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“Jesus, Sam, it’s good to see you!” he said, once he finally released me from his grasp.

“Thanks,” I said, brushing myself off and trying to get the tickling in my nose under control. “What the hell’d you hit me with?”

“Push broom,” he said.

“And you were gonna what —sweep me to death with it?”

He scowled at me, faux anger hiding embarrassment. “By the look a you, you could maybe use a decent brooming. And besides, it was all I could find by way a weapons in this place. A man gets mighty paranoid, holed up too long alone.”

“Alone? Roscoe, where’s Gio?”

“Left late yesterday, and don’t you go blamin’ him for it, neither. The both of us done thought you were a goner, an’ yet that boy stayed anyways, for as long as he could stand.”

“If you both thought I was dead, what’re you still doing here? I told Gio if I didn’t come back, he was supposed to let you go.”

Roscoe did a little soft-shoe, showing off his unbound limbs. “You see anythin’ keeping me here? I stayed because I wanted to. Was the only way I could get that boy to go. He said someone oughta be here in case you came back.”

“No offense, Roscoe, but why? I mean, I appreciate your sticking around and all, but we kidnapped you. We tied you up. Why on earth would you decide to help us out?”

“Figured I owed you,” he said.

“How’s that?”

“Now, Sam, I ain’t the most religious man, but I do believe the good Lord sent you two boys to rattle my cage a bit, shake me off the path I was on. I made some decisions I ain’t proud of lately —decisions that wound up with me passing out piss-drunk in a strip club parking lot. And even then, I didn’t see I’d hit rock bottom. But then you two jokers come along, and of all the cars in the world you coulda jacked, you wound up taking mine. You and Gio, you showed me ain’t no good can come of the life that I was leadin’, and aside a sticking me in the trunk a while, you boys treated me just fine. Least I can do to show my thanks is help you two find your own way.”

“That’s sweet and all, but I’ve gotta tell you, me and Gio are no messengers from God. We took your car because it was pretty and it was there to take —and believe me when I tell you, we had no idea you were passed out in back. And unfortunately, as far as finding my own way, there’s nobody who can help with that but Gio, and he’s long gone.”

Roscoe shook his head and smiled. “Just ’cause you don’t know the good Lord sent you don’t mean it ain’t so. And as for finding Gio,” he said, nudging me with his elbow like we were co-conspirators, “maybe I can help with that. ’Fore he left, he gave me a message to give to you.”

“Yeah?”

He screwed up his face, like he was trying to get it right. “’Though she is blind, she has the sight. Her visions, they are always right. Into the future, she will peek, and put you on the path you seek.’”

I blinked at him a moment. Wondered was this some kind of joke. But if it was, he wasn’t letting on. “Roscoe, what the fuck am I supposed to do with that?”

“How the hell should I know? You two are the spooky Reaper types. Thought maybe it was like some kinda magic words or somethin’ —’specially after he made me say it back so many times, till he was sure I had it right. Figured it’d mean something to you. Foolish a me, I guess. Sounds more like some bullshit psychic-hotline jingle than anything else.”

Well, I’ll be damned, I thought. That’s exactly what it sounded like.

“Roscoe, you’re a genius!”

He laughed. “Ain’t nobody accused me a that one before. You sayin’ you know where you can find him?”

“No, but I’ve got an idea. I’m afraid I’m gonna need a favor, though.”

“The car?” he asked. I nodded. “Take her,” he said. “Me and Bertha, we had a good run, but there’s only one woman in this world for me, and that’s my Jolene.”

“The same Jolene you called a thieving devilwoman not two days back?”

“Hey, ain’t none of us’re perfect, Sam. And the fact is, you can’t help who you’re meant to be with —or, for that matter, who you’re meant to be.”

Truer words were never spoken.

“You want a lift somewhere, at least?”

Roscoe squinted at me and cocked his head. “Look at this Grim Reapin’ sumbitch, up against some kinda scary deadline, God knows what-all nipping at his heels, and he’s still got manners enough to offer me a ride. You know what, Sam? You’re all right. And speakin’ of, I’ll be all right too —don’t you worry none for me. Now, git.”

We shook hands and parted friends.

Then I headed north, following the breadcrumbs Gio left behind.

Las Cruces to Las Vegas is eleven hours on a good day, I-10 cutting a jagged northwest diagonal out of southwestern New Mexico and clear up to the southernmost tip of Nevada —bisecting Arizona like a through-and-through. Eleven hours of khaki-colored desert interrupted only by the occasional, reluctant green that accompanied human settlement, jutting from the arid soil like weeds through a sidewalk crack. Eleven hours between me and my only hope of finding Danny.

I made the drive in nine.

Not bad, I’ll admit —but I could’ve shaved off another half hour if I hadn’t had to stop for gas, money, and a change of clothes. I was so focused on my task, I damn near forgot this battleship of a car ate gas like Gio’s meat-suit went through Ring Dings. But somewhere outside of Tucson, the engine started sputtering, and I realized the needle was on E.

And me without a penny to my name.

Took another ten minutes for me to spot a truck stop, and by then, poor Bertha was on fumes. I doubt she could’ve gone another mile. Hell, I thought she was going to quit long before she did, but that old girl took pity on me. I was grateful. I’d spent far too long in the desert the past two days to relish the thought of hoofing it.

The truck stop was huge: three acres of fresh-lined pavement, pumps, and gleaming big rigs, all rippling in the late morning heat. At the center of the automotive sprawl loomed a massive central building trimmed in red neon piping and boasting a lunch counter, a convenience store, a set of jumbo-sized car wash bays, and —if the signs were to be believed —shower facilities both hot and clean. Why in God’s name hot was a selling point six inches from the surface of the sun was beyond me.

I pulled the Caddy up to a pump out of sight of the main building next to a municipal truck stacked high with orange traffic barrels and caked with hot-mix asphalt. The faded state seal stenciled across the side of the truck bed read Ditat Deus. God Enriches, if my rusty Latin served. Though as I watched the trucks belch black diesel fumes into the cloudless sky and set out across the lifeless earth, I didn’t see much evidence to support that claim.

Even in the shade, the pavement burned my soles. I trotted barefoot to the door, thinking inconspicuous thoughts. Turns out, I needn’t have bothered; bare feet aside, I wasn’t any rougher around the edges than half their clientele.

The store inside was more Walmart than 7-Eleven. Everything from tube socks and trucker caps to televisions and toaster ovens, the latter two made special to plug into a truck’s cigarette lighter. The clothes —mostly novelty Ts and off-brand jeans —weren’t much my style, but they were tempting nonetheless. Still, tough to walk off with a whole outfit hidden in your pants, so instead I settled on pocketing a hammer and a flat-head screwdriver. Wish I could’ve snagged some aloe vera while I was at it; after two hours of being chased westward by the sunrise, the back of my neck was hot enough to fry an egg. But all pharmacy items were on a rack up by the register. Guess they didn’t want the truckers lifting the No-Doz.