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The farm was a nice little place. He remembered when old Samuel Griffin had lived there. Sam had died while feeding his hogs, and the hogs ate him. Nothing left for anybody to find but bones.

Hogs were weird that way. Especially in a feedlot situation. He knew a guy who'd just slipped and fallen. Before he could get up, a hog bit off his ear.

There was no sign of activity. Maybe it was better this way. Take him by surprise with a search warrant. That was if his suspicions were enough for a search warrant. He'd made some bad calls in the past, and the judge was getting reluctant to spit warrants out the way she used to. Damn woman.

From a crack in the living room drapes, Mason watched the police car drive away, smoke from the rapidly blown-out candles burning his throat. The girl-Gillian-was lying on the floor, unconscious from a blow to the head. Her fault. She shouldn't have tried to run for the door.

He'd known the police would come. He just hadn't thought it would be so soon.

Chapter 33

Anthony sat hunched over a desk in the corner of Elliot Senatra's office, going over the matches they'd come up with from the list of rose propagators. They'd narrowed it down to twenty-three men, not a figure Anthony was happy with, but they couldn't risk dismissing the remotest possibility. Mary, who Anthony didn't think had slept in days, was on the phone with Detective Wakefield. Time was their enemy, and she was desperately trying to pull together forty-six people in order to simultaneously send teams to the twenty-three remaining addresses.

The door flew open, and Elliot stuck his head inside. "A grave in Poplar Grove's been robbed," he announced. "And get this-the missing body belongs to Josephine Von Bryant."

Von Bryant. One of the names on the propagator list.

"Does she have a husband?" Mary asked. "Or a son?"

Elliot smiled broadly. "A brother. Mason Von Bryant."

The rental car flew down the country road, gravel and mud hitting the undercarriage.

"The turn should be coming up on the left." Mary leaned forward in the passenger seat. It was raining hard, and the rapidly clicking wipers could barely keep up.

Mason Von Bryant's house was located on the top of a hill, with an unobstructed view of the half-mile lane leading to it and the connecting highway. When planning their strategy, they'd decided it would be too risky for a parade of patrol cars to approach the house. Instead, Mary and Anthony were going in and would call for backup when needed. Parked along the highway two miles away was Elliot, along with four BCA agents, four police officers, six members of the SWAT team, and an ambulance. Even though it wasn't his jurisdiction, John Wakefield was also on hand.

"There it is." Anthony slowed and then turned the car onto a road with a private property sign. The narrow lane was deeply rutted, and he was forced to slow down.

He pulled up behind the garage and shut off the engine. Then he radioed Elliot and the waiting team to let them know they'd arrived.

He and Mary opened their doors and stepped out. Wind caught their raincoats, whipping them about their legs. Hunching their shoulders, they ran for the house and the overhang above the front door.

Anthony tried the doorbell, then knocked. When no one answered, he jiggled the knob. It was unlocked.

He looked at Mary with raised eyebrows. They withdrew their weapons from their shoulder holsters. She nodded, and he pushed open the door. With guns drawn and pointed skyward, they entered cautiously.

It was an old house. Wind shifted a curtain and crept into a crevice around the sash, sounding like breath being blown across the curved glass lip of a soda bottle.

Immediately in front of them was the kitchen where a table had been set with wineglasses and a cake. In a vase were red roses.

Seated at the table, her back to Mary, was a woman. Mary inched forward, slowly approaching her while Anthony kept his eyes on the living room and hallway.

Mary had come expecting to find Mason Von Bryant's dead sister, so she wasn't surprised to discover that the woman seated at the table was a frozen-faced corpse, an untouched glass of wine and slice of cake in front of her. The ice cream had melted, dripping to the floor to dry in a congealed puddle.

Was every traumatic event in her life going to feature cake? Mary wondered.

The body neither shocked nor frightened her.

She motioned to Anthony, and they scoured the lower story of the house, quickly and efficiently checking the living room, dining room, two bedrooms, and bath. Then they climbed the narrow, twisted stairs.

The ornate railing was covered with glossy, chipped white paint, the stair steps with a wool runner. The walls were smothered with overwhelming floral wallpaper, yellowed and stained with age. The house smelled like mildew and rotten wood.

In the doorway of the first bedroom, Anthony paused and tensed. Behind him, Mary looked over his shoulder. Reclining in a narrow twin bed, pillows at his back, dressed in light blue pajamas, was a man she assumed was Mason Von Bryant. He watched passively with emotionless eyes.

There was no dismissing the emptiness there. She'd seen it before. That kind of emptiness belonged to killers, to mass murderers. To people without souls or conscience.

Where is Gillian?

Is she still alive?

Those were the two questions foremost in her mind. If the case hadn't involved her sister, Mary would have said he'd most likely killed her the first or second day. But this was Gillian they were talking about, and Mary couldn't face the possibility that her sister was dead.

Beside her, Anthony sensed Mary's fear and apprehension, sensed the way she struggled with the scene as presented to them. These situations always fit a pattern, and her years of experience would be telling her that her sister was dead. Right now Mary was probably clinging to the few cases that fell outside the norm. Let this be one of those, he prayed, all the while afraid such prayers were useless. Gillian was dead. That's what his gut was telling him.

Both their weapons were trained on the man in the bed. Anthony pulled out his ID and introduced himself and Mary. "Are you Mason Von Bryant?"

"As a matter of fact, I am."

"Where's Gillian?" Mary asked, her voice neutral.

"Aren't beds the greatest?" Von Bryant asked, acting as if they had come to visit him. "I always feel safe in my bed;"

Anthony remained focused on the man, watching for the smallest flicker of movement that would indicate a weapon. "Put up your hands."

Von Bryant slowly lifted his hands and held them high. "I always wanted to do that," he said, smiling.

He was like a kid, Anthony realized. Like some thirteen-year-old kid. In a matter of seconds, Anthony went from anger to pity. And now, peripherally, he took note of the surroundings.

The room was done in cartoon animal wallpaper. Black-and-white photos covered one wall. A glance told him they were of Mason Von Bryant and variations of the woman downstairs. On the bed was a big stuffed bear and a purple elephant. Shelves held model cars, toy rockets, and arrowheads-all lined up neatly in rows. The sheets on the twin bed were faded and worn, but not so worn that Anthony couldn't make out characters from the 1977 Star Wars movie.

Jesus.

It was the saddest fucking thing he'd ever seen.

How did this happen? How did people get so messed up, so twisted around in their heads? The poor guy. Poor kid.

"Where's Gillian?" Mary repeated.

"I'm not afraid of dying," Von Bryant stated.

"We don't want you to die," Anthony said carefully.

"This isn't real. None of it's real, so it doesn't matter."

"Mason, this is real."

"I've always felt safe in my bed."

"You are safe."

"No place is really safe, is it? Don't you know that? No place. Not even this bed."

"That's not true," Anthony lied.

Mason cocked his head to one side. "Listen to the rain. Doesn't it sound peaceful? The way it's hitting the roof like that?"