Christ, he'd covered all the bases.

She clenched her trembling hands and decided to go the disarming route and 'fess up.

"All right, you caught me. But I lied because I'm scared."

"No need to be. Just give me the answers to a few questions and you can be on your way."

"You're not going to let me go. I've seen you, and kidnapping is a federal offense."

He laughed again. "Rest assured that I'll have a perfect alibi. I'll simply say it's all something you cooked up to sell more papers. You've already gone public with your rabid hatred of Dormentalism—or 'Dementedism,' as you like to call it—and since you couldn't dig up any real dirt on the Church, you pulled this stunt. Remember Morton Downey when he faked an attack by skinheads? Making that sort of crazy claim will hurt you, not us. You'll be the new Morton Downey. No one will ever believe you again."

Jamie doubted that. Doubted it big time.

"What about Henry?" she said.

Jensen's brow furrowed. "Henry? I don't believe—"

"The night guard at the paper. Was he in on it?"

"Oh, yes. Henry. I didn't know who you meant at first because that's not his real name."

"What?"

"He's a Dormentalist, you know."

"Bullshit. He's been with the paper for years."

"He's been with the Church even longer. Of course, you'll have no way of proving that since our membership rolls are sealed."

Did he really think they could pull this off? She wasn't about to disabuse him of that particular illusion.

For the first time since the trunk lid had slammed closed over her, Jamie Grant saw a glimmer of hope that she might come out of this alive.

And if that was the case…

"Let me out of this trunk. I have to go to the bathroom."

"In a minute."

"I have to go nowT God, she didn't think she could hold it another second. "I mean right now."

"After you've answered a question or two." His smile broadened. "Consider bathroom privileges part of an incentive plan."

When she got out of here, was she ever going to nail their asses to the wall.

She pressed her thighs together and said, "Doesn't look like I have a choice. What do you want to know?"

Jensen's smile faded. "Who is the man you were with at the cabin?"

She could pretend she didn't know who he was talking about, but Jensen would know it was another lie. All she'd accomplish was wasting more time—time she could be spending relieving herself in the bathroom. Bladder spasms or not, though, she didn't want to give up Robertson's name.

Jensen took the choice out of her hands by holding up Robertson's card.

"We found this in your pocketbook. It says that John Robertson is a private detective. When did you hire him?"

Jamie had no problem answering that.

"I didn't. He came to me. He'd been hired to find one of your members who'd gone missing—as a fair number of them seem to do. He read my arti-cle and came to me for advice on how to sneak in. He knew I'd been kicked out and didn't want to make the same mistakes."

Jensen stared at the card, nodding slowly. "He didn't." His head snapped up. "How do you know he's John Robertson?"

"I checked out his PI license. It's current."

"True, but Mr. John Robertson is not."

"What do you mean?"

"I mean he's dead. Died of cancer in Duck, North Carolina, three years ago."

Jamie couldn't believe that. "You're lying."

Jensen fished a piece of paper out of his back pocket, unfolded it, and held it out to her. A Xerox of an obit. She caught a flash of a grainy photo of an old guy in a Stetson hat before the paper was snatched away. He looked nothing like the man she'd been working with.

Jensen angrily balled it up and hurled it across the room. She sensed his pent-up fury, felt it radiating from his soul like heat from an oven, and it frightened her.

"But his license—"

"—is current. Yes, I know. But obviously someone else has been renewing it." Jensen snarled as he poked a finger against the card. "The address here is a mail drop. And the phone number belongs to a hair salon." His rage seemed to build with every sentence. "Who is this man? I want to know and I want to know nowl"

Jamie couldn't believe it. "His name's not Robertson?"

"No, and it's not Farrell and it's not Amurri either."

What was he talking about?

"Then—?"

He jabbed a thick finger at her. "He must've given you a number."

His blazing eyes frightened her.

Jamie shook her head. "No. He always called me. No, wait. He gave me a cell number. It should be in my purse."

"There is no number in your purse."

Oh, God, had she lost it?

"Then… then…" What could she say? "Wait a minute. I have caller ID on my office phone. It would still be there on the call list. I'm always getting grief for leaving so many numbers in the list."

Pure bullshit, but maybe Jensen would go for it.

His eyes narrowed. "Then you would have seen the number. What was it?"

"I couldn't possibly remember. I get so many calls. I vaguely recall a 212 area code, but that's it. I can check it out for you if—"

Another Uncola Nut laugh. "If I let you go back to your office? I don't think so. Not quite yet. But maybe we can figure out some way for you to find that number from here."

Her bladder shot a quarrel of pain into her lower back.

"All right then, if I'm not going to my office, can I at least go to the bathroom? Now? I can't think straight with my bladder killing me like this."

"Of course." Jensen pointed toward the front end of the car. "It's right through that door."

She raised herself on one knee, slipped an unsteady leg over the trunk lip, past the bumper and down to the floor. When both feet were back on the ground, she straightened slowly, carefully, her back protesting all the way.

She looked around and saw an unfinished, uninsulated garage. To the car's left sat a chair and an old table with a couple of nails driven into its thick, scarred top. A pile of heavy chain sat on the table next to a folded green towel. And just past the front bumper, a closed, unmarked door.

"Is that it?" she said.

He nodded, but as she turned away she felt her shoulders grabbed from behind. She was twisted and shoved into the chair and, before she could react, Jensen was wrapping the chain around her waist and chest.

"What are you doingV

His face was set in grim lines and he didn't answer. She tried to wriggle free but he was too strong for her. Finally, when Jamie couldn't move, Jensen spoke.

"Time to test your memory."

"About what?" Her pounding heart threatened to break through her chest wall. "Not the phone number! I told you—"

"We have 2-1-2 so far. Only seven more to go."

"But I don't know the rest!"

Jensen grabbed her left hand and flattened her palm on the tabletop. He maneuvered her little finger until it was fixed between the two nails.

"What are you going—"

"I hate when things are unbalanced, don't you?"

Jamie sensed where this was going and it doubled her terror.

"No, I—"

"Your right pinkie, for instance. It's so much shorter than the left."

"No." She remembered the pain, the blood when her darling husband had chopped it off. She heard herself sobbing. "Oh, please, please…"

"Perhaps I can overcome my dislike of an unbalanced body by hearing a phone number. A complete phone number. One that will connect me to the man I'm looking for. If not…"

He lifted the towel to reveal a heavy, rust-rimmed meat cleaver.

Jamie's struggling bladder gave up. She felt a warm puddle spread across the seat of the chair.

Jensen picked up the cleaver and hefted it, then raised it over her finger.

"We'll call this an exercise in memory stimulation."

Jamie could barely speak. Her words gushed out in a high-pitched rasp.