“You’re sure?”
“Trust me, Dad. I’m sure.”
“Of course I trust you.”
Logan’s phone vibrated in his pocket. Dev again.
He stepped away from the bed to answer it. “What’s going on?”
“You’re not going to believe this,” Dev said.
“What?”
“They went to our friend Mark Hackbarth’s office.”
“Really?”
“Stayed inside for about ten minutes. After that they went back by the diner, but didn’t stay. My guess is that when they didn’t see the Cherokee, they had no reason to hang around.”
“Did you lose them?”
A grunted laugh. “No, I didn’t lose them. They’re at a motel near the highway. A place called The Happy Traveler. You want the room number?”
“You can tell me when I get there.”
CHAPTER TWENTY
Diana sat up with a start. Sweat covered her brow and soaked her shirt. The pleasant desert night had been replaced by Braden’s typical one-hundred-degree-plus day, turning Richard’s rental car into a sauna.
But it wasn’t the heat that bothered her at the moment. It was the position of the sun itself. It was higher in the sky than she’d expected. She grabbed her phone and looked at the time.
A quarter after ten?
She’d slept for over six hours.
With a sense of dread, she looked out to where the El Camino had been parked, and saw that it was…still there.
“Thank you, Lord,” she said, relieved.
Maybe the guy-what had he called himself? Logan? — maybe Logan had slept in, too. Even if he hadn’t, she knew he wouldn’t be too far from that car. It was a beauty, more so in the daylight where its paint job sparkled under the desert sun.
Kitty-corner to the motel was a gas station she’d used a few times. It had a restroom around back that you could enter without going through the store. She drove over, pulled her hoodie tight around her face, and made a beeline for the women’s room. After relieving herself and cleaning up as best she could, she returned to the motel, parking this time a few slots away from the El Camino.
When an hour and a half passed with no sign of Logan, she decided he must have gone somewhere without his car. She wasn’t worried, though. He’d be back. But after another forty-five minutes, it turned out she was wrong. At first she barely looked at the tough older guy who’d entered the parking lot, but then he got into Logan’s truck and drove off.
She couldn’t imagine that there were two electric blue El Caminos in town, so she had no choice but to pull out after it.
Following vehicles always looked easy on TV. Cops and PIs and even amateurs seldom ever lost the car they were tracking. In real life it turned out to be another matter-for Diana, anyway. She was a bartender, after all, not a stock car driver. She made it through two traffic lights before the El Camino disappeared.
She drove through the town, but couldn’t find the car.
“Dammit! Dammit! Dammit!” she said as she pounded the steering wheel, adrenaline and dread racing each other through her body.
When she finally calmed down, she did the only thing she could do-return to the motel and hope that the El Camino showed up again.
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
Logan recruited Barney to drive him to Dev’s location. Harp, not wanting to be left out, came along for the ride. Whatever spat they’d had over Len’s envelope seemed to have been forgotten. On the way, they picked up a burger and a drink for Dev, then parked a few blocks from the El Camino.
“Don’t forget to call us if you need any help,” Harp said as his son got out. “And…the envelope?”
“Next time you see me, I’ll give it to you. I promise,” Logan told him. He looked at Barney. “Park behind our motel. If you guys need to go out again, walk or wait until we get back. Don’t take the Jeep.” He had told them on the way over about being followed, so they all understood the car was marked.
“Be careful,” Barney said.
Logan watched them drive off and then walked through the quiet neighborhood until he reached the street where Dev was parked. Beyond the El Camino he could see the motel the others were apparently using. Other than a family trying to cool off in the pool, the place looked almost deserted. Satisfied no one was casting any attention in his direction, Logan approached his truck and got in the passenger side.
“Here,” he said, handing over the bag and setting the drink caddy on the seat between them. “Anything new?”
Dev shook his head. “They’ve been inside since I called.”
“Which room?”
“Second floor, third from the left. Number twenty-seven.”
Counting the doors, Logan found the room, but there was no way he could read the number mounted outside.
“You have binoculars or something?” he asked.
“Took a little walk,” Dev said, chewing his burger. “The car’s parked right below it.” He handed a piece of paper to Logan. “That’s the license number, but it won’t get us much. It’s a rental.”
“Have you seen anyone else with them? Another woman, maybe?”
“Nope. Just the couple we already saw.”
Logan was working under the theory that these people were either friends of or working for Diana. He’d been hoping Dev had spotted her and solidified the connection.
His phone vibrated on the seat where he’d set it. The display read BLOCKED.
“Hello?” he answered.
“Logan?” It was Callie.
“Hey. I was beginning to worry something happened to you.”
“Sorry, flew back down this morning, then got pulled into some meetings at the office. I did get your message, though.”
“What about the email I sent a little while ago?”
“Email?” she said. “Haven’t seen it yet. What was in it?”
“I found Diana’s Social Security and driver’s license numbers.”
“Great,” she said, excited. “That’ll help a lot.”
“Logan,” Dev said, pointing through the windshield.
“Hold on, Callie.”
Across the street, two people had just exited room twenty-seven.
“That’s them?” Logan asked Dev.
“Yeah.”
They watched the woman and the man walk along the breezeway and disappear inside an enclosed staircase. A few moments later they reappeared downstairs and walked over to the sedan.
“What do you want to do?” Dev asked.
Logan brought the phone back up to his ear. “Callie, I apologize, but I have to call you back.”
“No problem,” she said. “I’m here.”
“Thanks.” He hung up.
Across the street, the sedan’s taillights flared on.
Logan grabbed some napkins out of the hamburger bag and reached for the door. “Follow them. If they start heading back this way, call me.”
“What are you going to do?”
Logan pushed open the door. “A little recon.”
A block down from the motel, next to the interstate, was a combination gas station/mini-market. Logan made that his first stop. He went rapidly up and down the aisles looking initially for paperclips, but settling in the end for a plastic box of various-sized safety pins. He then circled around the back of the motel to avoid the office, and took the stairs at the far end up to the second floor.
When he reached number twenty-seven, he turned his head and held his ear near the door, listening in case someone had stayed behind. All was quiet.
Just to be doubly sure, he rapped on the jamb.
“Housekeeping,” he said.
Silence-no squeaks from beds or feet walking across the room.
He retrieved the package of safety pins, selected two of the largest, then bent them all the way open, creating spears-or tools, in this case-to pick the lock. They were far from the best, but the lock was a cheap one, and within thirty seconds it willingly gave way.
Inside the room, the air had the undisturbed stillness that confirmed he was the only one present. Though dim, there was enough sunlight seeping in from around the curtain for him to see. Along one wall were two queen-size beds separated by a nightstand, and against the opposite, a dresser with a TV on top. At the back of the room was a closet, and next to it a nook that went further back to a countertop with a sink. Though he couldn’t see it from where he stood, he knew there would be a door near it to the toilet and shower.