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Daly nodded. “You still have the same cell number?”

“You think maybe you could keep me updated on your progress?”

“Of course,” Daly said as he looked at Frank. “We both know there’s far more to this than a car accident and what you’re telling me.”

Frank inhaled, his face speaking the truth that his words couldn’t say.

“Good luck, then,” Daly said in all sincerity.

Daly turned to see his team of divers climbing out of the water. He slowly counted heads twice before looking up at a man in a hard hat who stood by the crane. Daly gave him a thumbs-up, and within seconds the low rumble of its engine grew. The winch engaged and slowly began to spool up. All eyes were glued to the heavy wire, watching in anticipation, fearful of what they would see but unable to avert their eyes. And then the water started to churn, and in near slow motion, the trunk section of the white Tahoe emerged from the water, rising like a rebirth. As more of the vehicle emerged, the extreme damage began to sink in. The right side of the SUV was crushed in as if someone had taken a giant sledge hammer to the door panels. The driver’s side was demolished. The car continued to rise out of the water until the last bit of its front end was revealed and it began its fifty-foot climb into the sky. Frank could almost hear the gasps as the front accordioned section was seen; the windshield was missing, as was the driver’s-side door. Water cascaded out of the doors, out of the crumbled front end, like a waterfall, as the car ascended toward the bridge.

As Frank headed back up the embankment, he knew they would never find a body; he knew they would be working through the day and well into the night before they concluded what he already knew. Jack’s and Mia’s bodies weren’t in the water.

• • •

Jack sat in the passenger seat of Frank’s Jeep. With the car sitting far back from the activity and with Frank’s license plate still possessing the police tag IDs, no one paid the vehicle any mind. Jack had tucked his black hair under a dark blue Yankees cap. He chose to avoid sunglasses, the preferred “disguise” for those who wanted to remain anonymous, but as he knew, the effect was the antithesis; it called attention to the individual, made him appear either suspicious or famous or, at the very least, someone who deserved a second glance.

Jack’s confusion was even greater since he’d left his parents’ home. He wasn’t sure what disturbed him more, seeing his tearful mother or his father sitting watch over his daughters. He had remained silent for fifteen minutes after rushing from the house. Jack almost mentioned seeing his father, as Frank knew their relationship, the harsh words his father always threw his way, the distance between them. But he thought better of it. He’d deal with his father later.

Despite the fact that his kids were at his parents’ house, despite the fact that his father was watching over them, he had Frank call his friend Ben. The ex-military man who didn’t suffer fools had taken up position at the beginning of the single access road that led to his parents’ house. His car parked on the side, he would remain there until Frank gave him the all clear, ensuring that no one got near Jack’s girls.

A surreal feeling filled Jack as he watched the distant crowd standing in collective grief for his and Mia’s purported deaths. He had never imagined his own wake or funeral, who would attend, what people would say with his passing. He was never one of those who fantasized about being eulogized, having his friends or some priest stand at the pulpit extolling his virtues, his accomplishments and example in life. He always wondered why people never expressed their true feelings for one another while they were alive, instead of waiting to say the kindest things when they were no longer able to hear it, when they had left this earth for their final reward.

Truth be told, Jack’s faith had wavered; he no longer clung to the notion of an afterlife. His life and career, all of the death and cruelty he had seen, made him question the existence of God. On the other hand, while she was not outwardly spiritual, Mia’s unspoken convictions had been strong since she was a child. She knew of Jack’s diminished beliefs, which is why she bought him the crucifix that had hung around his neck for the last twelve hours in the hopes that it would bring him protection, instill him with faith, ensure God’s beneficence upon him. As he thumbed the talisman around his neck, he refused to attribute to it the fact that he had survived being shot and nearly drowned, but if it had somehow played a role, then he hoped the blue necklace he had given her was equally, if not more, imbued with spiritual protection.

In this moment, Jack swore he would believe in anything if it would save Mia. He’d believe in the power of the cross, he’d believe in God, in the afterlife, in Elvis… whatever would ensure her survival.

The thrumping engine of the crane pulled Jack’s attention back to the recovery effort. He watched his white Tahoe rise over the bridge guardrail, the crane slowly swinging about, the SUV dangling, swaying back and forth as the construction vehicle guided the wrecked truck over the flatbed that lay in wait. He could hear the metal twisting, screaming in protest, as it was lowered onto the tow truck. The crumpled front end was a reminder of how lucky he truly was. He didn’t just survive the bullet wound, he survived a vertical car crash, he survived drowning, being trapped within an SUV coffin. While he had recaptured most of the memories of the night before, he had no recollection of what had happened after hitting the surface of the water. His mind was truly blank.

He watched as the crowd followed the Tahoe’s journey, watched as it was secured to the truck. There were no murmurs, no gasps, the only sound being the grinding of the crane’s gears and the gentle sobs of the people who had individually and collectively concluded that Jack and Mia Keeler were dead.

And as he continued to watch, he could see their individual faces. Joe Gasparri, the newest member of the DA’s office; Margo Libreros, his tough-as-nails lead prosecutor; Stanley Boil, the rumpled veteran who refused to retire. There were cops, local officials, and people in mourning he didn’t even know.

But the sight that struck him the hardest, the one person he felt ashamed for deceiving, stood there alone, off to the side, silently weeping, tears running down her face. She made no effort to wipe them away, allowing them to pour down as if they would somehow wash away her agony.

Joy had been his assistant for twelve years and had come upstairs with him to his current position as DA. She was everything that made him successful; she kept him timely, organized; she knew his faults and weaknesses and always countered them, never allowing the outside world to know of her boss’s shortcomings. She was like the sister who always kept him in line, kept his ego in check if it ever got out of control after winning some big case or being featured in the newspaper.

And as he looked at her, at her forever-young face, at the black purse he had given her for her birthday slung over her shoulder, his head began to pound, his heart suddenly racing as his emotions built up inside him. Last night’s rage and anger and fury filled him once again.

His mind began to open. He felt the memories coalesce. Joy’s pain, her suffering and tears, and, in an odd way, the purse on her shoulder sparked it all. It was as if his brain was suddenly on overload. Thoughts, feelings, images, and memories from two days earlier poured forth as if it had been minutes ago, as if it was always there, in the forefront of his mind.

Jack remembered.

CHAPTER 13

WEDNESDAY, TWO DAYS AGO

It was Wednesday, 11:00 in the morning. Jack was staring at Joy, her eyes blue and clear, unmarred by tears and sorrow. Her wry smile flashed the usual I-told-you-so as she handed him a file.

“I told you to take the Richmond case file with you last night.”