called ? “

“Hold on a sec.” He put me in telecommunications limbo for what seemed like an age. When he came back his voice was grim. “Okay, they got a call late yesterday morning, a trucker said he picked up a hitchhiker who claimed a bear had torn up a campsite where Tony Royce and Marla Korman were camping. We haven’t heard from Marla or Tony, but you know the phones in Aspen Meadow were down most of yesterday.”

“The hitchhiker was Macguire.”

“A team’s already gone up to Grizzly Creek. Because it was Tony and Marla, Captain Shockley’s put himself personally in charge.” His tone very clearly said, And you know what that means. “Goldy, you’re going to have to let me get back to you.”

“Are there any …” I couldn’t say the rest.

“No reports of death, no bodies floating in the creek or washed up on the shore,” he said curtly, and hung up.

I grabbed my mug of coffee and my keys and ran out the back door.

Once I was in the van, however, I sat, bewildered. What was I doing, exactly? I took a slug of espresso and thought, What’s a logical explanation for this? Okay, Tony and Marla were miserable out there camping in that awful storm. There was some kind of problem with Marla’s Mercedes, so they got a ride out. Macguire said they only had the one car, and he didn’t see them leave. Then some animal got into their campsite while Macguire was asleep in his car. After that, a rock hit Macguire… . No.

I inhaled more caffeine and struggled to kick-start my brain. Okay. Say they came back early, for whatever reason ? they could be at Tony’s place right now, or Marla’s, sleeping in, having fun, being naughty and missing Monday morning appointments. Maybe Marla’s answering machine was on but the volume was off ? she rigged her phone that way all the time. She could have called somebody this morning when I got the busy signal, but not heard me begging for her to pick up later. So … was I going to go hauling over to Marla’s house, if that’s where they were, and barge in?

Was I up to making a fool of myself? Well, it wouldn’t be the first time. And anyway, what if Marla and Tony weren’t even there, what if they were at a hotel somewhere? I turned the ignition on, then off.

What about Macguire? What was the worst-case scenario? I wondered about Albert Lipscomb. If what Eileen Tobey had said was true, then the Eurydice Mine venture was Tony’s project as much as it was Albert’s. If it was a bust, Prospect might not recover. Maybe, I wondered wildly, maybe Albert hadn’t left town at all. Tony had told everyone he and Marla were going fishing at Grizzly Creek this weekend. Albert could easily have come back for revenge on his partner, after Marla had found problems in the assay reports. Revenge for what? For not analyzing the mine properly? For risking the assets of the entire firm? Huge maybe questions. Then, after doing something to Tony and Marla, Albert had whacked Macguire for good measure, and slashed his tires, so that he could make his getaway with all that money before anyone got back to Aspen Meadow… .

But then where were Marla and Tony? With Albert Lipscomb? Dead in the rain near Grizzly Creek? I suddenly knew what I had to do.

Fog pressed against my windshield as the van inched toward Main Street. Cottony mist wove through streetside aspen branches. The van crunched over rutted gravel left in the destructive wake of the heavy rain. Once again, I had to slow behind a line of traffic. Ten car-lengths ahead, a road crew with two bulldozers scooped up the remains of a rock slide. I drank the last of the tepid espresso and tapped the steering wheel in frustration. I didn’t want to think about rock slides.

Where was Marla? Twenty minutes later I pulled up in front of her house. A large pine branch, blown down in the storm, lay like a gnarled black bone in her groomed flower bed. The driveway was empty, the draperies pulled. There was no sign of movement on her street. I hopped up the stone steps. If Tony was here, I was going to recommend he break up with him. Immediately. Being involved with investment advisers, shady or otherwise, was getting to be burdensome on my cardiac health.

The doorbell dingdonged inside the silent house. I stared at my blurred reflection in the brass nameplate inscribed Chez Marla and waited. I rang again.

Decision time. She’d had a heart attack last summer. I’d gotten two busy signals and then nothing this morning. What if she was inside, and couldn’t call out, because she was having another heart attack? What if she needed me to do CPR? That’s my mom, I could hear Arch’s mocking voice. Always imagining the worst, and making you pay for her imagination.

Lucky for me, Marla frequently locked herself out of her own home. I hurried to the lock box under the utility gauges where I knew she kept at least two spare keys. I wrenched the box open, grabbed the one spare that was there, and sprinted back around to the front of the house.

The cold key bit into my palm as I once again pressed the doorbell and listened to it bong through the interior space. The key slipped from my hand and clanged onto the flagstone entryway. I picked it up and gently fit it into the lock. Unlike me, Marla had no sophisticated security system to protect against the Jerk or anyone else. She always claimed she had her ferocious personality to keep enemies at bay. The latch clicked, the knob turned, and I pushed the door open.

Stepping inside, I tried to prepare myself for the worst. If only I knew what the worst was, I reflected grimly. It was strangely heartening to sense a trace of Marla’s perfume in the air. In fact, the air in the house, surprisingly, was not three-day-old stale. I moved cautiously along the light blue Kirman runner into the front hall and sniffed again. Marla’s scent seemed to become stronger. So did the aroma of coffee.

Coffee? What the hell have I done? I wondered. She’s here with Tony and just not answering the phone. I’ve crashed in on a romantic interlude. She’ll never speak to me again, after this.

“Marla?” I ventured. “Hey, guys! Where are you? It’s Goldy. I’m here making a fool of myself because somebody said a bear got into your campground! Are you here?”

I fully expected to hear Marla’s familiar voice trill a sarcastic remark. Or perhaps her impish face and wild hair would appear and teasingly demand an explanation for my panicked behavior. Instead, I heard a tiny sound. Something hissed down the hall. I walked quickly toward it. Oddly, the kitchen floor was gritty with dried mud. The red light of the coffee machine blinked mockingly. Bubbles in the decanter bubbled and spat, producing both the scent and the sound I’d heard. I pulled the cord out of the wall and looked disconsolately around the room. I suddenly remembered something my mother used to do when she came home, and my brother and I looked guilty, and things in the kitchen didn’t look quite right. She would make a beeline for the trash bin. Whatever mischief we had made, whatever forbidden pizza or ice cream we had snitched, she figured, the telltale detritus was bound to be in the trash. I wrenched open the white cabinet and peered into the plastic garbage bag. It was filled with crumpled paper towels. I pulled one out. The towel was covered with dried blood.

“Marla!” I shouted. I threw down the towel and pawed through the trash. There was no meat tray or packaging to explain the bloodstained towels. I slammed out of the kitchen and ran up the back stairs, down the hall, and into her bedroom.

It was a disaster site. Clothes strewn on the beige carpeting. Towels draped over upholstered chairs. On her bed, the flowered bedcovers formed a mountainous tumble.

“Marla ? ” I croaked, fully expecting a corpse under the sheets.

The covers moved. If there were two people under there, I would never live down the mortification. That is, if Marla didn’t murder me for being such a paranoid idiot. But it would serve them right for not answering the doorbell or my calls.

A half-full cup of coffee and opened container of pills sat on the dressing table. The bedside lamp was on. I stepped awkwardly toward the bed just as Marla’s snarled mop of hair appeared from under a tousled sheet. I gasped.

“Marla? What’s going on?”

An unearthly groan, full of shame and pain, issued from the rumpled bed. Then a batch of soiled towels emerged, then my best friend’s face. I gasped again. One black eye, the other swollen shut. A bruised cheek. A dark, bloody gash down her forehead. She levered herself carefully to a sitting position. She wore a sweatshirt spotted with blood, which she tugged down self-consciously before raising her face to try to look at me.

“No,” I moaned, dropping to my knees next to her. “Oh God, you need a doctor. What happened ? “

“I wanted to call you, but the damn phone wasn’t working.” Her labored whisper squeezed my heart. “I’m sorry you have to … see me like this. I ? “

I reached a hand out to her poor face but she pulled away. “Marla, please,” I said firmly. “I’m calling your

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