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“The suicide.”

“Yeah. Talk about tragic.”

I nodded, thinking again of Dennis Kingsley and what he must have gone through.

“I guess it was too much for her to handle.” CJ’s smile was sad. “The guilt.”

“How’d she let him out of her sight long enough for someone to grab him, anyway? In her own home, no less.”

“Well, according to the prosecutor, it all went down fast—real fast. They walked home from the corner store. Probably Lucas followed them and hid behind the house waiting for the right time to make his move…which came when Jean stepped out to get the mail.”

“How’d he get in?”

“Climbed through the bedroom window. The screen was tampered with.”

“So the window was open,” I confirmed.

She nodded. “It was June.”

I thought about the physical logistics for a moment. “But how did he climb back out with a three-year-old in tow?”

“It was pretty easy, actually. The window was low enough to the ground where he could practically step right through it. They demonstrated it in court with an exact replica of the window and a life-sized doll of Nathan.”

I raised an eyebrow.

“Yeah,” she said. “Very dramatic, very effective.”

“And no one saw him leave with Nathan?”

“Nope. Just the mailman beforehand, but the timeline seemed to fit.”

I wrote a few notes, then looked up to find her gazing pensively at me.

“Something wrong?”

She tipped her empty glass toward herself and stared into it. “It may not be my place to say this—or maybe it is—I’m not sure. But I’m going to, anyway.”

I shook my head.

“The Kingsley case left a bad taste around here for a long time.”

“Understandably.”

“And someone like you, an outsider, asking questions, digging up the past—it’s likely to rub a few people the wrong way.”

“What exactly are you telling me?”

“Don’t get me wrong. I completely understand what you’re doing, where you’re coming from. But the locals may not be so understanding.”

“Is this some sort of warning?”

“Not so much a warning.” A compassionate smile. “More a friendly word of caution from one professional to another.”

“And that would be…”

“To tread lightly—that’s all. Corvine’s come a long way. They’re nowhere near as backwoods as they once were—trust me on that one—but hell, even I still run into a tense situation or two while covering the story. And I’m local. People in this town are super hyper-sensitive about the case. I’ve learned to ask the right questions and when to back off. Do that and you’ll be fine. Don’t do it, and you might be headed for some trouble.”

Chapter Eleven

CJ’s talk about unfriendly territory left me feeling a little uneasy. I got her point, and I understood it. Through the years, I’d run into my share of hostile subjects. But understanding didn’t mean I had to like it.

Like it or not, she was right, as I quickly found out when I tried to visit the old Kingsley house. Bill and Norma Bansch now owned it and had been living there for the past fifteen years. When I called to request a look inside, Bill gave me a definitive no—then promptly hung up on me.

So much for southern hospitality.

But I wasn’t going to let it deter me from stopping by and checking out the neighborhood. I needed to see where Nathan had lived and where his life had come to its tragic end.

* * *

It was a small place on the south side of town just past the railroad tracks. Starter homes, I think they call them: tiny houses with even tinier yards. It was probably a quaint little neighborhood back in the day, but the years had chipped away at its charm; pride of ownership no longer seemed to be a priority here. More than a few of the houses had paint peeling, driveways cracked, and no landscaping to speak of—unless, of course, you counted the brown, weed-infested grass.

I parked a good fifty yards from the Kingsley house, figuring I could make a quick getaway if someone became disagreeable. Then I took a good look at the place; it was in better shape than some of its neighbors, but something about it made me vaguely uneasy, as if there were a need for spiritual repairs. I didn’t believe in ghosts, but…well, a young boy had been kidnapped from here, sexually abused, and murdered. That would creep anyone out.

I pulled a baseball cap down low on my forehead, then picked up a stack of flyers I’d grabbed off the counter at the local coffee shop: Carpet stains getting you down? Clean one room, get the other free! 100% satisfaction guaranteed! Call The Carpet Doctor today for your no-obligation estimate!

I crossed to the opposite side of the street and went to work stuffing flyers in doors.

The first thing that pinged my radar was how close together all the houses were, separated only by narrow driveways and thin slices of lawn. That would have made it more of a challenge to grab a kid in broad daylight. Also odd, I thought, was that only one person had seen Lucas that day—the mailman—and that was before Nathan disappeared.

Nothing during, nothing after.

Nabbing a toddler is noisy business; they tend to scream a lot when a stranger pulls them from the comforts of home and their mothers. Someone should have heard something. I watched a few cars drive past from different directions, then looked up and down the street: open on both ends.

Very odd, indeed.

What’s more, the newspaper said that Jean had gone to the curb to check the mail. But the mailbox was less than fifty feet from the front door. Unless she’d stopped to read a letter, it shouldn’t have taken her more than twenty-five seconds to make it back to the house.

Lots of obstacles, and yet Lucas seemed to sail through them all with no trouble at all.

Closer to the Kingsley house now, I slowed my steps. I needed to see that back window. I peered up the driveway and saw the garage door was open and the inside empty. A good sign. I came to the front, shoved a flyer in the door, then moved quickly to the rear. Stood by the window. CJ was right: the ledge was only a few feet off the ground. Easy in, easy out. Kid didn’t stand a chance.

But then I gazed out at the mailbox. Just as I’d thought; it was a straight line of sight. This meant Lucas had a very small margin of error if he wanted to avoid being seen, and with a toddler under his arm, no less. Yet another obstacle.

What the hell did she do, hand the baby over to him?

Doubtful, but too many unanswered questions lingered in my mind.

Then I realized where I was standing, and stepped back. Quickly. This was the exact spot where a toddler had been pulled away from his loving family and straight into hell. Sexually abused. Murdered. Tossed in the dirt somewhere out in the remote Texas desert like so much trash.

A three-year-old boy, for Christ’s sake.

I couldn’t stay there any longer, not by that window, not even in that neighborhood. I hurried down the driveway, crossed the street, then went straight for my car. Got in and sped off down the road without so much as a backward glance.

I may not have seen the Ghost of Nathan, but I’d seen enough.

Chapter Twelve

My mind was speeding faster than my car after I left the Kingsley house. I shouldn’t have let it get to me. I’m a reporter. I’m supposed to separate my feelings, keep them out of my way; it bothers me when I can’t. I’ll admit I’ve got a soft spot for kids, maybe because my own childhood was so lousy. My experience paled in comparison to what Nathan Kingsley suffered, but on some level, in some way, it still resonated. I felt for him. Death was too good for this Lucas guy.