Sheriff Tait was waiting for us outside the building when we arrived.

He looked about sixty, was a little too round, but still had a formidable appearance. His face was chiseled with creases and shadows, and as we approached he snuffed out a cigarette against the wall and flicked the butt into the snow.

An observation of Tessa’s came to mind: Smoking is suicide. It just takes longer than a gun, but I kept it to myself.

Alexei remained silent while he was processed and fingerprinted and then led to a cell. “You get one phone call,” Burlman taunted. “You better make it a good one.”

“I’ll wait on that for now.” He was looking at me.

I tried to think what to do.

How are you going to find Kayla without his help?

Once Alexei was out of earshot, I said to Tait, “I want two people watching his cell at all times. Rotate them in and out.”

“No good. We’re short on staff with this storm, with the search for Kayla, with everything.”

“This man is an escape risk, Sheriff, and we cannot let him get away.”

“We’re stretched thin here, Agent Bowers, you know that.”

“I’m not sure the cells here will hold him.”

He eyed the wall beside me. “I can give you one officer. That’s it.”

“At all times then. But not Burlman. And Chekov stays cuffed, even in the cell.”

“Sure. Okay.” He tapped the edge of his lip with his tongue. “This guy, he killed my deputy.”

“I know this is easier said than done, but you need to set that aside for right now. We just have to make sure Chekov doesn’t slip out of here.”

“Oh, he won’t.” His voice was filled with acid, and I had a feeling I knew what he was thinking.

“Sheriff Tait, two state troopers already beat him with their batons.”

“Yeah, I heard. Kicked the living-” He caught himself, perhaps concerned he shouldn’t be defending police brutality by cussing to an FBI agent. “He was resisting arrest.”

“I know you don’t buy that.” I wasn’t going to play this game. “I’ll be filing a report dealing with their actions later. For now, Alexei stays in his cell, and no one goes in there with him. Mistreating him in any way isn’t going to encourage him to give up anything on Kayla’s location-or help us get a conviction against him for Ellory’s murder.”

A pause. “You gonna interrogate him, then?”

“I am.”

Although I was planning to talk with Alexei, I honestly couldn’t see him giving anything up unless he decided it was in his best interest-and even striking some sort of deal wouldn’t make any substantial difference in the charges that were going to be brought against him.

I looked around.

In the next room over, the 911 dispatch call board was staffed by a bleary-eyed overweight man in his thirties. Some storage rooms, a few offices, two holding cells, restrooms, and a small conference room rounded out the place. The building wasn’t equipped with anything close to a secure interrogation room, and I figured Alexei would do whatever it took to escape and would likely somehow use the transfer to any other room to his advantage, so I decided to leave him in the cell when I spoke with him.

Sheriff Tait was quiet for a moment. “So did he tell you why he killed the Pickrons? What he did with Donnie?”

“I don’t believe he killed the Pickrons.”

“Why’s that?”

“The evidence points in another direction.”

“Oh, I get it.” His tone had turned snide. “Keeping an open mind, huh?”

“Would you suggest we do the opposite?”

“’Course not. It’s just… what Burlman told me before he headed to the hospital, and Chekov… well, there are two sides to every story, Dr. Bowers.”

“Yes. But there’s only one truth.”

And sometimes neither of the two sides is telling it.

He took a somewhat strained breath. “I’ll make sure nothing happens to him.”

Behind him I saw Alexei sitting placidly on his cot, examining the walls of his cell, his cuffed hands resting on his lap. I wished I could climb inside his head, unravel his thoughts, and study them one by one, not just to find out what he was pondering at the moment but to find out where Kayla was, to discover if she really was okay.

I checked Alexei’s spring-loaded bone injection gun into evidence, then pulled over a chair and took a seat beside his cell.

62

Solstice drew her skis to a stop at the edge of the woods and scanned the barren field stretching before her.

Though not yet dusk, with the thick cloud cover, daylight was already beginning to fade. A bitter wind shrieked around her.

She’d heard the rolling whine of a motor as she approached the field, and now, at last, saw a snowmobile trail groomer about a quarter mile away. She had no idea how long it had been in the area, but it was pressing forward along one of the trails that skirted directly around the old ELF site.

Taking a trail groomer out in weather like this wouldn’t be entirely unheard of, but the all-too-convenient fact that someone was doing it here, today, disturbed her.

At the moment, she and her team were still hidden in the forest, as well as dressed in Marine Corps Disruptive Overwhite snow camouflage so they wouldn’t be visible to the people in the trail groomer, and she took a moment to orient herself and see if there might have been more than one machine out.

To her left, two wide swathes of forest were missing, lonely for the ELF lines that had been removed back in 2004. A few intermittent scraggly grass blades fingered through the snow, breaking up the otherwise pristine snowscape. Only one structure was visible: a windowless thirty-foot-tall sheet-metal maintenance building with six reinforced sliding garage doors.

That was her destination.

No other trail groomers or snowmobiles were visible.

Solstice knew that the forest rangers occasionally used the building to store old vehicles and trail upkeep equipment, but, though the rangers wouldn’t have been privy to it, that wasn’t the only purpose the building served.

Three power lines stretched from a telephone pole to the top of the building. One provided electricity to the building, another was the now-useless phone landline, the third served as the sat comm antennae for the base.

The trail groomer turned south, toward Solstice’s team.

She borrowed Tempest’s semiautomatic AR-15 and sighted through the scope. It took a few moments for her to get it dialed in, but at last she was able to identify three people in the cab. An Asian woman, a Native American man, and a male Cauca Wait.

She knew that Asian lady from a previous encounter, the same one in which she’d met Agent Bowers last year. Jiang. She was an FBI agent as well.

Solstice took a moment to let things sink in.

Agent Bowers is here. So is Jiang.

She peered through the scope again.

Solstice couldn’t identify the two men with Jiang. One might be a civilian operator, but FBI agents usually work in teams so she went with the most likely assumption that at least one of them was a federal agent as

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