“I’m always on duty but that doesn’t mean I can’t occasionally dress like a girl, Robie.”

He lifted his glass. “I’m not saying otherwise. You look great.”

“Thank you,” she said primly.

A twinge of guilt hit Robie sharply enough to make him look away momentarily. He didn’t like holding the truth of Holly’s death from her sister, but they had made a deal with the FBI, and Robie couldn’t jeopardize that investigation. Not even when his gut was telling him to pull Malloy into another room and tell her everything.

“You okay?” she asked.

He looked back at her. “Sorry, just preoccupied.”

“I called a buddy of mine in New York. I told him about the creds you and your partner are carrying. You know what he said?”

“No, but I think you’re going to tell me.”

“He said that those sound like cred packs Feds use to cover up who they really are. And that people who do that are ones who have serious firepower back in DC.”

“Okay.”

“Is that an admission?”

“No, that was just me saying ‘okay.’”

“Bender talked to Patti. She didn’t have any insights on the white van. I mean we have them around here, but the ones I know about are used by contractors, subs…you know, plumbers and electricians. I know them all, and they’re not going to be involved in human trafficking.”

“So we really need to find Lamarre, if he’s still alive.”

“You really believe he saw what he said he did?”

“Why would he lie about something like that?”

“He probably wouldn’t,” she conceded.

“And the fact that he vanished right after telling his girlfriend he basically wanted to settle down with her and left his stuff behind?”

“You think whoever he saw got to him?”

“Sounds that way to me.”

“So she said he disappeared around the same time that Roger Walton did?”

“A few days earlier than Walton.”

“But he obviously saw the people in the van a while back. I mean he went into rehab in between that, when he talked to Holly.”

“Yeah, that’s true.”

“So what happened to change the status of things?”

“You mean if he was safe for a while and then they snatched him, something changed. The people had to find out he knew something and needed to be taken care of.”

“Right. And how would they have done that?”

“Well, he told his girlfriend about it. She might have told someone, although she denies that she did. He also told your sister about it. And we know she told JC Parry. And Parry probably told Walton. And they both disappeared.”

“You mean all three. I’ve tried Holly’s phone. I‘ve e-mailed and texted and gotten nothing. Now, she’s not the most communicative person in the world, but that’s not like her.”

“I imagine not, ” said Robie.

“You think I’ll hear from her at some point?”

Robie looked immensely uncomfortable. “I don’t know.”

Malloy sighed. “Family. I came all this way to help her and I don’t think I helped her at all.”

“Sometimes, people just need to help themselves, Sheriff.”

“I’m off duty. So please, call me Valerie.”

“Okay, Valerie.”

He glanced over to see Reel in animated conversation with Derrick Bender, who, Robie thought, was standing a little too close to her, though Reel didn’t seem to mind. She laughed at something he said.

The hairs on the back of Robie’s neck rose a bit.

“You okay?”

He glanced back at Malloy and her empty glass. “You want a refill on that? Bar’s this way.”

A few minutes later Robie found himself talking to Patti Bender.

“We asked around but no one knows anything about Walton, or prisoners in a van,” she said. “Or if they do they’re not talking about it.”

Robie sipped his wine and nodded slowly. “It may be a combination of ignorance and deceit.”

“I know most of these people,” said Patti. “I doubt they have it in them to keep something like that secret.”

“I appreciate your asking around.”

“Any word on Holly and Luke?”

“But you said ‘luxury’ preppers,” pointed out Reel.

Lambert took a sip of his wine. “Right. There’s no money in ordinary preppers. They get their stuff from the stores or online. But for those who can afford it, there are opportunities for profit. A lot of profit.”

“How?” asked Robie.

Malloy, who was seated across from them and had been listening said, “Secure facilities when everything goes to hell.”