to the Tarvers. The flames illuminated the faces of Raymond, his wife, Anita, their son, Thomas, and their daughter, Emily, the girl who took her final breaths in Graham’s arms.
What went wrong here?
Graham wanted to believe that this was your nice, average American family. But where were Ray and Anita Tarver?
Did they drown their children?
Or drown with them?
What happened?
Had they been having a blissful mountain vacation before a horrible accident? Or was something else at work? Was there stress in the family? What was going on in the lives of the Tarvers before the tragedy?
What about his own life?
The firelight also captured the urn visible through the screen door to his tent.
Graham ran a hand across his face.
It’d been a hell of a day. He’d come up here to one of Nora’s favorite spots, to distribute the rest of her ashes. He’d come up to quit the force. He couldn’t go on without her because he had nothing left.
Nothing.
Because it was his fault.
Then today happened. And in his darkest moment when he was in the river, certain he would die, he heard her, telling him not to give up.
To keep going.
And then came Emily Tarver’s final cryptic words.
How could he walk away from this?
He owed the dead.
The radio sputtered.
“Repeat, Sector 17—”
“We’ve got something here!”
7
Blue Rose Creek, California
It was nearly 1:30 a.m.
In the quiet, Maggie was losing hope of ever meeting Madame Fatima. As she got ready for bed, she consid ered all the messages she’d left. All unanswered.
She’d try again tomorrow.
Maggie drew back her bedsheet then froze. What was that?
She’d heard something. Down the hall. In the study
area off the living room. She glanced around, listening for a moment.
Nothing.
She was exhausted, dismissed it and tried to sleep but a million fears assailed her.
Were Jake and Logan dead?
Why hadn’t she heard from them? She ached to hold Logan, to talk to Jake.
Just pick up the damn phone and call me, Jake. Let me know you’re all right.
Why are you doing this?
Why?
For much of her life, Maggie had been a loner. But tonight she wished she had a friend, someone to talk to. When Maggie was six years old, her mother commit ted suicide after a drunk driver killed Maggie’s older sister, April, as she was riding her bike. Maggie’s dad raised her alone until she married Jake. Then her father took up with a younger woman, a drug addict he’d met in rehab.
He moved to Arizona and Maggie hadn’t spoken to him in years.
She’d called him to see if he’d heard from Jake, but it had been a short conversation.
No.
Jake had no family either. His parents divorced after he’d left high school. His father died of cancer five years ago. His mother died three years back.
Maggie and Jake had always kept to themselves, happy to have each other. Able to handle any problem together.
Until this.
What really happened to Jake in Iraq?
Maggie knew he’d driven on secret missions and that his convoys often came under fire, but he refused to tell her anything as she worried about his brooding, his nightmares, the outburst.
One day, Jake went with her to the supermarket where they’d bumped into Craig Ullman, Logan’s soccer coach. As they talked, something icy flitted across Jake’s face. A few nights later in bed, he turned his back to her.
“I know you slept with Ullman when I was over there.”
She was stunned.
Not only was Jake wrong, he scared her because it seemed as if he was losing it. Then came the scene at one of Logan’s games. Jake had been out of town and arrived late. Logan waved from the field, Maggie waved from her place among the parents in lawn chairs on the sideline.
Jake ignored them, marching up to Craig Ullman.
“I know, asshole,” Jake said.
Ullman looked up from his clipboard, bewildered.
“Is something wrong, Jake?”
“You were banging my wife while I was away. I fucking know it! ”
“What?”
Jake drew back his fist and Maggie grabbed it.
“No, Jake!
Janwillem van de Wetering