I studied my surroundingsâthe purposely (and generously) paint-splattered floors, the walls hung with assorted T-shirts, discarded window frames, Frisbees, surfboards, and various other hand-me-downs from Jimmy Buffett's condominium in Margaritaville. Amanda Crisp had also accused me of nearly blowing a carefully orchestrated, multiagency sting operation, but I pleaded emphatically not guilty to that.
On a shelf over the door, a TV was playing CNN with the sound turned off. I watched the closed captioning, fascinated as typo after typo scrolled by. CNN was reporting on a funeral. Someone was singing “The Impossible Dream,” “writing unwritable wrongs” all over the place, and pining about loving “pure and chased” from afar while she was about it. I had to smile.
When an ad came on, I pulled the envelope of photos from my purse and spread its contents out on the table in front of me:
Timmy.
Joanna.
Madam X.
The FBI's Identikit technician had drawn a sketch based on Chloe's description of the woman who'd approached them in Ben and Jerry's. I put the sketch side by side with the photo I'd taken of Joanna Barnhorst. The woman in the sketch wore a hat and sunglasses. It looked like Joanna Barnhorst, I supposed, but it also looked like me, or Connie, or any one of the thousands of female tourists who flock to Annapolis each summer dressed in sunglasses and hats bought at Target.
I stared at the TV, thinking about summer, when Paul had no classes and the hot, lazy days seemed to spread out endlessly before us. Family time, spent relaxing on the farm, or sailing the Chesapeake Bay on Connie's boat,
Sea Song
. Last summer had been Timmy's first, and I prayed it wouldn't be his last.
Suddenly, a familiar face filled the television screen. Bette Keating, the idiot reporter with the helmet of improbable red hair who had been camped out at Emily's, dogging our every move for the past several days. I checked my watch. We weren't due for another press conference until two o'clock. What the heck was going on?
The camera panned back, and I could see that Bette wasn't alone. She was standing on Emily's lawn, damnit, and beside her was Montana Martin, the psychic. And beside Montanaâmy heart did a quick rat-a-tat-tat in my chestâthere stood Dante.
“I feel quite certain that Timmy is alive,” Montana informed the television audience. “I have the impression that he's being held on, or near the water, and that there may be some sort of Asian connection.”
I smiled grimly.
Asian connection
. Whatever happened to the “Chinese, Japanese, or Korean” she'd shared with the press corps from our doorstep the other day? CNN had obviously vetted Montana's “vision” for political correctness, cleaning it up to avoid offending the opponents of racial profiling.
“Yes, I know it's controversial⦔ Those were my son-in-law's words crawling by on the closed captioning. “⦠but Ms. Martin has an amazing track recordâyou may remember the Lonnie Edwards caseâso we're taking what she tells us quite seriously.”
I rolled my eyes. Was this another publicity stunt cooked up by Dante and his Haverford chums? If we looked into a certain Ms. Montana Martin's background, would there be a Haverford connection there, too?
In spite of Montana's recent conversation with my dead mother, the whole psychic business was beginning to creep me out. Then the CNN reporter reminded everyoneâwith accompanying video clips from the CNN archivesâthat Scott Peterson had called in a pet psychic to interview the family dog about his wife, Laci's, disappearance. My heart turned to stone. Was Dante up to no good, too?
Montana disappeared and another head filled the screen, Professor Avery K. McMasters, if the label to the right of his head was to be believed. McMasters was a professor at Rice University, an expert inâI squinted, but didn't catch whatâand, naming no names, he was clearly taking Montana to task. “Such charlatans can be pretty clever.” The professor grinned, Sphinxlike, into the lens. “They hook you, reel you in slowly, until you lay at their feet, flopping and gasping, with an empty bank account to prove it.”
I hoped Dante was listening.
With her usual impeccable timing, just as the hamburgers arrived, Agent Crisp slid into the booth across from me. “Thanks for coming.”
I tore the top off my packet of chips. “You look tired.”
“I am. We're working Timmy's case 24/7. With kids, it's triply hard.”
“I have some information for you that may help us both,” I said.
“Well, Hannah, that's exactly why I called you. It's this
both
business that's troubling me.”
“What do you mean?”
Amanda made no move to touch her food. “Since it's your grandson who's been kidnapped, and you understandably have a deep, personal interest in the progress of this investigation, I was willing to cut you a little slack. But now, I have to tell you, you're getting in the way.”
A lump began to form in my throat, and as delicious as it had seemed only seconds ago, I suspected my burger would remain uneaten.
“Do you know how incredibly lucky you are?”
I shook my head, fighting back tears. I refused to cry in front of Amanda Crisp.
“If the child you saw is actually Timmy, after your daughter's outburst in the mall the other night, you're lucky the Barnhorst woman didn't head for the hills with him.”
“I didn't think of that,” I admitted sheepishly. “Emily was so certain it was Timmy, at least at first. I just couldn't let the woman get away.”
“If she suspects that you're tailing her, she may
still
get spooked and run off with him.”
Once again Agent Crisp had taken me by surprise.
“Are you following me?”
“Let's just say that I wish you'd leave us alone to do our job. Will you promise me that?”
“Do you know that she bought suitcases at Sam's Club?”
Agent Crisp simply smiled. “Promise me you'll stop following Joanna Barnhorst.”
“Okay, I promise.”
“Have a chip,” she said, sliding her bag across the table.
“Thank you,” I said, still feeling a bit miffed, “but I'd rather smoke my own.”
After a respectable silence, during which Amanda tucked into her burger and I nibbled on the chips from my bag, I said, “I took some pictures,” and slid the envelope of photos across the table.
Amanda laid her hand on the envelope. “Thanks. But that's
it
, right? As of right now, you are off the case.”
“Your hamburger's getting cold,” I said.
After Amanda left, I stayed in the booth, finishing my ice tea. Then I headed for the colorful restroom where someone had painted enormous bird tracks on the wall. They snaked up and around, before disappearing into a ragged hole in the acoustical tiles. From the opening overhead a demonic Tweetie Bird peered down at me as I sat on the toilet and dialed my sister-in-law's cell. I needed to give Connie a heads-up: watch out for the Feds.
When I made that promise to Agent Crisp, after all, I didn't say anything about Connie.
I certainly didn't set out to wreck my daughter's
marriage, but the look of pure loathing she sent Dante's way when the words “Joanna Barnhorst” passed over my lips will be tattooed on my brain forever.
Emily tossed the picture she was holding across the table at her husband. “So this is your former girlfriend,” she sneered. “I always wondered what she looked like.”
Dante turned the photograph face down without even looking at it. “She means nothing to me, Emily. After seven years of marriage and three beautiful children, surely you know that.”
“I once had three children,” Emily whispered in a long, long ago and faraway tone of voice, as if she were reading the first line of a Victorian novel.
Across the table from his wife, Dante paled.
“If she means so little to you,
darling, honeylamb, sugarpie
, how come you were so hot to give her a job at Paradiso?”
“Correction.
FranÃois
was lobbying to give her a job, not me. He said he felt sorry for her.”
“Oh, puh-leeze, give me credit for a little intelligence, will you?”
Dante massaged his temples with his fingers, as if trying to erase the pain. In my opinion, my son-in-law had a lot of explaining to do, but I feared that what Emily was about to say might poison the well forever.
“So, you turned her down,” she continued, relentless.
“Right.”
“You sent her away.”
“Yes.”
Dante closed his eyes and rested his head against the back of his chair as the significance of what he'd just said sunk in.
“And she came back that Monday?”
“I don't know, Emily. You may recall that I was tied up with that reporter. If Joanna came back, I certainly didn't see her.”
As much as I hated to fan the flames, I felt I had to jump in and set the record straight. “She did come back, Dante. She stuck her head into the office for a second while I was sitting there. She was looking for you.”
“My God.” Emily practically screamed the words.
“Emâ” Dante began, but Emily interrupted him.
“What on earth would make Joanna kidnap Timmy? I have
tons
of ex-boyfriends,” she added maliciously, “but as far as I know, none of them ever tried to kidnap my children!”
Dante leaned forward and pressed his hands between his knees, as if trying to control their shaking. “I don't know, Emily. I dated the woman. When I met you, I broke up with her. End of story.”
“Apparently not,” my daughter said.
Dante turned to me. “Did Joanna say what she wanted?”
“Just that she was looking for you.”
Dante exploded. “Jesus Christ! I'll kill her. I swear to God I'm going to kill her. Where did you say she's living?”
“She's got an apartment out on Bestgate Road.”
Dante bolted from his chair, and considering the black mood he was in, took Emily surprisingly gently by the arm. “Let's go.”
Emily shook his hand away. “You go. I'm going to call the FBI.”
“Stay put,” I told them. “The FBI is already on it. Agent Crisp told me that when she warned me against stalking Joanna.”
“The hell with that! Come on, Emily!”
Emily glanced from me to her husband. I suspected she would have gone off with him, too, but was saved from making any decision by the sound of my cell phone, chirping its buttons off to the tune of “Old McDonald Had a Farm” from my purse, which was sitting on the landing.
“Connie?” By the time I reached the phone and punched the Talk button, I must have sounded breathless.
Connie sounded breathless, too. “Joanna's packed up Timmy and the suitcases, Hannah, and she's on the move. I'm right behind her on Route 50, heading west. Unless I miss my guess, she's heading for New Carrollton.”
New Carrollton station, at the intersection of Route 50 and I-495, better known as the Capital Beltway. From there, Joanna Barnhorst could take a train, or bus, or hop on the Metro. My bet was on the train.
Thinking about Amanda Crisp and her FBI team who were supposed to be on the case 24/7, I asked, “Have you seen any Ford Tauruses in the vicinity? Crown Vics?”
“You think I noticed
that?”
“Right. Silly question. Best to hedge our bets, then. Stick with her,” I said, “We're on our way.”
Except when the children were in the car, my son-in-law drove like Dale Earnhardt, Junior, and had four points on his license to prove it. In his present state of mind, I had doubts we'd arrive in one piece with Dante at the wheel, so I insisted on driving while my daughter yelled encouragement from the backseat. “Can't you go any faster?”
I pulled into the HOV lane. “If I go any faster, I'll get stopped for speeding, and where would
that
get us?”
From a spot in the console, my cell phone chirped again. “You get it,” I told Dante as I overtook and passed a truck on the right.
Dante clapped the phone to his ear. “Yeah?” He listened for a few seconds, then turned to me and said, “It's Connie reporting in. Joanna's in the parking garage at New Carrollton, so it's either the Metro or the train.”
“Jeeze.” I slammed my foot down on the accelerator. The speedometer shot up to a terrifying eighty. In the backseat, Emily kept muttering faster-faster-faster under her breath, nearly driving me insane. Nevertheless, I made it from the Annapolis city limits to the Capital Beltway in a record fifteen minutes. I shot right off the highway and onto the exit ramp, crossed over the Beltway, ruined my shock absorbers by taking a series of diabolical speed bumps way too fast, pulled past the taxi rank and into the Kiss and Ride.
As we climbed out of the car, Dante still had Connie on the line. “Where's she now?” he hissed into the phone. “There's a train for Florida in ten minutes,” he reported while punching the End button with his thumb. “Connie thinks that Barnhorst will be on it. Let's go!”