“Just under your seat, to the left.”

She pulled it and the guy raised the hood. Silence for a couple of minutes, and then she felt the whole front of the car dip down and up a couple of times, as if he was really yanking on something.

“Try it now!”

She hit the ignition and the thing turned over first time.

He put the hood down carefully and came round to the passenger side.

“That’s fantastic,” Sabrina said. “Was it what you thought?”

“Exact same thing as my daughter’s. Fuel injection.”

“Awesome. I don’t know how I can thank you.”

He opened the passenger-side door and got in.

“I do.”

Owen clicked on Update.

“She’s moving again,” he said. “We can’t be too far behind, but she’s left the service station.”

“Marvellous,” Max said. “How are we supposed to know which car is hers?”

“We should be able to come right up on it. Maybe she got a Mustang like she was fantasizing about.”

They drove in silence for a while, Max keeping it steady.

“We’re just going to take our stuff back,” Owen said. “Okay, Max? I don’t want you going all King Lear on her.”

“I only want what’s mine, lad. I’m not a vindictive man.”

Owen knew this was true, but he couldn’t help adding, “I mean it, Max.”

“It would behoove you to worry more about Zig.”

“I’m trying not to think about that.”

“Shit,” Owen said. “I think we’ve passed her.”

“We haven’t passed anything but families with dogs and dune buggies for the past fifty miles.”

“Pull over, Max. She turned off somewhere.”

“There haven’t been any turnoffs.”

“Max, will you please for God’s sake pull over?”

There’s nothing like having a gun pointed at you to make you realize how much you want to live. Sabrina really didn’t want to find out what it felt like to have little bits of lead whizzing around inside her. She thought of herself as a reasonably good talker, a diplomatic person amenable to compromise, and persuasive when she had to be. The question was, what kind of entity was this on the other end of that gun?

“Why’d you pick me?” she asked him.

“You know why.”

“You want the car.”

“If I wanted the car, the car would be gone.”

“You want sex.”

He used the gun barrel to push a strand of hair back from her face.

“It’s not my primary motivation.”

“So what do you want with me?”

“I got a whole inventory of reasons. They’re growing by the minute. You certainly have a nice chest.”

“Watch your mouth.”

The man laughed. Not a pretty sound.

“You have a gun,” Sabrina said. “It’s not necessary to be an asshole as well.”

He’d already made her turn off the highway onto a smaller road that twisted back the way they had come. Sabrina was keeping a close watch on the passing landscape, trying to memorize it. They were surrounded by trees now, and the forest was getting thicker and thicker-not at all what she had expected in Mississippi. She kept hoping they would reach some kind of open space. Where the hell were cotton fields when you needed them?

“Were you looking for me specifically?” she said. “Or did I just happen to be unlucky?”

“Luck’s got nothing to do with it.”

“So you were looking for me specifically.”

“Affirmative.”

“If that’s true, how would you find me? Nobody knows where I am.”

“Bill gave me directions.”

“Bill wouldn’t do that. Bill would come himself.”

“If he could.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?”

“It means what it means.”

“Is this a kidnapping? You imagine someone’s going to pay a ransom? Believe me, I am not a person anyone’s going to pay good money for.”

“That’s just low self-esteem talking. You might want to work on that.”

They came to a dusty crossroads.

“Take this left,” he said.

“Which will take us where?”

“Don’t worry about it. Where’s your sense of adventure?”

“Suppose I decide not to.”

“Do that, and a bullet will enter your body. Somewhere painful.”

Sabrina made the turn. It was a narrow dirt road, heavily rutted. An ancient real estate sign, shotgun scarred, came up on the right, advertising cottages for sale.

“You’re thinking of buying a Forest View cottage?”

“Maybe I’ll buy all of them,” he said. “Open myself a money-making enterprise.”

By the look of them, the Forest View cottages had been boarded up fifty years ago, having no doubt hit hard times after the interstate went through. There wasn’t much other than trees to draw tourists or anyone else out here-no hills, no lake-and the road was a wreck that threatened to rip the floor out of Sabrina’s brand new car.

They went a little farther and then the guy said, “Stop here.”

A single sagging cottage on one side of the road. Other than that, no houses, no farms, just the road winding off through the trees.

“Switch off and open the trunk.”

Sabrina switched off and pulled the trunk release.

“Show me the stuff.” He clicked the safety off his automatic. “Now.”

She got out and lifted the trunk lid. “It’s in the suitcase.”

He gestured with the gun. “Show me.”

She bent into the trunk and undid the clasps of her suitcase. The canvas satchel she had lifted from Max and Owen was inside. She held it open for him to see.

“I like it. All right, put it back.”

She closed the satchel and set it back in the case. As she was closing the trunk lid, she felt a sharp pain in her right hip and spun around.

“What the hell-”

The man held up a hypodermic and smiled. “Medication time.”

“What the hell is that?”

“Short-acting sedative.”

“You bastard.”

Sabrina started back toward the front of the car. Her right leg was going soft.

He got in the seat beside her. “May cause drowsiness. Do not exceed recommended dose. Do not operate heavy machinery.”

“Fuck you.”

She hit the ignition, but her eyelids were starting to weigh several pounds each.

“You’ll thank me later. Everybody likes a good nap.”

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