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"That's not fair," Wendy protested.

"Fuck fair," Virgil said. "Berni, if you know, you better say, or you're gonna be in as deep as Wendy."

Wendy said, "I'll tell you-don't pick on her. He's working a job south of town, on the Wendigo farm."

"When did he leave?"

"Usual time, I guess-six-thirty or so. I heard him go," Wendy said.

"Didn't you think it was a little odd, him not going to see the Deuce?"

"I think he was too freaked out, and then they took the Deuce away," Wendy said. "Berni and I are going down to St. Paul today, maybe he'll come. What're you doing out there, Virgil?"

HUNTINGTON WAS AT THE BOTTOM of the garden with a metal box slung around his shoulders, holding what looked like a basketball hoop at the end of an eight-foot pole. As they watched, he pushed the hoop out in front of him, so it hovered over the top of the potatoes, and started walking up the length of the garden, Mapes pacing along with him.

"Wendy, you oughta go see your brother," Virgil said. "I was down there last night. He could use some support."

She turned back to him: "Is he bad?"

"Bad enough. They can fix him, but it's going to take time. The biggest threat is infection." He told her about the visit, turned back, and saw Mapes walking toward them. Huntington was wandering in a circle, stepping on tomato plants and cucumber vines, heedless of the damage, killing them.

Mapes said, "We got a mass, Virgil. And it's big."

"No question?"

"Well, we got a mass. You think you know what it is; and it's consistent. That's all I can tell you at this point."

Wendy asked, "What?"

Virgil sighed and stepped up on the top step and put his arm around her shoulder and squeezed her tight. "Ah, God I hate this."

"What?"

"Wendy… I believe your mom is down there, under the garden."

SHE FROZE, as if all the muscles in her body contracted at once. Then she pushed him off, and Berni, agape, stepped away and said, "You're crazy."

Wendy, horrified, looking from the garden to Virgil, repeated it: "You're crazy."

Virgil said, "These guys are using a top-end metal detector. They say there's a big buried metal mass out there, under the garden.

"You told me that when your mother left, she left her car here, and took off with her boyfriend, Hector Avila. I had a BCA researcher look up Avila's car, which was a 1990 S10 Blazer. It was never rereg istered anywhere in the United States. There was no sign of it in Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, California, Nevada, Colorado… no place in the Southwest.

"You told me that when you came back from school, that your father told you that your mother had gone away, and that day he started a garden…"

She shook her head. "No… no, no, no, not right. Mom's out in Arizona."

"Can't find her," Virgil said. Can't find a Hector Avila, either. Can't find a Maria Ashbach getting a divorce anywhere in Minnesota or Arizona or anywhere else."

"Dad told me when they got divorced…"

"And he told you that he got a letter that said your mom didn't want to see you anymore. Did that sound like your mom?"

She looked at the garden, a sense of dry-lipped desperation about her. "But that… but that…"

"Your brother. I took his picture and showed it to Jan Washington, in the hospital in Duluth. She thought it was a picture of Avila. The Deuce is Avila's son, and your father knows it. That's why he's framing him."

"It can't…"

"There's only one way to find out," Virgil said. "We know we've got a big metal mass down there. We know your father had excavation equipment that he could have used to bury it. You're out here at the end of the road, with nobody going by. He could have pulled it off. We gotta look."

WENDY STARTED TO CRY, and Berni wrapped her up and led her back into the trailer, Berni looking at Virgil with fear on her face, and Virgil said, quietly to the deputies, "Hang around, keep an eye on them."

He called Sanders: "You better get out here."

Mapes showed him the space in the garden where they were getting the best responses. "You can't tell exactly how big it is, but it's probably car-length, and probably car-wide, and not too deep."

WENDY CAME OUT of the house, tears streaming down her face: "How're you going to dig it up?"

"Get some guys out here."

"I can run the Bobcat better than anyone in the county."

"Wendy, that's a really bad idea."

She shrieked at him: "I can't stand this. I can't stand it. I can't wait. You understand that? Mom's in Arizona. Mom's in Arizona, and she might come back. She can't be in the garden…"

Virgil said to Berni, "You better take her-"

Wendy pushed Berni away. "Bullshit. I'm going for the Bobcat." She stalked away, and one of the deputies moved to cut her off, but Virgil gave him a shake of the head, and the deputy stepped back. Virgil followed her, and Berni followed Virgil, and the deputy came after them, leaving the second deputy, Mapes, and Huntington standing in the garden.

THERE WERE TWO BOBCATS in the machine shed, one with a front-end loader, the other with a shovel. The larger Caterpillar shovel was gone. Wendy climbed into the Bobcat with the shovel and fired it up. She said to Virgil, "Out of the way."

"Not a good idea, Wendy," Virgil said.

"I don't care…" She idled the machine for a moment, said, "When Mom left, something must have busted in his brain. He told me once that he'd taken her into town, and they bought gravesites together. I mean, they were thirty."

"I think that's why he was holding you so close," Virgil said.

She ran the power up a bit and said, "Out of the way."

VIRGIL FOLLOWED THE BOBCAT across the yard, and Mapes came up and said, "You think this is a good idea?"

Virgil said, "We're going with the flow. Give her an outline to work with."

MAPES MARKED OUT a perimeter, and Wendy went to work. She was good with the shovel, cutting down a foot at a time, over the whole perimeter, dumped the dirt to the side, out of the garden, the black-and-tan soil piling up as she went deeper and deeper. At two feet, Virgil could see her crying, and stepped up next to the Bobcat and called, over the engine beat, "You okay?"

"Somebody's been digging here, deep. The soil's all cut up. Get back…"

Sanders showed up with another deputy, and Virgil walked over. The sheriff got out of the car, gawked at Wendy in the Bobcat, and asked, "What the hell's going on?"

"I think Hector Avila and Maria Ashbach are down there."

"What?"

VIRGIL EXPLAINED and Sanders said, "You can't be having her dig them up. Get her out of there. What the hell…"

But they were down three feet, and as Sanders was speaking, there was a shriek of metal. Wendy lifted the shovel and backed off, and one of the deputies jumped down into the hole, dug around with a spade, then stood up and looked at Virgil and asked, "What color was the Blazer?"

"Blue," Virgil said.

"We got blue," the deputy said.

WENDY WAS IN CONTROL now, her face tight, cold. After a short argument with Sanders, she moved back up to the hole and removed two inches of dirt, and then another inch, and then began to hit metal along the whole length of the hole.

She backed off, and the deputies climbed down into the hole with a long-handled shovel and a spade.

Wendy wandered away, through the picket fence around her father's house, and sat on the porch, her feet on the porch step. Virgil and Berni sat on either side of her.

"Dad used to whip her ass. I remember it. I remember her fighting him and crying. He used to cry after he did it-but he said he had to, because she'd screwed something up. I thought that was… the way men acted. Most of the time, everything seemed all right…"

"We got a letter from Mom. Dad showed it to me, he read it to me. All about she was going to have a new life, and it was better if we didn't get involved. She said good-bye. I remember Dad telling the Deuce that she wasn't coming back, and the Deuce starting to cry because he didn't understand where Mom went. It was like she was dead or something… And then Dad told me a couple of years later that they were getting a divorce, and then they had gotten one, and I told all my friends…"