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Griffin's phone rang again.

He flipped it open and steeled himself for Price's smirking voice.

“He's going to do something along the way!” Jillian exclaimed. “He's never going to make it to the park!”

“I know,” Griffin whispered.

“Think about it,” she continued excitedly. “He let the police pick the location. He never would have done that if that's where he was planning on making his escape.”

“I know.”

“And with the snipers and the SWAT team and all that coverage… It would be impossible to do something there. En route, on the other hand, when it's just him and some drivers-”

“Jillian, I know.”

“You do? Well, then, stop him!”

He didn't say anything. He didn't have the words to voice what he had just heard. How many men had been involved in the escort? Four, six, eight? How many had wives? How many had children? Waters had turned away. Fitz sat down hard on Ron Viggio's driveway, staring bleakly at a streetlight. Somewhere in the neighborhood, a dog howled.

“Griffin?” Jillian said, her voice suddenly uncertain. “Did he? Is it…”

“It just happened.”

“Oh my God. What did…”

“I can't.”

“Meg?”

“We don't know.”

“Griffin, he can't get away.”

“You think I don't know that?” His body finally came alive. He kicked the tire of the police cruiser. Then kicked it again and again. Sitting in the back of the car, Viggio gazed at him balefully. The prick had probably heard it all and still didn't give a damn.

Griffin's vision started to cloud over. He could see his hands so clearly. He could envision them fastening on Viggio's neck, squeezing, squeezing, squeezing…

Breathe deep, exhale. Breathe deep, exhale. Don't give in. Picture yourself in a happy place. He wanted to dance on David Price's grave. Was that a happy place? Or did that simply mean that one year later, he hadn't learned a goddamn thing?

“Griffin,” Jillian said, “Lieutenant Morelli claimed you had a lead on the rapist.”

“Found him.”

“But he doesn't have Meg?”

“Nope. And he doesn't seem to be in the mood to talk about it.”

“Griffin, I know where she is.”

“What?” He perked up. Waters and Fitz caught the change in his demeanor and glanced at him sharply.

“David's self-centered,” Jillian said in a rush. “Self-absorbed. This has all been about him. He picked Meg to be the first victim again. He picked you to lead the case again. And now, for the grand finish…”

“No!” Griffin breathed.

“Yes. He has one more grave to dig, don't you see, Griffin? He started with Meg. And now he's going to do what he probably thinks he should've done six years ago. He's going to kill Meg. And he's going to bury her in the basement. He's going back to your old neighborhood, Griffin. He's going back to his old house!”

Griffin looked at Viggio. The rapist tried to blank his features, but was too late. The look of amazement on his face said enough.

“How did you get access to Price's former home?” Griffin barked.

“My mother bought it.”

“What?”

“Price recommended it. Face it, who wants to buy a home that used to have murdered babies in the basement? The real estate agent gave up months ago, and my mother bought it cheap. She's on fixed-income, so hey, she's happy.”

“You involved your mother in this?”

“Of course not! She's in Florida. I surprised her with a free trip.”

“Son of a bitch!” Griffin motioned furiously at Waters and Fitz. “Jillian, thanks. We're on our way there.”

Griffin's car was blocked by the police cruiser. They ran for Fitz's Taurus while Griffin started yelling into the radio.

David had a ten-minute head start and they were a good fifteen minutes away. Once more the clock was ticking. For Meg's sake, Griffin hoped they weren't too late.

In the Pesaturos' living room, Jillian hung up the phone, grabbed her coat, grabbed her purse and then grabbed her pepper spray.

“This is insane,” Toppi said immediately. “You're not a cop!”

“It's Meg.”

“Let them handle this.”

“Because it's gone so well thus far?” Jillian turned to her mother. “May I have your pepper spray? I'll take as much as I can get.”

Libby frowned, gazed at her reproachfully.

“I can't sit around and wait anymore, Mom! Meg needs me. I have to try.”

Libby didn't budge.

“Oh for heaven's sake, I'm not going to just barrel into the house! I did that once before and I know as well as anyone that it didn't work. I'll be careful. I'll… I'll think of something along the way.”

Libby's expression started to waver. Jillian bent down and looked her mother in the eye.

“I have to do this,” she said quietly, intently. “I didn't save Trisha, don't you see? You miss her terribly, I know you do. But I failed her, and I have to live with that every day of my life. Yes, he was stronger than me. Yes, you should blame the rapist and not the victim. It all sounds so well and good. But I was there. I saw her. And I… I didn't get to her in time. I didn't save her.

“I don't want to lose someone else, Mom. I don't want to lose you or Meg or Carol. So I need to do this. Maybe I can't change the world. But I'm finally learning that, for me at least, it's important to try. Please, Mom, may I have your pepper spray?”

Libby reached into her pocket. She held out the canister with a trembling, liver-spotted hand. She looked at her last daughter with open concern. Then she sighed and dropped the canister into Jillian's palm.

Jillian kissed her mother's cheek.

Then she turned and ran for the door.

Chapter 42

The Survivors Club

MEG HAD DRIFTED OFF AGAIN. SHE WAS AT HOME, IN Molly's pink-colored room. They were preparing Barbie for her big wedding day, except this time Pooh's cape was blood red. Meg was trying to get the cape off when she looked down to see that Pooh's fuzzy cheeks had morphed into David Price's smirking face.

“Daddy!” Molly cried in delight.

Meg jerked awake with a scream. Her legs had given out beneath her, and her arms screamed at the sudden impact of her dead weight. Hastily she scrambled to get her footing on the rough dirt floor. Perversely enough, her arms and shoulders ached worse.

A sound. Up above. A door opening. Footsteps moving quickly across a wooden floor.

Meg couldn't help herself. The College Hill Rapist was back, and she was grateful. Her bloody wrists stung, her bound ankles hurt. She couldn't stand the feel of her urine-soaked jeans plastered against her skin. She wanted down. She wanted out. She wished… she wished so badly to feel human again.

She turned her head to where she believed the staircase was, and held her breath in anticipation of his approach.

Another click, the door opening at the top of the stairs. And then, “Hi, honey,” David Price's voice sang out clearly, “I'm home!”

Through her gag, Meg started to scream.

Five blocks from Griffin's old home, Fitz hit the brakes. Adrenaline demanded that they roar up to the front door and leap out, guns blazing. Prudence advised a different course. The three men gazed studiously around the neighborhood for any sign of David Price while Fitz drove a grid.

Up one street, down another. Around this block, around another. Clock ticking, tension mounting. Griffin could feel the knots bulging in his shoulders, while Waters cracked his knuckles incessantly.

The streets were quiet. The sun was beginning to sink and firing the sky bright orange and deep crimson.

They got within one block of Griffin's former home, where he had lived and loved and lost his wife. Then Fitz pulled over.

“How many points of entry?” he asked quietly.

“Three. Front door, side patio door and basement bulkhead.”