“And I’m not going to stop looking for Adele. But we can get you somewhere safer.”

“That’ll be fine,” she said.

“Okay. Pack your things.”

“They’re packed.”

“Pay your bill.”

“Already did. I knew I couldn’t stay here.”

“Good. Then I’ll take you to the place Ames lives and works, the Texas Grill. You’ll be safe there. I’ve got a stop to make then. After that I’ll pick you up and we we’ll go see a lady who might be able to tell us how to find your daughter.”

I got up and put a hand on her shoulder. She looked up at me.

“I’m not going without Adele.”

“I know.”

“Be careful of Dwight.”

“I will.”

I looked at Ames, who nodded in understanding, tucked the gun into the pocket of his loose-fitting faded jeans, draped his blue, equally loose shirt over the weapon and moved to the window. He pulled the drapes open just enough so he could see outside and said, “Looks okay.”

Ames went first. I was sure that if Dwight Handford appeared he would get the surprise of his less-than- savory life. I hoped he didn’t appear. I didn’t want Ames ending his life in prison.

I picked up Beryl Tree’s suitcase. It wasn’t heavy. She got up from the chair and followed Ames through the door with me behind. Ames stood watch while I pulled open the door of the Metro for Beryl Tree and dropped the suitcase on the backseat.

“See you at the Texas,” I told Ames. “You fix the air conditioner?”

“Got to get some parts. Might be cheaper to buy an old one or a used one,” he said.

“Might be,” I agreed. “Meet you at the Texas in a few minutes.”

Beryl and I didn’t talk as I drove up 301, turned left on Main and then made a right on Lemon to Second Street. We got to the Texas before Ames, but he wasn’t far behind. He parked his scooter next to me. There were plenty of spaces. Parking was no problem in Sarasota, even in tourist season.

“Ames’ll take care of you,” I said, handing him her suitcase.

“I’ve taken care of myself my whole life,” she said. “I don’t see that changing.”

“You like chili, good burgers?” I asked.

“I’ve served enough of ’em to know the good from the bad.”

“Try Ed’s and we’ll talk later.”

I got back in the Metro but before I could close the door Beryl Tree said, “You need more money?”

“I’m fine,” I said. “You’re way ahead on retainer.”

“And I get an itemized bill when you find Adele.”

“To the last penny,” I said.

I left them standing on the sidewalk and drove the five blocks to the office of Geoffrey Green, Psychiatrist. I made it with ten minutes to spare.

There was a space in front of Carigulo’s Restaurant between a green Saab and a blue Rolls-Royce. The Rolls had a For Sale sign in the window.

The narrow passageway between Golden Fleece Antiques and Robintine’s Fine Oriental Rugs and Carpets led to a brightly tiled, small, open courtyard with a bubbling fountain in the center. To the right of the fountain was a large wooden door with a golden handle. The sign next to the door said FERGUS amp; SONS. I wondered what Fergus and his sons did and how they paid the rent. To the left of the fountain was a similar door marked GEOFFREY GREEN, M.D., PH.D. I opened the door and found myself in a carpeted waiting room twice the size of the two rooms I worked and lived in. A sliding glass window stood open in front of me. I told the matronly receptionist who I was and she asked me to have a seat. The only other person in the large green-carpeted waiting room was a nervous young woman, about twenty, who hadn’t done much to look her best. Her hair was short and dark. Her brown skirt didn’t really go with her gray blouse. She ruffled through a magazine, looked up at the clock on the wall and over at a tank of colorful tropical fish and then back at her magazine. I was halfway through an article about Clint Eastwood in Entertainment magazine when Green’s office door opened and he stepped out. There was no one with him. If he had a patient, the patient had gone discreetly out another door.

Geoffrey Green was in his late thirties. He wore a dark suit, had dark hair and was ruggedly good-looking. I’d bet he climbed mountains or skied when he wasn’t tending to his patients.

“I’ll be with you in a few minutes, Dorothy,” he said to the nervous woman, who nodded, frowning.

“Mr. Fonesca?” he said, looking at me. “Please come in.”

I followed him into his office. He opened his drapes and let in the sun and a view of a very small, lush garden and a colorful tiled wall.

The office wasn’t large compared to the waiting room, but it would do. There was a desk, a chair, a small sofa and two armchairs. The colors were all subdued blues with a touch of gold. A painting on the wall showed a woman standing on a hill looking into a valley beyond the ruins of a castle. Her face wasn’t visible.

“Like it?” Green asked, sitting behind his desk and offering me the choice of couch or one of the chairs. I took a chair.

“The painting? Yes,” I said.

“One of my patients did it,” he said. “An artist. A man. We spent a lot of time talking about that painting.”

“It’s…” I said.

“Gothic, haunting,” he said. “Yes.”

“I was going to say melancholy.”

“Yes. I’m sorry, Mr. Fonesca, but I’m going to have to get right to your questions. I have a patient waiting.”

“I understand. Melanie Lennell Sebastian…”

“I can’t give you any information about why she was seeing me or what was said,” he said softly.

“What can you tell me about her?”

He sat back, picked up a well-sharpened pencil, put it down, looked out the window and made a decision.

“Melanie Sebastian is a remarkable woman,” he said, choosing his words carefully. “She’s been through a great deal in her life. The town where she grew up-”

“Ogden, Utah,” I said.

“Ogden, Utah,” he repeated. “Her mother was sick, recurrent brain tumors from what I understand. Melanie took care of her. Every day from the time she was about ten she came home and relieved her father, who worked evenings. I think he was a carpenter. Melanie just took care of her mother, didn’t play with other children much, just read and took care of her bedridden mother. When she was fourteen, her father had a heart attack and had to retire. Melanie went to work in a restaurant waiting tables after school till ten at night. No boyfriends. No close friends. It was Melanie’s idea to move to Florida with her father and mother. They moved to Gainesville while she earned her degree while continuing to work. Then, about four years ago, just after her parents died within a week of each other, she met Carl Sebastian.”

“And what’s she like?”

“Complicated,” he said, playing with his pencil. “Dedicated herself to her husband and to helping children. She worked long hours for not much pay at a Catholic agency. She fought the system, the courts, the psychiatrists, to save children. When Melanie Sebastian gives her love, she gives it with a conviction, compassion and ferocity I’ve never seen before.”

“You know this from experience?”

“I know it from observation. I’ve told you more than I probably should.”

“You haven’t told me why she was seeing you and what you make of the story of Melanie Sebastian you just told me,” I said.

“And I won’t,” he said, putting down the pencil and looking at me.

“Do you know where Mrs. Sebastian is?”

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