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"Yes," she said positively. "We talked to somebody there about it, but we never found out what happened to it. We didn't want to seem like we were complaining."

"We think that the man who killed her may have taken the jewelry."

"Oh, no."

"But if he did, and we can identify it…"

"Oh, yes. I'd know these two pieces anywhere. An antique pearl necklace and an antique pearl wedding ring. They were my mother's, and her mother's before that. I had them myself for thirty years."

"Do you have photos or anything?"

"Actually, my insurance agent does, I believe. Shall I send them?"

"Yes… uh, no. What I would prefer is if you could take them to your local police department and have them make color copies and send the copies. Hang on to the originals in case we need them."

"I will do that. I will get them and make the copies and I will send them to you by Express Mail. Or if you need them immediately, I will have Dick drive them down."

"Express Mail would be fine," Lucas said.

When he got off the phone, he told Marcy, "We need a list of fences."

"I'll talk to the guys in property crime," she said. "If the guy is taking this stuff, you think he would be stupid enough to sell it here?"

"How many Minneapolis artists know fences in New York?"

"All right. I'll talk to them right now," Marcy said.

"How are the lists going?"

"We've got a couple more matches, but nothing hot."

"How about IDs from the graveyard?" Lucas asked.

"Just the ones we knew going in. The state guys are rounding up dental records for women reported missing, who are still missing, that more or less match the ones that we know-more or less blond, more or less interested in art, seventeen to thirty-five at the time of their disappearance."

"Bet we get a few," Lucas said.

"Ought to start getting some results by tomorrow."

"We want to get on top of them: Start making the lists as soon as we get a name."

She had a stack of papers in her hands, and she shuffled through them. "There was one girl from Lino Lakes, a Brenda… I think. Hmmm…" She was so intent that Lucas smiled and asked, "You like this? Running things?"

"Yes," she said, looking up. "Not only that, I'm pretty good at it."

"I thought you might be," he said. "I just hope you don't wind up spending too much time with this task force. Get your name known, but hang around here, not with them. It's always better to be with the winner."

"The winner?"

"Yeah," Lucas said. "The task force won't catch this guy. We will."

THAT NIGHT, LUCAS made pasta with his special meat sauce-ground moose tenderloin with off-the-shelf vegetarian spaghetti sauce-with apple-onion salad and Chianti, and had it ready when Weather arrived. She came dragging in, her briefcase a half-inch off the kitchen tile. She sniffed the air and asked, "Moose?"

"Different this time. I've perfected it," he said.

"I suppose you've used the whole jar of spaghetti sauce."

"Nope. I knew you'd be chicken, so I saved some. You can sample the moose, and if you don't like it, we'll whip some of the straight stuff into the microwave." He picked up her attitude. "What happened to you?"

"I had a really bad day," she said. "Really bad."

"I thought you had the day off," Lucas said. "Paperwork."

"And a couple of office patients. Have I told you about Harvey Simson? The guy who runs the snowmobile and ATV shop?"

"No."

"He was cleaning out a carburetor a month or so ago with some kind of spray solvent, and it exploded. He got third-degree burns on his forearms, and after it was cleaned up, he needed a graft to cover the wound. I was up, so I took some skin off his leg and put it on his arm. No sweat. I saw him a couple of times, met his wife, she's this nice fat girl, one of the happy ones, and they've got a little daughter and another kid on the way. He's about thirty and he's finally got the shop going, and they're starting to make some money, but they didn't have a whole lot of insurance. So the question comes up, how are they gonna pay for the burn work? They're not poor enough to get aid, but they're not rich enough to write a check. So Harvey said not to worry, he'd cover it. He went to the bank, and the bank knew him well enough to give him another loan on his shop, and he's right up to date."

She put her head down and snuffled a couple of times, something Lucas hadn't often seen with her patients. "Well, Jesus, what…"

"So he came in today so I could take a last look, and I'm asking him how everything is, and everything's fine, and he's hoping we get an early spring so he can start moving the ATVs, and so on, and then he mentions he's got some kind of skin fungus going that he can't seem to shake, right in the middle of his back, and it itches. So I say, let me take a look…"

"Ah, shit," Lucas said.

She bobbed her head. "Yup. A big fat melanoma. He's known he's had it for weeks, or maybe three or four months. God knows how long he had it before that. I sent him right over to Sharp, but… I think he's history. Just been too much time."

"Jeez." Lucas patted her on the back.

"Yeah. I can handle the ones where I know what's going on. But when it just jumps up like this, a guy younger than you are yourself, and he looks perfectly healthy and he's gonna be dead in a year… Man. I don't know. I'm wondering if I ought to have a kid at all."

"Hey. If everybody worried about what would happen to their kid if they died, nobody would have kids. You just do it."

"Yeah…"

"Tell you what's worse: If you have the kid, and the kid dies. That's worse."

"I guess." She sighed. "Fuckin' moose, huh?"

MARCY HAD PHOTOS of Aronson's jewelry when Lucas arrived at the office in the morning, as well as insurance photograph of Neumann's diamond and emerald rings.

"Aronson's parents came in this morning," she said. "They decided they didn't want to take a chance on the mail, so they drove down last night, stayed in a motel, and brought them in first thing."

Lucas looked at the photos. Both the necklace and the ring had been shot against a black background, and had been enlarged to show detail. "Better than I hoped," he said. "Get the property guys to run these around town. Paper the place."

"That's sorta under way," Marcy said. "We got some copies made, and Del's taking them around to people he knows, and he knows most of them… Property's already doing some more."

"Okay… Do you know if the state's still working the hill?"

"They are-McGrady called. They've got an ID on another one of the dead women. Ellice Hampton, from Clear Lake, Iowa. She disappeared four years ago, twenty-eight. She was unemployed and living with her parents when she disappeared. She'd been working with an insurance company in Des Moines, in the advertising and publicity department. She did advertising layouts for print media and was active in community theater. She'd been looking for work in both Des Moines and Minneapolis. Blond, good-looking, small, and busty. Divorced-ex-husband was a cop in Mason City, and he's in the clear."

"Another artsy type."

"That's the impression I get. I called down Clear Lake, but they've got nothing at all on the case-she vanished, and her parents didn't even know where she'd been planning to go that day, if she'd been planning to go anywhere. When they got home from their jobs, she wasn't there, though her car was. She just never came back."

"Is there any point in doing a list?"

"From what the Clear Lake cop said, her parents really didn't know too much about her friends either in Des Moines or up here. They don't even know if she had any friends up here."

"Goddamnit."

"He's careful about that. He cuts the woman out of her usual crowd, moves in, must feed them some kind of bullshit to keep them from talking, and then kills them."