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“About the tissue,” Davis said patiently. “And about that tomcat running loose in the store.”

Clyde gave her a disingenuous look that to anyone but a cop would reek of honesty. “He got out of his carrier. Guess I didn’t fasten it securely. Cat picked up a used tissue somewhere while I was describing Wilma, asking if she’d been there. I thought I had the carrier door fastened.”

Davis did not respond. Joe wished she’d show some expression. As warm and thoughtful as Juana Davis was on occasion, that cop’s look could be unnerving.

“Juana,” Clyde said, “Wilma’s like my family, you know that. I’m really worried about her, I had to just go in and ask, had to do something. I…with Wilma gone, I didn’t have anyone to leave the cat with.

“But then,” he said with excitement, “when I left the store, luck was with me. Incredible…” He reached in his pocket, drew out the wrapped credit card, laid it on the table, and opened the tissue. “Looks like, for once, my stupid civilian nosiness paid off.”

Davis looked at the credit card, at Wilma’s name, at the dark stain that appeared to be dried blood. She looked up at Clyde. Still a cop’s look, silent and expressionless, a look designed to unnerve the toughest convict.

“It was in the gutter. Among some trash, right where I parked my car.”

Juana’s rigid demeanor and her unreadable black Latina eyes made her look more severe than she was.

“I figure,” Clyde said, “either someone robbed her and dropped this-except why was it bent? Or that Wilma was mugged and kidnapped, and had time to drop it herself. To bend it and drop it. A carjacking, maybe? You think that’s blood on there? Could she have slashed someone with it, then dropped it hoping it would be found?”

Joe was glad he was concealed inside the carrier so Davis couldn’t study his face as severely as she was studying Clyde’s.

“My guess is,” Clyde said, “she was shoved in a car outside Liz Claiborne’s, had the card in her hand, slashed at her abductor, and dropped it as he slammed the car door and took off.”

“Why would she fold it?”

“To make a better weapon? That sharp corner?” Clyde took a sip of his coffee. “I don’t know, Juana. I only know it’s Wilma’s, it has her name on it, and it’s an act of fate that I found it, that I ever saw it.”

Davis studied the credit card. She picked it up by the edges and, taking an evidence bag from her pocket, dropped the card in, marked it with date, time, and location, and sealed it. She looked at Clyde again, then looked across the table at Joe’s carrier. Joe yawned stupidly, scratched a nonexistent flea, and curled up as if for a nap. Davis and Clyde were silent until their order came. A burger for Clyde, the same for Joe, sans the fixings. A chicken sandwich for Juana, which probably fit into her perpetual diet.

Clyde opened the carrier, shoved the burger inside, and fastened the mesh door again; he tore into his own burger as if he hadn’t eaten in days.

Joe inspected his order to be sure there were no pickles or offensive spreads, pulled off the bun, and scarfed down the hot, rare meat.

Clyde said, “What have you found out? Can you tell me? Sheriff have any leads?”

Joe stopped eating to watch Juana. Suddenly her dark eyes revealed a depth of anger that neither Joe nor Clyde often saw in the steady officer, a controlled rage that frightened them both; she didn’t like what she’d found. Wilma was not just a missing case, she was Juana’s friend, too.

“Sheriff’s deputies had already done the rounds when I got here,” Juana said. “Three clerks, in two stores, recognized Wilma from the picture we faxed. One clerk saw her leave, saw her go up the sidewalk with her packages but didn’t see where she went. Didn’t know if she got in a car. Sheriff has copies of her Visa charge slips. He checked the motels in the area, in case she decided to stay over. Showed them her picture. Nothing.

“No one’s found her car, no sign of Jones or Sears. We don’t know that Sears is with him, but he’s usually in Jones’s shadow. Sheriff is checking convenience stores, gas stations. CHP is all over the freeway watching for her car, and for Jones or Sears. APB out for the state. If she’s not found soon, that’ll be all the western states.”

“What does Sears look like?”

“Slighter built than Jones, thin face. Younger, thirty-two. Longish brown hair, muddy brown eyes. Jones is a hulk, six four and built like a truck. Gorilla face, long lip.” The detective was tense and edgy. Joe waited uneasily, as did Clyde. There was something more, something she wasn’t telling Clyde. Rearing up against the carrier’s soft top to observe her, Joe shivered. Davis was mad as hell, and about something more. Joe was surprised when Clyde unfastened the carrier, reached in, and began to stroke his back, as if to comfort them both.

“I just got off the phone with the dispatcher,” Juana said.

Clyde’s hand stiffened. Joe went very still.

“It’s Charlie,” Juana said. “Charlie’s disappeared. Charlie Harper’s missing, too.”

Clyde gripped Joe’s shoulder so hard the tomcat hissed. But then he rubbed his face against Clyde’s fingers, which felt suddenly icy.

“Charlie and Ryan had planned to ride,” Davis said. “Ryan was delayed on the job. By the time she got there, Charlie had fed the horses and put them up, and started to make sandwiches. Looked like she went outside again on some errand, or at some disturbance. The door left unlocked, and she hadn’t finished in the kitchen. From that point, no one knows. Ryan got there, she was gone. No note, no phone message. Her car there, engine cold.

“Max is there. Karen is making casts, taking the prints. Ryan found the tracks of a small car or maybe an old-style Jeep behind the stable, leading away up the bridle trail, back into the woods.” Juana looked at Clyde gently, her cop’s reserve falling away. She was close to Charlie and the chief, the small department was like family.

“Whatever the hell this is,” Juana said, “I hope the bastards burn-that we can make them burn.”

Even as evening fell, the cabin and the little cubbyhole kitchen remained intolerably hot, the walls pressing closer, so that Wilma felt there wasn’t enough air. Sweating, confined by the tight ropes, panic gripped her, making her feel almost out of control. She wanted to scream and to beat at the walls, to tear at the rope, tear it off, and she couldn’t even get a grip on it.

She seldom lost it like this. She was trained not to panic, but her training had gone to hell; she wanted to scream, and keep screaming until someone somewhere heard her.

Violet had taken the butcher knife, jerking it from Wilma’s clenched hand with surprising strength, and was carrying it away with her, toward the stairs. Wilma watched her retreating back; how thin her shoulders were, every bone visible beneath the flimsy shirt.

“You don’t think I can hide you,” Wilma said, trying not to beg. “You’re wrong. You don’t believe the federal authorities can keep you safe. I know they can. Witness protection has hidden thousands of folks with far more dangerous men after them than Sears, and those women are doing fine.”

Violet paused, but didn’t turn to look at her.

“You’re destroying what may be your only chance for freedom, Violet. I can get you into a safe house far away, out of the state. New identity, new name, all the papers. New driver’s license, new social security number. You can start over, free of Eddie’s abuse, do as you please with your life.”

As she tried to gain Violet’s attention, she prayed that in Gilroy her credit card would be found. But that was a real long shot, you couldn’t lay your life on a card lying in the gutter, a card that would probably be swept up by the street sweeper and dumped in some landfill.

“We can hide you in a little house or apartment in the most unlikely small town, somewhere no one would think to look. We’d alert the sheriff there to watch out for you, he’d be the person you could go to anytime if you were afraid. You could be living where no one would beat you, threaten you, hurt you, Violet.”