“Which was?”

“Said he’d seen a ghost.”

“Oh, come on, Terry-he was drunk and babbling. Probably had the DTs.”

Terry nodded. “Yeah, I thought the same thing. But, see, there were a couple of odd things. For one, he didn’t sound as crazy as he should have, somehow. And it turns out this guy used to be some hotshot computer expert. Apparently, he had too many problems being bipolar to hold on to his job and ended up on the streets.”

“Sad,” she commented. “But sadly not so unusual.”

“No. But here’s the other odd thing. We found him about two blocks away from where that last rape victim was found-Hollis Templeton? And he was staring toward that building while he was babbling about having seen a ghost a few weeks before. So I wondered.”

Jennifer wondered too. “Terry… is he back on the streets?”

He grimaced. “Afraid so. But my guess is, he’ll still be in the area. There’s a mission near where we picked him up where guys like him can get a bed and a meal. You might try there. I don’t have much of a description to give you-he was so filthy it was hard to say what he looks like. White male, maybe forty, six feet, not more than a hundred sixty, brown and brown.” He pulled out his notebook and jotted down the name and address of the mission as well as the man’s name, then tore out the sheet and handed it to her.

She accepted it but didn’t get up right away. Instead, she said wryly, “You told the file clerk to suggest I just might find what I was looking for here, didn’t you, Terry?”

He smiled. “You know how fast word gets around, Jenn. Especially with Scott Cowan calling every station, too innocently asking about old files. So I figured one of you’d show up here sooner or later. I just asked Danny to hint we might have the files you wanted here.”

“And then let you know I was coming?”

“Like I said-I was going to call you about it. But I figured you might think I was just using it as an excuse and refuse to even take my call.”

“You might have told me all this before I spent so much time in your filthy storage room.”

“Yeah, I might have.”

She got to her feet, smiling. “So you weren’t using it as an excuse?”

“Well, not entirely.”

“I would have taken the call, Terry.”

“Yeah?”

“Yeah.” She saluted him casually and left the lounge. It wasn’t until she was in her car and looking at the note he’d given her that her smile faded. Another dead-end lead? Would she discover only a poor, damaged man with a damaged mind playing tricks on him?

Or something else?

Maggie wasn’t especially eager to walk through the home of the most recent missing woman, but she knew only too well that time mattered; the sooner they could determine with certainty whether Tara Jameson had been abducted by the Blindfold Rapist, the better. So when Andy suggested she and John go along and check out the apartment while he talked to the fiance who had reported her missing, she agreed.

“Another high-security place,” John noted as they stood before the apartment building.

“The bastard seems to like them,” Andy agreed sourly. “Our department shrink says it’s some kind of challenge, that maybe he goes out of his way to take the women from supposedly secure locations even though he could get them a lot more easily when they went out to grocery shop or something.”

“A challenge,” John mused.

“Yeah.”

“This is an older building, isn’t it? I remember it being here twenty years ago.”

“Yeah, but it’s been updated, at least as far as security goes.”

Maggie, who was silently marshaling her energy and trying to narrow her focus in order to retain at least some kind of detachment, only half listened until they entered the building, checked in at the security desk, and Andy asked her where she wanted to start.

“The fiance is waiting in her apartment with one of my people,” he added.

Maggie looked around the bright lobby. “This is awfully public. Is there a service elevator?”

“Yeah, down that hallway there, and it’s the only one goes to the basement. It was checked out, even though the security videotapes for both here and the basement access door don’t show anyone the guards didn’t okay in the areas, and nothing at all suspicious.” He nodded toward the security desk and the two guards who were watching them warily.

“Still, it’s the most likely way for him to get her out of the building, right?” “I’d say so.”

“Then I want to start there. Go up to her floor in that elevator.”

“I’ll go with you,” John said.

Maggie didn’t object, just nodded.

“Eighth floor,” Andy told them. “Apartment 804. I’ll be there with her fiance.” He headed off toward the regular elevators.

“Are you sure you’re up to this?” John asked her abruptly.

“Why wouldn’t I be?”

“Maggie, you were upset when you got to the hotel this morning, and you’re still upset. When you went home last night, you were more tired than anything else. So I can’t help wondering what happened later.”

She was only a little surprised; either his perception was sharpening where she was concerned, or else she wasn’t hiding her tension very well. “It was… a nightmare, that’s all. I didn’t sleep well.”

John had the feeling she had evaded the subject and yet hadn’t really lied to him, which made him all the more curious to find out the whole truth. But all he said was “You don’t have your sketch pad today. It’s the first time.”

“So? I don’t always carry it.”

“I think you usually do, especially during an ongoing investigation.”

Maggie shrugged. “Usually-not always.”

“So why not today?”

“Maybe I forgot it.”

“Did you?”

“No.”

“Well, then?”

She looked at him for a moment, then shook her head. “Never mind. The only thing I’m thinking about right now is whether Tara Jameson is or isn’t the sixth victim.”

John followed as she moved toward the service elevator. “You know, you could just try saying it’s none of my business,” he commented mildly.

“I guess I could,” she murmured.

He decided to take a chance and push just a little bit. “Unless maybe it is. I think you’re too honest to lie about that. So is it my business, Maggie? Is there something you’re not quite sure you should tell me?”

She glanced at him, then drew a breath and said calmly, “Several things, actually. But not here and not now. Okay?”

Bearing in mind Quentin’s warning, John got a grip on his curiosity and nodded. “Okay.”

A flicker of gratitude crossed her face, which made him glad he’d agreed. It also made him wonder even more what could have upset her so much; clearly, she wasn’t looking forward to telling him about it.

Maggie paused in the hallway a few feet from the service elevator and visibly braced herself.

John was hardly given to premonitions, but a sudden uneasy impulse made him say, “Maybe this isn’t a good idea.”

She looked at him gravely. “Why not? Because I might imagine something terrible? But my own imagination can’t hurt me, can it, John?”

He chose his words carefully. “After what I saw in the Mitchell house, I know it’s more than imagination, Maggie. I just… I don’t want to see you hurt like that again.”

Maggie almost reached out and touched him, wanting to reassure him, needing to, but stopped herself with an effort she hoped didn’t show. Steadily, she said, “If Tara Jameson is the sixth victim, she’s the one hurting right now. Whatever I feel is… temporary.”

“That doesn’t mean it hurts any less.”

Instead of denying that, she merely said, “I’ll be fine.” She didn’t give him a chance to protest again but went to the service elevator and pushed the button.

The doors opened almost immediately, and before she stepped inside, Maggie cautiously allowed her inner senses to reach in and probe the innocent-looking cubicle.

The elevator was well used, and at first all she got was a jumble of images and flashes of emotion, mostly irritation and low-level anxiety. Not unusual, she knew, for a building in which often harried, stressed people lived and visited.