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to look back out into the alley, Rick noticed that the remaining outside brick wall on both sides of the gap was bowed, ready to crumble.

      At the far end of the dining area was a set of brick-littered stairs leading down into the basement. Except for a few inches of water, it was probably the least damaged room in the tavern.

      He stood still for a moment, listening. Someone was going through the rubble in the north end of the dining area, the side farthest from the street and hidden by the remaining walls. He turned toward the sound. Despite his size, Rick could move silently when he hunted man or beast. He had a tattoo over his heart with the word chaha’oh. It meant shadow.

      “Federal agent. Don’t move.” As he stepped through what remained of the doorway, he realized he’d spoken out of habit. He was now working with the Hartley Police. “Turn around slowly.”

      “Just don’t shoot, okay? I work here,” he said. “Remember me from last night? I’m Bobby. Bobby Crawford.”

      Hearing footsteps behind him, Rick turned his head for a second and saw Kim. She’d come in the same way he had, through the door cavity, and was wearing a white hard hat and holding another.

      “Dude, just chill, okay?” Bobby said, his hands up. “In the rush to get out last night, I lost something important. I was hoping to find it before they brought in the bulldozers. It was a gift from my mom.”

      Rick sized Bobby up in a glance. He was around eighteen or nineteen, stood five foot six and had dark hair and brown eyes.

      “Did you mention this to the police when they took your statement?”

      “No, I didn’t realize it was gone until this morning. It’s a gold crucifix I wear around my neck on a chain.”

      “You shouldn’t be here. That’s why the yellow tape’s there,” Rick snapped. “It’s not safe for the public to be rummaging around, moving things around.”

      “Dude, are you listening? It’s not evidence. It’s a family heirloom.”

      “Forensic experts and the fire marshal will continue to sort through the debris and recover items. If your crucifix is found, you’ll get it back,” Rick told him. “Let me see your driver’s license.”

      When Bobby handed it over, Rick took a quick look, then returned it. “All right. Get going. If anything belonging to you turns up, I know how to find you.”

      Bobby backed out through the kitchen and quickly disappeared down the steps.

      “I ran into the fire marshal out on the sidewalk,” Kim said, and handed Rick the hard hat. “Preston had called to tell him we’d be here, so Medina came over to make sure we followed safety protocols. He said no one’s allowed inside the Brickhouse without hard hats and he intends to stand by until we’re ready to leave.”

      Rick gave her a tight-lipped smile. “Medina give you hard time?”

      “No, not really,” she replied softly, gesturing to the street to indicate the man was close by. “He told me not to lean on anything or to move any structural elements. Then he gave me these and insisted we wear them.”

      “All right,” he said, putting the hard hat on. “Let’s take a look around, then we’ll go into the kitchen, where all this started.”

      She stood in one spot and turned around in a circle, slowly surveying the wreckage. “I can’t believe what this place has become. You could always hear laughter here.”

      “Everyone’s okay and we have another chance at life. That’s a reason for laughter. You ready to go into the kitchen?”

      She nodded. They picked their way back, stepping over and around the remnants of the shattered interior.

      They were barely in the kitchen when Arnie Medina poked his head in through the front door and yelled. “This place is coming down! Get out. Now!

      Rick grabbed Kim’s hand and moved toward the gap in the wall facing the alley. Before they could reach the opening, a cloud of dust descended and bricks began to tumble from overhead, raining down on their escape route.

      Rick turned back toward the dining area when a roof beam sagged, then cracked as the ceiling gave way.

      Rick spun Kim around and pushed her toward the basement stairs. “Down! Jump!”

      Because the wooden steps were littered with chunks of bricks and debris, Rick and Kim ended up sliding into the basement, flat on their backs. As dust and ash billowed down the steps with them, Rick rolled on top of Kim, his body protecting her from the building materials that bounced down the steps. One brick struck his hard hat like a stone fist.

      Within seconds the earthshaking cascade was replaced by a loud rattle, then a dozen or more solid thumps from somewhere above. When it was quiet again, Rick rose and looked down at Kim, who still had her eyes tightly shut. It was a good thing, considering her face was covered with dust.

      “Keep your eyes shut and I’ll blow away some of the dust.”

      He tried, but they both started coughing. He helped her sit up.

      For a moment she kept her head down. Finally she opened her eyes and looked up at him. “We’re alive, I take it?”

      Rick smiled. “Pretty much. You okay?”

      “I feel like I just went down a rock slide, but all I’ve got are bumps and bruises, I guess,” she said, looking down at herself.

      Shaken, she turned to look at the stairs. They were piled high with bricks and rubble, but light was coming in as the dust began to disperse.

      “At least we’re not totally trapped,” Rick commented. “But we’re going to need help digging out of here.”

      “Can you hear me?” came a man’s voice from up above.

      “I hear you, Medina, and we’re both fine. There’s a lot of debris in the way, but once we clear a path we’ll have enough room to crawl out,” Rick called back.

      “No! Don’t start moving things around. Something else could come down. Wait until my people have a chance to check the situation up here. Stay away from the stairs, hang tight and we’ll get you out.”

      * * *

      TWENTY-FIVE MINUTES later Rick and Kim were standing in the alley at the rear of the Brickhouse. The firemen had braced the remaining walls as well as the sagging roof beams, then cleared a path for them.

      “Did I ever tell you how much I hate closed-in spaces? I felt like I was smothering down there,” she said, coughing.

      “That was poor air quality, not claustrophobia,” he said, clearing his throat. “At least you did all the right things, including the most important of all—keeping your head.”

      Arnie Medina came to meet them. “Speaking of keeping your heads, good thing I handed you the hard hats, huh?”

      “Yeah, but I still don’t get it. I made sure we stayed in sections that looked stable,” Rick said.

      “You had someone working against you. A guy with mirrored sunglasses, dressed in sweatpants and a gray sweatshirt, gave it a push with a two-by-six. He stopped the second I saw him and yelled, but I have no idea how long he was out there.”

      “Wait. Sweatpants or jeans?” Rick asked, instantly thinking of Bobby.

      “No way,” Kim said, reading Rick’s thoughts.

      “You know who it was?” Medina asked.

      “Maybe,” Rick answered. “What color hair? Height? Give me anything you’ve got.”

      The fire marshal shook his head. “He was wearing a hoodie, and his face was turned

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