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"I’ll save a shell for the radiator," he whispered. "Nobody’s going to kill me and ride away from it in comfort." He eased himself to the ground and lay prone with the shotgun aimed at the car. Jane began to crawl on her belly, closer and closer to the dark shape. She had gone twenty feet when she touched something hard and cold. It felt like a piece of metal, set into the ground. A drain? She ran her fingertips across it and felt raised letters. I...N...M...E...M...O... a cemetery. It was a grave marker.

She heard a snick-chuff sound, coming from the other side of the car. Somebody was digging. She could hear the clods of earth landing on the pile, some granules rolling back down, and then snick-chuff again. So that was why the other two had left. They were working in shifts. It was a lot of work to dig a grave, but not much room.

She crawled closer until she was beside the car. The trunk was open, but there was no light inside the lid. She knew she had to look inside, and that when she did, the sight she was going to see was John. They were in a town they didn’t know any better than she did, and they had decided to use the old, reliable way of disposing of the body: finding a fresh grave, digging it up, and burying the new one with the legitimate resident.

She forced her breaths to come more deeply. The air seemed to seep into her lungs and lie there, and then she would have to think to force it out and let in more. She tasted her dry tongue and made her way to the back of the car. She put her hand on the rear bumper and experienced a sensation like the one she had felt when standing on a high diving board as a little girl, those few seconds when it still seemed possible to turn and go back down.

She found herself counting silently: one ... two ... three, and then popped her head up and saw ... nothing. The trunk was empty except for a flashlight. The way it was lying there on the center of the flat, empty surface was almost like an instruction from somewhere to pick it up.

She grasped it and took a few breaths to calm herself. She could hear the shovel noise again, and now she could tell it wasn’t one shovel. They were both digging. She began to crawl toward the sound. She couldn’t see a silhouette or a shadow, but then she reached the place and she knew. They were already too deep in the hole, over their heads with piles of dirt on both sides. She moved to the nearest pile of dirt, feeling her way for John’s body.

She grasped the slide of the shotgun and stood up just as the flash came. She saw all of it at once. The two men were standing over the casket and they had the top half of it open, and the one from the apartment was taking another flash picture. Down in the coffin was Harry Kemple. The darkness closed on all of them instantly, there was the familiar whirr, then the man aimed again and the flash came with a click, and then darkness.

Jane shone the flashlight into the open grave and shouted, "Police officers. Freeze." She hoped Jake could hear her and not just see the light and shoot it.

The two men in the pit below her stood still, straddling the casket. They seemed unsure of what to do, but certain that they weren’t going to be able to find adequate footing in the narrow hole to turn around and face her, let alone draw a gun and shoot her. They raised their hands.

"Turn around," she said.

They slowly, carefully tried to free their feet from one side of the casket, turn about to step across it, and face in the other direction, but neither was able to do it with his hands in the air. Each had to lean across the casket and hold the opposite wall to do it. Then they raised their hands again and tried to stare past the beam of the flashlight to see her.

"It’s not what it looks like," said one of them. She recognized his thick arms and broad shoulders. He was the one who had climbed in Harry’s window, and he looked down so she could see the camera at his feet. "It’s just a camera, see?"

The other, a taller, thin man with a permanent look of distaste holding the muscles around his lips rigid, said, "She don’t think we killed him, for Chrissake." To Jane he said, "I know this looks strange. Weird, even."

"Save it," she said gruffly. "First I want to see you slowly take your guns out and toss them up over the pile of dirt, one at a time. And give a lot of thought to how you look while you’re doing it. If I get startled, you’re dead. First you, the tall one."

The tall man hesitated for a second, and she added, "We know you’re armed. Just having a gun on you means I can shoot now and never have to answer any questions." Looking at them, she decided that they had certainly been arrested more times than she had, and they were beginning to sense that this wasn’t normal. She pumped the shotgun. There was already a shell in the chamber, and she ejected it onto the ground, but the sound had its desired effect. The tall man bent over, took a gun out of an ankle holster, and threw it over the mound of dirt to the grass. The second man took a gun out of the waistband of his pants at the small of his back and did the same.

"Now turn and put your hands on the side of the pit."

This seemed to comfort the two men, who executed the movement with an assurance that could only have come from practice. They had their legs apart and their arms out from their bodies, and leaned across the casket to look down at the poker-faced Harry.

"Now, tell me your names."

The tall one said, "Samuel Michko."

The wide one said, "Ronald Silla."

She said, "All right, Sam and Ron. Tell me what you’re doing here."

Sam and Ron strained to look under their outstretched arms at each other. "She’s not a cop," said Sam. He turned toward the light. "You’re not a cop."

"No," she said. "Bad luck for you. I’m the woman you’ve been chasing all over the continent."

"Uh," said Ron, as though he had been kicked. Sam was silent.

"Why did you dig up Harry?" she asked.

"To take his picture," said Ron, pointing at the camera again with his foot.

"What do you want his picture for?"

"You don’t know how Mr. Cappadocia’s mind works," said Sam. "He’s from the old school. You tell him there’s a duck, you better be able to show him some feathers."

Jane’s mind silently exclaimed: Cappadocia? They work for Jerry Cappadocia’s father? They should have wanted to talk to Harry, not kill him. She needed to think. She said, "It’s a lot of work."

Sam turned a little to squint up at the light. "Jerry was important. Usually, somebody important gets popped, and sooner or later there’s no big mystery. Somebody else ends up with whatever he had. But Jerry Cappadocia dies, and that’s it. Nothing happens. So Harry gets to be important"

"You mean Mr. Cappadocia wouldn’t believe Harry was dead?"

"He figured it was just possible that Harry got cornered and went to the cops to make a deal."

"What kind of deal?"

"The only kind that’s worth anything. They’d stage his death, and he’d tell them whatever he saw that night. You think they wouldn’t do that?"

"I’ve heard of it."

"Harry was the perfect candidate. He’s been gone for five, six years, and nobody has stopped looking. And all the cops wanted him for was questioning. He didn’t do anything except see Jerry die."

"Why didn’t you take pictures right away?"

"What do you mean, right away?" asked Ron. "How the hell were we supposed to do that?"

"When you killed him."

"Killed him?" snapped Sam. "What are you talking about killed him? Martin killed him. Mr. C. read it in the papers and sent us out to make sure."

She sensed that if she didn’t say exactly the right thing now, she was going to reveal her real ignorance and they would know she couldn’t catch them in a lie. They had said Martin. She had to find out who Martin was.