“I could barely get his attention,” she said. “And that asshole Girdler…”

  “Mercedes!” Her mother was on the word like a wolf on a lamb.

  “Well, he is,” she said, barely defensive. “He kept talking all over me—I don’t think he saw hardly any of it. He was mostly hiding down the hall.”

  “Okay,” Lucas said. “What about the truck? Anything unusual about it?”

  She nodded. “Yeah, there was, and I told the other cop. They’d painted over the sign on the truck. I don’t know what it said, but there were letters on the door and they were painted right over.”

  “What letters?”

  She shrugged. “I don’t know. It was just something I sorta noticed when I went up closer to the windows and he was driving away. It wasn’t a good paint job, you know? They just slopped right over the old letters.”

  LUCAS USED THE Bernets’ phone to call back to the office, and dropped the T-shirt and truck information with Anderson.

  “Heading home?” Anderson asked.

  “Not much more to do tonight, unless we get a call. Are we still doing the door-to-door?”

  “Yeah, up in Manette’s neighborhood now. Asking for suspicious activities. Haven’t heard anything back.”

  “Let me know.”

  “Yeah, I’ll be putting together a book on it…Have you asked Weather yet?”

  “Jesus Christ…” Lucas laughed.

  “Hey, it’s primo gossip.”

  “I’ll let you know,” Lucas said. He could feel the engagement ring in his pants pocket. Maybe ask her, he thought.

  “I got a feeling about this,” Anderson said.

  “About Weather?”

  “No. About the Manettes. There’s something going on here. So they’re not dead yet. They’re out there waiting for us.”

  WEATHER KARKINNEN MADE a bump on the left side of the bed, near the window. The window was open an inch or two, so she could get the fresh cold air.

  “Bad?” she asked, sleepily.

  “Yes.” He slipped in beside her, rolled close, kissed her on the neck behind the ear.

  “Tell me,” she said. She rolled onto her back.

  “It’s late,” he said. She was a surgeon. She operated almost every day, usually starting at seven o’clock.

  “I’m okay; I’ve got a late starting time tomorrow.”

  “It’s Tower Manette’s daughter and her two children, her daughters.” He outlined the kidnapping, told her about the blood on the shoe.

  “I hate it when there are kids involved,” she said.

  “I know.”

  Weather was a surgeon, but she looked like a jock—a fighter, actually, somebody who’d gone a few rounds too many. She had wide shoulders and she tended to carry her hands in front of her, fists clenched, like a punch-drunk boxer. Her nose was a little too large and bent slightly to the left; her hair was cut short, a soft brown touched with white. She had the high Slavic cheekbones of a full-blooded Finn, and dark blue eyes. For all of her jockiness, she was a small woman. Lucas could pick her up like a parcel and carry her around the house. Which he had done, on occasion; but never fully clothed.

  Weather was not pretty; but she reached him with a power he hadn’t experienced before: His attraction had grown so strong that it scared him at times. He’d lie awake at night, watching her sleep, inventing nightmares in which she left him.

  They’d met in northern Wisconsin, where Weather had been working as a surgeon in a local hospital. Lucas had run down a child-sex ring, and the killer at the heart of it. In the final moments of a chase through the woods, he’d been shot in the throat by a young girl, and Weather had saved his life, opening his throat with a jack knife.

  Hell of a way to get together…

  Lucas put his hands on her waist. “Just how late can you go in?” he whispered.

  “Men are animals,” she said, moving closer.

  WHEN SHE WENT to sleep, Lucas, relaxed, warm, moved against her. She snuggled deeper into her pillow, and pushed her butt out against him. The best time to ask her to marry him, he thought, would be now: he was awake, articulate, feeling romantic…and she was sleeping like a baby. He smiled to himself and patted her on the hip, and let his head fall on his pillow.

  He kept the ring in the bottom of his sock drawer, waiting for the right moment. He could feel it there and wondered if it made black sparkles in the dark.

  5

  THE ROOM WAS a concrete-and-stone hole that smelled like rotten potatoes. Four fist-sized openings pierced the top of one wall, too high to see through. The openings reminded Andi of the holes that a child would punch in the top of a Ball jar, to give air to his insect collection.

  A stained double-bed mattress lay in one corner, and the girls slept on it. John Mail had been gone for three hours, by Andi’s watch. When he’d left, the steel door banging behind him, they’d all crouched on the mattress, waiting wide-eyed for his return.

  He hadn’t come back. The fear burning them out, the girls eventually curled up and fell asleep like kittens in a cat box, too exhausted to stay awake. Grace slept badly, groaning and whimpering, Genevieve slept heavily, her mouth open, even snoring at times.

  Andi sat on the cold floor, with her back to the gritty wall, taking inventory for the fiftieth time, trying to find something, anything, that would get them out.

  There was a light socket overhead, with a single sixty-watt bulb and a pull-chain. She hadn’t yet had the courage to turn the light off. A Porta-Potti sat in a corner, smelling faintly of chemical rinse. The portable toilet was meant for small sailboats and campers, and was made of plastic. She could think of no way to use it as a weapon, or as anything other than a toilet. A Coleman cooler sat next to the door, half-full of melting ice and generic strawberry soda. And beside her, on a low plastic table, a game console and a monitor. The console and monitor were plugged into a four-socket power bar, which was plugged into an outlet above the lightbulb.

  And that was all.

  A weapon? Perhaps one of the cans could be used as a club…somehow? Could the cord be used to strangle him?

  No. That was all absurd. Mail was too big, too violent.

  Could you wire the door somehow? Strip the wire out of the cord to the computer, connect it to the door handle?

  Andi knew nothing about electricity—and if all Mail got was a shock, he’d simply turn off the power, and then come down, and…what?

  That was what she couldn’t deal with: what did he want? What would he do?

  He’d obviously planned for this.

  Their cell had once been a root cellar in a farmhouse, a deep hole, well below the frost line, with walls of granite fieldstone and concrete. Mail had knocked out part of an interior wall and had rebuilt it with concrete block to accommodate a steel fire door. The wiring was all new, nothing more than a cord run in from the outside.

  Although the walls were old, except for the part Mail had redone, they were solid: Andi had pushed or kicked at every stone, had probed the interstices with her fingernails. Her hands were raw from it, and she’d found no weaknesses.

  Overhead, between two-by-ten joists, was a plank ceiling. They could reach it by standing on the Porta-Potti, but when they beat on it, the sound was frighteningly dead: Andi feared that if they somehow pulled out a board, they’d find themselves buried underground.

  The door itself was impossible, all steel with a simple slide latch on the outside. No amount of patience with a hairpin would pick the lock—if she’d known how to pick a lock in the first place, which she didn’t.

  She did the inventory again, straining to think of ways out. The chemical in the toilet? If it were harsh enough, perhaps she could throw it in his eyes and slip past him up the stairs?

  He would kill them…

  ANDI CLOSED HER eyes and relived the trip out of the Cities.

  They’d rattled around the back of the van like dice in a cup—the cargo space had been stripped and was no more than a steel box, without handholds or
comfort. Mail had apparently rigged the steel screen and removed the door handles for the kidnapping.

  When they’d left the school, Mail had dodged from street to street, watching the rearview mirror, then took the van onto I-35, heading south, Andi thought. They were on I-35 for several minutes, then exited to an unfamiliar two-lane highway, out through the whiskey billboards and into the pastel suburbs south of the Cities, as the kids screamed and beat at the sides of the truck and then fell into an alternating, spasmodic weeping.

  Andi was still bleeding inside her mouth, where her teeth had cut into her lip. The taste of blood and the smell of exhaust nauseated her; fighting to get to her hands and knees as Mail dodged through the side streets, she eventually crawled into a corner and vomited. The stench set Genevieve off; she began to retch, and Grace began to weep and shudder, shaking uncontrollably. Andi took all of it in but was unable to focus on it, unable to sort it out and react, until finally, dumbly, she simply took the children in her arms and held them and let them scream.

  Mail paid no attention.

  After a while, they all got to their knees and looked out the windows as the suburbs dwindled, and the truck entered the great green sea of corn, beans, and alfalfa outside the Cities.

  Up front, Mail punched buttons on the radio, seemingly without purpose: he went from Aerosmith to Toad the Wet Sprocket to Haydn to George Strait to three, four, five talk shows.

  Listen, most of these criminals are weaklings; the only thing that makes them anything is that we give them a gun. Take the gun away, and they’ll crawl back to the gutters where they came from…

  They spent five minutes on a rural highway, bumping over long, snaky tar joints in the cracked concrete; then Mail took them off the highway onto a gravel road, and they left a spiraling cloud of gray dust in their wake. Red barns and white farmhouses flicked past the windows, and a black rural mailbox in a cluster of orange daylilies, dusty from the gravel.

  Grace staggered to her feet and grabbed the chain-link fence separating them from Mail, and screamed, “Let me out of here, you fuck, let me out of here let me out…”

  Genevieve panicked when her sister began to scream and wailed, a high, sirenlike keening, and her eyes rolled up into her head. She fell back and Andi thought for a moment that she’d had a stroke and crawled toward her, but Genevieve’s eyes rolled and got straight and she started again, the keening, and Andi put her hands over her ears and Grace shouted, Let me out of here…

  Mail put a hand over the ear closest to Grace, and, without looking back at her, shouted, shut up shut up shut up, and spit sprayed down the length of the windshield.

  Andi grabbed her daughter and pulled her down, shook her head, held her daughter’s face close and said, “Don’t make him mad,” then gathered up Genevieve and held her, squeezed her until the keening died away.

  Then came a moment, just a moment, when Andi thought something different could happen, a streak of possibility rolling through her bloodied mind. They’d turned off the gravel road and started up a dirt lane.

  Ragweed and black-eyed Susans grew in the middle of the track, and along both sides; farther away to the right, ancient, gray-barked apple trees stood with branches crabbed like scarecrow fingers.

  An old farmhouse waited at the end of the lane: a dying house, shot through with rot, the paint peeling off the clapboard siding, a front porch falling off to one side. Behind it, down the far side of the hill, a barn’s foundation crouched in a hollow. The barn itself was gone, but the lower level remained, covered by what had been the floor of the old structure and by a blue plastic tarp tied at the corners with yellow polypropylene rope. An open doorway poked into the dark interior, like the entrance to a cave. Around the barn foundation, two or three other crumbling outbuildings subsided into the soil.

  When they stopped, Andi thought in the recesses of her mind there would be three of them, only one of him. She could take him on, hold him while the girls ran. A cornfield bordered the farmhouse plot. There was no fence. Grace was fast and smart, and once in the cornfield, which was as dense as a rain forest, she could escape…

  John Mail stopped the truck and they all rocked back and forth once, and Grace got to her knees and looked out the dirty window. Mail turned in his seat. He had an oddly high-pitched voice, almost childlike, and said to Andi: “If you try to run, I’ll shoot the little kid first, then the next one, then you.”

  And the streak of possibility died.

  GENETICS HAD MADE John Mail a psychopath. His parents had made him a sociopath.

  He was a crazy killer and he didn’t care about labels.

  Andi had met him as part of her post-doc routine at the University of Minnesota, a new psychiatrist looking at the strange cases locked in the Hennepin County jails. She’d recognized a hard, quick intelligence in the cave of Mail’s mind. He was smart enough—and large enough—to dominate his peers, and to avoid the cops for a while, but he was no match for a trained psychiatrist.

  Andi had peeled him like an orange.

  Mail’s father had never married his mother, had never lived with them; last heard of, he was with the Air Force in Panama. Mail had never seen him.

  When he was a baby, his mother would leave him for hours, sometimes all day and overnight, stuck in a bassinet, alone in a barren room. She married a man when he was three—three and still unable to talk—who didn’t care much about her and less about Mail, except as an annoyance. When he was annoyed, when he was drunk, he’d use his leather belt on the kid; later, he moved to switches and finally to broomsticks and dowel rods.

  As a child, Mail found intense pleasure in torturing animals, skinning cats and burning dogs. He moved up to attacking other children, both boys and girls—the class bully. In fourth grade, the attacks on girls had taken a sexual turn. He liked to get their pants off, penetrate them with his fingers. He didn’t know yet what he wanted, but he was getting close.

  In fifth grade, big for his age, he started riding out to the malls, Rosedale, Ridgedale, catching suburban kids outside the game rooms, mugging them.

  He carried a t-ball bat, then a knife. In sixth grade, a science teacher, who also coached football, pushed him against a wall when he called a girl a cunt in the teacher’s hearing. The teacher’s house burned down a week later.

  The fire was a trip: five more houses went down, all owned by parents of children who’d crossed him.

  In June, after sixth grade, he torched the home of an elderly couple, who ran the last of the mom-and-pop groceries on St. Paul’s east side. The old couple were asleep when the smoke rolled under the door. They died together near the head of the stairs, of smoke inhalation.

  A smart arson cop finally found the pattern, and he was caught.

  He denied it all—never stopped denying it—but they knew he’d done it. They brought Andi in, to see exactly what they’d caught, and Mail had talked about his life in a flat lizard’s voice, casually, his young eyes crawling around her body, over her breasts, down to her hips. He scared her, and she didn’t like it. He was too young to scare her…

  Mail, at twelve, had already shown the size he’d be. And he had tension-built muscles in his body and face, and eyes like hard-boiled eggs. He talked about his stepfather.

  “When you say he beat you, you mean with his fists?” Andi asked.

  Mail grunted, and smiled at her naivete. “Shit, fists. The fucker had this dowel he took out of a closet, you know, a clothes rod? He whipped me with that. He beat my old lady, too. He’d catch her in the kitchen and beat the shit out of her and she’d be screaming and yelling and he’d just beat her until he got tired. Christ, there’d be blood all over the place like catsup.”

  “Nobody ever called the police?”

  “Oh, yeah, but they never did anything. My old lady used to say that it was none of the neighbors’ business.”

  “When he died, it got better?”

  “I don’t know, I wasn’t living there anymore; not much.”

&nbs
p; “Where’d you live?”

  He shrugged: “Oh, you know: under the interstate, in the summer. There’s some caves over in St. Paul, by the tracks, lots of guys over there…”

  “You never went back?”

  “Yeah, I went back. I got really hungry and fucked up and thought she maybe had some money, but she called the cops on me. If I hadn’t gone back, I’d still be out. She said, ‘Eat some Cheerios, I’ll go get some cake,’ and she went out in the front room and called the cops. Learned me a lesson, all right. Kill the bitch when I get out. If I can find her.”

  “Where is she now?”

  “Took off with some guy.”

  After two months of therapy, Andi had recommended that John Mail be sent to a state hospital. He was more than a bad kid. He was more than unbalanced. He was insane. A kid with the devil inside.

  THE GIRLS HAD stopped weeping when Mail opened the van door. He took them out, single file, through the side door of the old farmhouse and straight into the basement. The basement smelled wet, smelled of fresh dirt and disinfectant. Mail had cleaned it not long ago, she thought. A small spark of hope: he wasn’t going to kill them. Not right away. If they had a little time, just a little time, she could work on him.

  Then he locked them away. They listened for him, fearful, expecting him back at any moment, Genevieve asking, over and over, “Mom, what’s he going to do? Mom, what’s he going to do?”

  A minute became ten minutes, and ten minutes an hour, and the girls finally slept while Andi put her back to the wall and tried to think…

  MAIL CAME FOR her at three in the morning, drunk, excited.

  “Get out here,” he growled at her. He had a beer can in his left hand. The girls woke at the sound of the latch, and they crawled across the mattress until they had their backs to the wall, but curled, like small animals in a den.

  “What do you want?” Andi said. She kept looking at her watch, as if this were a normal conversation and she was on her way somewhere else. But the fear made her voice tremble, as much as she tried to control it. “You can’t keep us here, John. It’s not right.”