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Lewis entered. The station was clean, almost antiseptic, he thought. He realized he had little reason or opportunity in his life to be in police stations. It wasn’t what he expected. A woman at a desk with striking green eyes asked Lewis if he needed help.

“Yes, I’d like to file a missing person report.” He hoped he was saying it right. “Actually, I think it’s a kidnapping. Do I talk to the same person?” He felt himself breaking up. At least he didn’t like the way he sounded.

The woman’s too-green eyes showed sympathy. “Have a seat here, Mr.?”

“Mason.” He sat beside her desk in the seat she had indicated.

She picked up the phone and asked for a sergeant. She hung up. “I’ll get a call back in a second,” she said.

Lewis nodded.

“Can I get you anything? Coffee? There’re doughnuts over on that table.” She pointed.

“Thank you.” Lewis was hungry. “I think I will have a doughnut.” He got up and went to the table. He looked over the selection, then up and out the large window.

Parked in the lot was a brown van. Lewis rationalized that there were many brown vans around. This one was parked with the patrol cars. He picked up a glazed doughnut and took a bite. He remembered the van which had driven past him on the street in front of the restaurant that day. He remembered that he could not make out the tag because of the dirt. He tossed what he was eating into the can by the table and went back to the green-eyed woman.

“Where is the men’s room?” he asked.

She pointed.

He didn’t go to the restroom. He left the building and made a wide circle in the parking lot to get a view of the rear plate of the van. It wasn’t a New Mexico tag, he knew that, but he could not make it out. Because of the dirt. He found himself wanting to run, but he walked back to Ignacio’s truck and drove away.

Lewis stopped at a restaurant in Española. The tables were in booths that wore facades of old west town places; the livery, the saloon, the barber shop. The hostess sat him in the undertaker’s.

He ordered a hamburger, a lame attempt at convincing himself he was somewhere else. The sandwich came with green chiles on it. He was especially glad now that he had exchanged his truck for Ignacio’s. He never imagined he could be so afraid. Once, while at a conference in Chicago, a man had pointed a gun at him and demanded his money. He was scared then, but it was a simple matter of handing over the cash. There were too many unknowns here. Maybe if he had some idea of why Martin had been killed in the first place, he could have found more purchase.

He thought of Maggie. Was she really all right? Was she alive? Hurt? Blindfolded? Did Peabody think they knew more than they did? He could hear Maggie’s smart ass remarks flying. Perhaps that would amuse them enough that they wouldn’t just hurt to relieve the boredom. He’d had three bites of the burger, but could eat no more.

He would leave here and go to see Manny. He knew Manny had to be getting tired of this stuff. And he’d have to do something once he learned that Cyril Peabody had admitted to Lewis that he had abducted Maggie.

The waitress came and topped his iced tea and he asked for the check.

Unlike the state police headquarters, the county sheriff’s office had no cars, patrol or otherwise, parked in its lot. Lewis walked in to find Flora, the heavy dispatcher and secretary alone at her desk, eating a packaged snack-cake.

She wiped her mouth daintily with a handkerchief. “May I help you?” she asked.

“Is the sheriff in?”

“He’s on patrol.” She looked at the clock. “He should be back at three, but I can call him.”

Lewis decided he could wait the forty-five minutes. There was no sense in getting started on the wrong foot by rushing the man back. Lewis looked at back issues of Popular Mechanics and Motor Trend. Flora burped and excused herself. Lewis smiled at her.

Flora got up and left the room. Lewis assumed she was off to the restroom. He looked at the clock. He had twenty minutes. He stood and walked to the door of Manny’s office. He went inside and pushed the door to gently. He stood there and searched for his breath and thoughts. He went to the sheriff’s desk and glanced at the papers atop it. He looked at everything. There was an unsigned complaint of a woman accusing her husband of assault and an accident report saying that the teenage driver had been drunk.

He pulled back the blinds and looked at the lot. Back at the desk, he found a television schedule open and a program circled: Invisible Weapons. The guide said it was a documentary about the chemical warfare agents of World War I. He found a letter from the State Association of Law Enforcement Officials reminding Manny of an upcoming meeting in Las Cruces. There was nothing on the desk that helped him. He went to the file cabinets. He looked up Aguilera, Martin. The folder was thin, containing only the report which stated that an old man had drowned in the Rio Grande. He paused and listened. He guessed that Flora had just assumed he’d left. He looked at the report. Aguilera, Martin; born 1919, five-feet-six-inches tall, brown hair, brown eyes. Lewis closed the folder. He dropped it on the floor, not absently, but defiantly and he kicked it. He snatched open the Ñ-through-S drawer without a thought to Flora in the next room. He was looking for Peabody.

Lewis could hear Flora at the door. She knocked. “Manny?”

Lewis pulled files, leafed through them and dropped them. He turned when Flora opened the door. They looked at each other for a full ten seconds, just standing there. Lewis went back to the desk and pulled open drawers, dumping handfuls of things onto the top, loose bullets, plastic toy handcuffs, mint candies.

Flora came back to the doorway, more composed. She said, “Manny wants to talk to you on the radio.”

Lewis stared at her for a few seconds, then followed her to her desk. She picked up the handpiece and said, “Here he is, Manny.” She gave the thing to Lewis.

“What’s going on, Lewis?” Manny asked. His voice sounded strange through the speaker.

“What’s going on?”

“You have to push the button down to talk,” Flora said.

He held the button down. “What’s going on, Manny?” He felt Flora’s chair behind him and sat in it.

“Tell me what you’re talking about,” the sheriff’s voice cracked with static.

“Maggie’s missing.”

“What do you mean, missing?”

“I went to the state police, Manny.”

“What’d they say?”

Lewis began to think that Manny was trying to keep him on the radio and became anxious. “I’ve got to go.”

“No, wait until I get there, Lewis.”

He put the handpiece down and backed away from it.

“The sheriff wants you to wait,” Flora said.

Lewis said nothing to her. He got up and walked past her and out of the station. He got into the truck and sped off. He rubbed his head at a four-way stop. He stopped for gas, nervously checking for Manny or anybody. No one was following him, he was confident of that.

He parked across the street from the house of boots and just sat for several minutes. He decided he just couldn’t watch Salvador cry again and left. He needed to go home, though he didn’t think that was the safest place, get his shotgun and hike up into the canyon behind Martin’s cabin. The answer, some answer, was up there. He didn’t feel afraid anymore. He didn’t care what happened to him.

Chapter Twenty-three