open. “Get in, and stay,” he said.