Riley scrolled through her phone and found the picture of Vicky. “This her?”
The heavy scent of cigarettes radiated from Ms. Smith as she leaned forward. “That’s her.”
“What can you tell me about her?” Bowman said.
“She never got out of the car. Darla said she was shy. I didn’t buy that, but I wasn’t in the mood for an argument. Darla has a temper.”
“You get a name?” Bowman asked.
“I didn’t care enough to ask. I was more anxious to see Darla and Jax get off my property. I didn’t need trouble.”
“When was this?” Bowman asked.
“About two weeks ago.”
“How’d the girl appear to you?” Riley asked.
“Fine, I guess.” She rubbed her hand along her arm. “I could see the kid didn’t have a clue about those two. I wanted to tell her to get as far away from Darla and Jax as she could, but Darla never let me get close. That girl all right?”
“No, ma’am, she’s dead,” Riley said.
The lines on her face deepened. “I’m sorry to hear it. Darla do it?”
“Why do you say that?” Bowman asked.
She laughed. “She can be jealous. My girl don’t like sharing nothing with nobody. I could see Jax had eyes for that pretty girl. Kept touching her and kissing her when Darla wasn’t looking.”
“Did Darla leave any of her possessions here?” he asked.
“No. Moved them all to Jax’s trailer, but I couldn’t tell you where that’s parked these days.”
Riley pulled a card from her pocket. “If you hear from her, will you give me a call?”
“Sure. I’ll call, if you promise to lock Darla away. She’s my own flesh and blood, but she’s mean as a snake.”
“Thanks.”
Bowman followed Riley to the car. He could see she was frustrated. “We’ll find her.”
“She’s slithered under a rock and she might not ever come out.”
“We’ll find her and the man who bought Vicky from her.”
She paused at the car and her shoulders slumped a fraction. “You sound so sure.”
“I am.” A part of him wanted to pull her into his arms and tell her he’d keep her safe. But she didn’t really believe he was here to stay yet. But she would.
Darla’s phone rang as she sat in a borrowed blue Chevy truck, staring up at the two women standing outside the diner. She knew them both. Sandy and Cassie. They worked for Tony.
“Yo,” she said into the phone. “What do you need?”
“I’m looking for a girl.” The deep voice sounded raspy.
The man’s voice was new to her but that didn’t mean much. She’d put up new ads on the Internet last week before Vicky got herself killed and Jax messed up Jo-Jo. “What kind?”
“Young. Dark hair.”
“When do you need her?” She didn’t have any girls now, but there was always a girl to be found on the street. She could be nice when it suited, and if the girl needed drugs or a meal, then convincing her to work could be easy.
“Tomorrow. I’m having an overnight party.”
“Overnight will cost you a grand.”
“That’s a lot.”
“If you can’t afford it, stop wasting my time.”
“All right, a grand. But she’s mine for the night. And she has to have dark hair and wear a yellow dress.”
She never questioned a john’s special request. Her job was to find him what he wanted. “Sure. No problem.”
They agreed to meet and she hung up.
As if Jax were sitting beside Darla, caution whispered in her ear. That damn Vicky had gotten herself killed and the cops were swarming around. Selling another girl now was asking for trouble. But a grand was enough money to get her and Jax out of the state as soon as he made bail and they could took care of that bitch cop and Jo-Jo.
She sniffed and took another drag before tossing her cigarette out the window. She glanced in the mirror and practiced her smile. The girl by the diner, Cassie, was a blonde, but that was easily fixed. She also belonged to Tony, but he would cut a deal with her if the money was right.
Shuffle of poker chips. Cigar smoke. Plush velvet. She lay on the soft couch, her brain addled with drugs. She had discovered too late the water she drank was laced with something. Who had drugged her? And why?
As much as she struggled to study the faces of the people around her, their features faded into a haze of blurred beige ovals.
The hum of male conversation pulled her attention toward her left. They were fuzzy, distant shapes. There were two, maybe three men. She couldn’t tell. Couldn’t see well enough to figure anything out.
“She’s waking up.”
“Give her more,” one of the men said. “We don’t need trouble.”
“Where am I?” she whispered. She was rolled onto her back and her sleeve shoved up past her elbow. Eyes narrowing, she stared into the featureless face looming over her.
Dark eyes. Pale skin. She was looking at the face of a ghost.
“Help me,” she whispered.
“This is the best help for you,” the ghost said. “It’ll keep you out of trouble and maybe, if you’re really lucky, alive.” A needle pricked her arm, its sharp point plunging below the surface. Only seconds passed before her mind fogged and her thoughts became disjointed. Her vision went black.
Riley sat up in bed, swallowing a scream. Shoving her hand through her dark hair, she gulped in air and stared at the shadows dancing across her small bedroom. Gripping the sheets, she clung to the familiar. The chair covered in a dark-blue pattern, the quilt neatly folded and draped over it. A few pieces of jewelry from her grandmother lined along her dresser.
She glanced at her trembling hands. For an instant she felt helpless. Lost. It took a few seconds before the haze of sleep passed and her thoughts sharpened.
A knock on her door had her sitting a little straighter. “Riley?” Hanna said.
She cleared her throat. “Yes?”
“You all right?”
“I’m fine.” She looked at the time displayed on her phone. It was minutes after two in the morning.
Hanna cracked the door, letting light from the hallway spill into the room. “I heard you cry out.”
Running her hand through her hair, she mustered a half smile. “I had a dream. You know how I’m always chasing bad guys, and sometimes I relive it during the night. Nothing to be worried about.”
The light behind Hanna cast a warm glow and helped settle her. “You’ve never done that before.”
“There’s always a first time.” Realizing her explanation wasn’t dispelling Hanna’s worry, she added, “I get worked up when I’m in a foot pursuit. And in my dreams I was chasing three guys.”
“Three? Really?”
“It was a dream, but they were armed. They were ready to shoot. I had to choose which one to go after first.”
“Okay. That’s too much of a riddle for me at two a.m. See you in the morning.”