us.'

'Us?'

'About why we covered it up.'

'We're not covering anything up,' I said.

'Yes, we are,' Meredith said. 'You've known about that car from the first night.'

'Yes,' I admitted, 'But it's not as if I was trying to cover up something Keith did. Like hiding a bloody hammer, something like that. It was just a car. Keith might not even have been in it.'

Meredith glared at me, exasperated. 'Eric, you sat in our living room and listened to two cops question our son. You heard his answers, and you knew that one of them might have been a lie, but you didn't say anything.' Her eyes flamed. 'It's too late to take any of this back, Eric.' She shook her head. 'It's too late to take anything back.'

For a moment I couldn't tell exactly what she was talking about, what, among perhaps scores of things, could not be taken back.

'All right,' I said. 'I won't say anything.'

'Good,' Meredith said. Then, with no further word, she whirled around, opened the door, and fled toward the car, the heels of her shoes popping like pistol shots on the hard brick walk.

Despite Meredith's conclusion that we couldn't say anything about the car I'd seen pull into our driveway that night, I thought of calling Leo Brock and telling him about it. But I never did. Meredith would no doubt argue that it was because I knew Leo would be irritated that I'd withheld something from him and I didn't want to confront that irritation.

But the reason is simpler even than that. The fact is, by midmorning I'd entered an irrational state of hope that it might all simply go away. This hope was based on nothing, and because of that I've come to believe that we are little more than machines designed to create hope in the face of doom. We hope for peace as the bombs explode around us. We hope the tumor will not grow and that our prayers will not dissolve into the empty space into which we lift them. We hope that love will not fade and that our children will turn out all right. As our car skids over the granite cliff, we hope, as we fall, that a cushion will receive us. And at the end, the last fibers of our hope throb for painless death and glorious resurrection.

But on that particular morning, my hope was more specific, and I have no doubt that it sprang from a groundless feeling that things were getting back to normal. Customers came and went, but none of them looked at me in precisely the same way as Mrs. Phelps had the day before. Instead, they nodded polite greetings, smiled, looked me dead in the eye. Perhaps the case was growing cold in their minds, the events distant, their former urgency dissipating. Perhaps my customers had come to accept the fact that Amy was missing and we might never know what had become of her. If this were so, then soon the flyers with Amy's picture would peel from the town's shop windows. The yellow ribbons would unravel and fall to the ground, to be picked up and tossed into the garbage. For a time, the people of Wesley would vaguely consider that my son might have had something to do with Amy's disappearance, but day by day, the stain of their suspicion would fade, and eventually his association with whatever had happened to Amy Giordano would fade as well, and we would all be back to where we were before that night. That was the illusion I allowed myself all that morning, so that by the time I came back from lunch, got out of my car, and headed toward the shop, I half believed that the worst was over.

Then suddenly, like a creature rising from dark, brackish water, he was there.

I saw him get out of the delivery van he used to haul his fruits and vegetables, the bright green cap and vest, his lumbering, muscular figure oddly hunched, like a man carrying a huge invisible stone.

'Hello, Vince,' I said.

I could see what the last few days had done to him, the toll they'd taken. His eyes were red with lack of sleep, and large brown crescents hung beneath them. His face looked as if it were hung with weights, everything pulled down slightly.

'Karen didn't want me to talk to you,' he said. 'Cops probably wouldn't like it, either.'

'Then maybe it's not a good idea,' I said.

He steadied himself with a shifting motion, and had it been Warren, I would have suspected he'd been drinking. But as far as I knew, Vince Giordano was not a drinking man, especially one who'd have a bag on at one- thirty in the afternoon.

'Maybe it's not,' he said. 'I don't know, maybe it's not.' He glanced toward my shop, then back at me. 'But I got to.'

He'd always had a ruddy complexion, but now I noticed that the side of his face looked as if it had been roughly scraped. I pictured him clawing at himself with an agonizing desperation, like an animal gnawing at its paw, frantic to escape the metal trap.

'Karen cant have more kids,' he said. 'Amy was hard. And after her, Karen can't have another one.'

I nodded softly, but I could feel my skin tightening, becoming armor. 'I'm sorry, Vince.'

His eyes glistened. 'I got to have Amy back,' he said. 'She was all we had, Eric. All we'll ever have. And we got to have her back ... one way or the other.' Again his eyes fled from me. He sucked in a long trembling breath, but continued to stare out across the parking lot. 'If she's in some'—his voice broke—'some ditch or something, you know?' He looked at me pleadingly. 'You know?'

'Yes,' I said quietly.

'Some ditch where ... animals can ... where—' He suddenly staggered forward, leaned into me, buried his face in my shoulder, and began to sob. 'Oh, Jesus,' he cried. 'I got to have her back.'

I draped a single arm over his shoulder, and he drew away quickly, as if stung by an electric charge. 'You tell him that, okay?' he said. 'Keith.' His eyes were dry now, a desert waste. 'You tell him that I got to have her back.'

'Keith doesn't know where Amy is, Vince,' I said.

His gaze fixed on me like two hot beams. 'Just tell him,' he said.

I started to speak, but he spun around and made his way to his truck, his short powerful arms sawing the wind mechanically, like a furious wind-up doll.

'Keith doesn't know anything,' I called after him.

Vince didn't turn, and when he reached his van, he yanked open the door and pulled himself in behind the wheel. For a moment, he sat, head dropped forward, eyes downcast. Then he turned toward me, and I saw the depth of his pain and knew beyond doubt that his world had shrunk to the dark, pulsing nucleus of Amy's loss. All that had mattered to him before no longer mattered. Nor did all that still mattered to others touch him now. I heard his words again, fraught with desperate warning, I got to have her back. Beneath the anguish, there was a festering rage. Vince would level cities, vaporize oceans, burn all the fields of earth to hold Amy in his arms again, hold her dead or alive. For him, all existence weighed no more than sixty pounds, stood no higher than four feet. Everything else was dust.

***

I didn't want to go into the shop after that, didn't want Neil to see how shaken I was. He'd ask questions I didn't want to answer. And so I walked to the other end of the mall and dialed Leo Brock.

'I had a little ... confrontation with Vince Giordano,' I told him.

'When?'

'Just now.'

'Where?'

'In the parking lot outside my shop.'

'What did he say?'

'That he wants Amy back,' I answered. 'He told me to tell that to Keith.'

I see.

'He thinks Keith did something, Leo,' I added. 'He's convinced himself of that.'

There was a pause, and I could almost hear the tumblers of Leo's brain.

'Listen, Eric,' he said at last. 'The police seem to think that there's something wrong. Something somebody isn't telling.'

'What do you mean?'

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