Seconds later, before she fell unconscious, the man began to sing.

'Here are maidens, young and fair…'

84

The snow was unremitting. At times Byrne and Vincent had to pull over to let a squall pass. What lights they saw-the occasional house, the occasional commercial enterprise-seemed to come and go in the fog of white.

Vincent's Cutlass was built for the open road, not the snow-covered country lane. At times they drove five miles an hour, wipers on high, headlights illuminating no more than ten feet ahead of them.

They passed through small town after small town. At six o'clock they realized it might be hopeless. Vincent angled to the side of the road, pulled out his cell phone. He tried Jessica again. He got her voice mail.

He glanced at Byrne, Byrne at him.

'What do we do?' Vincent asked.

Byrne pointed out the driver's side window. Vincent turned, looked.

The sign seemed to appear out of nowhere.

DOUG'S DEN.

There were only two couples in the restaurant, along with a pair of middle-aged waitresses. The interior was standard home-style small-town decor-red and white checked tablecloths, vinyl-covered chairs, a ceiling spiderwebbed with white Christmas minilights. A fire burned in a stone fireplace. Vincent showed his ID to one of the waitresses.

'We're looking for two women,' Vincent said. 'Police officers. They may have stopped here today.'

The waitress looked at the two detectives with well-worn country skepticism.

'Can I see that ID again?'

Vincent took a deep breath, handed the wallet to her. She scrutinized it for what seemed like thirty seconds, handed it back.

'Yes. They were here,' she said.

Byrne noticed that Vincent had that look. The impatient look. The Double K Auto look. Byrne hoped Vincent wasn't about to start body- slamming sixty-year-old waitresses.

'About what time?' Byrne asked.

'Maybe one o'clock or so. They spoke to the owner. Mr. Prentiss.'

'Is Mr. Prentiss here now?'

'No,' the waitress said. 'I'm afraid he stepped out for a bit.'

Vincent checked his watch. 'Do you know where these two women went from here?' he asked.

'Well, I know where they said they were heading,' she said. 'There's a small art-supply store at the end of this street. It's closed now, though.'

Byrne looked at Vincent. Vincent's eyes said: No it isn't.

And then he was out the door, once again a blur.

85

Jessica was cold and damp. Her head felt as if it were full of broken glass. Her temple throbbed.

At first it felt as if she might be in a boxing ring. She'd been knocked down a few times in sparring, and the first sensation had always been one of falling. Not to the canvas-through space. Then the pain.

She was not in the ring. It was too cold.

She opened her eyes, felt the ground around her. Wet earth, pine needles, leaves. She sat up, a little too quickly. The world spun out of balance. She lowered herself onto an elbow. After a minute or so, she looked around.

She was in the forest. There was even an inch or so of snow that had accumulated upon her.

How long have I been out here? How did I get here?

She looked around. There were no footprints. The heavy snow had blanketed everything. Jessica gave herself a quick once over. Nothing broken, nothing seemed fractured.

The temperature was dropping; the snow was falling harder.

Jessica stood up, steadied herself against a tree, did a quick accounting. No cell phone. No weapon. No partner. Nicci.

At six-thirty it stopped snowing. But it had gotten fully dark, and Jessica had no way of knowing direction. She was far from an outdoor expert to begin with, but what little she knew she could not use.

The forest was dense. Every so often she clicked on her dying Maglite, hoping to gain some sort of bearing. She didn't want to use up what little battery life she had. She didn't know how long she would be out here.

She lost her footing a few times on icy rocks hidden beneath the snow, repeatedly tumbling to the ground. She decided to walk from barren tree to barren tree, holding on to low branches. It made her progress slower, but she did not need to twist an ankle or worse.

After something like thirty minutes, Jessica stopped. She thought she heard… a stream? Yes, it was the sound of water trickling. But where was it coming from? She determined that it was coming from over a slight rise to her right. She slowly negotiated the incline, saw it. A narrow brook snaked its way through the woods. She was no expert on waterways, but the fact that it was moving meant something. Didn't it?

She would follow it. She didn't know if it was leading her deeper into the forest, or closer to civilization. Either way, she was certain of one thing. She had to move. If she stayed in one place, dressed as she was, she would not survive the night. She flashed on the image of Kristina Jakos's frozen skin.

She pulled her coat close to her body, and followed the stream.

86

The gallery was called the Art Ark. There were no lights on in the store, but there was a light in the window on the second floor. Vincent pounded hard on the door. After a while a woman's voice, coming from behind the drawn curtain on the door, said, 'We're closed.'

'We're the police,' Vincent said. 'We need to talk to you.'

The curtain pulled to the side a few inches. 'You don't work for Sheriff Toomey,' the woman said. 'I'm going to call him.'

'We're with the Philadelphia PD, ma'am,' Byrne said, stepping between Vincent and the door. They were about a second or two away from Vincent knocking the door down, along with what sounded like an elderly woman behind it. Byrne held up his badge. A flashlight shone through the glass. A few seconds later, lights came on inside the store. 'THEY WERE HERE this afternoon,' Nadine Palmer said. In her sixties, she wore a red terry cloth robe and Birkenstocks. She had offered them both coffee, which they declined. The TV was on in the corner of the store, another showing of It's a Wonderful Life.

'They had a picture of a farmhouse,' Nadine said. 'Said they were looking for it. My nephew Ben took them up there.'

'Is this the house?' Byrne asked, showing her the picture.

'That's the one.'

'Is your nephew here now?'

'No. It's New Year's Eve, young man. He's with his friends.'

'Can you tell us how to get there?' Vincent asked. He was pacing, tapping his fingers on the counter, all but vibrating.

The woman looked at them both a little skeptically. 'Lots of interest in that old farmhouse of late. Is there

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