No, she wouldn't accept that explanation. She wasn't nuts and she didn't have any alter egos running around in her head. So she had weird dreams. They didn't do her any real harm and she found Cira fascinating. Every dream was like turning the pages of a novel and discovering something new with every sentence. If that story became a little too exciting at times and she woke scared to death, that went with the territory.
At least she evidently hadn't been screaming or whimpering this time or she would have had Eve or Joe running in here. She swung her feet out of bed and padded to the bathroom to get a glass of water. She glanced at the clock on the bedside table. It was almost three in the morning and in a few hours Eve would be getting up and starting to work. She didn't need to get up early and come in here to comfort Jane, she thought as she padded to the bathroom. She would get a glass of water and then go out in the living room and cuddle Toby on the couch until she was drowsy enough to go back to sleep.
She suddenly stiffened.
There was something wrong.
She turned to look at the Orvis dog bed on the floor beside her bed.
“Toby?”
SIX
Toby's red collar was lying on the top porch step.
Jane slowly knelt to pick it up and saw a piece of paper fastened to it.
She heard the howl as she straightened.
Panic soared through her. “Toby! Toby, come.”
Another howl. Far away. Across the lake.
She started down the porch steps and then stopped.
Bait for a trap. It couldn't be clearer. She should call Joe and Eve.
She slowly unfolded the note on the collar.
Come alone and the dog will live.
The implication was clear. If she didn't come alone, Toby would die. If she called the policemen in the squad car or Joe and Eve and set them to searching the woods, her Toby would not live through the night. Agony twisted through her at the thought.
“Is everything okay, Ms. MacGuire?”
She looked up to see Mac Gunther walking toward her from the squad car.
No, it wasn't okay, she wanted to scream at him. Toby . . .
Her hand holding the collar slipped behind her back. She forced a smile. “Fine, Mac. Just getting a breath of air. I couldn't sleep.”
“Can't blame you.” He smiled sympathetically. “But let us know when you decide to come out on the porch. You gave us a start.”
“Sorry. I didn't think.” She turned and started up the steps. “I'll just go back to bed. Good night.”
“Good night.”
She watched him turn and stroll back to the squad car as she opened the screen door. Give it a little time before she slipped away.
She heard Toby howl as it closed behind her.
“No,” she whispered as she closed her eyes in pain. “You dirty bastard, stop it. I'm coming.”
The howling pierced the night like a knife.
Bartlett jumped. “Jesus, what the hell was that? A wolf?”
Trevor began to curse. “Son of a bitch.” He straightened away from the tree. “He's got her dog.”
“What?”
“I'd bet on it. It's her dog, Toby. I've been here three nights and never heard that dog howl before.”
“That doesn't mean— Where are you going?”
“I'm going to follow the sound,” Trevor said curtly as he faded into the shrubbery. “Just like she's going to do.”
“Should I go with you?”
“Hell, no. Go to the car and wait for me to call you. You make too much noise in the woods. If he hears you crashing through the brush, Aldo will kill the dog and then Jane MacGuire will kill both of us. She loves that dog.”
The dog howled again.
“This could be a break,” Bartlett called after him. “If you can get to the dog before the girl, you might be able to take down Aldo.”
“I know that.” And if he didn't get there in time, Jane MacGuire would be either butchered or taken prisoner. Some break. It wasn't the scenario he'd have planned if given a choice.
Well, choices had been few and far between since this macabre charade had begun. He'd have to take the hand that was dealt him. Don't think about the girl. Forget her. This was the closest he'd been to Aldo since Brighton. Think only about what he'd do to him when he got his hands on him.
Toby howled again.
She was closer.
Toby's last howl had sounded much nearer.
She stopped on the trail and closed her eyes, waiting for him to howl again.
If she could get a fix on his location, then she wouldn't be so vulnerable. She knew these woods. She and Toby had run and played over every inch of them for years. The minute she figured out the location, she could picture it and find a way to get there without blundering into Aldo's trap.
“Come on, Toby,” she whispered. “Tell me where you are.”
He howled again.
To the south. At least a hundred yards from here. Concentrate. Don't think what Aldo is doing to make him howl. He's alive. Now keep him alive. A hundred yards south. There was nothing but a glade surrounded by pines.
Where better to stake out Toby than an open glade? To get to him she'd have to go through the pines where Aldo would be waiting. At the thought her hand unconsciously closed on the butcher knife she'd taken from the cutlery drawer in the kitchen. Would she use it? The thought of stabbing someone made her shudder.
But it didn't make that bastard flinch. He'd killed before and now he wanted to kill her.
And he was hurting Toby.
Hell, yes, she'd use the knife.
Okay, was there any other path she could take to elude Aldo?
Not unless she circled around and entered the lake in the one place where the pines were scraggly and sparse. She would be able to see any waiting attacker as she approached from that angle and, if she was careful, he wouldn't see her as she crawled up on the bank.
Was there any other way?
Toby howled again.
If there was another plan, she had no time to discover it. She had to get to Toby.
She moved quickly to the edge of the lake, took off her shoes, and waded into the cold water.
Jane!”
Eve jerked upright in bed, her heart pounding.
Joe opened his eyes, totally alert as he always was when he woke. “What is it?”
“Jane.”
“Is she having another dream? Did you hear something?”
“I didn't hear—or maybe I did.” She threw the covers aside. “I'm going to go check on her.”
Joe sat up on one elbow and watched as she grabbed her robe and headed for the door. “I didn't hear her call—” He stopped, tilting his head, listening. “Go check on her.” He swung his legs to the floor. “Now.”
She was already flying down the hall.
Empty bed.
No Jane.
She ran to the bathroom. “Jane!”
Jane's nightgown lay in a pool on the floor.
“She's gone?” Joe was behind her. He'd pulled on his jeans and was shoving his arms into his wool sweater.
She nodded numbly. “He's got her. He just came in and got her.”
“I don't think so. He would have to be pretty stupid to try to get by Mac and Brian.” He pulled the sweater over his head. “Get your clothes on. I'll meet you outside.”
Eve didn't argue. “Where are you going?”
“To the squad car. They might have seen her.” He headed down the hall. “Or Toby.”
“Toby?”
“I didn't hear Jane call out, but I thought I heard Toby howling.”
Terror iced through her. “Oh, God.”
“Maybe I was wrong.” He opened the screen door. “Toby doesn't often—”