'One way to find out.' He stripped down to his jogging shorts, then waded in. She watched as he took a deep breath, then dived under.

A moment later, he surfaced. 'It is. And a fine car at that. A Mercedes coupe.' She frowned, something plucking at her memory.

'I'm going to take another look.'

Hunter went under again. Sarah began to bark. This time when he reappeared he swam back, then climbed out. 'I think we better call Dad.'

CHAPTER 21

Neither Avery nor Hunter had a cell phone. They decided the quickest route to a phone would be through the woods and across a pasture to Sam Tiller's place. The man caught sight of Hunter and broke into a broad smile, his weathered face creasing up like a Shar-Pei's hide.

He pushed open the screen door, smile faltering when he saw the condition they were in. 'A bit early in the year to be swimming. Water'd be real cold.' He shifted his gaze to her. 'You're the doc's girl.'

'Yes, sir. Good to see you.'

'Damn shame about the doc. He was a good man.' He turned to Hunter. 'What's this all about?'

'We need to use a phone, Sam. To call Buddy.' Hunter ex-Plained about jogging to the pond, Avery seeing the shadowy form °f something under the water, then realizing it was an automobile.

The man scratched his head. 'A car, you say? A Mercedes?

Damned if I can figure how it got there. Come on in, phone's this way.'

They followed him inside. Sam's wife had died back when they were in high school and as far as Avery knew, the couple hadn't had children. The old farmhouse's interior begged for a little TLC. Fabrics were frayed, curtains dingy and any feminine touches had long since gone the way of the dinosaurs.

It reminded her of how her dad's house had begun to look.

Hunter dialed. Avery could tell by Hunter's side of the conversation that his father was surprised to be hearing from his son.

'You want me to call or- Fine. We'll meet you there.'

Hunter hung up the phone. He turned to her and Sam. 'Dad's calling Matt. The farm's outside the city limits and falls under the sheriff department's jurisdiction.'

'Seeing it's in my pond,' Sam said, 'I think I'd better get a look at this thing. I'll drive us.'

They all three crowded onto the bench seat of his battered old pickup truck; Sarah rode in back. The sky had begun to turn dark, fat black clouds forming to the south.

Within minutes they reached the turn for the pond. Hunter hopped out and unhooked the chain barricade; Sam eased the truck through. Avery wasn't surprised to see they had beaten both Buddy and Matt there.

Sam stopped the pickup; they climbed out. The farmer crossed to the water, squinted down at the cloudy surface. After a moment, he looked at Hunter. 'Damned if it isn't a car. I'll be.'

Just then, Matt pulled up, followed by Buddy. The younger Stevens climbed out, waited for his father, then crossed to the trio.

'What's the deal?' Matt asked.

Sam stepped forward. 'A car,' he said. 'In my pond. Damned if I know where it came from.'

Matt shifted his gaze briefly to her, then turned to Hunter. 'You seem to be in the thick of everything these days.'

'What can I say? Trouble finds me.'

'How about you give me the sequence of events.'

Hunter did. Matt shifted his gaze to hers. 'You want to add anything to that?'

Dark clouds drifted over the sun; she shivered and shook her head. 'I can't think of anything.'

'How you goin' to get it out of there?' Sam asked.

'Call Bubba, get one of his wreckers over here, haul it out,' Matt answered.

'You're certain it was a Mercedes?' Buddy asked. 'One hundred percent. Silver. A CLK 350.' The two lawmen exchanged glances. 'But you say it was empty?'

'It appeared so,' Hunter confirmed. 'But you're not certain?'

'No.'

'If we need anything else, we'll be in touch.' Matt looked at her. Something in his gaze had her folding her arms across her chest. 'Storm's moving in,' he said softly. 'I suggest you take cover.'

CHAPTER 22

At the same moment the storm hit, Avery remembered what had eluded her before: the guy whose Mercedes had supposedly broken down outside of Cypress Springs, the one whose girlfriend had claimed he'd gone missing. She'd cried foul play, but without any evidence of a homicide, Buddy and Matt could only assume the story a fabrication or that the guy had wanted to disappear.

They had their evidence now. Though a submerged vehicle did not a murder make.

That's why Matt had asked twice about the vehicle being empty. He was looking for a body to go with the car.

'Here you are,' Sam said, interrupting her thoughts. His pickup rattled as it crept up her driveway, then creaked to a stop.

She turned to him. 'Thanks for the ride. I really appreciate it.'

He peered out at the rain. A boom of thunder shook the truck. 'I don't mind waitin' a minute, till it eases up out there.'

'I appreciate that, Sam. But I'm already wet. A little more water's not going to hurt me.' She grabbed the door handle. 'Thanks again for the-'

'It's not true,' he said, cutting her off. 'What they all say about him.'

She stopped, looked back at him. 'Pardon?'

'Hunter's a good man. Rock solid. Your father liked him.'

Her mouth dropped. He motioned to the door. 'Go on now. Before it gets any worse.'

She did as she was told, hopping out into the downpour. Instantly soaked, she hurried to the front porch. There, she watched the old truck rumble off.

What who said about Hunter? His family? Others in the community?

Your father liked him.

She sank onto the porch swing and stared out at the rain. Her lips lifted with a curious kind of pleasure. The old farmer's comment shouldn't matter to her, but it did. It warmed her. She had always considered her father an excellent judge of character. Had turned to him for advice about people often, during both her adolescence and adulthood.

She liked Hunter, too, despite their recent clashes. She always had. As a young person, she had admired his intelligence and wit. His fine, dry sense of humor. She thought back, recalling the times he had helped her with math, the subject that had given her never-ending fits. She recalled how he'd had the ability to make her smile, even when she had not been in the mood to. She remembered the time, after a particularly upsetting disagreement with her mother, when he had held her and talked her through it. Quietly supporting her while getting her to see her mother's point of view as well.

Where had Matt been that day? she wondered. Busy? Or had she sought Hunter out because she'd known that he would be the one able to calm her?

And now, as an adult, she sensed a deep, abiding honesty in him-about himself and his shortcomings and about others. That made him difficult for some to take, she supposed. It made him confrontational.

Cypress Springs didn't embrace diversity. Round peg, round hole. PLUs-People Like Us. That made them feel

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