eyeglasses with large, round lenses, making him resemble an owl.
Begley was peering through those lenses now, directly into Hootâs unblinking eyes, giving him one of the incisive stares that his subordinates called nutcrackers. Behind Begleyâs back, of course.
Begley was a staunch born-again believer, always having at hand the large Bible with his name engraved in gold lettering on the black leather binding. It had the worn look of being read frequently. He quoted from it often.
One of the notches on Begleyâs rigid moral yardstick was the usage of foul or suggestive language. He had no tolerance for it and didnât allow it from the men and women serving under him. He used it himself only when he felt it was absolutely necessary to getting his point acrossâwhich was about every ten seconds.
Hoot was a confident, capable, and unflappable agent. He quailed less than most beneath Begleyâs nutcrackers. No one knew his accuracy on the firing range, but indisputably he was a quick draw on a computer. He excelled at research, and there his talent was unsurpassed. If Hoot couldnât uproot needed data, the data didnât exist.
He met his bossâs hard stare with aplomb. âIâve been looking at Ben Tierney for several days now, sir, and some interesting facts have emerged.â
âIâm listening.â
Begley motioned him into the chair facing his desk, but since he was still giving Hoot the look that said the agent better not be wasting his time, Hoot began talking even before he sat down.
âOver the past couple of years, Ben Tierney has been drifting in and out of the area, specifically Cleary, every few months. He stays a few weeks, sometimes a month, then moves on.â
âLots of weekenders up there. Vacationers,â Begley said.
âIâm aware of that, sir.â
âSo what makes him special? Do his visits to Cleary coincide with the disappearances?â
âYes, sir, they do. He stays in a lodge about twomiles from the center of town. Private cabins with kitchenettes, decks overlooking a waterfall, and private lake.â
Begley nodded. He knew the type of place Hoot described. There were hundreds of them in that area of the state, where tourism was a main source of revenue for the small mountain communities. Outdoor activities like fishing, hiking, camping, and kayaking were huge draws.
âAccording to the lodgeâs manager, Mr. Tierney always reserves the largest cabin. Number eight. Two bedrooms, living area with a fireplace. And this I think is significant. He does his own cleaning. No matter how long he stays, he picks up clean linens at the registration desk twice a week and declines the daily housekeeping service.â
âHardly a smoking gun, Hoot.â
âBut odd.â
Begley left his desk and moved to the easel holding the corkboard that Hoot had brought into the office in advance of their meeting. On it were tacked photographs of the five women missing from the Cleary area, along with compiled data on each: DOB, driverâs license and Social Security numbers, date of disappearance, physical description, family members and close friends, interests and hobbies, religious affiliations, level of education, bank accounts or other sources of fundsânone of which had been tappedâlocation of where she was last seen, and anything else that might help locate the woman or point to the unknown subject who had abducted her, who in this case had been nicknamed Blue.
âDoes this Tierney fit the profile of a serial sex offender?â
Although it hadnât been established that sexual offenses had been committed against the missing women, it was assumed that was the reason for their abductions. âYes, sir. Heâs white. More or less a loner. Married once, briefly. Currently divorced.â
âEx-wife?â
âRemarried.â
âWhat do you know about the marriage and