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It was an interesting connection, but one Erica might not have done anything about if she hadn’t had one of her freelance researchers hack into the transportation department for both California and Arizona, checking highway cameras for footage of Diana. The hope was her contact might be able to discover which way the woman had gone. The researcher called late that afternoon.

“Arizona,” he’d said. “Early this morning.”

That’s when it came together for Erica. Diana would return to somewhere she knew. People always did. Flagstaff would fit that bill nicely.

Braden, Erica had decided, was a dead end. They needed to move east.

But then what happened? After driving around town and checking various addresses from Diana’s file, Erica had headed over to her former employer’s office and found Harper and Martin standing in front of the building.

What the hell? That’s when she decided to get rid of them once and for all. Lovely how that worked out, she thought.

Her grip tightened on the steering wheel as her anger began rising again. She glanced at Frisk in the mirror. The idiot’s eyelids were barely open, his skin pale.

“Do not let him throw up in here,” she said.

“I think he needs a doctor,” Markle said.

Erica was about to say she didn’t care what he needed, but stopped. She couldn’t afford the headache or the time it would take to deal with the problem if Frisk died in the car. She could just have Markle dump him on the side of the road, but that wasn’t a good option, either. They were too close to town now, and there was always a chance someone would see them.

“You might want to open up a window,” Clausen suggested.

Erica touched the button that automatically rolled down the window next to Frisk. As soon as the fresh air hit him, the injured man leaned toward it.

Erica found the Flagstaff Medical Center parking, and stopped where there were no other cars. She looked back at Frisk.

“Are you with us?” she said.

Frisk tried to focus on her. “Huh?”

“Can you hear me? Do you understand what I’m saying?”

“Yeah. I…understand.”

She frowned. He might understand, but would he remember? “If you value your life and the life of your family at all, you will do exactly as I say. Understand?”

He tensed. “Yes, ma’am.”

“As I understand, your sister just had a baby boy, isn’t that correct?”

“I’ll do whatever you want,” he pleaded.

“I wanted you to keep an eye on the woman, but you couldn’t handle that, now could you?”

“It was a mistake. It won’t happen again.”

“I know it won’t because you know the consequences if it does.” She made sure he was looking her in the eye. “This is what you will tell them inside. You were in a fight with someone you don’t know. You’re just passing through town, and can’t remember much of anything about the evening. Got it?”

“Sure. Got it.”

“Repeat it.”

With some difficulty, Frisk did. It was the best Erica could hope for.

“You have any ID on you?”

He thought for a moment. “Don’t think so. Should be…in my bag.”

Erica looked at Markle. “Check him.”

Markle shifted Frisk around, checked his pockets, then shook his head. “Nothing.”

Good. At least Frisk had been smart enough not to be carrying anything with his name on it.

“Get in, get out. Don’t answer any questions,” she instructed the other two men.

“Yes, ma’am,” Clausen said.

He and Markle helped Frisk into the emergency room. They returned just a few minutes later.

As they drove away, Erica glanced at Clausen and said, “We’ll find a motel. You two get a few hours’ sleep, then I want you to go back to Braden. You’ll have to find your own ride. When you get there, learn all you can about that guy who got beat up outside Diana’s bar. Both he and Harper were looking for the girl. Find out what their connection is and what they want her for.”

“No problem,” Clausen said.

Before locating rooms for the night, Erica had one quick stop to make first. At some point, Harper and Martin would find their way back to Flagstaff. The way she saw it, she had two choices. Leave either Clausen or Markle to stake out Harper’s car and deal with him and his friend permanently when they returned, or see if the two interlopers could prove to be more useful. Since she’d rather not waste the manpower, the second option was more attractive.

She drove back to Harkin Services and stopped behind the El Camino.

Without a word, she popped open the trunk and got out.

In the back was the leather bag that had been waiting for her when she’d picked up the rental car. As was her habit, she had prepared for all contingencies. The bag contained some of that hardware her money had paid for, including the guns and matching sound suppressors she and the others were using. What she was interested in now was a small case with several magnet-backed trackers.

She took one out, and attached it to the inside of the El Camino’s rear bumper.

As she drove away, her anger at the botched evening started to subside. They were on the right path again. She could feel it. Tomorrow she would find a new lead on Diana.

One way or another, this problem would soon be closed.

CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE

If Diana and the Paskota woman weren’t working together, then the only way The Hideaway’s former bartender could have been there was because she had followed the doctor’s car. So that meant she’d hidden her own vehicle somewhere in the woods between where Logan and Dev stood and the main road, the opposite direction in which she’d run. At some point, she would have to circle back.

“Come on,” Logan said.

He and Dev ran along the path that Dr. Paskota had used to bring them here. They made it almost all the way back to the dirt road before Logan pulled to a stop and knelt down. Even in the darkness, he could see the eight-inch strip of compacted pine needles that led off the path. Predictably, he found a second, identical strip a few feet away.

Tire tracks.

Silently, he pointed in the direction they headed. Dev nodded.

Careful not to make a sound, the two men followed the tracks. About a hundred feet from where they began, they found a Ford sedan with California license plates, and a tag that identified it as a rental car. Though there was no one sitting inside, Logan saw that the keys were in the ignition, the car ready to go the moment the owner returned.

Dev raised a finger to his ear and tapped twice. Logan listened. Footsteps, fifty yards away and heading in their direction.

The two men immediately pulled back into the trees, hiding behind two pines close to the car. It was a whole minute before Logan saw a shadow moving through the woods on the other side of the sedan. It was Diana, of course. He’d never doubted that. She moved slowly, taking her time with each step, and probably thinking she was doing a good job of masking any noise.

Upon reaching the car, she abandoned her caution, and raced around to the driver’s door. As her hand shot out and grabbed the handle, Logan silently moved in behind her, his gun in his hand.

Sensing his presence, she started to whip around, but he yanked the gun out of her hand before she could bring it even halfway up. She staggered backward and slammed against the car door, knocking it closed again. “Get away from me!”

Logan tossed her gun to Dev. “You drive. Ms. Stockley and I will sit in back.”

He grabbed her arm and pulled her over to the rear door.

“Let me go!” She jerked back and forth, trying to break his grip, but succeeded in only getting him to squeeze tighter.

After Dev opened the door for them, Logan pushed Diana inside and jumped in right behind her. She immediately tried to get out the other door, but Logan was having none of it. He grabbed her again and pulled her back. “Don’t waste your energy. You’re not going anywhere.” To Dev, he said, “Child lock.”