of lockpicks, along with a couple of small hand drillsâtools any burglar would want. A first-aid kit with two different vials of drugs meant to render someone unconscious, along with the necessary supply of syringes. Any cop worth his salt would have searched and confiscated all this. He thought of the skinny, smart-ass jailer whoâd smirked at him, and snorted. The laugh was on them, and they didnât even know it.
Satisfied that all was in place once again, he zipped up the bag, shoved it back behind the spare tire andslammed the trunk lid shut. As he got back in the car, he already knew his next destination would be the last place heâd seen Alicia Ponte. At a place called Marvâs Gas and Guzzle.
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Daisy Broyles had come to work for Marv Spaulding on her sixteenth birthday and had been here ever since. Job security had been assured after sheâd turned nineteen and married Marv. Now they lived in the little brick house behind the store, which suited Daisy just fine. She liked small-town living, and Justice, Georgia, was small-town personified.
This morning was passing much like every morning did. Herbert and Hubert Cooper, two old bachelors who happened to be identical twins, had come in around seven oâclock, downed their usual three cups of coffee and two of Daisyâs fresh-baked cinnamon rolls apiece and then left with a wave and a promise to be back tomorrow.
Marshall Waltersâ daughter, Sue, had stopped by for gas to mow their lawn.
Three little boys came in with a dollar apiece and spent fifteen minutes arguing between themselves before settling on pop and candy. And the morning went on, with a steady flow of locals stopping by.
The morning scent of cinnamon rolls was slowly being replaced by the food Daisy was preparing for the lunch rush. She already had a dozen burritos fried up, a pan of crusty chicken strips, a big bowl of potato salad and a bowl of slaw. She was wrapping her chocolate-chip cookies in clear plastic for individual sale when she saw a car pull off the highway and park near the door.
She frowned, recognizing the car. No one had everpulled a stunt like that here. Passing out drunk at one of her gas pumps was ridiculous. He could have killed someone driving drunk. Yesterday, it was all anybody had wanted to talk about when theyâd come in. She was tired of the subject, and tired of the jackass whoâd done it. Marv had reminded her last night that theyâd been lucky the sorry sucker had stopped before heâd passed out. Like Marv told her, if the drunk had still been driving when heâd conked out, they might have had a mess on their hands. What if heâd hit the pumps? What if heâd run into another customer? Finally Daisy had relented, admitting Marv had a point.
But seeing the man walking toward the door didnât mean she was ready to sell him some more booze so he could get behind the wheel and drive again. With that thought in mind, she braced herself against the counter, crossed her arms over her ample bosom and set her jaw. Southern women had their ways. If he argued with her, she would show him what a real steel magnolia was all about.
Dieter didnât know heâd already been made, but it wouldnât have mattered. Finding Aliciaâs car parked right beside his in the impound yard hadnât made him feel any better about the situation. It was his own fault for giving away the GPS business. Heâd just assumed she would have known. Now she was running again, but in whatâand with whom? He needed to find out who that big Indian was sheâd been with yesterday. He was the only lead he had.
The bell over the door jingled, then played a short burst of âDixieâ as the door swung shut. Surprised by the unexpected tune, he was actually grinning as hespied the clerk. But from the way she was glaring, she didnât look happy to see him.
He shifted his attitude to all-business as he moved toward