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Was that why he picked her, because she looks like his daughter? What’s he intend to do to her, what’s he already done?

The room out there, this closet, the locks on the doors… all just to hold this one kid? Or had there been others? How many others?

Now that her eyes had adjusted, she could make out faint strips of light at the bottom of the door, around the edges. She tried to get her fingers into the cracks, couldn’t do it; the door was tight in the jamb. Wouldn’t’ve done her any good anyway. No knob on this side, probably bolted on the outside. She felt all the way around the walls, squatted and felt the floorboards. Solid wood. No lie when he’d said there was no way out of here.

The little girl was still crying in rackety sobs. Tamara could hear, almost feel her terror. There’d never been much of a maternal streak in her, but she felt one now-a mothering urge to protect and comfort so strong it surprised her. What’d the child say her name was? Laura? No, Lauren.

She put her mouth close to one of the cracks. “Lauren, you hear me? Come on over here, honey.”

Had to say it again twice before the crying stopped. Faint squeak of bed springs, hesitant footsteps. Then, low and teary, “I don’t like it here, I want to go home.”

“I know you do. So do I, Lauren.”

“You know my name.”

“Sure I do. Mine’s Tamara.”

“That man calls me Angie. Why’s he do that?”

“He had a little girl named Angie once. Maybe you look like her.”

“Where is she now?”

“I don’t know. Maybe her mama took her away somewhere, a long way away where her daddy can’t find her.”

“Why?”

“I don’t know.” But I can sure guess.

Sniffling sounds. Then, “Why’d he put you in the closet? It’s dark in there.”

“He’s a bad man, that’s why.”

“He keeps saying he’s my daddy. He’s not my daddy.”

“He’s not anybody’s daddy anymore.”

“He said I could go home if I didn’t throw up or wet the bed again.”

“Where do you live?”

“I’m scared. Why can’t I go home?”

“Where’s home? Where do you live?”

“Vallejo.”

“Where in Vallejo?”

“On Patterson Street. Our house is number one-sixty-three.”

Went all the way up there to snatch the kid. Why?

“You know him, honey, the man who brought you here?”

“No. I was playing in the park. Mama was there but she went to the bathroom and then he was there.”

“Never saw him before he took you away?”

“Uh-uh. He grabbed me and wrapped me up in a blanket and put me in a car. He said I had to be quiet or else.”

“Did he hurt you?”

“I threw up in the car. All over the blanket.”

“Did he hurt you, Lauren?”

“No.”

“Take your clothes off? Touch you where he shouldn’t?”

“Uh-uh.”

Something, anyway.

“What’d he say after he brought you here?”

“He said if I was a good girl I could go home. He gave me a doll to play with, but I don’t like it, it’s a white doll. I wish I had Alana Michelle.”

“Who’s Alana Michelle?”

“My doll. She’s African-American. I’m just half African-American ‘cause my daddy’s white. Mama helped me braid her hair just like mine. I don’t think you can braid the white doll’s hair.”

“What else did the man say to you?”

“He said he loved me.”

The words put ice on Tamara’s spine.

“How can he love me?” Lauren said. “He doesn’t know me and I don’t know him. He’s not my daddy. I don’t want to go with him to the trailer.”

“What trailer, honey?”

“I don’t know. He said we were going to a trailer in the woods and there’d be a big surprise for me and we’d have lots of fun. But I don’t want to go.”

“What woods? Where?”

“I don’t know. There’s deer and elk around. What’s a elk?”

“A big animal like a deer. Did he say what the surprise was? What kind of fun?”

“No. Can you have fun with a elk?”

“Not unless you’re another elk. Lauren-”

“I have to go to the bathroom,” she said.

She went away. Tamara started to straighten up, changed her mind, and sat on the floor with her back against the wall and her knees pulled up. Trailer in the woods, deer and elk around. That could be anywhere. Someplace isolated, for sure, where he could be alone with Lauren and show her his big surprise and they’d have “fun.” Warped son of a bitch.

But he’d had her more than twenty-four hours and he hadn’t done anything to her yet. Maybe he wasn’t a pedophile, maybe he’d snatched the kid for some other whacko reason. Maybe he really believed she was his daughter and he had no intention of hurting her. Yeah, and pigs can fly and world peace is coming next Tuesday. Gearing up to it, that was all. Or prolonging it, savoring what he planned to do.

What was she gonna do? What could she do? Try to reason with him, that was one thing. If he wasn’t so far gone he wouldn’t listen to reason. She could be pretty persuasive. Silver Tongue Tamara. Talk at him, lay on the jive, convince him to let the kid go, let both of them go, and then turn himself in so he can get some help More flying pigs.

Have to try, though. Must be some good in him, a side she could appeal to. Use soft rap on him, don’t show fear, and make real sure not to say or do anything to push his buttons.

The toilet flushed. Another running water sound-Lauren washing her hands. Kid was well behaved and had been raised right. Pretty soon the floorboards creaked as she came back to the closet.

“Lady? Tamara?”

She leaned forward. “Yeah, honey?”

“When he comes back, that man, will you tell him to take me home?”

“Sure I will.”

“Tell him I miss my mama and daddy. My real daddy.”

“I’ll tell him.”

“Thank you.” Then, “Is he gonna hurt you?”

“Not if I can help it.”

“Don’t let him hurt me either, okay?”

Between her teeth: “Okay. You go on back to bed now, keep warm. And try not to cry anymore.”

“My mama says big girls don’t cry.”

“Your mama’s right,” she lied.

She sat in the new silence, shallow-breathing through her mouth. Working out what she’d say to Lemoyne when she saw him again-a way to occupy her mind so she wouldn’t be thinking and imagining too much. She got it pretty much straight, but after a while it didn’t matter much. So hot and airless in there it was like her brain was drying up, all the cells melting and oozing out with her sweat.

The little girl was quiet. Asleep now, maybe. Poor kid must be worn out. Being scared had a way of doing that to you, making you ache all over, so damn tired you could hardly keep your eyes open. Fear and quiet and not enough air and too much heat…

All of a sudden she was out of her doze, groggy for a few seconds and then with her senses sharply alert. Noises out there-key sounds, lock rattling. He was back.

She tried to stand up too fast. A cramp in her right calf kept her down until she twisted around and got her foot jammed up straight against the wall. The pain eased and she was able to lift up and catch hold of the clothes rod, haul herself upright. Sweat streamed on her skin; every part of her felt soggy, like she’d taken a sauna in her clothes.

He was in the room now. Lauren was awake, too, said something in a voice too low for Tamara to catch. He yelled at the child to shut up, go back to sleep, and the force of the words started her crying again.

Then he was at the closet door, rattling on the lock out there. Breathing hard, almost snorting like a bull in heat. He had trouble getting the lock open, swore at it, finally yanked it loose. Tamara pressed back against the wall as he tore the door open.