Ranger and I walked to the window and looked out. The SUV was back. It pulled up to Ranger’s truck with the bug-eyed lights, the guy in the passenger side lobbed a package into the truck bed, and the truck was instantly engulfed in flames. We stood there for a few minutes, watching the spectacle, listening to the sirens get closer.

“I liked that truck,” Ranger said.

**********************

BY THE TIME Morelli arrived it was after six and the remains of the truck were being hauled onto a flatbed. Ranger was finishing up police paperwork. He looked over at Morelli and gave him a nod of acknowledgment.

Morelli stood very close to me. “Do you want to tell me about this?” he asked.

“Off the record?”

“Off the record.”

“We had a tip that Evelyn was at Newark Airport. We drove to Newark and caught her before she boarded. After hearing her story I decided she needed to get on the plane, so I let her go. I had no reason to detain her anyway. I just wanted to know what this was about. When we got back, Abruzzi’s men were waiting. There were some words, and they torched the truck.”

“I need to talk to Ranger,” Morelli said. “You’re not going anywhere, are you?”

“If I could borrow your truck I’d get a pizza. I’m starved.”

Morelli gave me his keys and a twenty. “Get two. I’ll call it in to Pino’s for you.”

I pulled out of the lot and headed for the Burg. I turned at the hospital, and I checked my rearview mirror. I was being careful now. I was trying not to let my fear surface but it was boiling inside me. I kept telling myself it was only a matter of time before the police got something on Abruzzi. He was too flagrant. He was too wrapped up in his own craziness, playing the game. There were too many people involved. He’d killed the bear and Soder to keep them quiet, but there were others. He couldn’t kill everyone. I didn’t see anyone turn with me, but that was no guarantee. If more than one car is used it’s sometimes hard to spot a tail. Just to be safe, I had my gun out when I parked in the lot. I had just a short distance to go. Once I was inside I’d be okay. There were always a couple cops in Pino’s. I swung down from the truck and started for the door to the bar. I took two steps and a green van appeared from nowhere. It glided to a stop, the window rolled down, and Valerie looked out at me, her mouth duct-taped shut, her eyes wild with fear. There were three other men in the van, including the driver. Two of them wore full rubber masks: Nixon and Clinton again. Plus there was a guy in a paper bag with two eyes torn out. I guess the budget only covered two rubber masks. The Bag held a gun to Valerie’s head.

I didn’t know what to do. I was frozen. Mentally and physically paralyzed.

“Drop the gun,” the Bag said. “And slowly walk to the van, or I swear to God, I’ll kill your sister.”

The gun fell out of my hand. “Let her go.”

“After you get in.”

I reluctantly moved forward, and Nixon shoved me into the backseat. He duct-taped my mouth and wrapped tape around my hands. The van roared off, out of the Burg, across the river into Pennsylvania.

After ten minutes we were on a dirt road. Houses were small and sporadic, stuck into patches of woods. The van slowed and then stopped on the shoulder. The Bag opened the door and shoved Valerie out. I saw her hit the ground and roll, off the shoulder, into the brush at the side of the road. The Bag pulled the door shut and the van took off. Minutes later the van turned into a driveway and stopped. We all got out and went into a small clapboard bungalow. It was pleasantly decorated. Not expensive stuff, but comfortable and clean. I was directed to a kitchen chair and told to sit. A short while after I took my place, a second car crunched on the dirt and gravel outside. The bungalow door opened, and Abruzzi walked in. He was the only man not in a mask. He took a chair opposite me. We were close enough that our knees touched, and I could feel the heat from his body. He reached out and ripped the tape from my mouth.

“Where is she?” he asked me. “Where is Evelyn?”

“I don’t know.”

He hit me with an openhanded slap to the face that caught me off guard and knocked me off my chair. I was in shock when I hit the floor, too stunned to cry, too frightened to protest. I tasted blood, and I blinked tears away.

The guy in the Clinton mask hauled me up by my armpits and set me back on the chair.

“I’m going to ask you again,” Abruzzi said. “I’m going to keep asking you until you tell me. Each time you don’t

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