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Whoever this woman was, she was definitely watching him.

He headed for the lobby of the hotel. Inside, he showed his badge to the desk clerk and asked about the woman who’d entered the hotel five minutes earlier. Her name, according to the registration, was JoLynn Fields. The address she’d given was in Sarasota, Florida.

Florida again.

Stride got her room number and headed for the elevator. She was on the third floor in a lake-facing room at the far end of the hallway. He walked down the corridor and rapped his knuckles sharply on the door. Someone called cheerfully, “Just a second!”

The hotel door opened. JoLynn Fields saw him, and the smile on her face vanished.

“Oh!” she exclaimed in surprise.

“Hello, Ms. Fields. My name is Jonathan Stride, but I bet you know that.”

He could almost see the calculations in her head as she thought about what to say. “Yes, I do, Lieutenant Stride.”

“Well, maybe you’d like to tell me why you’ve been following me. And why you’re digging into my personal life.”

Her smiled returned. “Okay. Sure. You know, I should have figured you’d spot me. Following someone isn’t what they make it look like on TV. And let me guess. When I lost you downtown, you started following me, right?”

“You still haven’t answered my question,” Stride said.

JoLynn opened the door wider. “Do you want to come inside? I don’t bite, Lieutenant, I promise.”

He squeezed past her into the hotel room, where the heat was cranked high enough to make it uncomfortably warm. There were two queen beds, a desk, and an overstuffed chair near the window. She had a laptop open on the desk, but as she retreated to the far side of the room, she slapped it shut. She gestured for Stride to take the overstuffed chair, and she sat in the desk chair and propped her stocking feet on the bed. From where he was, he could see the lake through the window. Waves beat against the rocks, and snow streaked across the glass. The clouds were like steel. The boardwalk by the lake was empty.

JoLynn looked outside, too. Her eyes were pale and gray. She shivered and tugged on the sleeves of her pink turtleneck, as if she could feel the winter chill simply by looking outside. The blue tints in her red hair looked like twisting snakes. “It’s pretty here, but I’m not built for the cold.”

“It’s a lot warmer in Florida,” Stride said.

“You checked me out at the desk, huh? Of course you did. Yes, I’m from Sarasota. Born and raised.”

“What brings you to Minnesota, Ms. Fields?” he asked.

“The movie is what brings me here, but I’m sure you already guessed that. I’m a reporter. Entertainment beat.”

“Who do you work for?”

“The National Gazette. And yes, I know, people roll their eyes when they hear that. Don’t worry, I don’t cover UFOs or Bigfoot. Although if Bigfoot is hiding anywhere, it would be somewhere like this.”

“Why are you investigating me?” Stride asked again.

“I’m doing a story on you.”

“What kind of story?”

“Human interest,” JoLynn told him. “That’s what our readers like. They want to know: Who is Jonathan Stride? Why is Hollywood making a movie about him? What is he like in real life? What kind of a hero is he?”

Stride shook his head. He thought about Jungle Jack’s warning the previous day, and he didn’t think the timing was a coincidence. Dean Casperson had made a call and put the tabloid on his trail.

“First of all, nobody’s making a movie about me. It’s an adaptation based on a case I worked on, but Evan Grave is not Jonathan Stride. And second of all, I’m nobody’s hero, believe me.”

“Even better,” JoLynn replied. “People love strong men with flaws.”

“The point is, I have no interest in anybody doing a story about me.”

She shrugged. “No offense, Lieutenant, but that’s not how it works. I’m not asking for permission. I’m doing the story. If you won’t let me interview you, that’s unfortunate, but I’ll find other sources. However, I’d prefer to have your voice as part of it. I want to know what you have to say. Readers will want to know, too.”

Stride leaned forward in the chair and put his hands on his knees. “Whose idea was this? Yours?”

“Of course. You’re the man behind the mask. Dean Casperson is playing you. That’s news.”

“Following me secretly feels like stalking, not reporting,” Stride said.

“I was going to approach you about an interview, but once you know I’m there, you behave differently. Everybody does; it’s human nature. I wanted a chance to observe you before you realized you were going to be the subject of a profile. I wanted to see the real you.”

“What you see is what you get with me,” Stride said.

“Okay. So can I ask you some questions?”

“You can ask. I won’t guarantee that I’ll answer.”

“Do you mind if I tape this?”

“Yes, I do mind,” he replied.

“It’s only to make sure I get the quotes right.”

“I’ll speak slowly,” Stride said.

JoLynn smiled and leaned way back in the chair. She grabbed a hotel pen and chewed on it thoughtfully. She wiggled her toes on the bed. “You really are interesting. Dean is a good choice to play you.”

“How well do you know him?”

“Dean? Pretty well. I’ve been to their place in Captiva a few times. He and Mo are about as open as celebrities get. They make my job easy.”

“He doesn’t have any secrets?” Stride asked. “I thought people want strong men with flaws.”

JoLynn’s pale eyes saw right through him. “Just who’s interviewing whom, Lieutenant?”

He shrugged. “What do you want to know?”

“Let’s start with your work as a cop. I heard you went off a bridge a few years ago during a fight with a killer. You almost died.”

“True.”

“That’s pretty amazing. Did you think about quitting?”

“I thought about it on the way down,” Stride said.

“Funny. Is that how you deflect serious things? With jokes?”

“Going off that bridge nearly destroyed my life in a lot of ways. So no, there’s nothing funny about it.”

“You’ve had failures in your career, right? Criminals you haven’t caught? Mistakes you’ve made?”

“Plenty.”

“How do you deal with regrets? How do you let your failures go?”

“I never let them go,” Stride said. “As soon as you do that, you run the risk of making the same mistake again. The trick is learning to live with them. I’m still working on that.”

“Was the Art Leipold case a success or a failure? I mean, you caught him, but three women died before you did.”

“Obviously, it was both.”

“You’d known Art ever since you were a young detective, right? He reported on some of your earliest cases. And you never once suspected he was the killer?”

“No, I never did.”

“How did that change you?” she asked.

“Well, for one thing, I learned not to trust reporters.”

“There you go again,” JoLynn said. “Making jokes. It’s like a defense mechanism, huh? What about your personal life? Your job must take a toll. You’ve been married three times.”

“I don’t think I like where this is going,” Stride told her.

“Your first wife, Cindy, died. Then you married a Duluth teacher, but that only lasted three years. The people I’ve interviewed say you don’t talk about that marriage much. Is it because it ended when you cheated on her with the detective you’re married to now? Serena?”

Stride stood up. “Okay. We’re done.”

“But then you cheated on Serena, too, right? Before the two of you got married? I heard you slept with your Chinese partner.”