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“And this is the closest road,” Browers said, tapping a faint dotted line.

“That two-track runs along the edge, then cuts down the mesa,” Kenyon explained. “It joins up with Forest Road Thirty-three at the base of the mesa, and Thirty-three winds farther on down, eventually joining up with County Road Fourteen. And by the way, we’ve had search teams sweep right along this mesa in that general direction, all the way to that two-track, and all the way to Thirty-three. So I don’t know.”

“Shit,” Andy Browers said, and stood with his hands on his hips, as if he could discipline an answer out of the pinons.

I stepped around the map and knelt by Tiffany Cole. Her eyes were closed and her face was still muffled in the jacket. I was afraid for a moment that she’d gone to sleep. “Mrs. Cole, can you answer a couple questions?”

She nodded and lifted her face out of the polyester. “That’s your son’s jacket?”

“Yes.” Her voice was small and distant. Her lip quivered, but she wouldn’t look directly at the jacket she held in her hands. Instead, her eyes-and they would have been pretty had they not been shot through with so much red-were focused somewhere off on the horizon.

I put a hand on the tiny garment, and Mrs. Cole jerked as if she feared I was going to take it away. Instead, I just gave it a pat, leaving my hand on top of hers. “Was the jacket torn? The last time you saw your son, did his jacket have these tears in it?”

Then she focused, her eyes following the four parallel rents down the back of her son’s coat. It was as if I’d pulled the plug on whatever small energy source she had left. She crumpled backward before I could catch her, her head hitting the base of one of the little oaks with a thump.

Andy Browers was at her side in an instant, as were Deputy Pasquale and Dale Kenyon. I backed off to give them room. Movement to my right attracted my attention, and I glanced up, to see Estelle Reyes-Guzman walking back through the trees, toward the spot where we’d left the truck, Camille, and little Francis.

Mrs. Cole needed a hot bath, a massive sedative, and about two days in a soft, warm bed. And none of that would make it any easier. We still didn’t have a clue about the boy’s whereabouts. And now, every time she drifted back to the real world, Tiffany Cole would think of that jacket and wonder what the hell had taken a swipe at her son-and if whatever it was had ever come back to finish the job.

I didn’t blame Estelle a bit for wanting to go hug Francisco.

Chapter 12

The search teams spent the rest of the day on the mesa, systematically enlarging the search area, and now concentrating to the northwest of the campsite. The mood was grim when we left, and I could imagine every pair of eyes nervously flicking to any small shadow or trace of color, fearful that they’d find another clothing remnant, this time with a chunk of little Cody Cole still inside.

I caught up with Estelle as we approached the Blazer. I was carrying the blue jacket, holding it gingerly by the inside collar. “I’ve got a large evidence bag in the back,” I said. “You’re going to want to take this with you, I assume.”

She nodded, and I could see that Estelle wasn’t buying the rumor of a wild animal, which was the current mesa favorite. I hadn’t mentioned her misgivings to anyone, and neither had she. But I could tell that was on her mind. Her black eyebrows damn near touched over the bridge of her nose, so fierce was her concentration. She brightened a bit when she saw her son.

“I’m sorry we took so long,” she said to Camille, but this time it was Estelle and I who were interrupting the action. My daughter and little Francis were busy. Camille had folded down the backseat, and they were in the midst of a board game-using rules that had never occurred to the manufacturer.

Camille looked up and grinned, her eyes shifting to me as I bagged the jacket and scrawled my initials on the tag. The grin faded.

“Just that?” she asked.

I nodded. “So far. No blood, no signs of injury. No nothing.”

“God,” Camille whispered.

“What are you doing?” I said, and she looked down at the fistful of red plastic hotels in her right hand.

“These are all ore trucks,” she said, as if I’d know just what she was talking about.

“Where did that come from?” I asked. I knew more or less the contents of my vehicle, and a board game wasn’t on the list. Camille motioned toward Estelle’s voluminous backpack.

“His aunt in Veracruz sent him that,” Estelle said. “He just got it yesterday.” I cocked my head, leaned closer, and got the thing within range of my bifocals. Sure enough, it was the Spanish version. And just as deeply as he’d been occupied by the game, Francis just as quickly came unglued. He stood quickly, upending the board and scattering pieces.

“Oops,” he said, and then helped as much as any three-year-old could as Camille and Estelle gathered houses, hotels, and metal players’ pieces from the cracks in the Blazer’s anatomy.

“The reporter was nosing around,” Camille said quietly as Estelle finally slid the lid onto the box.

Estelle nodded. “I saw her walk over this way.”

“She apparently knows Francis?” She tucked an arm around the kid and held him in a hammerlock.

Estelle shot a quick glance at me, and her eyebrows furrowed again. “She did a feature story on me before the election last year, and of course”-she shrugged-“she covered the election itself. She talked us into a family picture for that first story.”

“She took my picture,” Francis said.

“That’s right,” Estelle said, “she did, didn’t she? You and Papa and me. You didn’t have a baby brother yet.” It was a decent photo, too. I had a copy in my scrapbook. Estelle may have had a fetchingly photogenic family, but that hadn’t been enough for an election win. Progressive had never been an adjective I would have applied to Posadas County, and the electorate had declined the opportunity to elect New Mexico’s first female Mexican sheriff.

“No,” Camille said. “What I think he means is that she took a picture or two of him just a few minutes ago.”

“Why would she do that?” I asked. “How could she take a picture through the glass, anyway?”

Camille grimaced. “Bad timing, Dad. We were outside.” She gestured at two small junipers and a pinon that snuggled together. “Potty time. I promised I’d wait right here by the truck while he went over there.”

“All of fifteen feet,” I said.

“Yep,” Camille said. “We were just about to climb back in so I could beat him in round two when Miss Photog showed up. She snapped a picture of Francis climbing into the truck, with me standing by the door, looking stupid.”

“Ah, well,” I said.

“And maybe another one after that.” Camille released Francis so his mother could help him clamber his way into the seat belt shoulder harness that secured him in the small seat, looking like a miniature jet pilot ready for ejection.

“And she asked if you’d call her later,” Camille added.

Estelle nodded and turned to look at me. “How are you holding up, sir?”

“I’m fine,” I said, and leaned an arm on the Blazer’s door. “I’ve been watching you think, so you’re the one doing all the work. What’s next?”

I could have predicted the result of that question. Estelle Reyes-Guzman played her cards close, even with me.

“Sir,” she said, pulling the last of her son’s belt tight, “We’re going to have to talk with the Coles. In private, away from the rest of the audience.”

“All right,” I said.

“I’d like you to be there. And Sheriff Holman.”

That surprised me, and Estelle grinned when she saw my expression. “He actually has an astute streak, sir.”

“However narrow,” I said. “Just say when.”

She glanced at her watch. “About eight this evening would be just about right. It’ll be dark by then; they’ll be exhausted and willing to come off the mesa for a while.”