did, he might return for her as a way to get at Karl.
“You were sitting here?” he asked, pausing by the table, now occupied by a couple and two young children.
When Hope nodded, he said to the couple, “Excuse me. My wife was here earlier and she dropped her keys. May I take a look under your table?”
The couple backed their chairs out. Karl crouched and checked one side, then the other. A word of thanks, and he put his fingers on Hope’s elbow, guiding her toward the stand.
“Two trails for Robyn, both leading this way,” he said under his breath. “One coming, one going, I presume.”
When people walk, they shed skin cells and hair, which fall to the ground and lay a scent trail. Hope had researched it, looking up how search-and-rescue dogs track so she’d understand what Karl could and could not do. He wasn’t comfortable with questions about what he considered one of the more undignified aspects of being a werewolf.
Canines tracked two ways. One was by air scent, which led straight to a person if he was still around. The other was ground scent, which told where someone had been. What ground scent couldn’t tell Karl, though, was which of two recent trails was fresher.
As they drew close to the ice cream stand, he paused. From Karl’s expression, Hope knew the trails had grown fainter, meaning he’d veered off course. Short of sniffing the ground, though, it was difficult to find exactly where they’d diverged.
She looked up at the menu board and absently reached into her pocket. She pulled out her change, letting it fall, clinking on the pavement and rolling away.
“Oh, of all the stupid—” she began.
“I’ve got it.”
He knelt, sniffing nearer the ground as he gathered her scattered coins. When he rose, he bent to hand them to her and said, “One goes to the left, through the parking lot. The other heads right, around the back of the stand.”
“The second is the way Gilchrist went earlier,” she said. “And the way I went.”
“Then that’s where we’ll go.”
ONCE PAST THE STRIP MALLS, Robyn’s trail became easier for Karl to follow, partly because he could stoop and sniff and partly because they’d figured out where she’d been going—following Hope. When Hope had run to see Karl, she’d checked for a tail a few times, but had been too anxious to do a decent job. If Robyn had stayed a reasonable distance away, Hope would never have noticed.
Robyn’s trail ended at the corner of a building. Looking around it, Hope saw the spot where she’d waited out her chaos rush with Karl.
“She saw me,” Hope said. “Dammit. What did she think? I must have looked—”
“She didn’t see your face, not from this angle. You had your back to her. What she saw was me . . . and a lot of blood.”
“Shit! She must have panicked and—” Hope shook her head. “No, not Robyn. She doesn’t rattle that easily.”
Karl said nothing, but his expression disagreed. The old Robyn would have seen blood and marched over to help. But she hadn’t been herself since Damon’s death. After witnessing two murders, had seeing Karl covered in blood been too much?
Or had something caught her attention? Lured her away?
Karl followed her trail. This time, it didn’t cling to the shadows. She’d made a beeline for the road, crossed to a gas station and headed into a phone booth.
“It ends here,” Karl said, crouched in the lot.
“She called a cab.”
“That would be my guess.”
“So she sees you bleeding, finds the nearest phone booth and calls a cab . . . Where? Back to the motel?”
Hope checked her cell. No missed calls. Maybe Robyn had run out of change and decided to call from the motel.
She hoped so. Otherwise, she had no idea where her friend had gone.
WHEN THEY ARRIVED AT THE MOTEL, Hope leapt from the car while Karl was still parking it. A cleaning woman near their motel room shrank back behind her cart, then relaxed as Hope pulled out her key, as if the cleaner had thought she was racing over to demand extra towels.
Hope opened the door. Their room was empty.
She remembered the cleaning woman. Had she been in here? Hope had told her to come after three, so she could get Robyn out first.
“Excuse me!” she called as she hurried back outside.
The cleaning woman’s shoulders tightened, but she didn’t turn, as if praying Hope wasn’t hailing her.
Hope jogged up beside her. “The room looks great. I