He smiled. “Some people think I’m your brother.”

Shiloh folded the knife blade and retucked the end of the towel. “That doesn’t make any sense.”

“Just give us a few minutes to explain things,” Jo said. “Did you know you’ve got a whole county looking for you?”

“Yeah? Well, they missed me.” She gave the man a closer look. “What did you mean you might be my brother? I don’t have any of that kind of family.”

The man scratched his head and seemed almost ready to laugh. “You have a lot more than you imagine.”

“You’ve been in terrible danger,” Jo said. “Were you aware of that?”

“Oh, yeah. That was made very clear to me. How did you know?”

Jo said, “Tell you what. Get some clothes on. I’ll make some coffee. And we’ll talk.”

In the tiny kitchen, Jo found a coffeemaker.

“She looks different,” Benedetti said.

“Her hair’s been butchered.” Jo found filters in the cupboard. In the refrigerator was a bag of beans. Kona Blend. On the counter was a small Braun electric grinder. She hadn’t realized Wendell was such a coffee connoisseur. But it seemed that nowadays everyone was.

“She looks pretty good otherwise,” Benedetti noted with an interest that sounded not at all like brotherly love.

“She’s your sister,” Jo reminded him.

“Allegedly.”

Jo ground the beans, put the coffee together, and was just finishing as Shiloh came into the small living room. She wore clean clothes-a large work shirt and overalls rolled up at the cuffs-that Jo suspected belonged to Wendell.

“Sit down, Ms…” Jo hesitated, uncertain how to address a stranger with but one name. “Sit down, Shiloh. We’ll explain some things. It’s a little complicated. First, I’d like to call the sheriff’s office and let them know we’ve found you.”

“Fine.” Shiloh shrugged. “Whatever.”

Jo lifted the receiver from the phone hanging on the kitchen wall. “That’s odd. No dial tone.”

Behind her, the door to the trailer home opened, and she heard Shiloh exclaim, “Willie.”

Jo turned quickly. In the doorway, with the sun at his back, stood a man in dirty jeans, a torn flannel shirt, and a green down vest. He took them all in carefully.

Shiloh stood up. “What are you doing here?”

A smile suddenly graced the face of Arkansas Willie Raye, and he replied, “Why, I was worried sick about you, darlin’. Lots of folks was.” He stepped in and closed the door.

“That’s what these people have been saying.” Shiloh swung a hand back to indicate Jo and Angelo Benedetti.

“How do?” Raye said.

Benedetti took a step forward and the look on his face was hard as brass knuckles. Jo jumped in quickly. “Mr. Raye, Jo O’Connor. Cork’s wife. I thought you were with him in the Boundary Waters.”

Arkansas Willie scratched at the silver grizzle on his jaw. “Got separated looking for my girl, here. I came on back. I suppose Cork and the others’ll be along shortly. Christ almighty, it’s good to see you, Shiloh. Have you let anyone know you’re here and safe?”

“Of course we have,” Jo said. “In fact I just finished speaking with the sheriff’s office.” Jo waved at the wall phone.

Willie Raye gave that a thoughtful nod, then said, “That woulda been kinda hard, seein’ as how I cut the line a bit ago.” He reached behind him, lifted his vest, and pulled a pistol from his belt. “Why don’t y’all just get together with Shiloh over there and rub shoulders.”

“Willie?” Shiloh frowned at the gun, then looked at Raye with puzzlement.

“When were you goin’ to tell me, girl? After you took my child and butchered it?”

“Tell you what? What child? What are you talking about, Willie?”

“I created Ozark. Ozark is mine, not yours. You can’t just take it and destroy it.”

“I own Ozark. Mother left it to me.”

Raye began to pace, but he kept his eyes on the others. He passed through a bar of dusty sunlight and his shadow leaped toward them.

“She left you a debt and a dream,” he cried. “I paid the debt. I made the dream come true. It was my sweat, my worry, my lost sleep that made it happen. Ozark is my baby. You think I’d just stand by and let you inflict on it whatever misery happens to creep into your head?” He turned and paced the other direction. The hand that held the pistol was beginning to become more animated, the barrel slicing the air like a conductor’s baton.

“Shiloh’s your child, too,” Jo tried gently.

“Like hell. She was never my child, only my responsibility.” His eyes snapped toward Shiloh like whips. “Gettin’ close to you, girl, was like tryin’ to hug a bunch of nettles. You never let me love you.”

“You never gave me anything to love,” she shot back. “When I needed comfort in the night it came from nannies and nuns.”

“I tried.”

“No, you didn’t. You didn’t have to. I wasn’t yours. And nobody had to tell me that. Whenever you touched me, your hands were hard. Whenever you spoke, your words were slippery. You were one big lie, Willie, and you can’t hide a lie from a child. I always knew.”

“I took care of you.” He emphasized his point by thrusting the barrel of the handgun at her. “I made sure there was a roof over your head. A damn good roof. Several of them. And I did that by building Ozark Records into something I was proud of.”

“And something you’d kill for. It was you.” Shiloh’s voice carried the wonderment of a revelation, but her face carried all the lines of pain. “Libbie, Wendell. That was your doing.”

“Libbie Dobson?” He laughed scornfully. “Now there was a true friend. She agreed to send me copies of all your letters. We had us an understanding. A debut CD all her own. She was easy. Cheap.”

“You killed her.”

“Had her killed. Had to. She knew where you were, knew your intentions. And she was goin’ to sell that information, make it all public. Death of Ozark right there.”

“And Shiloh’s therapist, Patricia Sutpen. That was you?” Jo asked.

“Patricia?” Shiloh looked like the wind had been knocked out of her.

“I figured it would focus attention on the past, which I had nothing to do with.”

Raye’s boots thudded heavily as he paced and the whole trailer shook under him. “And that Wendell, hell, that son of a bitch trusted me until we were ’bout halfway out there, then somethin’ happened. Somehow he knew and refused to take me any farther. So he’s dead.”

“No, he’s alive, Willie,” Shiloh said, and she took a fast, angry step nearer. “He’s alive in everything he passed on to others.”

“Shut up and get back.”

Shiloh took another step. “He’ll be alive a long time after you’re gone. He was more a father to me-to a lot of people-than you could ever have been. His concern was never about what I could do for him. That’s what a father should be all about, Willie.”

The gun was trued on her heart. But Willie Raye didn’t fire.

Jo asked, trying to keep her voice quiet with reason, “What do you expect to accomplish here?”

“What do I expect?” The question seemed to stump him. He searched the beige carpet where he’d tracked bits of dried mud. Finally he replied, “What I set out to do in the first place-and then some, looks like.”

The coffeemaker grumbled suddenly and Raye swung his gun that way. When he realized what it was, he smiled and the moment seemed to give him some relief. “When they find your bodies, I’ll be back out in the Boundary Waters, hopelessly lost. Your husband will attest to that, Ms. O’Connor.”

Angelo Benedetti stood up. “The first thing my father ever taught me about gambling was never draw to an inside straight. You’re missing an important card in the middle of the hand you’re holding, Willie.”

“Who the hell are you?”

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