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“Any luck?” he asked.

“No.”

“This is months of work. You’ve only been at it a couple hours.”

“I don’t know how much time Aimee has,” Serena said.

Stride jerked his thumb at the living room. “Chris is drunk. I put him on the sofa.”

“He was waiting for me when I got here,” Serena said. “I asked him to pull Aimee’s takes in the movie and put them on a disk for me. I thought he went back to his hotel.”

“Did he tell you? The movie is dead. They’re shutting it down.”

Serena didn’t look surprised. “So you’re not going to be a star after all?”

“I guess not.”

“Well, you’re a star to me,” she told him, leaning over to kiss him again. “And to Cat. I was worried about you tonight, Jonny. I really thought you were going to shoot Casperson.”

“I thought so, too. Did you make it to the hospital? How is she?”

“Sleeping.”

“You should probably get a couple hours of sleep yourself.”

“I can’t,” Serena said. “I have to keep at this. I have to find Aimee.”

“Okay, we’ll do it together.” Stride stretched his arms over his head and leaned back in the chair far enough that he could see Chris Leipold in the living room. He made sure Chris was out cold before he spoke. “To be honest, I was starting to wonder if Chris was the one who took Aimee. I was beginning to think he might have framed Art for the murders back then.”

“Why would he do that?” Serena asked.

“To get revenge against Art for making him feel worthless for most of his life. Except now I can see that the movie was really his revenge. He didn’t commit murder over it.”

“So where does that leave us?”

“Nowhere,” Stride said. He gestured at the television. “Why did you want the videos from the movie?”

“I’ve been going over every take Aimee did to see if there was anything that would give us a clue.”

“And?”

“There’s nothing that I can see,” Serena said.

Stride took the remote control and started the video again. The scene looked familiar to him, and he realized that he’d been on the set while it was being filmed. Dean Casperson was rescuing Aimee Bowe from the cage where she’d been held. It was unsettling to him seeing Casperson in the movie when he’d pointed a gun at the man’s head only a few hours earlier in real life. On the screen, they’d traded places. Dean Casperson was him. Casperson was the one with the gun.

He watched the dialogue between the two actors:

“Who did this—”

“It doesn’t matter now. We have him. He’s not going to hurt anyone else.”

“I can’t move. What’s wrong with me?”

“Give it time.”

“I’m so cold.”

“You’ll be out of here soon.”

“I killed it. I killed it. I killed the little girl.”

Stride stopped the playback. “I know Aimee improvises, but I still don’t understand that line. ‘I killed the little girl.’ What does that mean? Did she say anything to you about where it came from?”

Serena smiled. “You’re as bad at movie lines as you are with song lyrics.”

“What are you talking about?”

“It’s not ‘little girl,’ Jonny. It’s ‘little bird.’ She’s saying she killed the little bird. She’s talking about the chickadee that was inside the cage with each victim. That was an awful thing. I can’t believe you never told me about it.”

Stride rewound the video and played it again. He listened carefully and realized that Serena was right.

I killed the little bird.

And again and again and again.

I killed the little bird. I killed the little bird. I killed the little bird.

Serena stared at him as he kept replaying the scene. “Jonny, what’s wrong?”

He thought about all the possibilities, but none of them led him where he needed to go. None of them had an innocent explanation. Something wasn’t right.

“How did Aimee know about that?” Stride asked.

“What do you mean?”

“How did she know about the chickadees? We never released that information publicly. We didn’t want any of the families to know about it. It was too disturbing.”

Serena shrugged. “Lori Fulkerson told her about it.”

“No, that’s impossible.”

“Jonny, I was there when Lori said it,” Serena insisted.

“Lori didn’t know,” Stride replied. “There was no chickadee in the cage with her. The others, yes, but not her. We assumed Art wasn’t able to trap one during the winter.”

“How can you be sure about that?”

Feathers. There were no feathers in the box with her. When we dug up the bodies of the other women buried behind the cabin, we found feathers trapped in their clothes. And then when we did the autopsies and got the analysis of their stomach contents, we figured out what had happened. It was grotesque. No one needed to know about that. We made a conscious decision to keep it private out of respect for the victims. The county attorney didn’t use that information at the trial.”

“Well, Lori found out somehow,” Serena said. “Somebody must have told her.”

“No. Nobody told her. There are no more than ten people in Duluth who know about the chickadees. They’re cops and attorneys, and that’s all. I can give you their names. There is no way Lori Fulkerson could have known about it.”

Serena thought about it. Then she shook her head.

“There is one way, Jonny. What if Lori put those women in the box herself?”

45

Gray dawn broke through the snow as Craig Dawson completed his overnight maintenance shift at the Duluth Airport. Stormy nights always made for hard, backbreaking work inside and outside the terminal building. He’d been on the job for sixteen hours straight when his boss finally told him to go home. He was ready for a hot shower, a hot breakfast, and a cold beer.

Craig trudged across the skyway that led from the terminal to the parking garage. He wore his heavy coat, unzipped, his overalls, and his dirty work boots. An empty coffee thermos dangled from his hand. Snow had crusted on the skyway windows, but below him he could see the parking lot, which was mostly empty of cars. Flights had largely been canceled throughout the previous evening, and no one was here to make drop-offs and pickups. The handful of cars in long-term parking wore deep caps of snow.

He reached the covered ramp and made his way to his white F-150 pickup truck. As he turned on the engine, Maroon 5 blared from the radio. He dug in his coat pocket for a bottle of Advil and swallowed two pills. He wiped his brow, which was damp with sweat despite the cold.

No one else was leaving at the same time he was. He drove through the garage and used his key card to exit onto the one-way access road. He was distracted, thinking about what the driveway would look like at his farmhouse. He kept a plow attachment on his pickup at this time of year, and he knew he’d have to push through a quarter mile of eighteen-inch snow to make it to his garage.

He tapped the wheel to the music as he neared the four-way stop at Haines Road. He wasn’t looking for other traffic on the lonely highway, so he had to slam on his brakes to avoid a sleek black limousine that breezed through the intersection without stopping. Craig leaned on his horn, but the limo driver didn’t even slow down as he cruised toward the airport terminal.