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“Detective-?”

“Brogan.” Jake took out a spiral notebook. He’d transfer the notes to his new phone when he could, if need be. “I often handle-special cases. Let’s take it one step at a time. Your husband. His name is? When did you last see him? Forgive me, but why do you think he’s missing?”

“Greg Siskel,” the woman said. “Gregory Atkins Siskel. I last saw him, um…”

Silence. Clearly she was calculating the last time she saw her husband, which did not seem like it should be that tough a question. The last time he saw Jane? Eight thirty-five last night. Boom, easy.

“Yesterday morning,” Catherine Siskel finally said. “He was on his way to work at the-he was a-is a-” Her voice caught, Jake could hear it over the phone. “He didn’t come home last night.”

“Ma’am?” This was all wrong. Tired or not, he knew it. It was more difficult to make up a story than people expected. Cops knew how to listen. And they knew the sound of a lie. “Do you have a recent photo of him? Maybe a video?”

* * *

Catherine steadied herself, one palm on her desk. Why would he ask for a video? What did he know? Or maybe, no-home movies. People had family videos.

Why wasn’t this easier? Lying was simplest if you pretended it was true. It was a trick she’d learned at news conferences. Now she felt as if big heat lamps were focused on her, like in the old gangster movies when they sweated a confession out of the bad guy. But she wasn’t the bad guy; she was the victim.

Problem was, there was no way to reveal how she knew it.

“Ma’am?”

She needed to sound worried but not hysterical. Because in her created story, all she knew was that Greg was missing. Not dead. She cleared her throat, pretending. “Sorry, I’m upset. I’m sure it’s all fine. I hope it’s all fine. Certainly I have a photo. May I e-mail that to you? Is that the most efficient way? I already described him to Detective Bartoneri.”

“Yes,” the detective said. “Sooner the better.”

Catherine wrote down the e-mail address he dictated. “Doing it now. Hang on.”

She clicked on the camera icon, found a photo of Greg-oh, God, Greg-in her pictures. Recent enough. The four of them-the four of them-up in the White Mountains on their last ski vacation, red faced and bundled in parkas. Arms draped over each other’s shoulders, Lanna’s long auburn hair curling out from under her knit cap, Tenley looking at her with that mixture of jealousy and affection only a little sister can have. Greg and Catherine were bookending their girls, squinting in the glare of the sun, looking straight at the ski patrol camera. She hadn’t taken a photo of the family, or Greg, since Lanna died, she realized.

Now, two people in the photo were dead. And the other two were fighting. Soon as she was finished with this charade, she had to call Tenley. There was no way out of it. Tenley would have to be told, and then it would be awful. Catherine had no poker face for that, and no idea how to handle it. The extent of her mothering skills had already been reached, already been sucked dry. The future-no Lanna, no Greg-was uncharted territory. Treacherous and fearsome. And lonely.

But for now, step one. She’d send the photo. This cop would realize, pretty damn quickly, she hoped, that he’d discovered the identity of the victim in the city morgue. She’d probably have to go identify Greg-oh, my God-her knees went to jelly, and she balanced herself on the desk again, woozy. She’d get through it.

And then, since they had the assailant in the hospital, done and done. Case closed. No video necessary. She’d tell Kelli and Ward that the cops identified the dead man and didn’t need the video. She’d save the mayor’s ass. Again.

Who would save hers? And who killed her husband? Why? There was so much she didn’t know about Greg. Maybe it was simple, though. His wife worked at City Hall. His daughter, too. He might have been mugged, left with no ID when the thief took his wallet. That was a perfectly reasonable explanation. Horrible, but reasonable.

It would be a firestorm. But at least she could try to keep it personal and not have it detonate a career-destroying political scandal.

“Sent,” Catherine said. The sound of the mouse click echoed through her office, seemed to ricochet off the windows and the framed diplomas on her walls, ricochet off the political photos lining her bookshelf, ricochet off the wall she’d built around her feelings. “I’ll wait to make sure you get it. Are you a missing persons detective, is that why I was transferred to you?”

“Great,” the detective said. “While we’re waiting, though, fill me in a bit more. First the basics. When was the last time you talked to your husband? Did he say anything that might lead you to believe something was wrong? Sorry for being personal, but were the two of you having any problems? Had he threatened to leave? Had you? Why did you decide to report this? Why did you decide not to wait any longer? Do you have any indication that he may have met with, ah, an accident?”

Oh, my God, just look at the photo, Catherine thought. Show it to one of your colleagues working the Curley Park case. Show it to the medical examiner. She sat at her desk, stretched out her fingers, willing herself to stay calm. Breathe. There was nothing untoward about his questions. They were exactly what anyone would ask. These were Missing Persons 101 questions, no subtext, no hidden motive. She was hearing double entendres and accusations that weren’t there.

She didn’t have to try to sound weary and sad. She could feel her nerve endings, every one of them, edging closer to the surface. She’d been spinning stories so fast, she’d forgotten this was about her husband. Her husband. Who had annoyed her and baffled her, who’d been distant and dismissive and aloof since Lanna died. No, since before Lanna died.

How could she possibly battle through that barrage of questions? Maybe she should tell the police the truth. It wasn’t her fault, after all, that the mayor had set up this web of lies. Not her responsibility, really, to protect it. It would be such a relief to let go. To go home. To be with her poor daughter.

“Ma’am?” the detective was saying. “I know that’s quite a list of questions for you, but I know you can appreciate we’ll need the answers. I’ll need to come talk with you in person. Are you at City Hall?”

32

Jane handed the business card across Marsh Tyson’s desk. “Oh, my gosh, Marsh. Bobby Land? Look, he gave me his card. At Curley Park. He was-I don’t know. A crime scene groupie. A wannabe. He latched on to me, and then-”

Marsh’s desk phone rang. He took the card, centered it on the blotter in front of him, took the call, raising a finger. “One minute, Jane,” he said.

She stepped away, giving him a little privacy. Needing some for herself, too. The last time she’d seen Bobby Land was with Jake. Jake had taken him away, had him in custody. Jake had put the kid in his cruiser at the Curley Park crime scene, the alley next to the crime scene, at least. And now Bobby Land was dead. How? Why?

She’d called Jake three times, no response-where the heck had he gone?-then left an urgent message for him. And one for Melissa. Neither had answered their phones, or their texts. If they needed her, or if they figured out the Gracie situation, they’d call.

Bobby Land was dead. Had anyone, maybe Bobby Land’s mother, reported him missing? She could call the cop shop, that’d be public information.

She dug in her tote bag for a spiral notebook, flipped it over so the recognizable Register logo printed on its cover didn’t show, clicked open her pen. First thing, call the number on Bobby Land’s card. Well, no. She shook her head, pen poised over the notepad. No use in calling a dead person.