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“Did you get what you needed?” I asked.

“I did. Thanks,” she said, holding out the camera so I could look at the images. “That cat is so photogenic.”

Owen lifted his head for a moment to look over at me. I had no idea how he knew what “photogenic” meant, but I knew cat smug when I saw it.

Ruby and I talked about her plans for the two paintings while Owen ate and did a far less meticulous washing of his face and paws than he had earlier.

“Okay, Fuzz Face,” I said, setting the carrier on the table. “Time to go.”

“Thank you, Owen,” Ruby said.

He tilted his head to one side and meowed softly, and then he climbed into the bag.

“And thank you, Kathleen,” Ruby said, giving me a one-armed hug. “I’ll let you know when both paintings are done, if you’d like to see them.”

“I’d love to see them,” I said. There was a loud yowl from inside the bag. I patted the side. “Apparently, so would Owen.”

I put the strap of the cat carrier over my shoulder and headed for the stairs, double-checking to make sure the zipper was closed before I started down them. At the bottom, I pushed the back door open with one hip, feeling in my pants pocket for my keys.

They weren’t there. Where had I put them? I felt the pockets of my coat sweater. The keys to the truck were deep in the left pocket, the ring snagged on the cranberry-colored wool.

“Crap on toast!” I muttered.

I slipped the carrier off my shoulder and set it on the pavement so I could use both hands to get the keys free without making a hole in my favorite sweater. Which means I didn’t see a small gray paw figure out how to slide a zipper open from the inside.

The first thing I did see as I worked the key ring free of my sweater pocket was two gray paws and a tabby head poke out of the top of the carrier.

“No!” I said sharply. Like that ever did any good. Owen was out of the bag faster than Houdini from a straitjacket. I lunged for him, but being a cat, he could move faster. And did. Along the side of the building, straight for the tent across the street.

Not again.

“Owen! No!” I shouted. One ear twitched, but he kept going, like Hercules, pausing both times at the curb to look each way before darting across the street. I ran after him, skidding to a stop on the sidewalk to let an SUV and a half-ton truck go by before I could cross Main Street. That meant by the time I made it to the other side, Owen was already at the end flap to the tent.

“Owen! Stop!” I yelled, knowing I was wasting my breath. He poked his head around the canvas and disappeared, both inside the tent and out of sight.

I stopped outside the yellow crime scene tape that still roped off the tent. Should I duck under and go after Owen, or call Marcus? Without an officer standing guard, the area wasn’t exactly secured. It wasn’t a good enough excuse to ignore the yellow tape, though.

“Owen, get your furry little cat behind out here,” I called.

I waited. Nothing. I looked around to see if anyone was watching and then, feeling kind of silly, I stuck one arm under the crime scene tape and moved my hand through the air, just in case the cat was sitting there, invisible, watching me make a fool of myself.

If he was, he wasn’t anywhere I could get my hands on him.

I pulled out my phone and keyed in Marcus’s number, mentally crossing my fingers that I got him and not his voice mail. This wasn’t something I wanted to explain in a message.

“Hi, Kathleen,” he said, answering after just a couple of rings.

“Hi, Marcus,” I said, wondering, for a moment, how to start explaining what had happened. “I, uh, kind of have a problem.”

His voice rumbled through the phone against my ear. “What is it? Did one of your cats find another dead body?”

I pulled my free hand down over my neck and one shoulder, wishing that Owen would come out of the tent and I could just scoop him up and head home. He didn’t, of course.

“No,” I said slowly. “But Owen’s . . . in the tent.”

For a moment there was silence. “Which tent?” Marcus finally asked, his tone cautious.

“The one that’s surrounded by crime scene tape,” I said, cringing as the words came out.

I heard him sigh on the other end of the phone, and I could picture the tight line of his jaw.

“Why? How?” He paused for a second. “Never mind. I’m on my way. Don’t move.” He stressed the last two words.

“I won’t,” I promised, but he was already gone.

I stood on the grass, hands in the pockets of my sweater, jingling the keys that had started this whole mess. I kept one eye on the flap of the tent just in case Owen decided to grace Riverwalk with his presence. I knew he’d come out when it suited him and not a moment before.

Marcus pulled up about five minutes later. “I don’t suppose Owen decided to come out by himself,” he said as he came around the front of his SUV.

“I haven’t seen even a whisker,” I said. At least that was true. If Owen wasn’t in the tent anymore, then he was likely sitting somewhere close, watching us, hiding in his own personal Cloak of Invisibility.

Marcus started for the yellow tape. “Do I want to know how this happened?” I’d expected him to be a lot more, well, annoyed—mad—about what Owen had done. There was a time he would have been. Of course, there was a time I never would have imagined Marcus cooking dinner for me.

“I think you do,” I said, “being someone who likes to stick to the facts.”

He almost smiled. Then he ducked under the plastic tape and beckoned to me with one finger. “So tell me the facts.”

“You want me to come with you?” I said.

He nodded and I got a small smile as well. “I saw what happened when somebody other than you tried to pick up that cat. Remember?”

I did. Owen and I had almost been killed when a couple of propane tanks exploded. I’d ended up in the back of an ambulance, suffering from hypothermia. Despite Marcus’s warning to everyone not to touch the cat, a police officer had tried to move him out of the paramedic’s way. The officer had ended up needing his own paramedic.

Marcus held up the heavy canvas flap, and I followed him into the tent, pausing a couple of steps inside to let my eyes adjust to the dimmer light. Everything looked pretty much the same as the last time, except, of course, that the body and the white resin chair were gone. And there was a gray tabby cat, digging at the ground by the long side wall of the tent.

“Owen,” I said sharply. “What are you doing?”

The cat looked from me to Marcus. Then, with his golden eyes locked on the detective’s face, he scratched at a spot on the grass where about two inches of the tent wall made a lip on the ground and meowed loudly.

I walked over and crouched down beside him so I could get a closer look at where he’d been digging. Something seemed to be stuck in the damp earth. “Marcus, you better look at this,” I said. “I think Owen found something.”