she didnât even move all night, because she woke up in the same position sheâd fallen asleep in.
Alrighty, then. She lay there, just enjoying the fact that she didnât have to get up for class, and that although shehurt, it was that good sort of after-workout hurt. Sheâd done a good job last night.
Trouble was, it hadnât been what sheâd been Called to do.
And in the cold light of morning, she knew what she had to do. She had to stop dancing around the situation and stop trying to pretend that there wasnât some sort of magical connection here.
She had to visit Tamara.
With a groan that was strictly internal, Di pried herself out of bed and went hunting for some clothes. When you had hair as long as she did, it took some time to brush it out after youâd washed it, and that gave her time to think.
Occamâs Razor.
What if the simplest solution was the one that Zaak kept insisting on? What if Tamara was tangled up in the kidnapping? Forget that it had been a male âcopâ who took the kid, forget that it didnât look like there was any connection between Tamara and the Fitzhughsâ¦forget about hunting for motives. Motives were what you figured out after you caught the bad guy. Concentrate on finding the kid and catching the bad guy.
Di put her hair up in a bun, grabbed a bagel and tomato for breakfast, and went shopping at the Star Mart. She was pretty sure that Tamara wasnât an early riser; most of her kind werenât.
Back home, she put almost everything away, then usedsome of her purchases to do a little âspecialâ preparation. A picnic shaker of salt got consecrated, and so did the water that went into a tiny spray bottle meant for perfume. Then she made a little corsage out of the oak, ash, and thorn leaves sheâd picked up off the street on the way home and pinned it to the shoulder of her poncho. An iron horseshoe nail went into one pocket, and a silver crucifix into the other.
She called the number on Tamaraâs card. She wanted to do this before the Scooby-Doo team woke up and decided to go with her.
The woman who answered Tamaraâs phone had a curiously deep, throaty voice and a Slavic accent that was as phony as a plastic flower. Yes, there might be a booking free. She would go and see if someone had canceled. Why, Susan was in luck, one of Tamaraâs clients had phoned in to say she was ill. If she hurried, she could just make the appointment. âAnd bring a fresh egg,â she added.
Well, well. I know where this is going.
The first, the very first thing she did was to write several identical notes saying exactly where she was going. She distributed the copies around the apartment. There was one pinned prominently to the bulletin board, one on the kitchen table, and in case something happened to her and Tamara actually figured out her real address, one under the pillow on the bed, one in the stack of manuscript, and one rolled up and stuck into the laundry hamper. Sheâdnever had much patience for the sort of book or movie where the hero wandered off into danger without telling anyone where he was going.
Then she called Lavinia and told her.
With that done, Di packed the shoulder bag sheâd bought at Goodwill. First in were the perfume bottle and the salt shaker, plus the egg, wrapped in tissue to protect it. Besides that, for verisimilitude, she dropped in a pack of gum from which she removed two sticks; a new (cheap) lipstick and matching nail polish; a new, unused comb; a freshly opened pack of tissues; a used paperback romance; and a bandana with peace signs all over it. Plus the three things that she actually neededâenough money for bus fare, Tamaraâs fee, and maybe a cup of coffee and a donut; her keys; and a wallet with a phony ID. She had a stash of them from when she and Memaw had gone after the phonies. This one was from when she was seventeenâperfect for the purpose now.
According
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