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He eased her into the Jeep’s passenger seat, took the blanket, and put it and his pack into the rear. There were two quarts of water left back there. He drank from one, a couple of long swallows, before he leaned in under the wheel. She had slumped down limply in the other seat, with her head back and her eyes shut. Her breath came and went in ragged little pants.

“Casey?”

“I’m awake,” she said.

“Here. More water.”

She drank without opening her eyes.

He drove back to the Toyota, unlocked the driver’s door, opened it carefully because the metal was hot enough raise blisters. He fetched her purse from under the seat, then slid into the stifling interior. Usual junk in the glove compartment; he rummaged through it until he found the registration and an insurance card. He put these into the purse.

When he switched on the ignition, the gas gauge indicator hovered close to empty. He twisted the key to see if the car would start. The engine caught on the third try, stuttering a bit; he shut it off immediately. If the only serious damage was the ruptured oil pan, repairs wouldn’t cost much. It was arranging for a tow truck to come out and haul the Camry to the station at Furnace Creek Ranch that would be expensive.

He pulled the trunk release, got out and went around back. Two pieces of luggage in the trunk, a small suitcase and an overnight case. He took these out, closed the lid, locked the car again, and carried purse and luggage back to the Jeep and stowed them in the rear. Casey still slumped low on the seat with her eyes closed. She didn’t open them until after they were moving again in the opposite direction and the heated slipstream fanned her face through the open window.

Fallon drove slowly, trying to avoid the worst of the ruts, but a few times as they bounced over the track she gave out low groans. Otherwise she made no complaint, said nothing at all. When they reached the smoother valley road above the Ashford Mill ruins, her breathing grew less labored and he thought she was asleep. If so, the sleep didn’t last long. They were halfway between Mormon Point and Badwater when she stirred, shifted position, and drank thirstily from the water bottle. When she lowered it, her pained gaze turned to him.

“How much farther?”

“Forty-five minutes. You okay?”

“Do I look okay? It feels like we’ve been riding for hours.”

“Can I ask you a question?”

“I can’t stop you.”

“Why did you come here?”

“Where? Where you found me?”

“No, I mean Death Valley. Nearly four hundred miles from San Diego.”

“I came from Las Vegas, not San Diego.”

“Why were you in Vegas?”

“Fool’s errand,” she said bitterly.

“Is that where you got those bruises? In Vegas?”

“… You really want to know?”

“I wouldn’t have asked if I didn’t.”

For a time she was silent. Then abruptly, staring straight ahead, she said in flat tones, “A man called me a few days ago. He said his name was Banning and he knew where Court and Kevin were living, but he wanted two thousand dollars for the information. In cash, delivered to him in Las Vegas.”

“Somebody you know, this Banning?”

“No.”

“But you believed him.”

“I wanted to believe him,” Casey said. “He claimed he’d known Court years ago, mentioned the names of people I knew. He said he’d heard that the detective I’d hired had been asking questions about Court.”

“Did he say how he’d heard?”

“No. I know I should’ve asked him, but I didn’t.”

“What’s the detective’s name?”

“Sam Ulbrich. He managed to trace Court and Kevin to Las Vegas last week, but that was as far as he got.”

“You tell him about Banning’s call?”

“No.”

“Why not? Why not send him instead of going yourself?”

“He stopped working for me when I couldn’t pay him anymore. I had nothing left to sell, nobody to borrow from.”

“What about your family?”

“I don’t have any family. Except for my son.”

“So you couldn’t raise the money Banning demanded.”

“Oh, I raised it. I went to Vegas with two thousand dollars in my purse.”

“Where’d you get it?”

It was several seconds before she answered. Then, in the same flat, lifeless voice, “I stole it.”

Fallon didn’t say anything.

“I was desperate,” she said. “Desperate.”

“Stole it where?”

“From the man I work… worked for. From the office safe. And I drove to Vegas and gave it to Banning.”

“And it was all just a scam,” Fallon said. “He didn’t know where to find Spicer and your son.”

“Oh, he knew, all right. He knew because Court set the whole thing up. That was part of the message Banning delivered afterward.”

“Afterward?”

“After he beat me up and raped me.”

“Jesus.”

“Your ex-husband says you’d better stop trying to find him and Kevin, otherwise there’ll be more of the same. Only next time he’ll do it himself and it won’t just be rape and a beating, he’ll kill you. End of message.”

“You call the police?”

“What for? Banning isn’t his real name. What could the police have done? No. No. I stayed in the motel room where it happened until I felt well enough to leave, and then I started driving. By the time the car quit on me, I was out here in the middle of nowhere and I didn’t care anymore. I didn’t want to go on living.”

“You still feel that way?”

“What do you think?”

Fallon said, “It’s a hundred and twenty miles from Vegas to this part of Death Valley. How’d you end up where I found you?”

“I don’t know.”

“But you did come here intentionally. Death Valley-dead place, place to go and die.”

“No. I’ve never been here before. I told you, I just kept driving until the car stopped. What difference does it make, anyhow?”

“It makes a difference. I think it does.”

“Well, I don’t. The only thing that matters is that you found me too soon.”

They rode in silence again until they reached the intersection with the Shoshone highway. Six miles from there to Furnace Creek Ranch.

He said as much to Casey. “When we get there, I’ll tell the infirmary people you made the mistake of driving out into a wilderness area in the wrong kind of vehicle, and when it broke down you tried to walk out and lost your bearings. That sort of thing happens a dozen times a year in the Valley. Nobody will think anything of it.”

She was silent.

“After that I’ll get a cabin for you so you can rest up.”

“Don’t you listen? I don’t have any money.”

“I’ll pay for it. You can pay me back later.”

“Pay you back how?”

“Cash or check. I don’t want anything else from you, Casey.”

“Oh, sure. That’s what you all say.”

“I’m not other men. I’m Rick Fallon.”

“Why should Rick Fallon care about me?”

Good question. He kept thinking about the way he’d found her, how she’d looked lying there in the wash. And the suicide note. And everything that she’d told him. And above all the face of the boy, Kevin, smiling at him from the photograph she carried-the boy who looked like Timmy.

But all he said was, “We can talk about that later.”

“We’ve talked enough. I have, anyway. You know my story, so now I’m supposed to listen to yours?”

“No.”

“Then we don’t have anything left to talk about.”

“I think maybe we do,” he said, and let it go at that.

FOUR

FURNACE CREEK RANCH WAS a sprawling tourist oasis that Fallon avoided except when he needed to buy gas and supplies. Eighteen-hole golf course, the world’s lowest at 214 feet below sea level. Two hundred and twenty-four moderately priced rooms and cabins. Restaurants, saloon and cocktail lounge, shops, a Borax museum, swimming pools fed by underground springs, tennis courts, stables, airstrip, RV and trailer parking, service station. Too crowded, too much engine hum.