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“He’s in an isolation tank. He cannot be disturbed.”

“Why did you ask me if he was dead?”

Silence.

“Sir, did you think he was dead?”

“No, no. Not at all. For just a moment there I thought maybe someone might have gotten into the chamber with intent to do him harm, maybe some sicko—you know how that could happen, like that freak who shot John Lennon…but Max is checked on the hour. If there were anything, er, untoward, I’d know about it.”

Tess had had enough of his slippery answers. Time to bring the hammer down. “Are you aware that obstructing a criminal investigation is a crime?”

She could almost hear him puff up. “I am a doctor, Ms.…I’m sorry, I forget your name. Removing Mr. Conroy from the sensory deprivation tank at this juncture could result in grievous psychological harm, and I will not do it!”

“Mr. White Eagle—”

Doctor White Eagle,” he said primly.

“Doctor White Eagle.” Tess spoke quietly and concisely. “I’d like to read my notes from the beginning of our conversation. In reply to my statement that a serious crime had been perpetrated here in Bajada County, you stated as follows: ‘Is he dead?’ You asked me this not once, but twice.”

Silence on the line.

“Do you have knowledge of what transpired—”

The phone disconnected, and all she got was a dial tone.

Chapter Twenty-Seven

ON THE JET, Jerry tried to relax. He relaxed the old-fashioned way: by drinking. No designer drugs for him. Macallan scotch did just fine. He planned to drink all the way to Arizona.

Talia was moping in the jet’s bedroom, which was good, because he didn’t have to listen to her whine. He could see why Max dumped her the first time. No doubt, Max was happy that Jerry and Talia were sleeping together. If this was a game of hot potato, Jerry was the loser.

He’d tried to reach Gordon, but Gordon wasn’t answering. It could be Gordon was putting out fires, but it could also be he was in his suite taking mescaline. Peyote was a fallback position he’d used for years.

We all have our ways of coping, Gordon was fond of saying.

Gordon White Eagle was Jerry’s older brother by four years. A Jew, of course, but in the seventies he’d morphed from metal band lead singer to counselor at a hippie retreat in Mendocino, and, after a couple of correspondence courses and a quickie trip to Tortuga for a diploma in “Psychology,” he graduated to guru. For some reason, Gordon got the looks in the family. Jerry liked to think that he’d gotten the smarts. Gordon was big. Gordon was athletic. Gordon got the girls in high school. All his life Jerry had to follow in his wake.

But Jerry was richer.

Still, it was tough in high school.

They didn’t look like brothers at all.

When Gordon first started the Desert Oasis Healing Center fifteen years ago, he’d had a mane that would put Fabio to shame. His hair was slightly graying at the temples, which only made him look wise. The hair went with the tan deer hide jacket embossed with Native American symbols. But time had taken its toll and like Jerry, genes were genes, and by forty, Gordon was prematurely balding. For a while, he held onto the long locks, adopting a ponytail to go with his Guayabera shirts and wire-rimmed glasses. This made him look wise and professorial. The nineties came and went, and good ol’ Gord realized he needed to evolve again. He had grown more famous, more powerful, and he chose to show that power. Now he shaved his head twice a day, his gleaming tanned dome a wonder to behold. He wore a diamond earring in one ear, and kept the deer hide jacket.

But Jerry was richer.

TESS CALLED BACK and asked to speak to Mr. White Eagle. The administrative assistant told her that Dr. White Eagle was unavailable.

First, White Eagle had stonewalled her, and now he was unavailable.

His story about Max and the sensory deprivation tank made no sense. In Tess’s interactions with powerful people—and that included the second-in-command of a New Mexico drug cartel and a corrupt mayor—this was not at all unusual. She’d seen it many times. The tactic was almost universal among high-octane public figures—men, mostly—who felt they could get away with it precisely because they were wealthy and powerful. The object was simple: stick to the lie, no matter how ridiculous it sounded. Tess never ceased to be amazed by the sheer audacity of it. These guys seriously thought if they just stuck to their stories, they could get away with anything. And many times, they did. It didn’t surprise her that Gordon White Eagle had tried it on her; she would have been surprised if he hadn’t.

One thing was clear: the guru of the Desert Oasis Healing Center didn’t know what had happened to Max Conroy, but he assumed Max was dead.

Why would he think that?

She called Pat. “I know we won’t release the names of the victims until next of kin are notified, but I’d like to make sure no information leaks out in the next few hours. OK?”

“You think I’m a rookie?”

“No.”

“Then don’t ask me crap like that. We’re not releasing the names until the last dog dies. And one of those dogs is not answering his phone.”

“Good. I need to go to Sedona.”

“Sedona? Now?”

“It’s a lead.”

He gave her the silent treatment. She was pissing off a lot of people today. “It’s a lead, Pat.”

“Bonny know this?” Pat growled.

“No, I’m going to call him now.”

“And I get to do the dirty work.”

“Are the bodies gone?”

“On their way to Phoenix as we speak. But I’m going to be here a long time. I thought you would be joining me—it’s a real joyride, Detective.”

Pat had always been good at making her feel guilty. “I’ll get back to you when I know what’s up,” she said.

She knocked on Bonny’s open door. He looked up. “Something up, Detective?”

She told him about her conversation with Gordon White Eagle.

“He sounds slippery. But is that any reason to suspect him of anything?”

“I don’t know, sir. I think it’s important, though.”

Bonny sighed. “Pat’s gonna give me fits over this. Still, if it’s a lead, you’d better follow it.”

WHEN BAJADA COUNTY sheriff’s deputy Luke Jump cleared his throat, Pat Kerney looked up. He was still down in the bomb shelter, trying unsuccessfully to negotiate his way around all the blood. His blue booties were turning purple.

“Yeah? What?” Pat asked.

“We went through the guesthouse.”

“And?” Luke Jump talked slower than anyone he’d ever met. “Anything interesting?”

“Well, uh, as a matter of fact, I think there’s something you should see.”

“I’m in the middle of something, not so’s you’d notice.”

“It, uh, might be important.”

Pat climbed up out of the slaughter pen, as he was beginning to think of the bomb shelter, and followed Jump out past the pool to a smaller version of the main house. They went through the postage-stamp living room and into the hallway. The guesthouse had old blue-gray carpet of a tromped-down pile that reminded him of a nest of caterpillars. The air was on and it was cold.

Luke, gloved in latex, gently pushed on the door at the end of the hallway.

It was a small room. The curtains were pulled partway across the floor-to-ceiling glass window overlooking the pool. A lozenge of sunlight fell on the dingy carpet.

Pat noted the laptop on a cheap veneer desk—some kind of picture on it. The image jittered slightly.

But the object that dominated the room was a 60-inch, flat-screen, high-def LED TV, backlit by the window and the bright sunlight.