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Time to pluck the rat out of the cage. “Well?” she said to Jimmy.

“Can I use the forty-five?”

Shaun removed it from her paddle holster and handed it to her boy. He hefted it. Small kid, big gun.

“Who’s it gonna be?” asked Shaun.

Jimmy didn’t reply.

He just pulled the trigger.

Chapter Twenty-One

GORDON COULDN’T REACH Shaun. But he was sure she was on her way back with Max in her custody.

Everything would be all right.

So they’d gone off the rails a little. Providing the kidnappers didn’t broadcast it to the world—and so far they had not—he could continue on with the original plan. Although it might yet put a crimp in their schedule. Max had been gone for almost three days. Who knew who he’d talked to or what he’d done during that time?

The brainwashing techniques Gordon had used were effective, but it was not an exact science. Max had been out of Gordon’s influence for a while now, interacting with other people, trying to come to grips with the breaks in his memory. Hallucinating, probably.

Gordon assumed Max would hallucinate a great deal, his mind coming back to one or two images, as often happened with sensory deprivation therapy taken to its extreme. It was fine if Max saw flying toasters or hot dogs in suits, but the important image, the one Gordon had planted so carefully during hypnosis, had to dominate: the image of a woman and a girl standing by a car broken down by the side of the road. That would be the trigger, in combination with the audible command, “Freeze!”

If Gordon was completely honest with himself—and he always was—using the mother and the girl was gilding the lily. He didn’t really need to use them. The word “Freeze” should be enough. Jerry thought it was better just to stick with the command.

Keep it simple, Gordon. That way there’s no room for ambiguity.

Jerry should talk. He was rewriting the script every time Gordon turned around. Jerry’s constant tinkering with the story—that was the real problem. The simpler the scenario was, the better. At least the mother and little girl would reinforce the message: just one more cue to drive the point home.

Still, Gordon was worried, which wasn’t like him. Usually he let everything roll off his back. He was basically a centered person.

He took a walk out by the pool. The women were beautiful. Lots of starlets—did they even use that term now?—who had already lived twenty years in just two. They’d been big names for a time but now were drifting downward, which sent them into even deeper spirals. Some of them he’d pleasured. It had made some of them whole again.

Although one or two had threatened to call the cops.

Misunderstandings, easily smoothed over.

Fortunately, Gordon didn’t have a license to lose. He was a self-made man, a true guru. He did not need a wall full of degrees and plaques to demonstrate his abilities—although he had them anyway. They might not be from the best schools, they might not be from real schools, but they were from the best schools money could buy.

People were drawn to him. He was—OK, he wouldn’t say godlike, exactly—but he was a father figure. Someone pop singers and film stars and other celebrities and socialites and rudderless rich kids and middle-aged druggies could come to, could trust. That was his essence: his bigger-than-life personality, his strength, his power. His generosity.

So when Jerry asked for help, Gordon was more than willing to help him.

That’s what brothers did.

Chapter Twenty-Two

TESS WAS JUST finishing her shift, which included cleaning up Pat Kerney’s typos on his reports. The first week she’d come on board he’d gotten his bid in early for them to read each other’s reports, which really meant she read his. He called them “typos,” but Tess thought they were something else. Lately, his police reports were riddled with more typos of a specific type: “thank” instead of “think,” “witch” instead of “which.” In this report he’d quoted the woman as saying, the goat “wooden stop struggling.”

It seemed to be getting worse.

So here she was, cleaning up his syntax while he was in the restroom. He spent a lot of time in there—his prostate.

Bonny ducked his head into the work area Tess and Pat shared. “I’d like to talk to you for a minute.”

She followed him into his office.

“Close the door.”

Bonny hitched his duty belt up a bit on his waist and set one haunch on the edge of his desk. “Everything OK?”

“Fine,” Tess said. Thinking about Pat wanting to interview “the victim’s sun.”

Bonny looked at her from under his grizzled eyebrows, his eyes searching. “Something wrong?”

“Just the same old.” Tess had never been a snitch.

“This sleepy county’s going to get a lot worse soon, what with the prison goin’ belly-up and being bought by outside interests. Things are changing around here, and there’s going to be a lot more crime to go along with the building boom.”

“Building boom? What building boom?”

“It’s coming, don’t you never mind. They’re adding one thousand beds to that stinkhole across town, and the governor’s making noises about all the drug cartels in this county.”

“Drug cartels?”

“Yeah, I know—there aren’t any. But we’re talking federal money. It’s all exaggeration to generate more revenue for the governor, but now all the counties are getting caught up in it. If I want to survive, I’ll have to play the game. I’m too old to start a new career now, and people want me to protect ’em from things that ain’t never gonna happen, at least not for many years. Which is all a roundabout way of saying that I need to make some changes around here. There are folks who aren’t crazy about my detective.”

Tess saw Pat’s report in her mind’s eye, the one he pecked out with two fingers, typing “stinkbug” instead of “stun gun.”

“You come from a big city, and people—some people—are clamoring for, uh, more sophistication. Pat’s retiring next year, but the election’s next year too, and that’ll be too late for me. So. Raise your right hand.”

Tess raised her right hand.

“You’re detective.” He added, “I can go through the whole rigmarole, but I don’t have time for that nonsense. I’m sheriff and as sheriff I can make you detective, so, tag, you’re it.”

“What about Pat?”

“He gets to be detective too. I figure that’s what Solomon would do. But because he’s still detective, you won’t get a raise in pay. The good news is, you can wear regular clothes. Darrell at Watson Chevy unloaded a plain-wrap on me—you can drive that now. It’s got low miles, believe it or not, so it’s a step up. Only thing it doesn’t have right now is a radio, and I figure we can get that put in this weekend.”

Tess opened her mouth to protest.

But Bonny closed it for her with his next words: “I know about Pat’s dyslexia, or whatever it is, and I know it’s getting worse. It’s nice of you to cover up for him but it isn’t a help. Pat’s making noises about going to live with his daughter and I’m not going to discourage that. What do you say?”

“He’s not going to like it.”

“He doesn’t have a choice. I’ve made my decision. I hire you on to ‘learn the ropes’ with him, or I start looking for someone else, and Pat will be out sooner rather than later.”

There was nothing else Tess could say. She had always seen herself as a detective, had been one for four years before she had to leave Albuquerque. And she was good. A part of her wanted to show just how good.