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"Sir? You're trespassing on private property."

I rounded the corner. There was a fence surrounding the property. More security. But now, from this vantage point, I could see the mansion straight on.

"Stop right there. That's far enough."

I did stop. I looked ahead at the mansion. The sight confirmed what I'd suspected the moment I had seen the mansard roof. The house looked like the perfect bed-and-breakfast-a picturesque, almost overdone Victorian home with turrets, towers, stained-glass windows, a lemonade porch, and yep, a blue-gray mansard roof.

I had seen the house on the Save the Angels Web site.

It was one of their homes for unwed mothers.

TWO police officers got out of the car.

They were young and muscle-bloated and had the cocky cop-stride. They also wore Mountie hats. Mountie hats, I thought, looked silly and seemed counterproductive to law enforcement activities, but I kept that to myself.

"Something we can do for you gentlemen?" one of the officers said.

He was the taller of the two, his shirtsleeves cutting into his biceps like two tourniquets. His name tag said " Taylor."

Berleand took out the photograph. "We are looking for this girl."

The officer took the photograph, glanced at it, handed it to his partner with the name tag "Erickson." Taylor said, "And you are?"

"Captain Berleand from the Brigade Criminelle in Paris."

Berleand handed Taylor his badge and identification. Taylor took it with two fingers as though Berleand had handed him a paper bag full of steaming dog poo. He studied the ID for a moment and then gestured toward me with his chin. "And who's your friend here?"

I waved. "Myron Bolitar," I said. "Nice to meet you."

"How are you involved in this, Mr. Bolitar?"

I was going to say, long story, but thought that maybe it wasn't really that complicated: "The girl we're looking for may be the daughter of my girlfriend."

"May be?" Taylor turned back to Berleand. "Okay, Inspector Clouseau, you want to tell me what you're doing here?"

"'Inspector Clouseau,'" Berleand repeated. "That's very funny. Because I'm French, right?"

Taylor just stared at him.

"I'm working on a case involving international terrorism," Berleand said.

"That a fact?"

"Yes. This girl's name has come up. We believe she lives here."

"Do you have a warrant?"

"Time is of the essence."

"I will take that as a no." Taylor sighed, glanced at his partner Erickson. Erickson chewed gum, showed nothing. Taylor looked over at me. "This true, Mr. Bolitar?"

"It is."

"So your girlfriend's maybe daughter is somehow mixed up with an international terrorist investigation?"

"Yes," I said.

He scratched an itch on his baby-faced cheek. I tried to guess their ages. Probably still in their twenties, though they could pass for high schoolers. When did cops start looking so damn young?

"Do you know what this place is?" Taylor asked.

Berleand started shaking his head, even as I said, "It's a home for unwed mothers."

Taylor pointed at me, nodded. "That's supposed to be confidential."

"I know," I said.

"But you're exactly right. So you can see how they might be touchy about their privacy."

"We do," I said.

"If a place like this isn't a safe haven, well, what is? They come here to escape prying eyes."

"I get that."

"And you're sure your girlfriend's maybe daughter isn't just here because she's pregnant?"

Now that I thought about it, that was a fair question. "That's irrelevant. Captain Berleand can tell you. This is about a terror plot. If she's pregnant or not, it makes no difference."

"The people who run this place. They've never caused any trouble."

"I understand that."

"And this is still the United States of America. If they don't want you on their property, you have no right to be here without a warrant."

"I understand that too," I said. Looking at the mansion, I asked, "Were they the ones who called you?"

Taylor squinted at me then, and I figured he was about to tell me that was none of my business. Instead he too looked toward the house and said, "Strangely enough, no. Normally they do. When kids trespass, whatever. We found out about you from Paige Wesson at the library and then someone else saw you chasing a kid over at Carver Academy."

Taylor kept looking at the house as if it had just materialized.

Berleand said, "Please listen to me. This case is very important."

"This is still America," Taylor said again. "If they don't want to speak to you, you have to honor that. That said…" Taylor looked back at Erickson. "You see any reason not to knock on the door and show them this picture?"

Erickson thought about it a moment. Then he shook his head.

"Both of you stay here."

They sauntered past us, opened the gate, headed toward the front door. I heard an engine in the background. I turned. Nothing. Might have been a car passing from the main road. The sun was gone now, the sky darkening. I looked at the house. It was still. I hadn't seen any movement at all, not once since we arrived.

I heard another car engine, this time coming from the general direction of the house. Again I saw nothing. Berleand moved closer to me.

"Do you have a bad feeling here?" he asked.

"I don't have a good one."

"I think we should call Jones."

My cell phone buzzed just as Taylor and Erickson reached the porch steps. It was Esperanza.

"I have something you need to see."

"Oh?"

"Remember I told you Dr. Jiménez attended a Save the Angels retreat?"

"Yes."

"I found some other people who did too. I visited their Facebook pages. One of them has a whole gallery up on the retreat. I'm sending one of the photos to you now. It's a group shot, but Dr. Jiménez is standing on the far right."

"Okay, let me get off the line."

I hung up, and the BlackBerry began to hum. I opened the e-mail from Esperanza and clicked the attachment. The picture loaded slowly. Berleand looked over my shoulder.

Taylor and Erickson reached the front door. Taylor rang the bell. A blond teenage boy answered the door. I wasn't close enough to hear. Taylor said something. The boy said something back.

The picture loaded on my BlackBerry. The screen was so small, and so too were the faces. I clicked the zoom option, moved the cursor to the right, hit zoom again. The picture came in closer, but now it was blurry. I hit enhance. An hourglass appeared as the picture started to focus.

I glanced back at the front door of the Victorian home. Taylor stepped forward, as if he wanted to go in. The blond boy held up his hand. Taylor looked at Erickson. I could see surprise on his face. Now I heard Erickson. He sounded angry. The teenage boy looked scared. Still waiting for the photo enhancement to take effect, I stepped closer.

The picture came into focus. I looked down, saw the face of Dr. Jiménez, and nearly dropped my phone. It was a shock, and yet, remembering what Jones had told me, things were starting to click in a horrible, horrible way.

Dr. Jiménez-clever to use a Spanish name and probably identity for a dark-skinned man-was Mohammad Matar.

Before I could process what it all meant, the teenage boy shouted, "You can't come in!"

Erickson: "Son, step aside."

"No!"

Erickson didn't like that answer. He put his arms up as though preparing to push this blond teenager to the side. The teenager suddenly had a knife in his hand. Before anyone could move, he raised it overhead and jammed it deep into Erickson's chest.

Oh no…

I stuck my phone into my pocket as I started running toward the door. A sudden burst of noise made me stop cold.

Gunfire.

Erickson was hit. He spun around with the knife still in his chest and then dropped to the ground. Taylor started reaching for his gun, but he had no chance. More gunfire shattered the night. Taylor 's body jerked once, then twice, then collapsed into a heap.