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Then they waited.

"On his way," Sloan said with a voice like static.

"Give me the hat…" Lucas said. Bancroft passed him a felt snap-brim and he put it on his head. He picked up the handset, pressed the transmit button and asked, "Where is he?"

"He's coming. Two minutes. You ready?"

"Ready," Lucas said. To Bancroft, he said, "Get in the back, in case something weird happens. You try to peek over the door and I'll pull your goddamned head off. And don't stick that fuckin' camera up, either."

"Tell me what happens," she said, as she climbed agilely over the seat. Lucas got a flash of long legs and then her blue eyes.

"You just stay out of sight…"

"Can't I just peek?"

"Two blocks," said Sloan. "We can see the light. It's red…"

"Changing now," said another voice. "Tell me when…"

"It'll be a goddamned short green light," Lucas said to Bancroft. "Get the fuck down."

"Last corner, Lucas. Roll now," said Sloan. Lucas pulled away from the curve, topped a low rise and headed downhill to the light. He could see Bekker's car rolling toward the traffic light, signaling a left turn. The light went yellow, then red, on command from the surveillance car.

Lucas pulled up to the light, stopped, stared through the tinted windshield at Bekker. They didn't think he'd be able to see Lucas' face from this distance, but they weren't sure. Lucas could see Bekker. The traffic light for the cross street went yellow. "Here we go," Lucas said. "Stay down."

Bekker, still signaling a left turn, pulled into the intersection, the surveillance car right on his tail to block any possible pursuit. Lucas moved slowly through the intersection, and as he passed Bekker's car, he looked left, out the window. The coat collar was up, the hat was pulled down, his face was shaded…

His eyes caught Bekker's, and Bekker's head snapped around as though jerked by a wire. Lucas accelerated through the intersection and up the hill.

"He's killed the fuckin' car, I think, he's rolling through the intersection, he can't get the car started," Sloan called.

"He saw me," Lucas called back. To Bancroft, he said, "You can sit up."

"I need some fuckin' video," she moaned. "Davenport, you're killing me…"

Bekker, shocked, sat in his car and cried, tried to start it, sent it bucking in first gear, killed it again, started again…

Bekker didn't think of pursuit. He knew who it was he'd seen.

He'd sat in the closet for a day and a night, alternating between sleep and a half-waking state. He had no idea how many pills he'd taken, or the dosages, but finally, seeing daylight again and the cigarette case empty, and hungry, he crawled out of the closet. The eyes waited in the glass. He stood up, stumbled toward the bathroom, his body racked with pain. He'd gotten cramped in the closet, he hurt everywhere. In the shower, he stood in scalding water, the pain driving the pictures out of his mind…

Out of the shower, he dressed, took a careful black cap, amphetamine, just enough to keep him going, went to the car, saw the eyes in the rearview mirror, tilted the mirror away, started down the street. There was a deli less than a mile away. He was caught by a red light. A station wagon across the street…

"Is he going on?" Lucas asked.

"Yeah, he's still going," Sloan said. "He's moving slow, though. I think there's something wrong."

"He's freaked out," Lucas said. "I told you he knew Druze."

"Something definitely wrong," Sloan said. "He's turning around. He's going back out to Twelve…"

The net stayed with Bekker as he drove toward downtown.

"Could be heading for the hospital," Sloan called.

Lucas stuck a borrowed police light in the window of the Dodge and raced for the university campus. Bancroft, who'd crawled back into the front seat, pulled a safety belt over his lap and snapped it. "You drive as bad as a cameraman," she said, buckling herself in.

"Don't have a lot of time," Lucas said. "You know where to take the car?"

"Yes." She sounded taut and he grinned. "You'll be all paid off after this."

"I'll be paid off and a half," she said. "If the station knew I was doing this…"

"What?"

"Now that I think about it, I don't know what they'd do. If I had video, they'd probably be lined up outside the station with their lips puckered…"

Lucas hopped out of the car on Washington Avenue, at the base of a footbridge. If Bekker followed his usual route to work, he'd drive beneath the footbridge; but from the roadway, there was no quick way up to it. If he stopped his car and climbed up as quickly as he could, Lucas would still have time to duck into a chemistry building at the end of the footbridge.

"Where is he?" Lucas asked on the handset. He hurried along the sidewalk toward the entry to the footbridge.

"He's coming up to the exit, so you got time," Sloan said. "There he goes, he's off."

Lucas climbed the footbridge, looked west across the Mississippi.

"Davenport…" He heard Bancroft, on the other side, and turned to look over the rail. She was standing on a wall by the student union, the Nikon to her face. He waved her off and went back to the other side of the footbridge.

"On Washington," Sloan said on the handset. A passing student, a slender, long-haired kid in an ankle-length coat with an ankh on a chain around his neck, looked at him curiously and said, "Can't be Cyrano, with that nose."

"Fuck off, kid," Lucas said. He shaded his eyes as he looked down Washington Avenue toward the river.

"On the bridge," Sloan called on the handset.

"Okay," said Lucas, on his own set.

"Cop?" asked the kid.

"Go away," Lucas said. "You could fuck up something important and I'd have to throw your ass in jail."

"That's a good argument," the kid said, walking hastily away. • • • Bekker's car was on the bridge, pacing the traffic. Lucas squatted on the far side of the footbridge, out of sight, until Bekker was less than a hundred feet away. He should get just a flash… Now.

Lucas stood up and peered over the bridge. Bekker saw him, swerved. Lucas was gone, hurrying toward the chemistry building.

"He saw you, he's on the side, he's on the side," Sloan called.

"Is he coming?"

"Naw, he's still in his car…"

Bekker sat at the side of the road, his head on the steering wheel. He was afraid to sleep, waiting to move. And now here was Druze, coming back…

He made a U-turn and drove back across the Mississippi, left his car in a dormitory parking lot and walked to the library. A loose net stayed with him, watching. Inside, Bekker scanned an index for the StarTribune, looked up the appropriate issue and wrote down the details about the death of a tramp.

From a phone booth, he called the medical examiner.

"I'm trying to locate my father, who… had some mental problems," he said. "We weren't close, I was adopted by another family, but I've heard now from an old friend of his that he died and was buried by Hennepin County last year… I was wondering if you could tell me which funeral homes you use, so I could find out where he's buried."

The county used four funeral homes, selected on an annual bid basis. Walker amp; Son, Halliburton's, Martin's and Hall Bros. He called them in order. Martin's took his last quarter.

"Martin's…" The voice low and already consoling.

"I'm calling about the funeral for a Carlo Druze…"

"That's Friday."