and sarcasm. The fear lurking in the shadows did not surprise him, but it was troubling.

“Remember, you can’t take the files.”

She shifted her attention to the first box, her fingers skimming over the tabs of the folders. “I get it. Look. Don’t take.”

He walked to the door and then paused. “Joan, what do you hope to find?”

“I’m not really sure, Gideon.” She removed a dusty yellow-white file.

He could not save her now, any more than he could have ten years ago. “Call out if you need me.”

“Thanks.”

Sighing, he left, hearing the other file box tops hit the conference room table. When he returned to his office, his phone was ringing. He snapped it up, both annoyed and grateful to have his thoughts diverted. “Detective Bailey.”

“Becca here. I’m at the jail. Received a drunk-in-public complaint call from the manager at the Double R Bar. A fellow by the name of Ryan Davis, who is now in the drunk tank.”

“Why are you telling me this?” He sat in his chair, leaned forward, and began to doodle the letter J on his blotter.

“He got drunk because his girlfriend would not answer her cell or her apartment door.”

Becca had a punch line, or she would not have bothered with the call. She paused, as if savoring her coup. “The girlfriend’s name is Lana Long. Mr. Davis’s driver’s license gives his last known address in Denver.”

He dropped his pen. “I’ll be right there.”

“He’s still pretty drunk.”

“I still want to see him.”

He grabbed his coat and Stetson and, on the way out, stopped at the front desk. “My sister is dropping off Kyle in two hours. I should be back in plenty of time to take him to his doctor’s appointment.”

A phone rang, and as the deputy reached for it, he said, “If you’re late, we’ll look after him.”

“He can wait in my office.”

The deputy gave him a thumbs-up as his attention shifted to the call.

Fifteen minutes later, Gideon was headed into the jail, removing his hat as he greeted the officer on duty. After checking his weapon in a locker, he hustled to the cell where Davis was being held.

Becca sat across from the cell, her head tilted down toward her phone. As if she’d heard his approach, she closed a few apps and tucked the phone in her back pocket as she rose.

“Have you spoken to Ryan Davis?” Gideon asked.

“Right now, he’s sleeping it off, which is an improvement. At least he’s calmed down. The sobbing was pitiful. Worse than the vomiting.”

Gideon looked through the cell door window. Ryan’s long, thin body was curled into the fetal position. His shirt and jeans were stained, his face was as pale as snow, and his mouth hung open. There was a bucket by the cot.

“Like I said, really drunk. He’s not going to have much to say for a few hours,” Becca said.

“What did he say in the bar?” Gideon asked.

“He was shouting at the bartender. He seemed to know that Lana was a frequent patron through his Find My Friends app. Lana must have forgotten to disable it, or maybe she liked the idea of him tracking her. Either way, Ryan knew Lana had been at the Double R Bar.”

The Double R was located a few blocks from the beauty shop. “You said he was crying?”

“Like a baby.”

Some of the guilty did cry once the heat of murder had cooled and they realized their loved one was dead or injured. He had arrested a few drunken cowboys who’d mourned the girlfriend or drinking buddy they had assaulted. “Stay here and make sure he doesn’t get sprung. Call me when he wakes up. I’m headed to the Double R.”

Gideon crossed town in less than fifteen minutes and parked in front of what looked like a nineteenth-century saloon. Painted letters resembling twisted ropes spelled out DOUBLE R BAR across a plate-glass window. A red neon sign flashed OPEN. This time of day, the parking was easy, and the bar would be quiet. Nothing worse than shouting over music or fending off drunks during an interview.

Hat in hand, he pushed through the front door, pausing as his eyes adjusted to the dim light. Behind the bar was a young woman with red hair gathered up in a ponytail. A blue T-shirt, sporting the bar’s logo, stretched over large breasts, then whittled down over a narrow waist and into faded jeans.

Drying a glass tumbler, she eyed him suspiciously. “Officer, what can I do for you?”

He reached for his badge and showed it to her. “I’m Detective Gideon Bailey.”

“Marcie Cash.”

“You called in a disturbance this morning.”

“You’ll have to do better than that.” She placed the glass on the shelf and reached for another damp one in the sanitizer. “I had a couple last night.”

“Ryan Davis. He said he was Lana Long’s boyfriend.”

“Right. The sensitive one. Don’t get many of those. Yeah, what can I tell you?”

“He said Lana is a regular here?”

“She was. Liked to sit on the right side of the bar,” she said, nodding toward a trio of empty barstools.

“What can you tell me about her?”

“From Denver. Looking to find a little adventure. Had a boyfriend, and I don’t mean Ryan. She told me her new guy was local.”

“Did he ever come in here?”

“No. She always came in alone all dolled up, flirted a little, had her three Moscow mules, and then left by ten.”

“Did she ever mention the boyfriend’s name?”

“No, but she hinted once that she might be getting married. I wanted to call bullshit on that, but I keep my mouth shut. Insulting the customers hurts tips,” she said.

“Why didn’t you believe her?”

“The single boyfriends generally join their ladies. The married ones do not. Why all the questions about Lana? She okay?”

He sidestepped her questions. “You think Lana’s boyfriend was married?”

“Either married or in prison,” she said carefully, as if she saw the meaning behind his diversion. “And for the record, I’m rarely wrong.”

Joan thumbed through the files, her fingertips skimming the manila

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