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"Ho. Ho. Ho."
"Hold on to that thought."
When we'd disconnected I went looking for Anne. She'd already retired. No further explanation of fulfillment or substance. I had the sense she'd used the phone call as an escape opportunity.
I undressed, washed my face, brushed and flossed, all the time worrying over my promise to Katy. I'd been so wrapped up in Louise Parent and my pizza bas.e.m.e.nt girls I'd virtually forgotten Christmas. And totally forgotten Hannah's shower.
Could I resolve the case in a week, or would I be forced to put my lost girls on hold for the holidays?
Back in my room, I reached to set the alarm, stopped. Had Ryan given me a pickup time? I remembered asking, but couldn't recall his reply.
Ten-thirty. He'd probably be at home.
I hit Ryan's b.u.t.ton on my speed dial. The phone was answered after two rings.
"Yes?" The voice was female.
Something hot-wired through my stomach and lungs.
"Andrew Ryan, please."
"Who's calling?" Young and female.
"Dr. Brennan."
"You." Young and female and edged like a saw. "Why don't you leave him alone?"
"Excuse me?"
"Quit s.c.r.e.w.i.n.g with his head."
"Is this Danielle?"
Long silence.
My mind raced. Was that the right name?
"Is this Detective Ryan's niece?"
The woman snorted. "Niece? That's what he told you? And you believed him? You're dumber than I thought."
The truth dropped into place like a guillotine blade.
"Just leave him alone."
I was listening to a dial tone.
24.
AFTER LYING AWAKE MOST OF THE NIGHT FEELING MORE despondent than Anne, I began to sleep in fitful intervals. despondent than Anne, I began to sleep in fitful intervals.
Toward morning, I dreamed Ryan and I were in a long, dark tunnel. As we spoke, Ryan receded farther and farther from me, until his body was a hazy silhouette at the tunnel's mouth.
I tried to follow, but my legs were tar. I shouted again and again, but my mouth was mute.
Something skittered past me in the dark, dry and spidery like the wing of a bat.
I tried to raise my arm. It wouldn't move.
The thing brushed my cheek.
I flailed at it.
And awoke to find Birdie licking my face.
The tunnel monsieur monsieur phoned as I was crunching cornflakes and toast. I'd resolved I would go to Candiac with him as planned. I wanted to talk with Rose Fisher. After that, it was sayonara. Too much heartache. Too many sleepless nights. phoned as I was crunching cornflakes and toast. I'd resolved I would go to Candiac with him as planned. I wanted to talk with Rose Fisher. After that, it was sayonara. Too much heartache. Too many sleepless nights.
Too many prom queens.
I'd considered, but decided against a confrontation concerning the woman at Ryan's home. I'd been betrayed once. I'd played out that drama. The teary accusations. The hostile denials. The heart-splintering admissions. I wouldn't go there again.
Birdie supported my decision.
"Sleep well, suns.h.i.+ne?"
"Like igneous rock."
"Bastillo is taking Fisher to visit her priest at ten. She suggested we swing by the house at eleven." I heard what sounded like a match, then the exhalation of smoke. "Pick you up around ten-thirty?"
"I'll be at home."
Claudel phoned as I was blow-drying my hair.
As usual, there was no greeting, no formulaic query about my health or my day.
"Detective Charbonneau suggested I contact you, though I am uncertain why." From most tongues, the French language glides like silk. From Claudel's, it thuds like potatoes down a chute. "I have nothing to report."
"Meaning?"
"No smoking gun on Cyr's list of renters. No hits with CPIC. No hits with NCIC. No hits in Vermont or California."
"Not a single missing person even came close?"
"One kid in California. Broken right wrist. Tickled the lower end of your height range."
"How tall?"
"Five-four."
I felt a buzz of electricity.
"Close enough. When was she reported missing?"
"Eighty-five."
"What's the problem?"
"Kid was fourteen."
The current fizzled.
"The skeleton with the fractured radius had to be closer to twenty." I pictured the bones of the girl in the leather shroud, the molar root closure on her dental X-rays. "Maybe as young as eighteen, but there's no way she was fifteen."
"My point precisely."
"Of course date of disappearance need not be the date of death. Did you learn anything else?"
"Battalions of girls go missing each year."
Hang up, a voice warned. Hang up now or Claudel's going to suffer another direct hit.
My doorbell doesn't ring. It twitters. At that moment, it did so.
"I'd like a printout of every female aged fifteen to twenty-two reported missing in Quebec over the past twenty years."
"You're talking dozens. Most'll turn out to be runaways who eventually slunk back to Mommy or Daddy when they got tired of eating Beanie Weenies and sleeping on the floor."
Easy.
"It would be helpful to me to know which ones didn't."
More twittering.
"Madame, th-"
"Detective Ryan is here. I have to go."
"Andrew Ryan?"
"We are going to interview Louise Parent's sister."
"The DOA in Candiac?"
"Yes."
"The old lady that was burning up your phone line?"
"She called me."
"Wanting what?"
"That is exactly what I intend to find out."
"When did the sister surface?"
"Yesterday."
"Where?"
"At her home."
"Where was the old biddy hiding out?"
"Pointe-aux-Pics." Icy. "I'd like that printout as soon as it's ready."
"Sacrifice."
"Merci." a.s.shole. a.s.shole.
I shot to the bathroom. One side of my hair was fine. The other hung in damp spirals. I reached for the dryer.
Twittering. With talons.
"Terrific."
Birdie was watching from the doorway. At the sound of my voice he rose, stretched one leg backward, and moved on. No time to leave a note for Anne.
I jammed the dryer into its holder, pulled on a tuque, and headed out.
Ryan was waiting in the outer lobby, face ruddy from the cold. Brown-tinted shades. Bomber jacket.
Libido liftoff.
Though the previous night's call still held a stranglehold on my emotions, apparently l.u.s.t had pulled a Houdini.
"Did I wake you, cupcake?" Big Ryan grin.
"You did not wake me." I tried to keep the hostility from my voice.
"Are we testy this morning?"
"Are we smoking this morning?"