Stuart Woods_Stone Barrington 12
nine P . M . last evening.â
Everybody crowded around. âAs you can see, anything that radiates heat shows up in orange, to a greater or lesser degree.â He pointed at a house in the village. âTake this house, for example: Thereâs quite a lot of ambient light, and these concentrations are people,â he said, pointing to a group, âapparently gathered around the table, having dinner. Outside, you can see another orange object, which is the family car, its engine still warm.â
âThatâs very sensitive,â Young said.
âToo sensitive, in fact,â Lance replied. âIâve ordered other images for after midnight, on the next satellite pass. In those, weâll find many fewer lights and TVs on in the houses, and the car engines will have cooled. What weâll see then is people in their beds.â
âWhatâs this in the middle of the woods?â Young asked, pointing to a dark area with an orange spot near the north end of the island.
âVery likely a deer, maybe two,â Lance said. âThe satellite can pick up heat sources as small as a dog.â
Daisy raised her head and made a noise.
âGood dog,â Ham said.
âIâm not sure exactly how this will be useful,â Young said. âI mean, we can go to every house, search it and count the folks. Maybe we could see if thereâs somebody extra that we didnât count.â
âRight,â Lance said. âThe after-midnight images should be more useful. Then we can see if thereâs a person where we donât expect a person to be, in a garage or a woodshed, for instance.â
Ham spoke up. âI donât suppose it will pick up a dead body?â
Everybody got quiet. Lance shook his head. âNot unless itâs still warm.â
46
T HE AFTERNOON WORE ON until the shadows were long. Ham, who was asleep on the study sofa, suddenly sat up. âDaisy!â he said.
âWhat?â Stone asked.
âWeâre not using Daisy!â
âFor what?â
âTo track Holly.â
Stone slapped his forehead. âWhy didnât I think of that?â He ran upstairs to the master bedroom and started going through Hollyâs clothes, looking for something that had been worn and not laundered, which was tough, because Mabel laundered everything as soon as it hit the hamper. He found a spare pair of sneakers and ran back downstairs with one.
âCome on, Daisy!â he called to the dog. He grabbed her leash and ran for the door, with Ham and Dino right behind him. When they reached the end of the driveway, Stone rubbed the sneaker on Daisyâs face, and she sniffed it eagerly. âHas she been trained to track?â he asked Ham.
âSheâs been trained to do just about everything,â Ham replied. âDaisy! Whereâs Holly? Go find Holly!â
Daisy reacted at once, pacing around the area. Then, suddenly, she was moving at a brisk trot up the road, away from the village, on the left side facing traffic, her nose to the ground. The three men hurried along, trying to keep up with her.
âWe should have brought a car,â said Dino, who did not enjoy running.
âWhy donât you go back to the house and get the station wagon,â Stone said, handing him the keys. âFollow along, but donât get close enough to spook Daisy.â
The sound of her name caused Daisy to jerk the leash almost out of Stoneâs hand, and she resumed her tracking.
Stone and Ham jogged along after her, and a couple of minutes later Stone looked over his shoulder and saw Dino in the station wagon, moving slowly twenty yards behind them.
Daisy rounded a curve and started down half a mile of straight road. Then, after a couple of hundred yards, she stopped, seeming confused. She paced about, sniffing the road and the graveled shoulder, circling back and doing the same area again.
Ham unclipped her leash and pointed at the dense underbrush beside the road. âThere, Daisy,â he said, pointing, âgo find Holly.â
Daisy plunged into the brush, and they could hear her crashing around in the thicket, going this way and that, until she came back to Ham and sat down, looking at him.
âIt happened here,â Stone said. âShe was put into a car.â
âI donât think a dog can track a car,â Ham said.
Dino pulled alongside them in the old Ford wagon. âThatâs it,
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