His University of Wisconsin reference had checked out. And his van, although old, was serviceable; it would be useful when he made local deliveries. Annie, feeling a stab of sympathy, had taken a chance on him. After all, she’d reasoned, he couldn’t be worse than her previous assistant, a frizzy-haired nineteen-year-old named Beth whose chief talent had been devising excuses for showing up late and leaving early.
As it turned out, Harold had proved to be punctilious and diligent, the most reliable employee she could have asked for.
But although she’d worked at his side six days a week for half a year, she actually did not know him at all. He was like one of those good neighbors she occasionally read about, the person described by everyone as quiet and considerate and well mannered, until the day a cache of dismembered bodies was discovered in the crawl space under his house.
Bodies. She shivered.
Then she got hold of herself. As usual, she was becoming all emotional, letting her imagination run rampant, jumping to wild conclusions. She had nothing to go on except a turquoise bead, and such gems were commonplace in Arizona.
Besides, the whole idea was crazy. To suspect Harold—sweet Harold who made lovely bouquets of long-stem roses and worked overtime without pay and consoled her over Erin’s disappearance—to suspect him as a kidnapper, a psycho ...
Then she remembered how her porch light had been activated in the early hours of the night before last. The footsteps she’d heard, the chortling rumble of an engine.
Harold’s van sounded like that.
Had he deposited the letter? Had it been his footsteps on gravel, his van pulling away?
No way. Impossible.
Still, she had to be sure.
He had seemed nervous about taking a long lunch break today. And something about that accident just didn’t add up. And when she mentioned the dirt on his pants, he’d seemed flustered, hadn’t he? Almost ... guilty?
She wondered if he had really taken the van for an estimate, or if he had gone someplace else.
There ought to be a way to find out. Another minute of hectic, feverish thought guided her to a plan.
Before leaving the bathroom, she flushed the toilet and ran the faucet again, for realism.
In the front of the shop, Harold was on a stepladder, hanging a basket of green camellia on a ceiling hook to replace an identical item sold earlier today.
“Looks good,” Annie said, studying the plant from below. “Maybe spread the leaves a little more on this side.”
He did so.
“Perfect. Which auto-body shop gave you the estimate, by the way?”
“Metzger’s, at Grant and Campbell.” He glanced down at her, and she wondered if it was only her imagination that caught a glint of suspicion in his eyes. “Why?”
“Just curious. I know a good place if you need a second opinion.” A pause, then casually: “You know, I never did get lunch. Think I’ll run next door and grab a sandwich.”
Gund made some kind of acknowledgment, which she barely heard, and then she was out the door, breathing hard. The effort of maintaining a neutral facade had exhausted her.
On her way to the delicatessen, she circled around to the rear of Gund’s van and memorized the license number. The tires, she noticed, were streaked with desert dust.
At the back of the deli, there was a pay phone. A battered copy of the Yellow Pages was set on a shelf below. She looked up Metzger’s, dropped a quarter in the slot, and dialed.
As the phone rang on the other end of the line, she drew a deep, soothing breath and tried to calm her frantic heart.
“Metzger’s,” a female voice answered.
“Good afternoon.” She kept her tone cool and professional. “This is Barbara Allen, calling from Allstate Insurance. I’d like to confirm an estimate for one of our clients, Harold Gund, policy number seven-six-two-three-eight.” The five digits came out of nowhere; insurance people always gave the policy number, and she didn’t expect the receptionist to check. “The vehicle in question is a Chevrolet Astro van, license plate ...” She recited the memorized number.
“Hold, please.”
Silence. Annie clutched the hard plastic shell of the handset and tasted a sour flavor at the back of her mouth.
Click, and the receptionist was back. “Sorry, but we have no record of any estimate on that vehicle.”
Her heart slammed into overdrive. “It was my understanding”—she fought to betray no reaction other than mild consternation—“that our insured party, Mr. Gund, took his van to Metzger’s for inspection earlier this afternoon. He’s informed us that Metzger’s provided an estimate of twelve hundred dollars.”
“Well, we have no record of that.”
“I see. There must be some mix-up, then. Thank you.”
Even after she had replaced the handset on the plungers, Annie kept her hand on it, as if afraid to let go.
No record.
He hadn’t gone to Metzger’s.
Hadn’t gotten an estimate.
Then what had he been doing? And where?
Briefly she considered calling Walker. No, waste of time; she had nothing, really. Nothing specific, nothing tangible.
For the time being, she was on her own.
Okay, then.
Erin had sent an SOS. A distress signal. A cry for help.
Annie would do her best to answer it.
Tonight.
39
Even after she awoke, Erin lay unmoving on the futon for long minutes, taking inventory of every separate pain.
The cramps in her abdomen and thighs had loosened their grip, to leave only a dull, throbbing ache. Rubbing at the rope for hours had taken its toll; her shoulders and arms were agonizingly stiff. When she turned her head, a hot needle lanced her neck.
The worst pain, however, was not internal but external—the searing sunburn on every inch of her exposed skin. Her gaze drifted to her right arm, lobster pink. It looked boiled.
The burn would torture her for days. Every scrape of her clothes against her skin would be a minor agony.
But at least, for the moment, she was alive.
Grunting, she propped herself on one elbow and threw back the cheap cotton blanket. A gleam of metal caught her eye.
For a disoriented moment she imagined she was wearing an anklet. A large, curiously bulky anklet glinting on her right leg.
Then her mind cleared, and she recognized what she was seeing. A loop of chain, wound tightly around her leg just above her boot, with a padlock’s hasp inserted through two heavy links.
The chain snaked across the concrete floor to the wall, where a second padlock secured it to the sillcock.
Slowly she bent forward, wincing at the residue of pain in her abdomen, and studied the chain. The links were rusty and soiled, as was the padlock. They had been used outdoors.
The gate. It had been chained and locked. Yes.
And the other padlock, the one fastening the chain to the spigot, most likely had come from the rear door, which she’d tried to open last night.
While she slept, her abductor must have removed the chain and both padlocks, then brought them in here and shackled her. Christ, shackled her to the wall—like a prisoner in a dungeon.
Well, what else was she? What had she ever been?
She struggled to her feet, gingerly testing her legs. Though her knees were stiff and her balance uncertain, she could walk.
She tried reaching the door, couldn’t. The chain, drawn taut to a length of six feet, stopped her when she was still more than a yard away.
He was taking no chances, quite obviously. He didn’t want her escaping again.
Little likelihood of that, anyway. He’d cleaned out the room, removing all possible lock-picking tools, leaving only a bare minimum of necessities. Besides the futon, all she had left were the two chairs, a roll of toilet paper, the milk jugs and coffee cans she used for bathroom purposes, and, in the cardboard box, a few items of food—none requiring the c
an opener, which was gone.
Painfully she shuffled over to the sillcock. Crouching down was an exercise in self-torture so intense it was almost pleasurable. She turned the handle and cupped her hands under the lukewarm stream from the spout, drinking until she was satisfied.
A memory of the awful thirst she had known in the arroyo returned to her. It was said to be impossible to remember physical sensations, but the sandpaper dryness of her mouth, the swollen thickness of her tongue, the ache of her gums—all of it was abruptly vivid in her mind, as shockingly real as direct experience.
Not again, she promised herself, straightening up with a renewed protest of sore muscles. She would not be staked out again—to endure the elements or to burn. If he tried to take her, she would fight. She would make him kill her here.
Would it come to that? She blinked at the question, then nodded slowly. Of course it would.
She had been granted only a reprieve, a stay of execution. He would never let her go. Never.
She had seen his face.
Only dimly, it was true—in weak light outside, and through a haze of visual distortion in this room. Nonetheless, she had seen it.
And the ranch, too.
The ranch.
There it was again, startling as a slap—the wordless certainty that she had visited this place before.
Baking in the sun, she’d had no strength to ponder the riddle. Now she did.
A horse ranch in the desert, near the interstate.
Barbed-wire fence, wood-frame house, barn and paddock. The buildings painted green, white, and orange.
Green, white, and orange ...
“Oh, my God,” Erin whispered, remembering.
Her knees unlocked. She would have crumpled to the floor if she hadn’t gripped the brick wall for support.
In her mind she saw it suddenly—the ranch, this ranch, spread out before her, not in starlight but in the crisp May sunshine of another year, the buildings dressed in faded colors, paint peeling in strips like sunburned skin.
And at the entrance, a padlocked gate that displayed a hanging sign.
The sign was gone now. She hadn’t seen it last night.
But on that spring day in 1985 she and Annie had paused before that sign, reading the inscription grooved deep in the rust-eaten iron.
A single word in block letters: CONNOR.
This was the old Connor ranch. Lincoln and Lydia’s homestead, where they had spent the twenty years of their marriage.
Erin knew it, knew it with certainty, even without the sign as proof. The distinctive color scheme was confirmation enough. Green, white, orange—the colors of the Irish flag.
After the deaths of her husband and son in 1968, Lydia Connor had relocated to a bungalow in town, where, later, she raised her orphaned nieces. She rarely spoke of the ranch, never took the girls to see it, but in her photo albums there were pictures of a house and barn, a paddock with a split-rail fence, horses grazing on a few bleached acres.
In the second semester of her freshman year at the University of Arizona, Erin signed up for a course on the history of Tucson. At the library, hunting through the archival files of local newspapers to research her term paper, she came across contemporaneous accounts of the Connor case. One of the stories gave the couple’s address.
The next weekend, impelled by curiosity, she and Annie visited the ranch. The map they used was disappointingly inaccurate, and it took them forty minutes of searching in Annie’s old rattletrap Dodge, with the vents blowing hot air and the brakes squealing ominously, before they finally pulled to a stop outside a spread that matched the faded photos. The location, Erin recalled with a low incline of her head, was a side road off Houghton, just north of Interstate 10.
The Connor ranch never had been a large-scale operation, even when Lincoln’s parents had run the place. By the time Lincoln himself took possession of the title, most of the acreage had been sold off; what little remained had been adequate only for the pasturage of a half dozen horses, mostly elderly animals maintained at the expense of good-hearted owners.
The developer who’d purchased the ranch and acres of adjacent land in 1968 had meant to convert the property into housing tracts, but his ambitious plans had fallen through. The Connor homestead and the land around it, remote and unwanted, had been forgotten. When Erin and Annie found the ranch in 1985, it lay in forlorn disrepair, unoccupied for seventeen years.
Well, it was occupied now. Her abductor had bought it. Bought it and taken down the sign.
But why? What would he want with it? What could this place possibly mean to him?
Nothing, obviously—unless he’d lived here himself.
But no one had lived here in years, in decades. No one had lived here since Lydia, Lincoln, and ...
“Oliver,” she breathed.
The thought was dazzling like a blow. She groped for the chair and sank into it.
The man holding her captive couldn’t be Oliver Ryan Connor.
Oliver was dead.
Wasn’t he? Wasn’t he?
Eyes shut, lips pursed, Erin tried to recall what little she had ever known about Lydia’s son.
Most of what she’d heard had been local gossip, circulated in school. The murder-suicide had been a noteworthy local news item in 1968, and even in the mid-’70s, when Erin and Annie were growing up in Lydia’s house, it had not been forgotten. Other kids their age had heard the details from older siblings, and when they learned the two girls were living with Lydia Connor, they had talked.
From them, and later in more detail from the library’s newspaper archives, Erin had learned how Lincoln Connor had tracked down his son, shot him, and turned the gun on himself.
That was the official version, at least, the one accepted by everybody. But suppose it wasn’t the truth. Suppose Oliver hadn’t died in that clearing of Prescott National Forest, but somehow had duped the authorities into believing otherwise.
Suppose he’d changed his identity, relocated to the Great Lakes region, only to find that his first episode of homicidal violence wasn’t enough, that the same compulsion to kill would rise in him periodically, when his fingers would tingle and his ears would chime.
The aura phase. First stage of a seizure, perhaps an epileptic fugue state ...
“Of course,” Erin murmured.
He was Oliver. He must be.
Because she, too, was an epileptic. For both of them to suffer from variants of the same affliction could not be a coincidence.
Having studied epilepsy to better understand her own condition, she knew how rare it was. Less than one percent of the general population exhibited the syndrome. But among children of epileptics, the percentage ran as high as six percent. And when both parents had epilepsy, the percentage of affected children rose to twenty-five percent, clearly demonstrating the affliction’s hereditary component.
Among the Morgans, only Lydia had shown any epileptic tendencies—occasional petit-mal seizures with retrograde amnesia. Presumably either Rose Morgan or her husband, Joseph, Erin’s maternal grandparents, had carried a genetic predisposition toward seizures without exhibiting identifiable symptoms.
Both Lydia and Maureen must have inherited the trait, though Maureen never had shown any evidence of it. The syndrome had been passed on from Maureen to Erin, and from Lydia to Oliver.
“We’re family,” she whispered, blinking at the thought. “He and I—the same background. Same blood ...”
And if he had bought the ranch of his childhood, kidnapped his cousin—his foster sister, in fact—then he must want something from her, something more than therapy.
She couldn’t guess what it was. Perhaps he himself didn’t know.
But whatever it was he wanted, she would find out soon enough. When she did, she would understand him.
And then, almost certainly, she would die.
40
Annie said good night to Harold Gund at six-thirty. She lingered in her shop, turning off the lights, until sh
e heard the growl of his van’s motor out front.
Peeking through the blinds, she watched the Chevy back away from the curb and swing toward the shopping center’s Craycroft Road exit. The brake lights flared as the van stopped at the end of a short line of cars waiting for a break in the traffic.
She left the shop and ran to her Miata. Sliding behind the wheel, she saw the Chevy reach the head of the line and pull onto Craycroft, heading south.
She followed. A red light snared her almost instantly, and she was afraid she’d lost her quarry. But on the long, straight downhill run she caught sight of the van again, well ahead of her.
The sun hung low, westering above a spread of green treetops, as she passed over the Rillito River into city limits. At times throughout the summer monsoon season, the Rillito would be a foaming watercourse, but now it was only a dry, sandy channel, grim and barren, a gash in the landscape.
Gund’s van was still in sight, though harder to track on this more level stretch of road. Annie dared to pull closer. Greater population density here, lots of intersecting streets, more chances for him to pull off.
Gund drove carefully, violating no laws. A good driver, it appeared. Annie wondered again how his van had been damaged.
Fender-bender, he’d said. She didn’t think so.
As Speedway approached, the Chevy Astro eased into the turn lane, left signal winking. Luckily two other cars followed suit, providing a buffer between the van and Annie’s Miata.
She made it through the intersection as the green arrow cycled to yellow, then cut her speed, dropping back slightly for safety. After a brief inner debate she switched on her headlights; keeping them off in the gathering dusk would only make her car more conspicuous.
The day’s end had begun to bring relief from the unseasonable heat. The air rushing through the dashboard vents and the open window on the driver’s side was mild enough to feel almost comfortable against her face.
Gund’s van proceeded at a steady pace despite the crush of vehicles. Illuminated islands of strip malls glided past. A city bus groaned to a stop in the right lane, flashers pulsing.
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