Saturday, June 29, 2013

Tuesday, January 14th

Tuesday,
January 14th

      Bill slipped in as quietly as he could. He tipped toed to his room and tried to un­dress in the dark. After a few moments, Sophie flipped on the bedside lamp.     “Sorry,” he commented.
      “Don’t worry about it.”
     He unclipped his holster from the inside of his jeans and tucked it and his .38 inside the same box that held his service weapon and holster. He pulled pants out for use in the morning and tucked his wallet in the back pocket. “Just so you know,” he said, pulling his hooded sweatshirt over his head, “I stopped at Pinkies’ to interview a witness. I didn’t order anything.”
     “Okay,” she said, quietly.
    He growled and sat on the bed to work on his shoes. He had them off in a blink, and was up on his feet again in no time. He began to work on his belt, pull it through the loops of his pants and unthread his handcuffs, pepper spray, badge and other implements he needed in his work.
     “Can you talk about it?” she asked.
     “Huh?”
     “You’re frustrated.”
    He shook it off. Once changed he crawled into bed next to her. She flipped off the light and pushed up close. “You get your papers graded?” he asked as he tried to force the irritation of a fruitless night from his bones.
     “No. I’ll have to do it over the weekend.”
     "You’re working more on the weekends than usual. What is it? Can you give less assignments or something?”
     “Oh. I’ve been tutoring Mikey after school.”
    “Mikey?” He turned towards her in surprise. He needed to think. “I didn’t mean to wake you up. I’m sorry.”
    “Don’t worry about it. I can’t sleep when you’re gone anyway.” She wrapped her arm about him and gave him a small hug. “Bill?”
    “Huh?”
    “Happy Birthday.”

***

    Red awoke bright and early. After a few moments, he congratulated himself. He didn’t dream about Willie, or anyone else. He was free. No more Willie. No more dreams.

***

    Tim pulled his own vehicle out of the car wash lot on 123rd just as Borenstein pulled out of his apartment building parking lot. Tim let two cars get between them, and tried to maintain that. Borenstein used his signals properly, drove the proper speed and didn’t pass in no passing zones. Two miles down the road, he turned into World Reddee Transport. Tim turned right and swung back to Portland.

***

   Marie hurried back to her cell. She had another of Mikey’s letters in her pocket and she couldn’t wait to read it. This time he wrote with a red pen on that paper they give kids to draw on with crayons. The words were sloppy and sloped up on the page. ‘Dear Mommy,’ he wrote. ‘Yes! Your coming home. I can’t wait! Grandma told me yesterday. She said that you have to change the way you think though. I don’t know what she meant. I’m just happy. Oh, and my teacher says that my report card is going to be real good. I hope so. I want you to be proud. Sophie has been helping me with my homework. Don’t tell Dad or Grandma. They don’t like Sophie. I love you. I can’t wait to see you. Your son, Mikey.’
    Marie hung onto the letter for a few extra moments. She prayed that she could come home, and not disappoint Mikey. Her hearing was only a couple of weeks away, but the prospect of seeing Mikey, Tina and Cory again, made it seem like an eternity.
    She had to laugh though, because she’d cry otherwise. What didn’t her mother understand? Between ages five and eighteen, Marie had three stepfathers. Where was her mother’s behavior different from her own? From one man to another. And with each man her mother brought home, Marie became a bigger target. Her real father ran out on her. Her first stepfather ignored her, her second beat her. The third molested her. Her mother would have none of it. If a man said something to her, or accused her of something, than according to her mother, that man must be right.
     Marie’s worst fear was that she couldn’t put aside her past and make a new future. Could she not follow the same pattern that she had always followed? Could she not get mixed up with the wrong guy again and again? And could she forgive her mother for her own silliness?

***

     At two thirty, Bill signed out. At two forty, he signed in as a visitor at Taft Mid­dle School. He was directed down the hall to his right, and about a corner. Her classroom was somewhere further down. He passed a teacher and asked for direc­tions again. He was sent on, this time down another corridor and around another corner. When he finally found a sign outside of a classroom that said, ‘Grade 7, Social Studies, Mrs. Ramos’, he sighed, wondering how his wife tackled this maze morning after morning, and every afternoon besides.
      He stepped in. Seeing that she was busy with another teacher, he rapped on the open door. She came about and smiled. “Hi,” he said.
      “What are you doing here?”
      “In the neighborhood. Just thought I’d drop in.”
   “Oh?” She introduced the other woman. “Mary Clark,” she said. “My husband, Bill Ramos.”
      “Nice to meet you,” she said.
     “Nice to meet you.” He glanced about. “So, when is it that you and Mikey get together?”
     "Oh,” Sophie nodded at her friend. “Mary is Mikey’s teacher. Apparently he isn’t feeling well. His grandmother called him in today.”
    “Oh.” That was awkward. He glanced at his watch. “Got to get back.”
    “Oh.” That was awkward again. “So, you stopped in to see Mikey?”
    “You said his grades were coming up. I just wanted to tell him good work.”
    “I said I was tutoring him.”
    He shrugged. “Same thing.”
    She shifted away to look at her friend. “Guilarmo,” she said after a moment.
    “Sophia.”

***

    Pam Pratt skipped eighth period. If her Mom found out, she’d be in bigger trou­ble than usual. Something Willow told her during one of the few times they actu­ally got along. Mom could put up with almost anything. Just don’t screw up at school. Pam cut out a side door at Roosevelt, and hurried down Elm Street. She could make it to the police station, a good mile away, in about twenty minutes if she hurried, and God help her, if she didn’t get caught by a train.
    Luck was with her. Not only did she cross two sets of tracks just prior to trains blocking off either set, but she made it to the station just in time to catch that one cop she saw on TV. “Excuse me,” she called.
      The man, a Hispanic, turned about. “Can I help you?” he asked.
He wore a silver bar on his black leather jacket that said his name, G. Ramos.
      “Are you Mrs. Ramos’s husband? I mean the teacher?”
      He nodded and smiled in a really nice way. “Guilty.”
      “My name is Pam Pratt,” she said, “And I gotta talk to someone.”
     “Pam.” The man nodded at her to follow him. At the door, he opened it for her. He unlocked the next door with his own key, and held it open again. “Give me one moment,” he said, stepping aside. He hurried to a peg board type of thing and moved a peg by his name. He disappeared for a moment, but then returned to waive her in. She noticed immediately that he no longer wore a gun under his jacket. She followed him up a flight of stairs, and past a secretary who held up messages for him. “Hold my calls,” he said as he took her notes.
     Inside an office with a window that looked out on the secretary, he closed the door. “Have a seat,” he said, indicating a chair with the cap he took off. He hung that and his jacket on a coat rack that stood behind his desk. “So, what can I help you with?” he asked as he sat.
     “I’m here about my sister.”
     “I wish I had something to offer you. Just the photos from last night.”
     “Any idea who those people are?”
     “They’re out of Cairo, way down state. Talked to the Cairo PD this morning. They think this pair is a couple of local malcontents. No one we need to worry about.”
     “Okay.” Pam nodded. “So you don’t know any more than you did before?”
    “We’re working on it. Tell you the truth though, I don’t think it’s wise to discuss the details of our investigation. No offense. It’s ongoing. It’s being worked on as we sit here.”
     Pam nodded. Turning to her coat, she began to play with her frayed belt. “I un­derstand. It’s just that psychic. My parents called her.”
      “Oh?”
    “You see the news the other night? She was there passing out flyers on Friday. It just seems too convenient, that’s all. My parents are desperate. They’re willing to try anything at this point.”
      “You’re afraid they’re going to get ripped off?”
      “Big time.”
      “Unfortunately, until they do get ripped off, there’s not much I can do.”
      “She says that she’s worked with a lot of the police departments in the area. Even Portland.”
     Ramos shook his head. “She hasn’t worked with us. At least not in the last twenty years that I’ve been here. And I doubt you’ll find that she’s worked with any other police department in this district. Believe it or not, we are fairly inter­connected.” He began to rock in his chair. “One of the unfortunate situations that occur when someone disappears, is that people who think they can profit from a family’s pain come out of the woodwork. I don’t honestly know if there is such a thing as a real ‘psychic.’ There’s a lot of phonies, though.”
      Pam nodded. “You think she’s a phony?”
    "If she said she’s worked with the Portland police department, then I guarantee she’s a liar.”

***

      Red got off at five and hurried home. He had picked up paint remover on his lunch hour and couldn’t wait to try it on the floor. He grabbed a burger on his way, and wolfed it down as he drove.
      He grabbed his bag from the truck and headed directly to the garage. He stopped dead half way across his back yard. A coyote blocked the path to the garage. “Shoo,” he hissed at it. It growled. The hair on its back bristled. The hair on Red’s back stood on end. He took a tiny step forward, and the beast lurched up. “Shoo. Get out of here!” It growled and crouched into an attack position. Red backed away.

***

       Pam came to dinner uneasily. “I think,” her mother began, “That I have a buyer for my car. You know that man at the grocery store on the corner? He said he’d give me five hundred. There’s the Christmas fund. I have about a hundred in it at this point. I take that and they’ll hit me with a penalty for early withdrawal. What else is there?”
        Pam’s Dad nodded throughout her mother’s description and actually added to it. “I can borrow, I think.”
        “Why?” Pam demanded. “What do you think you can do with this?”
      “Pamela, honestly,” Mom began. “You’d think you don’t want your sister home.”
        “I do. I just don’t trust this woman.”
      Mom turned, her arm out, her expression was a study of faith. “How can you not? She’s helped a lot of other families.”
        “Not according to Chief Ramos.”
        “Who?”
     “The Chief of Police. I talked to him this afternoon. He says she never worked for Portland Police like she said.”
        “Maybe before he came here?”
     “He’s been here twenty years, he said. You remember my teacher from school? Mrs. Ramos? The blonde lady that taught social studies at Taft? This is her hus­band. He’s been here for twenty years. He says he knows a lot of other police chiefs in the area, and they never heard of her either.”
Mom started to shake her head. Dad, though, that look came over him. He was changing his mind. Or maybe he wasn’t going to make up his mind at all.
“Chief Ramos said that when something bad happens like this, that people come out of the woodwork, thinking they can make money off of people’s troubles.”
      Mom shook her head more. “No, if she was really a problem, then they’d stop her.”
       “He says he can’t stop her until she does something wrong. Don’t do this. Don’t give her any money.”
        “Harry,” Mom called, “Talk to your daughter. Tell her what we’re doing.”
Dad shook his head and turned away. “I don’t know. Maybe Pam is right.”
        “Damnit, Harry,” Mom cried. “Don’t turn yellow on me now.”

***

    Sophie made roast beef with peppers, onions, tomatoes and mashed potatoes, just the way Bill’s mother made it. Of course if she skipped the meat and vegetables, he’d be happy. His favorite food was the potatoes.
     This night, she decided, was for Bill, the kids and her. After the long evening he had the day before, he needed rest. He finished his shower and sat down to eat. Shortly after that she found him sound asleep in his recliner in the front room.
   “He promised,” Tina complained, crossing her arms over a book and stamping one foot.
      “Never mind that,” Sophie admonished. “You come with me. Both of you.” The kids followed her to the kitchen and together worked on frosting and decorating the cake she baked earlier in the afternoon. It wasn’t what Tina planned, but it satisfied her. “Go,” Sophie ordered the pair. “Get the afghan, it’s in my room. And put it on him. Don’t wake him though.”

*

     She walked into his office and stopped at the door. She held a boot in one hand and wore its mate on the opposite foot. Bill hung up the phone. Turning to her, he planned to give her his full attention. Her head though. It was hard to look at her and not stare. A big chunk was missing. She was bloody and her hair was matted, and tangled with leaves and twigs. She shifted the boot from one hand to the other, and used bony fingers to push her hair behind one ear. From what he could see, the other ear was missing. Her clothing, a pink sweater and jeans, were torn and covered with leaves and twigs. Whatever it was she had to say, he missed it. “Where the hell have you been?” he demanded. “You have any idea how many people are looking for you?”

     “Ah!” Tina wailed. “Bill! I need you!”
He jumped almost out of the chair. The kids laughed and clapped their hands.
“Happy Birday,” Cory sang tunelessly. “Happy Birday to Bill.”

    As hard as he tried, he just couldn’t put that dream aside. He enjoyed his cake, and the kids’ excitement, and he wrapped a beautiful handmade afghan about him for warmth. He needed it. That dream left him cold. The next dream left him sore.

     She set the boot on his desk. He waited for her answer, but it didn’t come. In­stead, she walked about his desk and reached out towards him with bony fin­gers. She latched onto his ear and tugged as hard as she could. He tried to pull away, but she wouldn’t let up. His arms flapped about and his chair swiveled about. He reached for his desk, for stability. She pulled harder. He could feel those bones in the tips of her fingers. They were cold and pointy. As hard as he tried to disentangle himself from her grasp, is as hard as she pulled. She held her ground. He lost his balance. The chair rolled out from under him. She pinched harder, holding him suspended between the seat of his chair and the floor. The ear snapped. His head exploded in a wealth of pain. He fell on his butt. He couldn’t believe it. Tenderly, he felt the side of his head, trying to find some indication of his ear. He found a hole.
     She had it. She held it in her hand, and smiled at it. Her mouth began to move. She turned aside. With both hands, she attached it to the side of her head that had the dent in it. Sound exploded about him. A sweet voice sang out to him, like the sirens sang to Ulysses. “You fill up my senses, like a night in the for­est...”

    Sophie woke him up. Somehow the lamp flipped off the night stand and smacked him right in the head.


Wednesday,
January 15th

   Bill sported a headache most of that day, and a bandage that covered the abrasion on his ear. He stopped at Twin Sisters’ for a ham sandwich and a cup of soup well after the lunch rush had ended. The sandwich was decent, but the soup tasted like canned. Pity. Not that he remembered seeing Willow Pratt there, she was ob­viously one of the reasons that the Rennault Sisters stayed in business for so long.
    At two o’clock a cuckoo clock clucked. A moment later something buzzed and something else dinged. There was now more wall and fewer clocks. Bill set aside his sandwich and turned to watch the pair behind the counter. They growled at each other, but nothing more. When they noticed that he was watching, both tried to smile. He finished up and paid his bill. He wanted to spend at least a half hour with Mikey.

     “How’s your stomach?” Bill asked the boy when he slipped into his wife’s class­room.
      “Fine,” he said. “Better anyway.” The boy smiled at Bill. “What happened to your ear?”
       He touched it gingerly. “Accident.”
Sophie nodded and opened a book. “You know, Bill, not to be rude. He really needs this time to work on his math.”
     “That’s fine. Just figured you guys could work on his math, then I’ll give him a ride home.” The look in his wife’s eyes told that she didn’t trust his motives. Twenty minutes later his cell phone rang. He had to leave without speaking to Mikey.

    Later that evening, Sophie brought it up. “I don’t appreciate you hanging around my classroom just so you can talk to Mikey.” She stirred up a pot of mashed potatoes.
      “I’m sorry?” He picked a spoon from the silverware drawer and used it to take a taste of the potatoes. When he finished he returned the spoon to where it came from.
      “Damnit, Guilarmo,” she hissed, “Don’t you dare pick a fight with me over this. Talk to me. Tell me what you’re doing.”
     He crossed his arms and leaned back against the sink. “And I tell you this has to do with work, then what?”
      “Then I tell you to pick your damned utensils out of that drawer and put it in the sink. That’s disgusting.”
      A moment passed. He remained in place. “I need to talk to Mikey. You tell me when.”
       “This has to do with that Pratt girl, doesn’t it?”
       He didn’t answer.
  She nodded after a moment. “You pick up your spoon and I’ll disappear tomorrow afternoon for a while. Is that good enough?” She returned her attention to the stove and another pot. She didn’t take her eyes off of him though. He smiled and retrieved the spoon. She shook her head. “Guilarmo, living with you is an adventure.”
     “Yep,” he said, tossing the spoon into the sink with several others. “You love me though.”


Thursday,
January 16th

      When Bill arrived, Sophie relinquished her desk next to Mikey. She slipped into the hall and Bill slipped into her seat. “I have to talk to you about Willow Pratt,” Bill explained. Tears sprung to Mikey’s eyes instantly. “I know you were with them when Detective Boca talked to your Dad and your Uncle Red. I’m sorry to ask you this, but is there something that you overheard that they didn’t tell us?”
       “I don’t know anything,” the boy whispered.
       “Why are you crying then?”
      “Dad said he’d blister my butt like he never did before if I said anything to any­one. Only I don’t know anything. Honest. I heard Red say that she won’t bother him anymore. That’s it though.”
       “You didn’t hear anyone say that she’s dead or anything?”
    “No.” A large tear escaped and slid down his cheek. “You know what, though? I had this dream. She sang for me this morning. Her head, though. There was something wrong with her head. And she was missing a boot....”

     “I have nothing,” Bill told Felix Boca. “I talked to Borenstein’s son. The only thing he heard was that she won’t be around anymore. No details.”
Felix shrugged. “Worth a shot.”


Tuesday,
January 28th

     The woman with part of her head missing, and his ear, sang to him first about missing puppies. When she finished with that song, she went on and on about ‘don’t you step on my pink suede shoes.’
    "It’s blue suede shoes,” Bill corrected as he fingered the hole where his ear had been.
    “I like pink.”

    He awoke, finding that he had dozed off at work no less. With his head back, deep in the head rest, and his fingers pressed into his closed eyes, he hoped his secretary thought he was resting them.
His head hurt. The job he used to love had to be paid for, and now it was his turn to make that happen. His father-in-law had warned him about that when he took the offer to become chief.
   Bill Scoggins had served as Portland’s Police Chief for years, and Bill’s Dad, Ramon Ramos, served under Scoggins as second in charge. They were best friends. Bill once heard that City officials avoided dealing with the police department on anything they found to be at odds with either Chief Scoggins or Lieutenant Ramos, because the pair presented a totally unified front on nearly every issue.
    Just once, Bill wished, he had someone at his side battling it out with him. The City finance manager was complaining again, and this time by letter, that his department needed to stay within the budget. Never mind budgetary restraints were developed by someone outside of the department, who had not taken into considerations his recommendations as to what his actual needs were. According to the letter, his over­time costs alone would be the responsible force in pushing the City into a bank­ruptcy abyss. Stop, it ordered. Consider the budget when making large purchases or small. And by all means, watch the overtime.
    “Chief?” Unsinger stood in the doorway of his office. “Those two new squads are in. Interested?”
    “I can use the break.”

    These were smaller, and maybe a little cheaper than what they used to buy. The State made a contract each year with one dealership in which government agencies could purchase any vehicle they needed. It used to be a Ford dealer, which meant that all cars the City purchased previously were Crown Victorias. Bill’s own squad was a Crown Vic. The current dealership under contract with the State sold Chevy’s.
     These were gorgeous. They were all shiny and new, bright white Cavaliers with a red, white and blue band across the quarter panels on either side of the vehicles, saying Portland Police. These had front grills made for pushing stalled vehicles off the road. This was expensive and Bill thought about dispensing with them all to­gether, and then changed his mind. He had put his back into pushing quite a num­ber of vehicles out of traffic in his day, and that usually happened when he was needed elsewhere. This had new, stronger side armor, but as everyone was aware, it provided only partial protection in a high speed crash.
    The real charm of both vehicles were the high tech amenities like the computer system. It was hooked up to the State system, and could provide information concerning warrants, stolen goods, records or anything else necessary for more effec­tive police work. Currently, the computer system installed in eighteen out of twenty-two vehi­cles was limited. Most information, such as rap sheets, current addresses, etc. had to be relayed by radio from the computer in the 911 Center. Four vehicles had newer equipment, and better software. It wasn’t enough, though. This new system also used Doppler and global tracking. Vehicles approaching from either direction could be pin­pointed and their exact location displayed on a plasma monitor located in the dash between the driver and passenger seats. That, Bill appreciated.
    “What do you think?” Unsinger asked. “Ready to go back on the street?”
   “Yesterday,” Bill commented as he adjusted the monitor. “Put these on the south side.”
    Another feature Bill loved, was movement sensitive cameras mounted inside and pointed at both the front and rear. Not only where they adjustable, but they were self-adjusting as well. When something went down either in front or behind the vehicle, the cameras moved with the action.
     “Both of them?”
     “Think about it. Put one in the forest preserves coming out of Pipe of Peace, and one back by the trailer courts on the west.”
Unsinger nodded. “Makes sense.”
    Bill drew in, appreciating the smell of new car. “Yep,” he said. “I’ll work the street as of yesterday. Let someone else pay for this train wreck.”

***

    Mario Verducci counted five one hundred dollar bills into Evelyn Pratt’s hand. “I appreciate it,” he said. “My youngest, Antoinette. She can use the car to go back and forth to college with on the weekends.”
     Evelyn nodded. “I appreciate this. Got a few extra expenses that I didn’t count on.”
       “Any word on Willow?”
       She shook her head. “Not yet.”
       “Well, I’ll say this. She’s in our prayers. You and Harry, too.”
       “Thanks. I appreciate that more than anything.”

Friday,
January 31st

      Karolyn Mathers called at three thirty. “I really need to begin work now,” she told Evelyn Pratt. “Any more delays, and I can’t guarantee I can find anything.”
   "Okay, okay,” Evelyn assured. “I have the money. When can we get started?”
    “Tomorrow. I need a photo of Willow. Also something that she values. Some­thing that she would have kept on her person. A piece of jewelry maybe.”
     “Clothing?”
    “Well, clothing is tough. People might keep clothing close to them, but they don’t attach a sentimental value like they would to a ring or a pair of earrings.”
     “Well, when would I get that back?”
    “I’m not sure that you would. Sometimes it’s just easier for me to keep it in hand. Keep me in contact with Willow. Or should I call her Willie?”
     Something with a sentimental value. Evelyn had to think. There wasn’t much left around the house that she could consider that important. She had to come up with something else. She called Red. “I don’t have a thing. She moved out New Year’s Eve and she packed up every­thing she owned and took it with her. You’re going to have to find her on your own. I can’t help you.”
     No, he wouldn’t help her. Not if she were drowning and he owned the only floa­tation device. She tried to think. Pam came to the rescue. “God, I don’t believe I’m doing this,” the girl whispered as she handed over a pair of earrings. “You remem­ber these? They were her favorite. She gave them to me after that time I helped her paint her kitchen.”
    They were silver filigree with pink industrial sapphires, and they were pretty. Evelyn wrapped them up in her palm. It would be so easy to cry right now. To give into the comfort of tears. She didn’t. She made up her mind earlier that she’d cry when she knew of Willow’s fate. “Thank you,” she said, giving her youngest a hug.


Saturday,
February 1st

      Karolyn Mathers took up the earrings in the palm of her hand and covered it with the other. She closed her eyes and drew in deeply. “These will do nicely,” she said after a long moment. “I’m going to take them with me, and I’m going to pray on these tonight. By tomorrow, I should be able to tell you something.” She wrapped the earrings up in a plastic lunch bag, and set that and the cash in her purse.
    "I hope she gave you some sort of contract,” elder daughter, Erica, commented, once the woman was out of the door.
    “Contract?”
    “Contract. Yes or no?”
    “Well, no. You don’t think... No.”



Sunday,
February 2nd

    “I’ve been praying all night,” said Karolyn Mathers over the phone, “And I’ve been praying all day. I haven’t got much to work with at this point. I mean I will have more for you. Still, I think I have something for you to work on.”
      “What’s that?” Evelyn demanded.
      “I keep seeing this bridge. It crosses a river of some sort. Only it isn’t really a river. On the right hand side, heading south over the river, there’s a break in the guardrail.”
      “And?”
      “And? That’s it. You have to find the bridge with the break in the guard rail. You find that and you’ll find Willow.”

     Harry brought in a map from the glove box of his car. “I kind of thought she’d help us with this,” Evelyn said as he spread the map across the kitchen table. “I mean what did we pay her a thousand dollars for?”
    He pointed to a long blue line, and then to another. “You said it was river like, but it wasn’t a river?”
      “Right.” She moved in to see where he was.
     “Here’s the Cal Sag Channel. It’s man made. A river, but it isn’t a river.” He moved along the blue line until he ran into another. “This is the Chicago Sanitary Canal. Also man made.”
    “So what are you suggesting?”
    “We can start right here,” he said, returning to a shaded area that said Portland. “The Channel begins over here by the Little Calumet River. A bridge crosses it every few blocks.”
    “That could take days.”
    “It could.”
    “And what if there is a bridge out there with the guard railing missing, and if it is repairs it before we get there?”
    Harry nodded. “I guess that’s one of the risks we face considering how long it took us to get moving on this.”
    “And if we had two cars, I could start at one end and you at the other.”
Harry met her eye for eye. “I didn’t ask you to sell your car. You did that on your own.”
   Evelyn folded her arms over her breast. Just like him. Wouldn’t make up his mind on much, but once someone screwed up, he’d point a finger. ‘Your fault. You did it. Not me.’ “God help me for making a decision,” she said slowly.
    “All I’m saying is that I didn’t tell you to sell your car.”
    “All I’m saying is that this isn’t helping us find that bridge. Now is it?”
Harry studied her, but then pointed at the map. “Let’s start here.”
    “Fine.”
    “Tonight. After dinner.”
    She nodded. Again, it was doing something.


  They crossed the first bridge, just east of Portland at five thirty. They crossed the next at five thirty five. They doubled back at the third bridge. It was dark and hard to see.

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