Brooke Lockwood Baldwin might have been raised in stone mansions and elite prep schools, but she fit in in a pub like this. She could probably challenge you to a game of darts or sweep the glasses off the bar and kick your ass in arm wrestling.

Brooke turned to Myron and, without so much as a hello, said, "Tell me exactly what happened."

He did. He told her everything from his arrival in London through the police questioning. She gazed at him steadily with bright green eyes.

When he finished, Brooke said, "So you had Rhys by the ankle."

"I think so, yeah."

Her voice was softer now. "You touched him."

The words hung in the air for a long moment.

"I'm sorry," Myron said. "I tried to hang on."

"I'm not blaming you. Did you see his face?"

"No."

"So we don't know for certain it was Rhys."

"I can't say for sure, no," Myron said.

Brooke looked at Win. Win said nothing. She turned back to Myron.

"On the other hand, we have no reason to believe it isn't my son, do we?"

Win spoke for the first time. "Depends."

"On?"

"Do we know for certain the other boy is Patrick?"

"Yes," Brooke said. "At least, Nancy says he's Patrick."

"She's sure?" Myron asked.

"That's what she and Hunter say. They're divorced now, you know. Hunter and Nancy. They broke up not long after."

She didn't say after what. She didn't have to.

"We all flew over together. The four of us. Back together again. I don't remember the last time we even talked to each other. We're still neighbors. We should have moved out, I guess, but . . . she always blamed me. Nancy, I mean."

"Seems unfair," Myron said.

"Myron?"

"Yes?"

"Don't patronize me, okay?"

"Not my intent."

"The boys were at my house. It was my au pair. I should have been home watching them. If the roles were reversed . . . Whatever; it was a long time ago."

Win asked, "Is there any independent confirmation that the boy is Patrick?"

"Like what?"

"Like DNA."

"I mentioned that. I guess they'll do it eventually, but right now there is some sort of legal mumbo jumbo. Patrick--I mean, assuming it's Patrick--is a minor, so they need to get permission from his parents."

Win nodded. "And yet there is no concrete proof Nancy and Hunter are the boy's parents."

"Irony, right?"

"So what has Patrick said?" Myron asked. "Where have they been? Who took them?"

Brooke picked up the mug, looked at the contents for a second, then downed them. Myron and Win watched and waited.

"Patrick hasn't said anything yet."

Silence for a moment.

"He's that wounded?"

"Apparently. It's not like they let me see him. Only family allowed in the hospital room."

"How serious are the injuries?"

"Nancy says he'll survive, but he's been pretty much out of it. Talk about irony. For ten years, we don't have a clue about Rhys. Not a peep. Now suddenly there is someone who can give me answers, and I can't even talk to him."

Brooke closed her eyes and rubbed them with a thumb and forefinger. Myron reached out to touch her shoulder. Win stopped him with a shake of his head.

"Anyway," she said as her eyes opened, "we are holding a press conference this afternoon. As you know, the media has gotten some of the story. Now it's time to release the rest."

"It's been three days," Myron said. "Why the wait?"

Brooke stood and turned so she could lean her back on the bar. "So, day one, two detectives or whatever they call them from Scotland Yard sit Chick and me down. 'We have a dilemma,' they say. If we go to the press and splash Rhys's age-progression photograph all over the place, there are, the detectives explained, two things that might happen. One"--Brooke raised her index finger--"we mount pressure and find Rhys. Two"--the middle finger joined the index--"we mount pressure and whoever is holding him kills him and dumps the body."

"They told you that?" Myron said.

"Just that way. They advised us to give them a little time and see if they could dig up any leads quietly."

"I assume they haven't."

"Correct. Rhys, it seems, has vanished without a trace. Again."

Again.

And again her eyes closed. And again Myron reached his hand out. And again Win stopped him with a shake of his head. Win wasn't being cold. He just didn't want her to fall apart yet. Myron got it.

"So the investigators," Win said, "they changed their suggestion?"

"No," Brooke said, "I did. I decided. My choice. We go public. Will that help find my son or kill him? Don't know. Nice, right?"

"It's the right move," Win said. "It's the only move."

"You think so?"

"I do."

Myron saw Brooke's two fists tighten. Her face started to redden, and when it did, Brooke suddenly looked like her cousin Win, or at least you could see the family resemblance. When Brooke spoke again, there was an edge in her voice.

"So now you think I should have a say in what happens to my son?"

Win did not reply.

"You received an anonymous email," Brooke said.

"Yes."

"You showed up and ended up killing three guys."

"Louder," Win said. "I think the gentlemen in the corner didn't hear you."

But Brooke was having none of it. "Why didn't you tell me about the email?"

"It was anonymous. I figured that it would go nowhere."

"Bullshit," Brooke said. "You found it credible enough to check it out."

"Yes."

"So why didn't you tell me, Win?"

No reply.

"Because you thought I'd fall apart? Because you didn't want to get my hopes up?"

Silence.

"Win?"

He turned and faced her full on. "Yes," he said. "That's why."

"That wasn't your decision to make."

He spread his hands. "Yet make it I did."

"What, you think I couldn't take it? You think you were sparing me additional pain?"

"Something like that."

"You know nothing about my pain." Brooke leaned in closer. "How dare you? How dare you decide that for me?"

She stared at him hard. Win said nothing.

"Win?"

"You're right," he said. "I should have told you."

"Not good enough."

"It's going to have to be, Brooke."

"No, sorry, you don't get off that easily. Maybe if you told me about the email, I would have flown over. Maybe I could have helped in some way. Maybe--no, definitely--things would have gone differently."

Win said nothing.

"Instead," Brooke said, pointing out the window of the pub, "my boy is still out there. Alone. You messed up, Win. You messed up big-time."

"Let's slow down a second," Myron said. "We don't know if that would have changed--"

Brooke snapped her gaze toward Myron, cutting him off. "Is Rhys here, Myron?"

Now it was Myron who said nothing.

"Bottom line: Is he here?" She turned back to her cousin. "We had our first real lead in ten years. In ten horrible, miserable years. And now . . ."

"Brooke?"

It was Win.

"I get it," he said. "You're angry."

"Man, you're perceptive."

"But more than that, you're trying to motivate me," Win said. "There is no need. You know that too."

Their eyes met. If someone passed a hand between those eyes, it would probably have been chopped off via laser.

Her phone rang.

"Find him, Win."

"I will."

They both blinked. Brooke took out her phone and put it to her ear. "Hello?" She hung up a few seconds later. "That was the police."

"What did they want?"

"It's Pa

trick. He's awake."

Chapter 10

Win didn't come with them to the hospital. For now, he felt that it would be best to keep his distance from anything involving law enforcement. They considered having Myron stay away too--the cops had been less than thrilled with Myron's explanation for the violence at AdventureLand--but in the end, they decided that he should be nearby in case he was somehow needed.

Brooke stayed busy on her phone during the taxi ride. She called her husband, Chick, and told him to meet her at the hospital. She made more calls and grew more agitated.

"What's wrong?" Myron asked.

"They are saying we can't see Patrick yet."

"Who?"

"The police."

Myron thought about that. "Is it their decision?"

"What do you mean?"

"I mean, who decides that you can't see him? Is it up to the police? Can't the parents overrule them?"

"I still don't know if Nancy and Hunter have legal standing."

"I assume you have their numbers?"

"Only Nancy's."

"Try it."

She did. No answer. She sent a text. No reply.