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went missing.”
Emory sighed. “Maybe her old man is the one who tried to off her.”
“She wasn’t wearing a wedding ring,” Dix said.
“I don’t either, Sheriff, and I’m so married Marty can finish my sentences.”
“It’s odd, but she didn’t seem married to me.”
Emory wondered what that meant, but he let it go.
Dix found Dr. Crocker, more rumpled than he’d been the night before, a stethoscope nearly falling off his neck, at the nurses’ station on the second floor.
“You ever go home last night, Doc?”
“Nah, I haven’t left the hospital for six weeks now. Just kidding, Sheriff. Now, our girl is trying really hard not to show it, but she’s scared—understandable since she had a pretty rough night of it and still can
’t remember who she is or how she came to be in your woods. The head wound’s okay. Since it’s the weekend, most of the toxicology screen won’t be ready until sometime Monday.”
Dix asked Dr. Crocker a few more questions, then he found room 214. It was a double room, but she was the only occupant. She was sitting up, staring at muted cartoons on the TV. There was a white strip of keri tape over her temple, nothing more. She wasn’t moving.
When she saw him, she said, “Do you use meters?”
“What? Meters? Well, no, I think in feet and inches, like most Americans. Why meters?”
“It popped into my head a little while ago. I realized I know all about meters and centimeters, how to convert back and forth. I don’t sound like I’m from Europe, do I?”
“Nope, you’re American to the bone. I’d say Washington, Maryland, around there.”
“Maybe I’m a math teacher and I teach the metric system.”
“Could be. Sounds to me like you’re nearly ready to remember everything, but don’t push it, okay? Just relax. How’s your head feel?”
“Hurts, but I can handle it.”
Odd, but it seemed to him she could handle about anything. He pulled a small black plastic kit from his jacket pocket, opened it, and spread out the paraphernalia on the bedside table. She watched him a moment, said, “You’re going to take my fingerprints?”
“Yes, that’s right. This is my portable kit since you’re not up to going to the station to scan them in. It could be you had a job that required fingerprints.”
“Could I be in NCIC?” The instant the words were out of her mouth, she froze.
“NCIC—you know what that means?”
He could tell she was trying really hard, and he raised his hand. “No, let it go. I’m sending your fingerprints electronically to IAFIS. That’s the Integrated Automated Fingerprint Identification System. If you’re one of the forty million folks in the civil fingerprint file, we should hear back within twenty-four hours.”
“I forgot your name.”
“Dixon Noble. I’m the sheriff of Maestro.”
“Maestro. What a strange name, charming, but strange.”
“I prefer it to Tulip, Montana.”
She smiled, but it wasn’t a simple smile, there were remnants of pain in her eyes. He knew that look when he saw it, knew it to his bones. And he could practically feel her controlling her sense of panic. “
You want some aspirin?”
“No, it isn’t bad. I heard the nurses talking about me earlier. They wondered what the doctors were going to do with me.”
“Not a problem,” Dix said. “I’m taking you home with me.”
THE HOSPITAL INSISTED she ride in a wheelchair to the front door. Once she was seat-belted inside the Range Rover, she turned to watch the sheriff as he pulled out of the parking lot and onto the highway. Then she stared out the window to watch the bright morning sun glisten off the snow. “It’s beautiful, and it feels familiar down to my bones, so I guess I’m not from Arizona.”
“Now that’s interesting. Some deep part of you feels at one with this atrocious weather.”
“Kind of sad, actually.”
“My boys looked in the woods where I found you, but there was nothing there. More snow’s forecasted for this afternoon, but it’s beginning to look like the weather guys are wrong again. Emory’s coming to the house later to take some photos. We’ll show them all over the area. Someone had to have seen you, someone will remember you.”
“I don’t live around here, I’m pretty sure of that, so that means I had to have a room somewhere. I like your Range Rover,” she said, surprising him. “They’re really good off-road, but I think they make me nauseous when I’m a passenger and
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