WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21
“It was good for me. How was it for you?”
The hour was 6:30 a.m. and Sonja Nilsson was sitting on the edge of the couch in the monitor room, braiding her hair.
Colter Shaw sat up straight, wondering when the pain in his back would vanish. “I’ve had better.”
Her smile was both demure and seductive, not an easy combination.
At around two that morning, exhausted from examining videos, they’d decided they needed to surrender to sleep. Shaw insisted Nilsson take the couch. He locked the wheels of two office chairs, put them face-to-face and sat, resting his feet on the opposite one. He crossed his arms, tilted his head forward and slipped under almost immediately. This was a helpful talent for a survivalist, though one that could not be taught. He was simply lucky in his ability to doze anywhere, anytime.
The marathon viewing sessions of the night before had been only a modest success.
Shaw’s third camera — the low-def one at the service station — had caught Allison Parker’s SUV speeding north on 55, three miles south of Herndon, the home of the bus terminal and rental car agencies.
Just past that sighting Parker had crossed into Marshall County, where Ferrington’s guardian angel Marty Harmon had no clout when it came to government officials opening up traffic cams. Shaw had left a message for beleaguered Detective Kemp to see if he could access any videos up there. But the man had not called back. The odds he would? Ten percent, tops. If there was any good news in this it was that they also hadn’t spotted Merritt’s truck going north on 55 in pursuit.
Stretching, Nilsson said, “HEP is the land of overnighters. There’s a shower on every floor. Toothbrushes. Shave kits.”
Shaw’s beard grew in dark and coarse, curiously the opposite of what crowned his head. Facial hair didn’t bother him but it did make him look sinister, and considering what lay ahead today he’d take advantage of a razor.
“Next steps?” she asked, making coffee from a Keurig in the corner. She lifted an eyebrow and he nodded.
“I’ll talk to friends outside of the office. You keep going with employees?”
She nodded and handed him the cup. He snagged a creamer from a bowl and poured it in. Let it self-stir.
“Bathroom?”
“I’ll show you.”
They walked out together, Nilsson pointing toward the restroom.
They offered silent nods in farewell. She continued to the elevator and Shaw stepped into the bathroom. He locked the door behind him. He sipped coffee and set the cup down on a ledge. The bright, clean room, of blue tile, was well stocked for the hardworking. Plenty of towels and individually wrapped packets of soap, shampoo, toothbrushes and paste and the shaving kits.
He stripped, stepped into the shower and stood under the hottest water he could stand, then the coldest. The Winnebago was downstairs, in the lot, but didn’t have water pressure or temperature like this; he always took advantage of landline pipes when he could. He toweled off, dressed and shaved.
In the monitor room once more, he collected his backpack, which contained his computer, phone and notebook. The Glock had remained affixed to his belt constantly, even when he’d slept.
On the ground floor, he carded out and stepped into a damp, still morning. Either he was getting used to the scent of the Kenoah or the off-gassing was milder today. Maybe the cleanup was finally having some effect.
In the camper, he changed into clean jeans, a navy polo shirt and gray sport coat. Outside, he tugged on his helmet and muscled the two-hundred-pound Yamaha off the rack on the back of the vehicle, where he had — out of habit — affixed it once again after returning from Allison’s. He swung on, fired up and typed into GPS the first address on his list of Allison Parker’s friends. He memorized the route and skidded out of the lot.
In the reward business he always called on interviewees in person if he could; a phone call could be terminated with a mere tap of a finger.
Riding through progressively nicer neighborhoods, he arrived at the stately white split-level in twelve minutes. There was a low-end Mercedes in the driveway. He motored past and parked around the block and left the helmet. Bikers, even those dressed like CEOs of computer start-ups, will often be ignored when knocking on doors.
He rang the bell and stepped back.
A blond woman of about forty opened the wooden door but left the screen closed. Shaw suspected it was locked.
“Ms. Holmes?”
“That’s right.” She scanned him carefully.
“My name’s Colter Shaw. Alli Parker’s mother suggested I talk to you.”
A child — a boy of about five — wandered up and stared. Holmes turned him around and said, “Go play.”
Back to Shaw. “Alli’s mother? Why?”
“Alli’s ex-husband, Jon, was released from prison yesterday. And her mother’s worried she might be in danger.”
The woman’s eyes widened. “What?”
The surprise was genuine. This deflated the potential value of the lead significantly; she hadn’t heard from Parker in the past two days. Still, she might know of other friends or of getaway spots the woman might head to.
“She and her daughter’ve disappeared. I’m trying to find them and make sure they’re all right.” He knew the answer but asked anyway. “Have you heard from her in the past few days? Or know where she might’ve gone?”
Holmes’s eyes narrowed considerably. “And, again, who are you?”
“I’m in security. You can call Alli’s mother or her boss at Harmon Energy if you want confirmation.”
“I only met her mother a few times. And I don’t know her boss. Isn’t this something for the police?”
“They’re investigating. But Mrs. Parker thinks they’re not doing enough. So, any thoughts where she might be? We know she was headed north out of Ferrington. Friends or inns or hotels in that direction she might’ve mentioned?”
Now she was looking behind him, scanning the street, her face a mask of worry. “No, I don’t know anything. Please leave.” Her voice was desperate, her eyes imploring. A whisper: “He could’ve followed you here. He could think I’m helping you.”
“No, he didn’t. I’m sure.”
The woman asked bluntly, “You know where he is?”
“No, but—”
“Then he could have followed you. What Jon did to her! Did you see her face?”
Shaw knew her tone and could see where the conversation was going: into a brick wall. He pulled a card from his jacket pocket. It bore his name and burner phone number.
“Call me if you think of anything. And if Alli calls you, have her check her email. There’s one from her mother she should read.”
He slid the card under the screen door.
Odds it was destined for the trash in thirty seconds?
Eighty percent.
In the reward business, Colter Shaw had learned that one of the largest demographic groups in the world is the Uninvolved.
“I have to go now,” Holmes said, and the door closed. She hadn’t picked up the card.
He heard the deadbolt and the chain secure the door, then walked back to the bike and fired it up.
He put to use the second name and address, but the meeting was a virtual rerun.
As was the next. There was no occupant at the fifth house — or at least no occupant willing to open the door to a stranger.
At the next locations he found friends more sympathetic than the others. But those he spoke with said they knew nothing helpful, and he sensed they were being honest.
When he ran out of individuals he had addresses for, he turned to the phone list. Sitting on the Yamaha in a Walmart parking lot, his notebook balanced on the gas tank, he made the calls. Four of the six picked up. There was an element of suspicion on their part, though mentioning Ruth Parker’s name allayed this to some extent. No one had any idea where Allison might have gone. One, a man who was a former neighbor, volunteered that Jon Merritt was unstable and dangerous. He’d gotten drunk at a block party and fought with a guest over a perceived slight.
“Man is a damn bully.”
He’d left messages for the two he hadn’t been able to reach and wondered if he should call again.
But then decided: no, no. This was pointless. He was doing this wrong.
Allison Parker, the brilliant engineer, would be brilliant as a fugitive too.
She would have thought out her escape carefully and wouldn’t confide in or seek the help of anyone her ex knew about or could easily find — someone he and Nilsson could easily identify too.
She’d run only to someone or someplace that Merritt would know nothing about.
The strip mall where he sat happened to be on a rise; the street was Humphrey Mountain Road, though that was an exaggeration. The geologic formation jutted from the otherwise flat earth here no more than a hundred feet. Still he could see the flat landscape for twenty miles in all directions. To the north, the industrial heart of Ferrington rose like red-brick tombstones along the sad Kenoah. East, west and south were densely clustered suburbs that ended abruptly, at lines of field and forest that vanished to the Midwest horizon, muted by a gray haze.
Tell me, Allison. Tell me.
Where are you going?
Like all mathematical problems, her methodology of escape would be laughably obvious to her.
And a mystery to most everyone else.
It was then that his phone hummed. He glanced at the screen.
Possible lead re: your request this morning. Motel in Ferrington. Should have name and address in 15 or 20.
This information came not from a local source but from many miles away.
Mack McKenzie.
His private eye was working her magic.
Jon Merritt lay in the rickety, creaking bed.
He squinted as the sun blasted through the torn curtain of the motel window and ignited a thousand dust motes that were parading slowly in the still air.
The Bulleit bottle had left a mark on his side, as he’d slept partially atop it. This put him in mind of his father, who on more than one occasion had fallen asleep with a bottle propped up next to him in his green Naugahyde armchair while watching sports. He would return home, announce, “Time to fire the sunset gun,” and pour his first of the night. Once, he woke in the morning, still in the chair, enraged that the bottle had emptied its contents into his lap. This somehow was Jon’s fault. Out came the belt.
Rolling upright, then out of bed, Merritt now struggled to the bathroom.
Puking? He waited.
No.
Thank you...
He showered then dressed, slipped his gun into one windbreaker pocket, loose shells into another and gathered up the half of Allison’s papers and notes that he hadn’t reviewed last night and stuffed them into the backpack.
He stepped outside into the tidal wave of sun.
At the convenience store Merritt bought a breakfast burrito and a black coffee and walked to the small park overlooking the river. Well, not so fragrant here, but it was good to be outside.
Merritt ate his breakfast. Tentatively at first, then with gusto. No nausea now. He sipped the coffee and then eased back and closed his eyes, bathed with a warmth that went beyond the excited electrons of the sunlight bearing down on him.
He allowed himself this sensation for only a few minutes, though.
Back to the task at hand.
He pulled out his phone, replenished the minutes, and went to the internet. He scanned once more for Allison’s and Hannah’s names on social media and found nothing active.
Slipping the phone away, he turned to the documents from his ex’s house. On top were Hannah’s assignments, poetry and selfies. Another Post-it about Kyle. Some with dates and initials. He flipped through the photos. Were one or two taken at an inn, a campground, a friend’s house they might have fled to? No. Just moody pictures taken by a moody adolescent. He read through her poems until he realized there was nothing helpful there either.
He turned to the stack of Allison’s papers. After five minutes he found something that snagged his attention.
It was an envelope addressed to Allison, postmarked a month ago. It bore a return address he didn’t recognize. Inside was a greeting card. On the front was a watercolor of two butterflies hovering over a daisy. He read the inked message inside.
Ah, good, the detective within him thought. Very good.
He slipped this into his windbreaker pocket, rose and adjusted the gun on his hip. He then started back to his motel room.
He found himself thinking of the picture on the front of the card the woman had sent Allison, the delicate watercolor. The flitting insects.
Merritt remembered, long ago, seeing a TV special about butterflies. The commentator had said that, yes, they were beautiful, they possessed the navigation skills of GPS, they had the energy and wherewithal to migrate hundreds of miles.
There was another fact about the creatures that few people knew, and that Jon Merritt had found amusing: in addition to those nearly miraculous skills, butterflies were also ruthless and aggressive cannibals.
Colter Shaw sat in an armchair upholstered sometime in a prior decade, if not century. Comfortable, though, he had to admit.
He was in a small room, in a small motel, not far from the Kenoah. This was the address that Mack McKenzie had uncovered for him.
The view was of a parking lot. Two homeless — men, he believed — slept against a warehouse wall. A woman in the sex trade smoked and eyed passersby.
Shaw thought of the Street Cleaner, the serial killer. These would be prime targets.
Did the man feel that it was less immoral to kill the marginalized?
Or did morality not enter into the equation at all? Maybe he killed for amusement or lust or out of boredom.
Shaw turned his attention back to the place, noting evidence of a weapon.
Ammunition, but not the firearm itself.
Very little personal was here. Shaw was itinerate. He was on the road most of the year. Yet, the Winnebago contained artifacts that connected him with family. A photo of the Compound, preserves his mother had put up, photos of the children on hikes, Ashton holding the trout he’d caught not with rod and reel but with a simple line and hook he’d made himself, paintings that Dorion’s two daughters had done for him, documents his father had sent that had launched Shaw on the quest to find the people who had killed the man.
He glanced again at the papers he’d riffled through when he’d first gotten inside. Like the bullets, they were evidence of impending murder.
A text hummed and he read it.
He replaced what he’d found exactly in the order he’d discovered the items. He then rose and stepped into the corner of the room. He reached to his right hip and drew the black Glock. Held it firmly.
There was only a faint click when the key card slipped into and out of the lock slot. The door swung open slowly and the man walked inside, eyes on his phone.
When the door closed, Shaw said calmly, “You’re targeted. Don’t move.”
Leggy Sergei Lemerov stopped.
Did his shoulders sag slightly? Shaw wasn’t sure.
“Mr. Colter Shaw.”
“Drop the phone. Raise your hands.”
“Maybe I am talking to beautiful woman. That will make her unhappy.”
Shaw was silent.
Never banter...
The Russian muttered, “Ah, all right.”
The Apple bounced when it hit the carpeted floor.
“Turn.”
He did and the dots of black eyes in the angular face looked Shaw up and down.
“With your right hand, thumb and forefinger, remove the gun.” Lemerov was predominantly left-handed, he could tell, but the Russian military teaches ambidextrous shooting.
With no inclination for heroics, he went through the prescribed routine. The weapon ended up on the armchair Shaw had just been sitting on. Shaw tossed a zip tie to him. He grimaced but pulled the band on. He didn’t play the looseness game. They efficiently secured his wrists.
Shaw indicated a chair and the man sat, tossed his head to get a stray shock of long blond hair from his eyes.
The Russian did not seem particularly troubled. Shaw was a reward-seeker and a troubleshooter for Harmon Energy. There was no risk that Lemerov would be taken into an alley and treated the way the GRU disposed of its prisoners.
Shaw glanced at the papers he’d been through earlier. Maps, photos of himself and of the Winnebago, notes, names and addresses he did not recognize. Shaw had taken time with them, looking specifically for any reference to Allison Parker. It wasn’t logical that Lemerov knew of her personally, but it was her brainchild he wanted. And Shaw had to make certain that there was indeed no connection between Jon Merritt’s mission and the S.I.T.
And there was not.
He now said to the Russian, “All of your homework. You have a destination plan. And I’m the traveler.”
A faint frown. Lemerov would be curious how Shaw had come to know the euphemisms used by Russian security services for a targeted kill. He had learned this from his brother, who swam in the current of intelligence.
He recovered. A smile. “What you talking? Everything you say is news to me. All that?” A nod at the paperwork. “Just about surveillancing you, when you went looking for that S.I.T.”
Shaw didn’t reply that the pictures were taken after the scam with Ahmad, Rass and LeClaire.
Yes, this might have to do with Marty Harmon’s reactor trigger, but if so, it was a future plan to steal it. Shaw would have to be eliminated; the message would be clear to Harmon: There’ll be consequences if we don’t get the device.
Then too this might be personal. Maybe Lemerov was just a very sore loser.
“Who ordered it? Be better if you tell me.”
“Ha, Mr. Colter Shaw, truth? Okay. Truth? Just wanted scare you. So you take bargaining serious. Nobody hurt a hair on head. Come on, come on, let’s us get back to turkey talking... You are not made of money. I can line your pockets. We can do accounts, we can do offshore. Bring in the experts. We have insurance, guarantees in place, so you safe, family safe. No more that.” A nod at the paperwork, the plan to get Shaw to his “destination.”
Shaw frowned. “How do I know your money’s good? Who’d write the check?”
“A rich friend.”
“That doesn’t answer my question.”
“He likes secrecy. Or she likes secrecy.”
“You’ve got to have a handler.”
“Why?”
“You don’t sound like you come from Boston or Atlanta.”
“Oh, maybe I am born in the U.S.A. Maybe my handler is Bruce Springsteen! Two hundred fifty thousand. A quarter million! Buy you lots of anything.”
“Tell me who.”
Instantly the man changed. His face contorted and his voice was a snarl. “Fuck Abe Lincoln. No fun and cute anymore. You don’t help, I come back and visit you. Middle of night. I will say, ‘Hello, Mr. Colter Shaw’ and that will be all you hear. Maybe when you with your woman. Surprise, surprise, and goodbye to both of you.” His wild gaze danced around the room, twitchy, if eyes could twitch. Like Jon Merritt, perhaps, Lemerov sported a borderline personality.
And, true to his diagnosis, the cheerful side of Lemerov returned, so quickly the transformation was eerie. “But what will come of this today? Your little clever scheme? What? I wonder.” He was as calm as could be. “Here is what happens, your police people come and take me away. I spend hour or two in jail, meet interesting friends. Have a Coca-Cola. Then lawyer comes and I leave. How is that? Because I have friends here, oh, in the state capital. What do you think of that? I call them, they call someone else, I finish my Coca-Cola and I’m out.” He affected a pout. “We have to start all over again. Waste of time. Two hundred fifty thousand? All you do is walk into HEP, walk out with trigger and you a rich man.” His grin was conspiratorial.
Shaw knew there were places where a quarter million made you rich. Not even Ferrington was one of them.
A knock sounded.
Shaw walked to the door, keeping the gun aimed at Lemerov’s torso — in a moment of mania he could charge them; his hands were bound but they were in front of him and could still punch and strangle.
“Yes?”
“Customs and Border Protection,” came a husky woman’s voice.
The captive’s smile vanished.
He was being arrested by the feds. Whoever he’d paid off in state government would have no sway. Shaw had called his friend Tom Pepper, who arranged for the takedown with CBP.
A large man and a large woman stepped into the room, both in dark blue uniforms. Three other agents stood in the hallway. They too were not small.
“Colter,” the woman said.
“Agent Gillespie,” Shaw offered, then nodded to the man, dark complected, muscled and broad. “Agent Stahl.”
They looked over Lemerov. Gillespie, blond hair in a ponytail, nodded to her partner, who walked forward and, while the woman kept her hand near her gun, cut off the zip and cuffed the Russian, hands behind his back. The agent then frisked him and removed his wallet and passport, money, a long locking-blade knife, which Gillespie glanced at with raised eyebrows.
“You can’t do this! I didn’t commit no crime!”
She picked up his passport and took a picture of the front page.
“Now, Mr. Lemerov, Mr. Shaw swore out an affidavit that he observed you in possession of a firearm. The one right there?”
Shaw nodded.
“He’s lying!”
“There are photos of you with the weapon, attached to the affidavit.”
Lenny Caster was quite the artist with the Canon.
Stahl pulled on latex gloves, unloaded the weapon, locked it open and then read the serial number to Gillespie, who typed into her phone.
A moment later: “Sir, you’re in possession of a stolen firearm.”
“No, no! I bought legally. Private sale. I know about Second Amendment.”
“So you admit you purchased the gun.”
Maybe he was thinking he should have said “found.” He licked his lips.
“Apart from the gun’s status, do you have a valid hunting permit or sports participation certificate?”
Silence again.
“Well, sir, then you don’t meet the requirements of 27 Code of Federal Regulations Section 178.97, regarding nonimmigrant aliens possessing firearms.” She read him his Miranda rights.
“I want lawyer.”
And his Coca-Cola, Shaw couldn’t help but think.
“You’ll have one.” Stahl placed the Russian’s possessions in evidence bags.
They led him toward the door, each gripping one arm.
He called over his shoulder, “You like boxing? I like boxing. You never know how end. Seem all wonderful, round one and round two. Then, bang, and there’s knockout.
“So. One and two to you. But don’t pat back too fast, Mr. Colter Shaw. More rounds to come. More rounds to come...”
Allison Parker let the hot shower stream course over her body.
The Sunny Acres motel was a dive but offered two advantages. One, the clerk was willing to forgo ID when an attractive businesswoman, accompanied by her daughter, explained with chagrin — and a handful of cash — that she’d left her billfold at a restaurant on 55, presently closed.
And, two, the water heater was top notch.
She rested her head against the blue tile.
Blue as the wall of the shower rinse-off by the pool, the wall on which the comical or eerie or sensuous white plaster seahorse reared in profile.
It’s November of last year, the fifteenth.
Parker is sitting with coffee, in the kitchen, staring out at the snow, the covered pool. The flakes descend in bright flares through the spotlight that shines over the pool. She stares at the tiny white fireworks. It’s a placid scene and she usually thinks how the blanket of snow covering the backyard is “heartwarming.” She laughs sometimes when she has those contradictory thoughts. Tonight she is only anxious.
Hannah has abandoned the history class project she and Jon were working on earlier, before he rose abruptly and drove off into the night. The girl has gone to bed. It’s eleven. On the glass-topped table, behind Parker, are pieces of metal and plastic, soldering iron and glue gun. She doesn’t know what the project is supposed to be; it was a dad-daughter thing.
Was...
Parker will have to write a note for Ms. Talbott about an extension.
A sip of coffee. Zero taste for it.
Her heart pounds as she hears a thunk from outside, faint but man-made — not the sound of the occasional branch surrendering to the weight of the wet snow.
Walking to a front window, she draws aside the curtain and peers out. Yes, Jon’s truck has overrun the driveway and decked the big blue recycling bin.
She hoped, and yes, prayed, that he simply went for a head-clearing drive.
And now reflects on her searing naivete.
She walks into the living room, stopping to look in on Hannah. Yes, she’s gone to bed but not to sleep. She’s lying back, Beats headset on, staring at her phone, her face illuminated weirdly blue. It’s time for lights out but Parker lets it go. She also thinks it’s a good idea to be deaf to any spousal exchanges this evening, and hopes, contrary to wise parenting, the volume is up nice and fucking high.
Locking the front door, she returns to the kitchen and turns on the light to the side porch. If she’s lucky, he’ll follow the path of least resistance: around the side of the house, through the gate and aim for the kitchen.
Upon intercepting Jon, she will guide him into the bedroom. Maybe a shower, more likely just a fully clothed landing on the bed. Or the floor. It’s carpeted. Once, he collapsed on the driveway and once on the garage concrete, waking with nothing worse than a muscle ache. Apparently in their altered state, drunks often fall soft and limber.
The front doorknob turns, once, then again. He doesn’t pound. She sees his form moving through the snow in the direction she’d hoped, drawn by the lights. A back entrance will get him straight to bed without going past Hannah’s room. Had he come in through the front he might stick his head in to see her and ramble or puke.
Another thud, then a crash. He’s bypassed the garage — the code usually defeats him — and he’s tripped over the garbage.
She moves quickly now. Any more noise and, if Hannah has de-headphoned, she’ll come out to investigate. And that will be difficult — for Parker herself. Hannah tends to be sad about her father and mad at her mother.
Now through the sliding patio doors. The cold stings and she thinks about a sweater, but it’s too late. Jon’s weaving through the pool fence gate and along the patio. He’s fallen somewhere and there’s a gash on his head. The blood is dark and crusted.
She walks to him.
“Don’t start,” he mutters.
“You’re hurt.”
“You don’t care. You never care.”
You can’t counter word for word, thought for thought. It doesn’t work that way.
The best course is to distract and deflect.
His hair is wild, his clothes disheveled. He rages, “Did you call him tonight?”
“Be careful. There’s ice.”
“Oh, be careful,” he mocks. He seems to think of better words to sling, but then they sail away.
The scent of the whisky is powerful. Jon once told her that he could tell how much a driver had had to drink by the scent. He could predict the Breathalyzer result with uncanny accuracy.
They are standing in the drift gathering on the pool deck beside the seahorse relief. She shivers as the flares of snowflakes dot her head. It’s twenty degrees, Alexa has reported.
“Where is she?” He stares through the door at the table, where sit Hannah’s notebook and parts for the history project. “What were you saying to her tonight? Turning her against me. You do that!”
“Jon, please. Just stop.” She says these words instinctively. They will have zero effect. Like always. He doesn’t hear them. So what is the point? But she can’t help herself.
He stumbles to the back of the garage and pukes.
If only it could purge his system. But it never does, of course. That’s not how the physiology works.
He stumbles back. “I know what you do. I know what you’ve told people about me. I’ve heard. You go to those parties and I know what you say. What you really think of me. You think I don’t know?” He frowns. “You think I don’t know what you’ve told her about me? She—” He hesitates, as if he’s forgotten his own daughter’s name. “I’m going to tell her. She deserves—”
Parker grabs his arm. He turns with a frenzied glare.
And five minutes later, the longest minutes of her life, Allison Parker is lying on her back, sobbing, in a drift of delicate snow — white spattered with red. The seahorse is bleeding too. She is pressing the flaps of skin torn from her face above her cracked cheek.
“Why are you doing this to me? Why...?”
Allison Parker now stepped out of the shower in room 306 of the Sunny Acres Motor Lodge.
The shower stall as blue as the blue wall the seahorse rose from.
Tears mix with the hot steam.
And she told herself sternly what she had just that morning. A half-dozen times.
Don’t think about it.
Drying herself. A towel turbaned around her hair. Another enwrapping her body.
Thinking of the SpongeBob boob towel.
The calculus problems that her genius daughter nailed.
The plans for pizza and learning about Kyle.
The final moments before the world exploded.
Was it yesterday, or ten years ago? Or a hundred?
She stepped into the chill room. She’d left Hannah snoozing but the girl was up now, channel surfing.
How would her mood be?
Warming Parker’s heart, Hannah smiled. “Hey!”
“Morning, sleepyhead.”
Parker noted that the chain was off the door.
“You went out?”
“Just the front office. For breakfast. They don’t have any here.”
Parker hadn’t expected Sunny Acres to offer up gourmet fare, though she’d hoped they could score coffee, tea and pastry.
“But the clerk? He said there’s this diner up the road. It’s, like, famous. And they deliver.” She handed her mother a menu and announced, “I want waffles.”
Moll undid his tie and opened his shirt. He navigated the Benadryl up under the cloth and blasted his shoulders, which were the itchier parts today.
The burning migrated. Neck and arms yesterday. Chest a few days ago. What the hell was it, and how did it happen?
He felt some relief thanks to the miracle substance.
“Allergy’s getting worse?”
“Just will not go away,” he told Desmond.
Moll had asked himself the where-did-it-come-from question a number of times. He finally believed he’d hit upon the answer. He had had a job six weeks or so ago — killing a truck driver. The man had done something he shouldn’t do or was going to say something he shouldn’t say or had pissed off the wrong man, and he had to go. Good money. Desmond was busy so Moll handled it solo. He’d killed the man where he was working on his truck, which was stuck in a tributary to the Kenoah. He’d dragged the body out and then schlepped it miles away to an industrial site, long abandoned, for disposal. Either it was the Kenoah or the reservoir where he sank the corpse that was polluted with some really bad crap. One of the two had to be the source. He never had the problem until then. He resolved to be more careful about the sites he picked in the future. Then reminded himself to also check with his paint supplier.
The men, coffee cartons in hand, were in the front seats of the Transit. Desmond had put down the willow branch and was on his computer, online, searching for mama bear and baby bear.
Merritt was looking for them too. Nobody was having any luck.
Moll sighed. “Hurry up and wait.”
“What?” Desmond asked.
“That’s what they said in the Army.”
“You weren’t Army.”
Moll said, “My dad. ‘Hurry up and wait.’ You bust your ass, you get somewhere, then you just hang. Funny, I do not mind hanging tight in a blind, waiting for duck or elk.”
“Or hog.”
“Or hog.” Moll sipped. “But this is getting obnoxious. Too long, too long.”
“Hurry up and wait.” Desmond smiled at the sentence, as if he’d found a shiny quarter on the sidewalk.
More coffee. Moll whispered, “Dawndue...”
Desmond asked, “So. You really think Merritt’s crazy?”
“Oh, I would say yes. Certifiable.”
“I never knew what that meant. Who certifies you crazy?”
Moll considered this. “Probably the government. They must have a mental department.”
Desmond scoffed. “Somebody on state payroll, our taxes, with nothing better to do than say, ‘Sane, insane.’ Stamp their file. Put ’em in a padded cell or let ’em go. Next.” Thonk, thonk. “So, the wife? What exactly’s the scoop him wanting her dead so bad?”
“She pressed charges. Went from a cop with a cushy deal to detention. Ruined his life. She did not stand by her man,” Moll said.
“That’s a song, right?”
“I think. And there is something else. The story is she has something on him he doesn’t want out.”
“Women.” Thonk, thonk.
VapoRub would not do it, Moll decided. He’d need a mask and oxygen for Edgar’s surgery up in Ralston. He had a tank somewhere. Maybe—
“Holy shit.” Desmond sat up straight. He was staring at the computer screen.
“What?”
“Look.” The man swung the laptop toward him.
A picture on Instagram.
Moll said, “Cannot be.”
But it was.
Desmond added, “We can be there in twenty. Let’s get psycho boy there.”
Moll was about to ask who he meant, then realized: certifiable Jon Merritt.
“Colter.”
It was Marty Harmon’s voice and Shaw could hear dismay.
“Yes?”
“Merritt got Alli’s lawyer.”
Shaw, at the dining table in the Winnebago, set down the cup of coffee he’d just brewed. He had yet to sip.
The CEO explained that the man had not arrived home last night. His car was found abandoned in a park beside the river, a mile from his office.
“Details?”
“I don’t know. God. Dave was a friend of mine too. We were Rotary Club together.”
Did Merritt torture him, then kill him when the man could reveal nothing about Allison’s whereabouts?
“How’d you hear?”
“Police called, asking if I’d heard from Alli, if she had any information about it.”
“I’ll talk to them.”
After the men disconnected, Shaw called the main FPD number, dropped the CEO’s name and three minutes later he was on the line with Dunfry Kemp.
“Detective. It’s Colter Shaw.”
“Yessir.” The voice was burdened. Because of this call or had more files arrived in the night?
“I understand that Ms. Parker’s lawyer has disappeared.”
A moment of debate. Then: “You’ll keep this to yourself.”
Meaning from the press.
“Yes.”
“Security video in a storefront on Fourth Street showed a man, dark windbreaker — what Merritt was wearing earlier in the day — getting into Mr. Stein’s car. Had a gun. Then it drove off. The car was found abandoned by the Kenoah about six this morning.”
“So he’s armed.” Adding quite the complication. “Any sign of a struggle? Blood?”
“I don’t know at this time.”
“Have you talked to anyone in his office? They see anything?”
“His paralegal-slash-secretary. She never heard from him after she went home about five.”
“Can I speak to her?”
Kemp’s cooperation wouldn’t extend there. “She doesn’t know anything. Anyway, she’s taking a few days off. She’s scared of Merritt.”
“I left you a message about video cameras in Marshall County.”
“Oh, yessir. I called them. Haven’t heard back.” The detective covered the mouthpiece and Shaw heard him speaking in muffled tones with someone else.
Shaw said, “So. This’s a felony investigation now.”
“It is. We have some patrol officers searching the area where his car was found.”
“You assign Homicide detectives?”
“It’s Major Cases here, and we will be.”
Shaw was tired of this. “You haven’t yet?”
“No. But those two patrol officers? They’re veterans. They ran a canvass on Fourth Street, then moved on to the river.”
“You have their report?”
“Not at this time.” Now the voice was not only burdened but resistant.
“You’ll call me if there’re any developments, won’t you, Detective Kemp?”
“I have your card right here, Mr. Shaw.”
They disconnected.
Useless.
Shaw tried the cooling coffee. One sip before his phone hummed again.
“Mack.”
“Get to your computer,” his PI instructed.
He pulled the unit toward him and powered up, his router too.
After a lengthy thirty seconds he said, “I’m on.”
“Check your email.”
The first message was from her. Attached was a screenshot of an Instagram photo. The image was a selfie: a smiling Hannah Merritt, in stocking cap and sweatshirt, gazing at the camera.
The time stamp was about forty minutes ago.
“I thought all their social media was closed down.”
“It was. And it probably took the girl sixty seconds to make a new account.”
Looking over the picture he said, “The background.”
“Exactly.”
That edge rose within him, what he felt when he was after deer or elk and had spotted fresh tracks left by what would be dinners for the next week. Or uncovering the first solid clue that led to a kidnap victim.
Shaw studied the image closely. You could see a town water tower, painted blue — to make it slightly less of an eyesore. There were five letters visible: HILLS.
Mack said, “In your part of the state, north of Ferrington, it has to be Thompson Hills. I pulled Google Earth shots. The picture was probably taken in the back parking lot of the Sunny Acres Motor Lodge. It’s not a chain. Allison could pay cash and give a fake name. Claim she’s on the run from an abusive spouse or lost her ID. A clerk’d bend the rules.”
Shaw typed the motel’s name into GPS.
He was twenty-seven minutes away.
Room 306 of Sunny Acres was claustrophobic and funky smelling. Yet, Allison Parker thought, the ladies were making a pretty good go of it. The fragile peace that had emerged this morning was enduring.
The food was on its way. A Disney sitcom glowed from the big-screen TV, one of those that was mostly for kids but had been seeded with somewhat more sophisticated humor for parents forced to oversee.
Parker’s heuristic plan was to stay here for two days and if Jon wasn’t caught by then they’d continue north to their safe house. She texted the owner now, and received back:
Ready and waiting. Keep me posted. Take care...
While they ate, she checked the news on her phone. Nothing about Jon.
She called her lawyer to see if he had learned anything. No answer. She didn’t leave the burner’s number and said she’d call him back. She was irritated that she hadn’t heard from him. He was supposed to be her lifeline to status reports.
Parker opened her laptop and reviewed the deck she was working on. She could be humorous in front of a crowd and always articulate and organized. Marty often tapped her to give presentations to investors and potential customers. Small modular reactors were as complex as equipment got and Parker was known to have the gift of translating the impossibly complicated to layperson understandable.
Would Jon’s escape affect her appearance at the meeting next week?
God, if he wasn’t captured by then...
On the TV, the Disney happily-ever-after ending faded to the credits.
She noted Hannah looking over her shoulder at her mother’s computer. No teen on earth could resist a screen.
“Dope,” the girl said. “Graphics rock.”
Parker moved the mouse pointer over a blue dot on the side of the reactor depicted on the slide filling the screen.
“That’s your thing, the Futvee!”
Parker nodded. Like the S.I.T. the F.T.V. — “fuel transport vessel” — was her brainchild, a proprietary device that contributed to making Pocket Suns unique, and more marketable than most SMRs. Traditionally uranium fuel rods had to be carefully loaded into the core and, when spent, removed just as carefully, all by experts. The trip from the enrichment facility and to disposal sites was always risky. Parker’s Futvee was a self-contained pod that could be mounted and dismounted by any worker and was virtually impervious to damage.
The phone rang. Parker hesitated and then picked it up.
No need to worry. The food had arrived. She walked to the lobby to pay the delivery boy.
In the room once more, she set out, on the bed, the waffles, bacon for Mom, red and blue berries. Real whipped cream and fake syrup. Under the circumstances, the girl’s concern about her weight remained largely on the distant horizon.
There was a coffee for each of them.
Passing her daughter a plastic plate, she glanced at a slide of the S.I.T. trigger. “Hey, want to hear a story? An employee stole one of these. He was a spy. He was going to sell it to a competitor.”
“Stole? No way.”
“Yes way.” She smiled. “Mr. Harmon called me yesterday morning and told me somebody he hired recovered it.”
“The guy who stole it, he was in your department?”
“No. He was IT.”
“Computer people,” Hannah said. “Can’t friggin’ trust ’em. Look at The Matrix... Did you know him?”
“No. He was in Building Five.”
“The new one.” Hannah knew the company almost as well as her mother did. Parker often arranged for the girl to come hang in her office after school. Before November 15 this was to keep her from being home with a drunk, temperamental father. Afterward, it simply made the paranoid mother feel more comfortable her daughter was nearby.
“What happened? The prick got arrested?”
Parker let the language go. “I don’t know.” Not adding that she didn’t have a chance to follow up with Marty about the spy’s fate because just after the S.I.T. was recovered, she and Hannah had had to flee.
“Can’t say your mother has a dull job, huh?” Impulsively she squeezed the girl’s hand and, after a nearly unbearable moment — will she reciprocate or not? — Hannah scooted close and threw her arms around her mother’s shoulders, buried her head against the woman’s neck.
Parker held her tightly and fought to keep the tears at bay.
“There.” Moll, in the front seat of the van, was pointing at the Thompson Hills water tower.
The thing stood out like a blue and silver spaceship lording over the stubby fields and low brown buildings of yet another lost mill town.
Desmond squinted it out. “So, the kid was there, in the back, when she took the shot.” He was looking at the lot behind the Sunny Acres motel.
“That sign is like to blind you.” Moll was referring to the big, pink vacancy sign. If you got close, he supposed, you could probably hear it sizzle.
They drove through the lot, in a slow U around the grungy motel. They knew the woman would no longer have the 4Runner; she’d rented something, make and model unknown.
“We check out every car?” Desmond asked. “Figure which one’s theirs. Take them when they come out.”
Moll shook his head. “What would they leave in the car that would identify them? They would take everything into the room. I say we just go in, have a conversation with the clerk.”
“Fine by me. Where’s Merritt?”
“Not far,” Moll said.
“We don’t wait for him?”
“Not necessary. We get the girls in the van, pacify them a little and go somewhere to wait for him.”
“In the van,” Desmond repeated slowly and gave a thoughtful smile that Moll found disturbing in the extreme.
Ski masks and gloves.
These were uncomfortable. But they had no choice. All motels, even the unfortunate Sunny Acres, had video cameras nowadays. They’d try for the hard drive but there was that damn thing called the cloud.
They walked fast into the lobby, guns up, ready to shoot. This was the world of concealed carry. Moll always assumed everyone over fifteen was armed.
“Oh, Lord,” the chubby clerk said, his face and bald head burning red. His hands shot up. When he spoke it was a single long sentence. “Take the money but there isn’t much we’re mostly credit card you can understand I’ll give you my ATM the PIN is 8899 take it all...”
Desmond’s punch to the face was quite satisfying to Moll.
“No, no, no!” The man’s hands came away bloody. He stared. The color seemed as troubling as the pain.
“Guest. Allison Parker and her daughter. Checked in yesterday.”
“That name I don’t know it nobody here like that name, sir, really I mean it we’re a small place and my mother and I are doing the best—”
Now Moll slugged him. The jaw. He yelped.
“You know who we mean.”
“Room three oh six, sir, three oh six.”
They escorted the miserable man into the office. “I don’t know anything about you I didn’t see your faces of course you’ve got those masks on and I wasn’t looking at your clothes or height or anything and I’ve got a terrible memory anyway everybody knows that and—”
Moll made a fist and the man shut up and squinted, turning his head away.
“Security camera hard drive.”
The man nodded toward a black box, holding a 3½-inch drive. Moll ripped it from the desktop and pocketed the unit.
Desmond zip-tied him and Moll found some packing tape, which he used to wrap his mouth. They left him on the floor to spend time in the company of the misery of signing the death warrants of two of his guests.
They started down the hall that led to the rooms, past the ice, past the vending machines. The corridor ended at a wall with a picture of the Eiffel Tower. Why that? Moll could not figure. To the right were rooms 301–319. The two men walked quickly that way.
As they approached 306, the door opposite opened and an elderly couple stepped out, both in leisure suits, hers pink, and blue for him. On the man’s head was a gray herringbone Greek fisherman cap. They stopped about as quickly as you would expect.
“Oh, my,” the woman whispered.
Moll glanced to Desmond, who said, “Hey there, folks, let’s go inside for a minute.” He ushered them back in and the door closed.
He emerged only three minutes later. “He called me an a-hole. Wouldn’t even say ‘ass.’ I don’t like people like that.”
The men walked to 306. Moll bent close to the wood, listening. He could hear a TV program playing. He sniffed. “Coffee and bacon.”
Having been in the business of making bodies and hiding them for some years, Moll had learned a half-dozen ways to get through doors. He’d taught himself lock picking and he became pretty good at the art. But then hotels started to go with electronic locks and key cards, which was as irritating as the discovery of DNA.
But there was a technique that was tried and true.
He glanced at Desmond, who nodded. Moll stepped back, took a deep breath, which for some reason seemed to help, and drove his size-twelve foot into the wood just below the lock with all the force of his solid right leg behind it.
Colter Shaw steered his Winnebago over the cracked asphalt of the Sunny Acres motel’s parking lot, off Route 92.
Even in broad blaring daylight there would be nothing sunny about the place, given the trash-filled grassland encircling it. Small industrial facilities were the view to each side, if you could see over the green-slatted chain-link. In the back was tall grass, from which rusty appliances and machinery rose like cautious soldiers, awaiting a skirmish.
In the distance was the telltale water tower.
He checked his Glock 42. The slim gun contained six rounds in the magazine and one in the chamber. He sometimes carried an extra mag — always left hip, as his father had taught. Sometimes two. Today, he clipped both, each in its own leather holster, on the sinister side of his belt. He untucked his black knit shirt to make sure the weapon was covered; it tended to be visible underneath the leather jacket when he bent or turned.
In a rare moment of verse, his father would recite the rule:
Never reveal when you’re supposed to conceal...
Hand near the weapon, he moved fast toward the motel office, scanning for Merritt’s pickup or Parker’s 4Runner. Neither vehicle was here, though he was sure she’d swapped her wheels for something else. Was one of these others theirs? There were some sedans, some SUVs, a white Ford Transit, two tractor-trailers. Many had out-of-state plates, but one could still be a rental of Parker’s; the companies were forever moving cars here and there.
Inside, no one was behind the counter.
He rang the clerk’s bell. No response to the ding.
He drew his weapon and started up the hallway, knocked on the door to the office.
A grunting voice responded.
A thud.
Shaw pushed inside, gun up, holding it two-handed. There he found the clerk, zip-tied and gagged, thrashing frantically, trying to free himself. The round man whose face and shirt and hands were covered in damp blood, panicked even more when he saw Shaw and the gun and tried to scrabble away, as if there were a hiding place in a twelve-by-twelve box of a room.
He yanked the tape off.
“Ow, Jesus.”
“When was he here?”
“I’m bleeding.”
“When?”
“Five minutes.”
“He armed?”
“They both were.”
“Both?”
“Two of them.”
Two? What was this about? Merritt and someone else? Or men working with him?
“Describe them, fast.”
He hesitated.
“Now!” Shaw growled.
“A big guy in a suit, one in a tan jacket. He was skinnier. Masked. Guns. Big guns. They were going to kill me!”
“What room?”
“They—”
“I’m not asking again.”
“Three oh six.”
Shaw flicked open his locking-blade knife and sawed through the zip. “Call the police.”
Gun in hand, Shaw moved fast along the Lysol-scented hallway. The door to the room had been kicked in. He moved in slowly, gun low and tight to his right side.
Never extend a handgun out in front of you when entering a blind doorway...
Then, inside, keeping low, pivoting, aiming at every site of concealment.
All the doors were open, bathroom, closet. The place was vacant. The remains of breakfast were scattered over the bed and floor. Articles of clothing and toiletries too.
A children’s cartoon was on the flat-screen TV.
Shaw returned to the office.
“And?” The clerk’s voice quivered.
Shaw said, “Nobody’s there. The two men and the guests in three oh six? You see any of them leave?”
“No, sir. They were going to kill me!”
No, they weren’t. Or they would have.
The clerk nodded at the phone. “I called the sheriff. They’re on the way.”
“What were the men driving?”
“I don’t know. They just, you know, were here, with their guns.”
Shaw looked out the greasy window. The boxy Ford van was gone. “Any guests drive a white Transit?”
“Not that they put down when they registered.”
Eighty percent that was their ride.
“Security tape,” Shaw said.
“They took the hard drive.”
“What county are we in? Marshall?”
“Yessir.”
Shaw jogged outside. He put it at ninety percent that the responding law, in a different county from Ferrington, would have little sympathy for Jon Merritt — at least not now, after killing Allison’s lawyer and breaking in here. Still, he didn’t want to count on the burdensome protocols of law enforcers. He’d go after them himself on his Yamaha. They had a head start, but not much of one. He could catch them easily.
Though, which way?
Probably back toward 55, the main north — south highway.
But only probably. If he chose wrong, he’d lose them entirely.
He tucked his gun away. He noted a family — husband, wife, two teenage boys — packing up their SUV. He asked if they’d seen a white Transit leave the parking lot. He was prepared to say the driver left his phone in the office and he wanted to get it to him — leaving it to the family to work on the improbabilities of that.
No fiction was necessary. The husband said they’d like to help but they hadn’t seen the vehicle. The wife nodded a confirmation. Shaw believed them.
Then, looking for other guests, his eyes strayed to his camper. He walked toward it, mouth tightening as he got to the rear.
No high-speed pursuits after all.
Both tires of the motorbike had been slashed.
And, for good measure, so was one of the Winnebago’s.
Ah. Here we go.
Detective Jon Merritt is crouching beside some unfinished sewer drains in a construction site — half built out and abandoned, as there are no supplies and equipment anywhere near. The sky is clear on this late autumn afternoon, the temperature unusually warm. The scent of mud and decaying leaves is strong.
He has just leveraged a cinder block aside with a piece of rebar and is training a flashlight into the twelve-inch pipe that would have gone to the city sewer system but now goes nowhere.
Looking around. He doesn’t see anyone. But there are kids on skateboards nearby. He knows this from the rushing clatter of the wheels on concrete. Hannah tried it for a while. Broke her wrist and that was that.
Merritt’s partner, Danny Avery, is canvassing nearby buildings to see if they can describe the workers who were here, any names on pickups, bulldozers or cement trucks, if any limousines were parked in front of the site.
Merritt has records that show that pouring this foundation and putting in a few pipes — the going-nowhere kind — cost the city two point seven million dollars. For a job that was worth thirty thousand. Tops.
The detective peers into the sewer pipe, his tactical flashlight turning the dark visible. He sees rubble.
Where there’s no reason for rubble to be.
He pulls on latex gloves and digs through the muck and stone and dirt.
His radio, on his hip, clatters, startling him.
“Detective 244, come in.”
He turns the volume of the Motorola down with his left hand, the one that is unmucky.
“This is 244, Central.”
“You’re in Beacon Hill?”
“Affirmative.”
What was this?
“Reports of shots fired, 8248 Homewood.”
It’s a block away, less. He wonders why he didn’t hear the gunfire. But much of the construction in Beacon Hill is early twentieth-century stone and brick. Built to survive winters here, built to last.
“History of domestics. Owner is Harvey Trimble, convictions for possession. Held on suspicion of battery, released.”
I’m busy, he thinks. But he mutters, “Copy. Where’s Tac?”
“Fifteen out.”
The Ferrington SWAT team was good but spread out like a half pat of butter on a whole piece of toast, a captain had once said — to groans in the watch room.
“There’re kids in the house, Jon. Neighbor heard screaming.”
“Shit. We’re responding. Over.”
“ ’K. I’ll advise Tac you may be inside.”
It’s now that Merritt moves one more piece of rubble and sees what he’s been looking for: several letter-size envelopes, thick ones. He pulls them out and slips them into his jacket pocket. Spends sixty seconds looking for more. None.
He stands and shouts, “Danny, got a 10–71 up the street. We gotta go.”
The stocky detective, thick brown hair, which matches his suit, joins Merritt, who’s at the car and popping open the trunk.
“What? Shit. You hear that?”
Two shots. Maybe a scream.
They have no armament other than their sidearms. Some detectives keep M4 assault rifles in the trunk but Merritt and Danny don’t. Glock 17s will have to do.
They shed their suit jackets, Merritt making sure the envelopes don’t fall out. Then they’re strapping on the body armor.
His partner, nervous, says, “The hell is Tac?”
“About fifteen out.”
“Jesus Christ. The city isn’t that big.”
Merritt laughs. “You want to live forever?”
Avery slows, eyes down.
A joke too far.
He recalls that the detective, seven years younger than Merritt, has never been in a firefight, has never drawn his weapon anywhere but on the range.
“Hey, Danny. It’s cool. The shooter’s a tweaker. He’s gone on his own product. We’ll be on him before he even sees us.”
Another shot.
Another scream.
The detectives begin the short jog to the squat brick house.
Colter Shaw returned to the corridor where room 306 was located.
He found an elderly couple in colorful jogging outfits, peering out the front door of their room across the hall. They saw Shaw — no ski mask, pistol on his hip, close-cropped hair — and made the common assumption. “Officer?”
Shaw nodded. “You see what happened?”
They were oddly calm, considering.
The wife: “These two men, bullies, thugs. One of them was in here. He said not to say anything. Threatened us.”
Husband: “But we got one up on them.”
Which meant what? Shaw wondered.
He gestured for them to continue.
They explained how the men were walking up the corridor, when the couple opened the door. One herded them into the room, took their phones and ripped the landline cord out, then threatened them and warned them to stay in the room and keep quiet.
“Very rude,” the wife added.
“Then we heard them kick the door down. The one that woman and girl were staying in.”
“Did the men take them out of the room?”
“No. They ran off before those a-holes got here. Five, ten minutes.”
“Stanley,” she warned.
Ah, so they’d gotten away...
The wife added, “The woman was shouting at the girl. Mad, real mad. ‘How could you?’ Something like that. And the girl was shouting back. They just threw some things in their car and drove off.”
“Bat out of hell.”
“What model car?”
“Kia,” the husband said. “Just like her cousin drives.”
“Just like Bett’s. Only gold.”
“Wish I’d bought one of them.”
“You see which way they went?”
“We could see which way they didn’t go — right, east. That’s the only view we got from here.”
A left turn would take them back to 55, though the highway the motel sat on, Route 92, was a major artery and would get her ultimately all the way to the West Coast.
The wife continued, “That man, the one in here. He threatened us. Looked at his license. Memorized the address.”
The husband said with a laugh, “But it’s a year old! I never got around to changing it after we moved. Joke’s on them.”
The one-up-on-them part — a variation on the same tactic that Undercover Shaw had used with Ahmad in the warehouse yesterday morning.
Shaw thanked them and returned to the office, where the clerk was manipulating his nose.
“It’s not broken. Don’t play with it.” Shaw pulled out his phone and scrolled to the most recently dialed number.
“Don’t say a word.”
Allison Parker was speeding west on Route 92.
“You were spying on me.” Hannah tried to sound indignant and wronged. The words rolled out, though, laced with fear.
Parker muttered, “Don’t. Go. There.”
The girl sat in the passenger seat, hugging her knees. Her stocking cap was unevenly tugged over her head and her gray coat was on the floor. She would have been looking at her phone under other circumstances. Not now, of course. The Samsung was in Parker’s pocket, where it would remain.
Her heart pounding, she looked in the rearview mirror. Expecting Jon’s truck to be following.
Not yet. But he could have come close to finding them.
Thanks to Hannah.
Just after the heartwarming embrace, as they were about to eat, Parker had glanced down at the girl’s phone, which was not only no longer in airplane mode but was open to an Instagram account. Not her old one. But @HannahMer-maid447788.
According to the time stamp she’d posted the selfie, taken in the back of the motel, when Parker was in the shower. So her errand was about more than just scoring a breakfast menu.
The picture was an uncharacteristically smiling face, behind which was the water tower with part of the name of a nearby town visible. Thompson Hills. It would take anyone with half a brain and access to Google no time at all to figure out where they were.
Parker had barked a scream and leapt up, scattering food, spilling coffee.
“We’re leaving. Now!”
“What?”
She had shut off and pocketed her daughter’s phone.
“Hey, that’s mine.”
Parker flung their computers and some clothes into their bags.
“What’s wrong?” the girl had wailed. “I don’t want to leave!”
She had gripped Hannah by the arm. “Now.” The word was an enraged shout.
There would have been something about her mother’s unhinged expression that rattled the girl. She didn’t nod, didn’t say a word, just grabbed the luggage and pushed out the door, ahead of Parker. Their bags were not even fully zipped up. Toiletries and a half-dozen articles of clothing were left behind. Another silly Disney show was on a TV screen too big for the room.
Now Parker pushed the accelerator hard and hit seventy-six in a seventy zone, wishing to do ninety, but she could not risk getting pulled over.
She muttered, “Did it not occur to you that he’s checking social media? That he could scan for ‘Hannah’? And ‘Mer’? How stupid could you be?”
They drove in silence. The girl was staring defiantly out the window.
About five miles from the motel, Parker skidded to a stop on the shoulder. She reached into her pocket and pulled out the girl’s phone. Hannah lunged for it and her mother lifted an arm to block her. It was the first painful contact between the two of them since a two-year-old Hannah punched her in the lip reaching for her necklace.
“Stop it!” Parker raged and her daughter sat back, fuming. Parker knew the PIN and soon the phone was live. She flipped through the apps. No Facebook or Twitter. Just the new Instagram.
“Password.”
When the girl didn’t answer immediately, she asked again, in a threatening tone.
The girl gave it to her. Parker deleted the account and tapped the phone to sleep in airplane mode once more.
“Christ.”
She now skidded back onto the asphalt and sped up. Her daughter was not, of course, careless at all. What she’d done was calculated. She wanted her father to know where they were. She knew he was checking for their names. So she’d left him what was, in effect, a coded message: Come and find us, without saying so specifically.
Deniability.
“Your father wants to hurt me. Do you understand?”
“You don’t—”
“Do you understand?”
“You don’t know him. Why do I have to keep telling you that?” Hannah was now sobbing. What was the most painful component of her sorrow? Her mother’s anger or the loss of a digital device?
Another few miles streaked by. Parker began to calm.
And she realized that this was her own fault. The overprotective mother had kept the girl far from the legal proceedings following November 15. She’d done the same yesterday, not sharing Jon’s true mission.
“Han, I wasn’t honest with you. I didn’t tell you everything.”
The girl continued to stare out the window.
“I didn’t tell you everything that David found out. I said I was worried he’d make a scene. It’s more than that. Worse. Your father wants to hurt me. He told some prisoners before he left he was going to find me.” A deep breath. “He wants to kill me.”
“Bullshit. He’d never do that.”
“He’s not who you think he is.”
Hannah shot back with: “And how would you know? You sent him to prison, just threw him away. And that was it. You never visited him!”
No, she hadn’t. She couldn’t. Nor had she let Hannah. That was not going to happen. This had been an open wound in their relationship. One of them.
“You dumped him there and went on to something else.”
Parker felt her heart beat faster yet. If that were possible. “What?”
“Don’t you have anything to say?”
More silence. The car edged up over eighty. She eased off the gas.
“I’m sorry, Han. I know it’s hard to hear. It breaks my heart. I made a judgment. I had to press charges. It was time for somebody to stand up to him. And now I’m going to keep you safe. Whatever I need to do. And that’s the way it is. We need to be together on this. I need your help.”
The girl scoffed.
Parker reached out and set a hand on the girl’s leg.
“Don’t touch me, bitch.”
Parker stared ahead at the ribbon of highway they coursed along, like so many others around here in need of the blessing of new asphalt. Tears of a very different type from those just a few hours ago formed in her eyes.
Her daughter leaned as far away as she could and reached instinctively for her rear hip, before recalling that the phone was no longer in attendance. She crossed her arms and looked blankly at farmworkers burning the residue from a recent corn harvest, the low orange flames sending pale, aromatic smoke rising uneasily into the air.
Jon Merritt parked his pickup in a shady portion of a public park in northwest Ferrington.
Few people were present. Some joggers lost in the zone. Some businesspeople striding decisively, heads tilted sideways or down, concentrating on their phones. Some teens — dressed the sweatshirty way that Hannah dressed — walked or hung out in clusters or did their fine acrobatics on gravity-defying skateboards.
He’d learned that his ex and daughter had been staying at a place called the Sunny Acres in Marshall County. He’d been on his way there when he got the news they’d vanished. Maybe their trail would be picked up again, but until then he himself would search elsewhere for their whereabouts. He had braked hard, spun his truck into a wide, lawn-destroying U-turn, and, ignoring the horns, sped south.
And now it was:
Butterfly time...
Theodore Roosevelt Park was lush, one of the few urban spaces whose lawns, arboretums, planting beds, ponds and stream were kept up. Benches painted, graffiti scrubbed. Parks elsewhere got hardly a dollar for maintenance. But this was the Garden District, the poshest of ’hoods in Ferrington, and though that was a low bar, the area was really quite nice. Merritt didn’t know it well; FPD made few calls here. A doctor was collared for skimming opioids. There was the occasional break-in or Mercedes-jacking. One business partner shot another — and the case wound up on the cable series When the Rich Murder. The producer had interviewed Jon and his partner.
Not Danny. A different partner.
Before Danny.
He shut the engine off, climbed out and started toward the address handwritten neatly — and conveniently — in the upper left-hand corner of the envelope that contained the cannibalistic-insect greeting card.
The sender was Dorella Muñoz Elizondo, who his ex would have met within the past year. Merritt didn’t know her, hadn’t heard the distinctive name. Yes, there’d been blackouts, but he would have remembered Alli’s friends.
It was possible Allison could have confided in her. She might’ve given Dorella her new phone number. Dom Ryan was helping him in the search. If Merritt could find the number, Ryan could get a location out of a greedy or intimidated underling at her mobile service provider.
Dorella lived in the heart of the ritzy Garden District.
Merritt recalled the inscription in the butterfly card, penned by Dorella to his ex.
Sometimes the love for new friends can be as deep and enduring as the ones we’ve known since childhood. Hang in there, Alli, you’ll get through this...
He supposed he could search her house for anything that might relate to his wife. But he really hoped she was home. He’d make sure she shared everything she knew about her.
Walking with purpose, he strode to the gate in the picket fence and unlatched it. He stepped through, closed it behind him and continued to the house.
Glancing up, he saw the door open, and out stepped a tall, handsome woman, wearing what was called, he believed, a sundress. Yellow, frilly, thick straps. A hem not far below the knees. She carried a watering can and paused en route to a half-dozen opulent pots. Her glance toward him was of curiosity but more friendly than frown.
“Can I help you?”
“Good morning. Dorella Elizondo?”
She nodded a pleasant greeting. “That’s right.”
He walked to the bottom step, no farther. He held up his old badge, tucked it away. Then, using his best canvassing voice, confident but friendly: “I’m Detective White, Ferrington Police. I’m trying to locate Allison Parker and her daughter. We understand you’re friends. Have you heard from her in the past couple of days?”
“Oh, my,” she whispered, her face troubled. “Is Alli all right?”
“I’m sorry to say they’ve been missing since last night. Her husband was released from prison yesterday and violated a restraining order. We think they’ve fled. We’d like to find them, get them into protective custody until he’s recaptured.”
Lines furrowed her carefully dusted brow. “Alli told me he was abusive. Missing? Do you think he... hurt her? And Hannah?”
“No reason to believe that at this time. We’re just trying to find her.” A placid voice. Jon Merritt knew the rule: always stay calm when talking with victims, witnesses and the suspects themselves. The voice of Jon the Charmer-Detective.
“Well, Detective, we haven’t been in touch for a week or so, I guess.”
“You have any thoughts about where she might’ve gone? Outside of Ferrington? We heard she was headed north.”
“North?” the woman mused and set down the watering can, which seemed heavy. “I remember Alli mentioned some place she was interested in going to. She thought maybe we could go together. Her daughter too. It’s a spa. Ladies’ weekend, you know. Near Spartanburg.”
The town, a quaint tourist attraction, was northeast, nearly two hours from Ferrington. A good place for his ex and daughter to hide.
“I think I’ve got the address.”
“Appreciate that.”
“Of course.”
She walked inside.
A few minutes later, he heard Dorella’s voice. “Found it!”
A lead, at last.
He saw her approaching through the screen.
As the door swung open she said in an amused voice, “I’m just curious, Jon. Did you really think Alli never showed me your picture?”
She calmly leveled the shotgun and fired one round into Merritt’s right thigh, racked the gun, then parked another center mass in his belly.
“Private eye?”
“No,” Shaw said. “Not licensed. I’m a security consultant.”
The county deputy, about Shaw’s age, was writing in her notebook. She was blond — the shade slightly darker than Nilsson’s, he found himself thinking. The thick strands were pulled tight into a severe bun, as women cops often wore it. Her face was angular, her hips narrow. A shadow of a tat peeked from her left blouse cuff.
“I’m helping to find the woman and her daughter who were here. The FPD’re underwater.”
She took this in with a knowing nod, though she said nothing critical about LEA in a different jurisdiction.
“The name on the material witness wire. Allison Parker.”
Well, overworked Detective Kemp was true to his word.
The radio clattered. “No warrants. CCP’s good.”
“Roger,” she said into the Motorola mic speaker attached to the left shoulder of her blouse. She handed back his license and concealed carry permit. On her chest was a name tag, dep. kristi donahue.
They were in the parking lot of the Sunny Acres motel. Her cruiser sat beside the Winnebago, and two more official cars were in the parking lot. One was printed with crime scene. An ambulance was near the front door. The medics were inside, tending to the clerk. Who, Shaw had assessed, needed little tending.
An audience of a dozen stood outside, this scenario probably being more interesting than most of what Thompson Hills had to offer.
Shaw’s documents had been validated but the deputy wasn’t completely at ease yet. The situation was, of course, a complicated one. “And her husband broke out of detention and is after her?”
“No, he was released. Just after that, they found out he wants her dead. He’s probably killed her lawyer and’s still hunting for her.” He nodded to the motel. “Those two’re working with him. Triggermen, I guess.”
“Hired muscle? To tag an ex?” Her voice lifted high.
“It’s not your typical domestic.”
“I would say. I heard about Merritt. He was a good cop years ago, closed some big cases. Vice, OC, corruption. Then it all went south. Drugs, drinking. I’ve seen what that shit can do.”
From the radio: words through the static. “Hey, Kristi.”
“Go ahead, Marv.”
“Scrubbed the traffic cam like you said. A gold Kia — it’s a rental, name of Harmon Energy — went west on Ninety-two. Turned north on Fifty-five.”
“Any sightings of Merritt’s truck?” Shaw asked. He’d told himself to keep the frustration from his voice. At this, he was only partially successful.
Silence.
Donahue said, “He’s okay, Marv.”
“No F-150s.”
The deputy said to Shaw, “No cameras north on Fifty-five or Eighty-four till Millton. That’s with two ‘L’s.’ Because it used to be.
“And the Transit?” she asked into the Motorola. “Any sightings?”
“Caught a white van. Couldn’t tell the make. Continued west on Ninety-two, past Fifty-five. This was, oh, I’d guess about three minutes after the Kia.”
“Thanks Marv. Out.”
“ ’K.”
She examined the tires. “You were going to go after them.”
He nodded.
“Only for the purpose of getting the tag numbers,” she asked pointedly.
“That’s right, Deputy.”
She kept her eyes on his face for a moment. Then, “You have spares?”
“Not enough for the bike. But one for the camper. Jack won’t work on this.” He nodded to the soggy ground beneath the Winnebago. Worried that Merritt was closing in, he’d braked to a stop half on the lawn. He’d called several service stations for a tow truck to lift the rear so he could change the tire. Only one had been interested, even after he offered two hundred dollars in cash as a need-to-move-fast bonus. It wouldn’t arrive for more than an hour.
Deputy Donahue walked to the Yamaha and ran a hand over it. Her look was both admiring and curious.
Shaw asked a question he knew the answer to. “You ride?”
Donahue paused a moment. Then: “Harley.” Perhaps a smile. Hard to tell. “My ex liked to show me off at biker bars. And that meant H-D. He was surprised when my lawyer told him he could have the pickup, but the bike was mine... or else he’d have a world of trouble to deal with. I can set you up with a dealer’s got a good supply of tires.”
“No time now.”
Donahue asked, “So. Security?”
He explained about the reward business.
“Well, that’s a new one on me.” She gave a smile. “Maybe you should stick around. With county budgets shot to hell, might be cheaper to pay you a reward to find the perp, ’stead of adding personnel. You could pick up some change, sir.”
“Colter’s fine. Or Colt.”
“Colt,” she said.
“If I head back this way, I could use the number of that repair shop.”
“Sure. Call me.” She handed him a card. He gave her one of his. “And if we get any reports on those vehicles, I’ll let you know.”
Which is when the Range Rover skidded to a fast stop in the mouth of the motel lot. As the dust cloud settled, Sonja Nilsson rolled down the front-seat passenger-side window and gave a smile. She was the one he’d called when he tapped the most-recently-dialed button on his mobile.
Deputy Kristi Donahue glanced at Nilsson, then lifted an eyebrow to Shaw. “Hey, good luck, travelin’ man.”
Jon Merritt grunted as he tried to sit up, his belly and leg throbbing, the pain radiating outward.
Nonlethal slugs — usually a metal core covered with rubber — fired from a twelve gauge strike the body with huge force. They are meant for crowd control, but they also can break bones and rupture organs and blind. And they’ve been known to kill.
He took stock. Nothing broken, no internal ruptures.
Not yet.
Dorella stepped closer, racking another shell.
Merritt knew that there was a protocol for using a shotgun for defense. You loaded rubber slugs last in the tube — to fire first — then, if that didn’t do the trick, there came skin-breaking bird shot, and finally lethal double-ought or lead slugs. Dorella clearly knew her way around weapons and he suspected something more painful, if not deadly, would soon be coming his way.
As he struggled to his feet, doubled over in pain, he drew his pistol and fired.
She fled back into the house.
Merritt staggered to his truck.
Though partially deafened by the shots, he could just make out in the distance the sound of approaching emergency vehicles. Sirens and get-out-of-the-way bleats. The cars were about a mile away, he guessed. And the very fact he could hear them at all meant that they were bursting through intersections fast.
He swung open the door of the truck and, after steeling himself a moment, climbed into the cab, groaning with pain.
Keys out, engine on.
Then he was speeding away from the curb, tires squealing and smoking. He wasn’t sure which direction the squad cars were coming from — sounds can deceive, especially to numbed ears — but he supposed the respondings would assume he’d be heading for the interstate or major state routes. But, no. He vanished into the maze of Garden District side streets.
The strategy was correct. He saw not a single black and white in pursuit.
Merritt powered through the red light, drawing yet more middle fingers and horns. He heard a collision.
Then Auburn Road presented a lengthy straightaway. He shoved the pedal down, and when he hit the first “traffic calming” hump in the road — at about seventy — he was surprised that the heavy truck actually caught air.
“Mobile Eight One to Central.”
“Go ahead, Eight One.”
“I’m 10–23 at Frederickson and Sycamore. Suspect’s 150’s off the road. He missed a turn. He crashed.”
“Roger. Injury?”
“Don’t know yet. Looks bad. Send a bus.”
“Roger, Eight One. Be advised. Subject is armed. Wanted in connection with assault with a deadly just now and a homicide.”
“Roger.”
Jesus, thought the slim, shaved-headed young officer, whose name was Peter Nagle. Jon Merritt had killed somebody? He hadn’t seen that on the wire. Nagle was uneasy. The dog had caught the school bus and wasn’t sure what to do with it. The white pickup was sitting in a ditch, axle deep. It wasn’t going anywhere.
He couldn’t see Merritt clearly. The man was keeping low in the cab and seemed to be looking around, considering options. There was only one, if he wanted to keep running: climbing out the passenger door and shooting his way past Nagle.
Lord...
“Any other units?”
There was a pause. “Not in the vicinity. Nearest is answering a call on Chesterton. Can be there in ten, twelve.”
Welcome to Ferrington PD.
Nagle eyed the cab again. Yes, the former detective was the Hero of Beacon Hill. This Jon Merritt, though, was somebody very different.
“Eight One to Dispatch. Further to that homicide?”
“His ex-wife’s lawyer.”
Jesus.
Nagle was new to the force — eighteen months — but he’d run a dozen domestics. Sanity went out the window when love, or its corpse, was involved.
“Eight One, you there?”
“Roger that. Proceeding to subject now. I am.”
Wondering what the last sentence meant.
“And weapon is confirmed?” he asked uneasily.
“Affirmative, Eight One.”
“Roger.”
Well, he knew his job. He had to clear the cab and disarm Merritt.
Not only for his and everyone else’s safety, but for his own reputation. He could hear: What were you doing, kid, just standing there with your thumb up your ass? You didn’t even try to collar him?
He crouched behind his open door and drew his Glock. Nagle peered through the window. Glare. Not much to see other than the former cop’s silhouette. No sign of his hands.
He thought of the fiancée he’d proposed to just one week ago at their favorite Outback. He’d rested the black Zales ring box on a napkin in the center of the restaurant’s signature Bloomin’ Onion.
Oh, Kelli...
Well, muscle up some balls. Crouching, Nagle pointed the weapon at the outline of the cop’s head. When the window didn’t come down he felt more confident. Aiming, two-handed, keeping low, he stepped from cover and slowly approached.
“Jon Merritt! Put your hands out the window. If you do not show your hands you will be fired upon!”
This line came not from training but a thriller novel he’d been listening to on speed-trap duty on Old Davie Road. Sounded good, though, and it was probably what real cops said because the author had been with the NYPD.
No response.
“Merritt! Let me see your hands!”
Moving close, Glock up, he slipped his finger from outside the trigger guard to in. Still no clear view of Merritt, but he saw his own reflection in the window. With his left hand he gripped the door handle. If it was locked, he’d just retreat and wait. He’d done his duty.
Please let it be locked.
It wasn’t.
Nagle yanked the door open all the way and dropped immediately to his knees like doing squats at the gym, praying that when Merritt shot, he would hit the armored plate and not flesh.
The young officer blinked and lowered the gun.
He couldn’t imagine how the teenager, a gangly boy in an AC/DC sweatshirt and with a panicked expression on his pimply face, had managed to curl up into such a tiny ball that his entire body fit perfectly on the passenger-side floor.
They finally would sit down to a meal.
Though it would have to be a brief one.
Sonja Nilsson had motored east along Route 92 to this diner, a mile from the Sunny Acres motel.
Shaw wanted a briefing as to how her canvass among employees of HEP was going; he would give her details of the assault at the motel.
Could this be done over the phone?
Of course.
But... why not meet in person, as long as he had time to kill while the Winnebago was being repaired?
They climbed from the Range Rover, Shaw noting that she had changed. She now wore a black pleated-skirt business suit and a black silk blouse. The jacket fit closely and had been tailored to add a bulge on her right hip, slightly back, the exact place where Shaw wore his Glock. Her blond tresses were down and shimmered in the muted sunlight as they danced in the hay-scented breeze.
She radared the surrounding. Shaw did too. He saw neither lead nor threat.
The diner was the only living structure in the immediate vicinity. The other buildings were long abandoned, some in a partial or full state of collapse. A rusted sign with the silhouette of a green dinosaur swung back and forth before a long-closed gas station. What was the brand? Shaw couldn’t recall. From ages ago.
Shaped like an Airstream trailer, gleaming even in the shade, the diner was an architect’s fantasy. Inside, all the seating surfaces were covered with red Naugahyde. The floor was gray linoleum, the counters abundantly armed with chrome condiment racks: you would never want for salt or pepper or ketchup or mustard in the Route 66 Diner, the name apparently deriving from an old TV show; black-and-white production stills and headshots were mounted everywhere.
At the register, Nilsson pointed to a booth in the back and a waitress said, “Sure thing,” and led them to it.
Shaw usually sat facing the front.
Never present your back to the enemy...
But Nilsson took that spot. He didn’t mind; she seemed just as watchful as he was.
A cheerful, pink-uniformed waitress, inked on the forearm with a bared-tooth tiger, took their order — BLTs for both, coffee for Shaw, tea for Nilsson.
“The attack?” she asked.
“Two of them, armed. Wore ski masks. I don’t think Merritt was one of them. On the video at the lawyer’s car he was wearing a dark windbreaker. These two were in a black suit and tie, and a tan jacket. Looks like he’s hired a pair of triggermen.”
“Pros?” She frowned.
The beverages arrived. Shaw added milk to his, Nilsson lemon.
Shaw said, “He probably used a contact from his cop days. Somebody with a crew.”
“He really wants her dead. I know reason goes out the window with domestics, and that’s part of it. But it smells like there’s more. Maybe—”
Shaw completed her thought: “What Marty was talking about earlier. She’s got something on him he doesn’t want to get out.”
She lifted the tea, inhaled the steam. “You know, Colter, I was thinking. Those two, at the motel? There was a hit downtown. A month ago. Whistleblower for a state agency. Another corruption thing — dipping into cleanup funds. A witness said the perps were two white males and one was in a black suit. They got away in a white van. There was a third perp, a driver. Not identified. You know what the two at the motel were driving?”
“White van — a Ford Transit.”
She said, “I wonder how many Transits there are.”
“Eight million since it was introduced. Most of them are white.”
“You know that from your reward business?”
“Just looked it up online. That deputy back at the motel—”
Nilsson asked, “Oh, the pretty one?”
Shaw came back with “Was she?”
Drawing a wry smile.
“She’s got it out on the wire. We’re in Marshall County, but it’ll go to all surrounding. And Allison’s in a gold Kia sedan now. Sheriff’s office’s looking for that too.”
The food came and they ate. Shaw understood the popularity of the diner. The sandwich was excellent. Crisp would have figured prominently in a review, applying it to the entire dish: bacon, lettuce, tomato and toast.
Nilsson gazed around. She was then aware he was watching her face and turned her attention back. “Classic. Feels like we’re in a Quentin Tarantino movie. He gets a lot of mileage out of diners.”
Shaw had started to watch one of the director’s films with Margot, years ago. He couldn’t remember the title but seemed to recall that, yes, there’d been a big scene in a diner. The two of them never finished the film, though not because of cinematic flaws. Something had intruded. Afterward, they’d been too tired to fire up the DVD player again.
“Any word about the lawyer?” Shaw asked.
“Still missing, presumed dead. The Kenoah’s a popular burial ground. FPD has divers but nobody wants to go in. They draw straws. They’re running a grid search near his car. Any idea which direction Allison went from the motel?”
“A camera got her on Fifty-five, north. The Transit kept going west on Ninety-two. Assuming she’s not bound for Canada, what’s around here, where she could go to ground?”
“Not much. No motels until you get north of Millton. Mostly forest and field. Marshland. A few residences: vacation places. Cabins and trailer parks. Has some bad pockets.”
“Meth?”
“That. A couple militias, survivalists... Not your kind.”
“One thing for certain. The girl’s not going to be posting any more helpful selfies.”
“Nope, that phone of hers is history. Mom ate it.”
Shaw said, “At the company? Your canvass didn’t turn up any leads.”
This wasn’t a question. Otherwise he would have heard.
“I’ve talked to a couple dozen employees. Marianne Keller — his assistant, remember?”
Shaw nodded.
“She’s helping out. But no luck. Nobody we’ve talked to knew Allison very well. She kept to herself. Worked long hours. May have been embarrassed — those times her ex showed up at the office drunk.”
Shaw didn’t think it was likely that Allison had confided to a fellow worker where she was going. He gave that twenty percent. If she didn’t tell her boss or mother where, why would she tell a co-worker? Shaw was convinced she was running to some place, or someone, her ex-husband knew nothing about. Still with so few other leads, why not pursue it?
Which was a reward-seeker’s mantra.
They ate in silence for a moment.
He said, “You can tell me if you want.”
She looked back from the front window.
He continued, “Checking horizons. Vantage points for sniper nests. A second phone — encrypted, I’m thinking — you have serious conversations on. Paying attention to unattended packages.”
“You’re quite the observant one,” she said. After a moment: “Okay. I’m not Sonja and I’m not Nilsson.”
This part was a surprise, though he supposed it shouldn’t have been.
“You’re on a list.”
“I’m on a list. I never talk about it. But now, after last night.”
The kiss, he assumed she meant.
“How big’s the risk?”
“Not high. I’m not invisible, but with a new name, new look, it’s manageable. If you saw my Army ID, you’d see a brunette who weighed forty pounds more than I do now.”
But with or without green eyes?
“Hardest part of the new identity is staying skinny when I’m a born foodie.” She gave a laugh and ate a few of the chips that nestled against the other half of her sandwich.
“Confession?”
He nodded.
“Most of my bio was fiction. No hubby. Never was. They give you a cover story, you stick to your cover story.”
“So no San Diego or Hawaii. Where in the Middle East? Can you say?”
“No. But I can tell you it was a high-value target. The shit had lots of followers. Was going to light some fuses. I took care of it. I was extracted. All was good. For a while. Then came Thomasleaks.”
So that was it. A contractor with access to Pentagon files stole and published a trove of operational documents, which included personal information on intelligence officers, U.S. soldiers, contractors and foreign assets. Shaw hadn’t followed the story closely but he recalled that three locals in Syria were killed after they’d been outed, and a dozen covert officers had had to leave their posts — quickly. There were others on various kill lists.
“They call it a fatwa. Tony Soprano’d just say ‘hit.’ Same difference. So, fair warning: last night you kissed a marked woman.”
“I wondered what made it so good.” Shaw looked over her pensive face. “So why Ferrington?”
“My handler gave me a couple of options for safe-house cities. Ferrington was close enough to home to see family regularly, far enough away from the old me to keep off the grid.”
Silence between them. Another kiss loomed, but this time it was interrupted by Shaw’s humming phone. The screen showed a local number. He answered.
“Mr. Shaw?” the man’s voice asked.
“Yes.”
“Your camper’s ready.”
Shaw said, “Thanks. I’ll be there in ten.” He disconnected, told Nilsson, then turned and waved for the check.
“Good news,” she said. “You’re back on the road.”
Marred only by the fact that he had nowhere to go.
Fooling them had been easy.
Because the cops weren’t thinking like he was. They were reacting.
Not being creative.
After his NASCAR race to flee from shotgun-lady Dorella Muñoz Elizondo, Jon Merritt had not sped to any highways, but instead lessened pressure on the accelerator and steered to nearby John Adams High. He parked behind the gym and examined his wounds. The bruises and welts from the rubber slugs were dark and gaudy but he could function. Merritt climbed from the vehicle, leaving the engine running and the window open. Then he’d walked away, trying to assume a normal gait, into the neighborhood of frame houses and postage-stamp yards.
The school had been on his beat when he was just starting out at FPD. The place was now populated by the same gangs and unaffiliated shits as most institutions of lower learning — kids who could be counted on to get into trouble, for no reason other than they wanted to get into trouble.
And a favorite sport was helping themselves to someone else’s vehicle.
Technically, to be convicted of grand theft auto — a category of larceny — you needed the intent to permanently deprive the owner of the car. This was sometimes hard to prove, so you’d charge the perps with the offense of joyriding, which was basically borrowing the car and planning to return it after you’d driven the vehicle to hell and back.
Jon Merritt didn’t care what the teenager would be written up for. A gangbanger would chop it for parts. Somebody else would want to see what an F-150 could do off road. Yet another would just want to cruise around until he found a good place to make out, or more, on a threadbare blanket in the bed.
Merritt was just leaving the grounds when he saw it go down. The Ford had sat, running, for merely one minute, when a skinny kid with a bad complexion and a ratty sweatshirt, emblazoned with the logo of a long-ago rock group, walked past. He paused, looked up and down the parking lot, and in a flash was inside and skidding across, then out of, the lot.
Now, head down, Merritt hiked the backpack higher on his shoulder and continued to limp along the sidewalk under the rows of elm. Now that he had a moment of peace, he looked at his phone and examined his texts. After escaping from Sunny Acres, his ex and daughter had disappeared once more. There were no clues to their whereabouts.
He sighed in anger.
This meant that he’d have to start plowing once more through the litter he’d picked up in her house. How much paper remained?
A thousand sheets and scraps.
But first he needed wheels.
He walked for another six endless blocks, when he noted an elderly woman parking her shiny dark blue Buick, an older model, in the driveway of a modest house. She climbed out, took a bag of groceries from the backseat and headed up the walk.
No one coming out to help her. So she lived alone, or at least was by herself at the moment.
Odds of dogs? At her age and frail state, any canines would be little yappers, not rotties or pit bulls.
Sidewalks deserted, the street was free of vehicles.
She walked to the front door. Drawing his gun, he followed.
He stepped silently into the living room, which hummed with the white noise of the modest HVAC system. He smelled lavender and lemon and some cleanser. Ah, it was ammonia. He recalled a case from years ago, a house not unlike this one. A wife had tried to kill her husband by mixing ammonia with other household chemicals, making a dangerous gas. She’d knocked him out then, as if he’d fallen, hit his head on the corner of the counter. She then poured the lethal potion on the floor. He remembered being impressed with her ingenuity — up to the point she neglected to dispose of the hammer she’d brained him with. Her fingerprints and his blood got her thirty years.
Merritt’s eyes took in a collection of tiny figurines. Animals mostly. White porcelain. Very meticulously crafted. He particularly liked the elephant.
He made his way silently toward the kitchen, where the woman was humming a pleasant tune. It was familiar, from a Broadway show, but for the life of him Jon Merritt couldn’t place it.
Standing at the massive raw-oak front door of the large contempo house, Allison Parker rang the chime. Melodic tones, three of them, sounded from inside, reminding her of the note made by running a moist finger around the rim of a glass.
The angular, glassy place was impressive and she nearly asked Hannah what she thought of it. Then remembered she was mad at the girl.
Bitch...
Footsteps, a shadow. The slab of wood swung open and Frank Villaine was filling the doorway, looking down at mother and daughter. He was smiling. The man was very much as she remembered: huge, bearlike, bearded, brown hair thick and with a few gray strands, but no more than when they’d known each other years ago.
“Well, hello.”
“Frank,” Parker said and they embraced. The same cologne, after all these years. “This is Hannah. Mr. Villaine.”
His was a broad smile; the girl’s muted. No physical contact. Hannah was cautious. Understandable. He was a stranger and he towered. And, then too, their life had descended into nightmare.
“Come on in.” Frank picked up their bags and ushered them inside, looking out over the hundred-yard driveway that led here from an unpaved country road. His eye squinted slightly and this was probably the look he affected when scouting for game. His permanent residence was in Chicago. This was his getaway home and hunting lodge.
He closed and locked the door and directed them through a large living area and into the kitchen, which like in many homes seemed the heart of the place. He moved slowly by nature, not physical limitation. He’d been working and the island, of dark green marble, was strewn with engineering diagrams, charts, graphs, notes. Two computers sat open.
The interior of the house featured walls of bird’s-eye maple and plank floors and oak doors that swung on and latched with wrought iron fixtures. Wide windows, curtains open, looked out on rolling hills to the east and, opposite, the imposing forest that dominated this portion of the state.
Only now did she notice that a rifle sat muzzle-up behind the door.
He’d been fully apprised of the Jon Merritt situation.
“I don’t know what to say, Frank.” She sloughed her jacket and he took it and hung it on a peg by the back door. Hannah kept hers on — as if ready to make a fast exit. Parker continued, “I racked my brain to think of somebody Jon didn’t know... And somebody who’d be crazy enough to let us stay for a day or two.”
“As long as you like.”
“It won’t be long. They have to be close to catching him.”
Did Hannah glare at this? Possibly.
“I checked the news,” he said, “there’s nothing about it. And I didn’t call the police or prison to find out.”
She’d asked him not to, only to monitor the press. “Thank you. He’s still got his connections.”
She was afraid someone at the FPD or detention would see the number, trace it to Frank and eventually here.
“My lawyer’s monitoring it. I’ve called but he hasn’t gotten back to me.”
“I’ll show you your rooms.”
“Hannah and I can share.”
“I’m your Airbnb. Whatever you like.”
Hannah said, “Maybe if you’ve got, like, another one.” Her polite smile was utterly fake.
He glanced to Parker, who gave a shallow nod, deciding it was probably a good idea to give the girl some space. Good for herself too. Her fury about the selfie ebbed and flowed. Yes, she hadn’t been honest about the risk her father posed, but the girl had blatantly ignored her instructions. Not acceptable.
Carrying their bags and backpacks as if they were pillows, Frank led them down a long dark corridor.
“Here you go.” He nodded to two bedrooms, next to each other. They were spacious, each with its own bath. The sheets on the beds seemed new and at the feet rested neatly folded towels. Parker took the first one they came to, Hannah the next.
“Han,” Parker said, standing in the girl’s doorway, “take your jacket off. Wash up.”
The girl took her backpack from Frank and dropped it onto the bed, then pulled out her computer, opened the lid.
“Han?”
“I will.”
Frank set Parker’s bags inside her room. He said, “I’ll be in the kitchen.”
A whispered “Thank you,” and a firm hug.
She stepped into her bathroom and scrubbed her hands and face. She looked pale and haggard and if anyone needed makeup, she did. But she didn’t bother. Then too most of the jars and bottles and tubes were on the floor of the Sunny Acres motel. Her hair was a mess. She finger-smoothed the curls, and let it go at that.
Returning to the kitchen, she found Frank at the back door, once again scanning slowly. His shoulders were raised slightly. It brought back a memory of a time they’d camped. A cold September in the mountains. One morning they’d both gazed out over a stunning dawn. She’d been swept away by the beauty of the light on dewy foliage. He had been entranced with a 10-point buck.
She now asked, “You have open internet?”
“Open? Oh. No, the router’s passcoded. I’ll give it to you.”
“I don’t need it. Can Hannah get the code?”
“It’s on the router. There.”
The black box sat in the corner.
“Can you hide it?”
He moved the device to a closet and closed the door. “Why?”
“Hannah doesn’t get how much we’re in danger. I’m afraid she’ll post something.” Her heart clenched. “She already did. Jon could have found where we were staying. She was trying to tell him where we were.”
He frowned. “Why on earth would she do that?”
Parker’s eyes too now scanned the property. “She wants her father. Well, the father she remembers from the old days. Thinks he’ll apologize and we’ll be a happy family again. She doesn’t see who he is now.” A shrug. “She’s happy to forgive. And thinks I should too.”
There was much more to say, almost too much.
But Allison Parker let it go at that, though she added, “I’m sure he’s drinking again.” She continued to stare out on the expanse of grass and scrub. “That’s a match and gasoline.”
“Well, you’ll be safe here. It’s a fortress. There’re druggies, meth, in this part of the county. Jon can’t get in once I seal it up. I’ve got a central station panic button. And then...” He nodded to the dark corner where the rifle sat. She knew he was quite the shot.
“Really, only a day or two. If they don’t get him by day after tomorrow, I’m going to Indianapolis. One of my old roommates lives there. I’ve never mentioned her to Jon.”
And then it was time — past time — for the subject of Jon Merritt to go away.
She studied him with a faint smile. “You seeing anyone these days?” Frank had been a widower for years. They had dated after his wife passed away.
“Nothing serious. Too old for that nonsense.”
She scoffed.
“Well, too busy.”
“That’s more like it.” She shook her head. “Sixty-hour weeks, I’ll bet. Like me.”
“The modular reactors. That’s exciting work. What’re yours called again? Interesting name, right?”
“Pocket Suns.”
“That’s clever. You in production yet?”
“Next year. And how are Frank Junior and Ella?”
“West Coast and East respectively. Ella’s turning me into a grandfather.”
“Oh, Frank! When?”
“Couple of months. I arrange my own lecture schedule. So I see them both quite a bit. Frankie’s got a partner now, going on three years. Thom’s a computer whiz. We talk math till Frankie falls asleep.”
“Happy for you.”
His eyes dropped. “I haven’t been in touch. I should’ve called.”
She held up a hand. “I’m just as guilty. Life moves on.”
“How about I get some lunch going?”
She gave a sour laugh. “That’d be great. Breakfast ended a little quicker than we’d planned.”
He put a large pot of water on to boil and got some fresh pasta and a bowl of cooked bacon from the fridge.
Parker said, “Sorry. Hannah’s a vegetarian.”
The strips went back.
“Cheese?”
Parker shook her head. “I don’t know. The rules change all the time. Maybe today it’s zucchini only.”
Frank called, “Hey, young lady. How’s cheese pasta suit you?”
There was no answer.
“Hannah, can you hear us?”
“Yeah.”
“Answer Mr. Villaine. Is cheese okay for lunch?”
“I’m not hungry.”
“Hannah!”
“I’m not hungry, thank you.”
Parker lifted her palms and Frank gave a laugh. His children had been teens once too. “Give her cheese. She’ll eat it.”
Frank asked, “What do you do at Harmon?”
“I just finished up a stint as anti-terror girl. Now I’m garbage girl.”
“Okay.”
She explained about the S.I.T. trigger and her current project: the fuel rod pods. “Like changing batteries — the difference being batteries won’t kill you if you come within twenty feet of them.”
“Your idea?”
“It was.”
“You like nuclear work?”
“Who wouldn’t?” A beat of a pause, then: “We’re leading the way to a brighter and cleaner tomorrow.”
He was clearly amused.
“Ah, just because it’s a slogan doesn’t mean it’s not true. And I believe in what Marty wants to do in developing countries. You’re mostly green, right? Wind and solar?”
“A hundred percent.”
“We’ll see where it goes,” she told him. “Lot of thinking that nuclear isn’t green at all. That debate’s going to heat up.”
“To critical mass?”
She laughed.
Parker didn’t add that she not only believed in nuclear power but she found the science particularly comforting, because of its certainty. You could rely on the immutable words of Einstein: energy and mass are interchangeable, E=MC2. All else in life might be in shambles but the formulas and equations she spent time with daily never betrayed, never lied.
“Hannah, come on in here.” She didn’t add: Be social.
Again, no response.
“I’ll go get her.”
Frank said in a soft voice, “This must’ve been hell for her. She can stay there if she wants.”
“No. She should sit down with us.” Parker rose and walked into the girl’s room. She found her sitting on the bed with her computer. But her eyes were out the immaculate windows.
The fields were autumn sparse and dun colored, but the trees beyond were spectacular in their radiant spectrum, interspersed with rich green pine.
It would be nearly impossible for someone at the forest line to look into the rooms, but the exposure troubled Parker and she walked to the window and lowered the blinds. She wondered if Hannah would object. She didn’t.
Parker leaned back against the dresser, crossed her arms. “Okay, Han. I was mad about your selfie. You were mad I got mad. And I was wrong not to tell you the risk. I should’ve done that. Let’s put it behind us.”
No answer.
Trying to keep a parental edge from her voice, she borrowed Frank’s word. “I know this’s hell, honey. But it’s not going to last forever.” Then tried a hapless cliché: “And it’s only going to get worse if we don’t pull together.”
The girl didn’t even roll her eyes at the trite words.
Parker tried again. “Please. What’s all this about?”
“Nothing.”
Which was the hardest single word your child could utter. It could mean the literal definition. Or it could mean the opposite: everything. Or any one of a million stops in between.
And you, the person who desperately wanted to know the answer, left wholly in the dark.
“Please. Talk to me.”
Then startling her, the girl blurted angrily: “I don’t want to stay here. In this house. I want to go.”
“Why?”
Her eyes shot defiantly toward her mother’s. She nodded toward the kitchen. “He’s the one you cheated on Daddy with, right? Go ahead. Just admit it!”
The girl slammed her computer shut and turned away.
Mrs. Butler’s Buick was as pristine a car as Merritt had ever seen.
Even the steering wheel had been polished. It was slick. He smelled Pledge.
He piloted the car into a shopping mall parking lot and drove to the far side, where dozens of modest vehicles rested. It was the spot where employees of the stores were told to park, freeing up spaces closer in for paying customers. Very little traffic — vehicular or foot — here.
Head back, pressing into the padded rest. Eyes on the textured ceiling.
He wanted to sleep. He was exhausted and groggy and in gobs of pain from the rubber shells, the second one of which had slammed into muscles still sore from the puking. But no time now. His anger was growing and growing, making him nearly as nauseous as he’d been earlier.
Get to it.
He sat up and opened the backpack. It was full. He’d brought all of his possessions from the River View. He’d checked in by paying cash, but there was still a chance he’d be recognized. Better to find someplace else.
He dug through the bag, set the whisky bottle beside him and some clothes, then lifted out the trove of remaining documents he’d taken from Allison’s rental home.
It took a half hour and he was nearly to the bottom and growing more discouraged and therefore angrier, when he stopped, studying a printout of an email. He set this on the dash and continued through the rest of the stack. Nothing else.
The one email would have to do. He read it again.
He went online and looked up the name in the “From” line. He found plenty of references but no addresses.
He then sent a text to Dom Ryan asking him to use his contacts to see if there was a nearby address associated with the name.
The mobster replied right away that he’d check. Of course he would. The money clock was running.
The email was a curious one. It was an interoffice email, dating to when Allison worked for a different company ages ago.
The missive was brief.
Hey there, Alli!
Euler’s Identity has been called the most beautiful of formulae.
eiπ + 1 = 0
I know another identity that’ll give Euler a run for his money...
Apparently the sender, his ex’s coworker Frank Villaine, wasn’t too much of a geek to have a romantic side.
“Tell me what you’re talking about.”
The girl’s rounded jaw was set. Her eyes red. “You think I was fucking deaf? I heard your fights. He said he knew all about you. You were cheating on him! Everybody in the neighborhood could’ve heard.”
Some did, yes.
“Go on,” Parker whispered, finding a calm center. Somehow.
Hannah’s whisper was vicious. “Dad said he knew all about you. The affair. It was him, right? Frank!” Her eyes were filling with tears. “You cheated on him. He found out. That’s why he started drinking! You ruined his life!”
So this was behind her comment during their fight earlier.
You dumped him there and went on to something else...
Tears in her own eyes now, Parker tried to grip her daughter’s forearms, but the girl pulled roughly away.
“No, no, no, honey! When you heard that, he was drunk, wasn’t he? Rambling, sometimes incoherent?”
“So? It doesn’t make it a lie.”
“Not a lie, no. But he believed things that just weren’t true. He’d forget the day of the week. He called me Judy — his old girlfriend. He called you Abby.”
Parker never knew where that name came from.
“Remember that party? Fourth of July at Hank and Patty’s. Your father got into a fight with Mr. Simms because he was sure he was saying things behind his back. He got paranoid and mean. Jesus, Han. Think about it: When would I have time for an affair? Sixty-hour weeks. Home the rest of the time.”
“Why would he make it up?”
“Because he got paranoid and delusional and angry. He wasn’t in his right mind. I never—”
“Don’t lie to me!”
“She’s not lying, Hannah.” Frank was standing in the doorway. His round, kind face was cast down at her. The girl looked up, clearly shaken that someone else had heard the exchange.
“Can I come in?”
When she didn’t answer he entered anyway, but only a few feet.
“I’m sorry. I heard what you were saying. I just wanted to tell you about your mom and me.”
What a calm voice, what kind eyes...
Hannah was frowning toward him but she gave a shallow nod. Wiped tears.
“Your mother and I used to date. Years and years ago. Before she met your father. Only for a few months. Then it was over with.”
Parker said earnestly, “Han, cheating? No, that wasn’t us. I had my faults. Your father had his. But that? No, never.”
What was the point? In fast memory, flaring spontaneously, she was picturing the last time Jon and she had made love, which wasn’t that long before he was arrested for assault.
It had been so nice. It always was. Consuming. And it was yet one more thing she regretted saying goodbye to when she’d pressed charges.
This memory killed her.
What she’d told her daughter was one hundred percent true. Oh, there were flaws in the Merritt-Parker marriage, but infidelity was not one of them.
“All the things he said when he was drunk? Nonsense and mean. And half of it didn’t make sense in the first place. He lit candles on a waffle for your birthday — six months early. And got mad at you when the tablecloth caught fire. He said why didn’t you thank him for the dog he bought you? What dog? There never was a dog. He accused me of banging up the new car — when it was him. His reality was different.”
Hannah was wiping tears on her sleeve. Her mother plucked a tissue from a box printed with gaudy orange daisies.
Don’t go away, she begged silently. Stay with me.
Hannah took the slip of Kleenex and wiped.
For the tenth, the twentieth, time in the past two days, she found herself touching her cheek, the skin just above the crack, long healed, the ridge prominent as a mountain, despite the doctor’s reassurance that that could not be.
Parker took her daughter’s hands. “They’ll find him, they’ll get him some help in prison.” And added spontaneously, “The help I should have gotten him last year.”
This was what the girl needed to hear. She nodded.
Emotions roiled within Parker. Oh, her daughter believed her about the infidelity. She was pretty sure on that. But this, of course, was not the end of the story. For the time being, though, the angst and anger were sidelined.
It was time for strategic withdrawal.
“I’m starving.” She looked at her daughter. “Mr. Vill—”
“No, make it Frank.”
“Frank’s going to make some lunch for us.”
“Okay.”
“You go on,” Parker said. “I’ll be there in a minute.”
The girl blew her nose and pitched out the tissue. She pulled her jacket off, tossed it on the bed and followed Frank into the hallway. Parker stepped into the bathroom and leaned, hands on the vanity, head down, wiping her own tears.
From the moment they’d met in the research department of Midwest Particle Technology she’d been comfortable with him. He was kind and funny. And he was as smart as she was, smarter in some disciplines.
They had both understood at exactly the same moment that there wasn’t enough chemistry to make them a couple — the sort of chemistry that sparks a true connection.
Chemistry...
That flare, that gut twist she’d never experienced with Frank but was front and center the first time she’d met boyish Jon Merritt at a Halloween party. She’d been wearing a Chicago Bears T-shirt with a large price tag on it, he’d been wearing a dark blue police uniform. They made eye contact and he walked up. “Okay,” he said, eyeing the outfit. “I give.”
“I’m a state of the union,” she replied.
Without missing a beat, he’d said, “New Jersey. Wow.”
“And you’re what? A cop from some TV show?”
“No, I’m a cop from a cop shop. Ferrington PD. I was too lazy to come up with a costume.”
“So,” she said, smiling coyly, “that means the handcuffs’re real.”
They’d talked the entire night. Well, most of the night. The two had ended up in his small bachelor apartment, where the chemistry continued into the early hours of the morning...
Now, in an instant, consumed with rage, breathing impossibly fast, Parker drew back her fist and aimed for the center of the mirror, two feet in front of her, not caring what shattered, what sliced.
She heard “Mom?”
The girl was calling from the hallway.
A deep breath. Two.
“What, honey?”
“I’m cold. Where’s my gray sweatshirt?”
Parker’s shoulders slumped. “I think it’s in my gym bag. Let’s take a look.”
They sat in the white Transit, Moll behind the wheel, tapping it with his long thick fingers.
They were in a 7-Eleven parking lot, having finished a late lunch — from cellophane containers. The long-awaited barbecue was still on hold.
They’d driven twenty miles west on Route 92 from the Sunny Acres motel, to put distance between themselves and any law, pausing only to pitch the motel’s security hard drive into a creek. They’d then flipped a mental coin and decided to keep north, though avoiding the cameras at the intersection of Routes 55 and 92. They’d join the former well into Marshall County.
Merritt had a lead and they were now waiting to see if it panned out.
Hurry up and wait...
As he sprayed his neck, Moll glanced at the passenger seat, where Desmond continued to work on the willow branch.
It was an interesting thing, this hobby of his. You pounded the branch until the bark was loose enough to work off. Then you cut a notch — called, for some reason, a fipple — in a three-inch plug of the wood and slid it back on the hollow tube of bark, the end result being a musical flute.
Desmond now set his SOG knife down and lifted the green instrument to his lips. He played, producing a soothing, resonant tone. He stopped and continued to refine the instrument with the blade. Then he played some more.
These flutes lasted only a week at most. Once the willow dried out it was useless. It turned back into a branch. This at first seemed like a waste of time to Moll, but then he realized: What in life lasted very long?
Forty-three years or a week... Both were nothing. Finger snaps of time.
Desmond played some more notes. It was a tune Moll didn’t remember but it had something to do with one of the rebellions in Ireland, fighting the British for independence. A girlfriend had once turned Moll on to the idea of reincarnation and he sort of believed it. He had suggested Desmond might have been a rebel in a former life.
The man had considered this and liked the idea. He asked Moll who he thought he’d been. Maybe Jack the Ripper.
But Moll had seen some movies and TV shows and he had said no. Jack had killed for lust and was sloppy. Moll killed for money and was organized and neat. Making bodies was, to him, like painting faux furniture.
It was all art. No difference.
Desmond cocked his head. “So? Jean?”
Moll hesitated a moment. “Gone.”
“Oh, you didn’t say.”
“It just happened.”
“I’m sorry about that, man. She seemed okay.” Desmond played a riff, then cut a glance to the side. “She gone gone?”
Took Moll a moment. “What? No, no. Of course not.”
Though it wasn’t an unreasonable question.
Desmond was happy finding satisfaction at truck stops. Moll wanted something more with a woman. The settling-down part that his mother used to mention. He could nearly picture the future. He would hunt and work and paint furniture and return home to help her, whoever she might be, fix up the house, go to county fairs, prepare dinners and eat them not in the driver’s seat of a Ford van but at a real dining room table. He’d help her with the dishes and pick a good wine. He was determined to teach himself the subject.
Jean, a voluptuous brunette who’d been a manager at Huxley’s Pub, had been the sort who might fit the bill.
But she was also smart and observant, which defined the dilemma. Smart and observant people had the potential to be significant liabilities in his line of work.
Why do you have to deliver the furniture yourself? You could ship it.
Did you cut yourself? Is that blood in the van?
Et cetera.
So, a conundrum.
He would get it worked out someday. Meanwhile he liked painting. He liked making bodies and liked finding creative ways for them to go away forever.
Someday...
Desmond asked, “She still in the area? Jean?”
Moll said, “She moved back to Dubuque.”
“That’s a funny name.” Desmond shrugged. “But I’m one to talk. Mine you don’t hear much.”
Moll offered an indistinct grunt. Thank you, Mother and Father, so very much. They’d believed she was delivering a girl, to be named Molly, after a relative. Oh, damn. It’s a boy. Let’s improvise. He recalled when a classmate said, “Hey, isn’t ‘moll’ what they called some slut, you know, a gangster’s whore?”
The kid was out of school for the rest of the semester, after being injured in a freak accident whose nature he simply could not recall. And no one ever made fun of Moll’s name again.
Moll’s phone hummed. He read the words and smiled. “Dawndue.”
“What?”
“Merritt found somebody. We’ve got an address.” He started the engine and typed on the GPS screen. The men buckled up. Moll said, “And speaking of weird names? His is Villaine. Spelled different, but like a bad guy in a movie.”
“Okay,” Desmond conceded. “He wins.”
Allison Parker and Hannah joined Frank, who was clearing the island, moving his computers and documents to a cluttered desk in the corner of the kitchen.
Frank asked, “Soda? Coke? I have diet. Not that you need it.”
The girl came close to smiling. “Yeah, diet.”
He got one for her.
“That’s the biggest refrigerator I’ve ever seen.”
Frank lifted an eyebrow to Parker and picked up a bottle of red Italian wine. He’d be thinking that after Jon’s problem she would abstain. She didn’t drink much but wanted some now, needed some. She nodded.
He opened the bottle and filled two glasses. They sipped.
Frank was heating tomato sauce on the six-burner stove. It simmered, bubbling gently. To Hannah he said, nodding toward the stove, “In Italy they don’t call this sauce. It’s gravy.”
“Smells cool. Why’d you guys break up?”
No one did non sequiturs like teenagers.
Parker said, “I moved to a different company, Marty’s.”
“And I went to Chicago. We both decided long distance wouldn’t work. Besides I’m not sure how compatible we would’ve been. I’d’ve forced her to go traipsing through the woods to go quote ‘shopping’ for dinner.”
“Instead of doing it the right way: Whole Foods.”
Hannah offered a fraction of a smile.
The water was at a rolling boil and he eased fresh fettuccine into the pot. “Well, the feast’s almost done. Hannah, any chance you could help me set the table?”
“Where’s the stuff?”
“Over there.” He pointed to a massive mahogany buffet at the far end of the kitchen.
“Everything’s big here.” She was looking at a dining room table that would seat sixteen or eighteen people.
“We’ll eat there.” He nodded at a round kitchen table near the island. He moved aside engineering diagrams. “I like this better. The rest of the house? It’s a like an interior designer cave. You two eat in the kitchen much?”
“Yeah, usually. Our dining room’s too dark. We’re renting and we can’t put new fixtures.” A glance at her mother. “Or paint.”
The girl’d been taught home manners and in a few minutes had plates, place mats, silver and napkins properly arranged on the glass-top table.
Frank mixed the sauce in the pasta and removed some grated cheese from the refrigerator. Then from the big oven came a loaf of Italian bread, its crust crisp and alluring. He pulled a mitt onto his left hand and used a serrated knife to cut slices. These went into a bowl. He removed a salad from the fridge and took several different dressings from a door rack.
Together, the three of them moved everything to the table.
He took one seat and pointed to those next to him, Parker on the left and Hannah to the right.
She realized then why he wanted to eat here and why he wanted to take the seat he had. So he would have an unobstructed view of the long driveway and the dirt road that ran in front of the house.
She studied it too, and expanded her glance to take in the long rifle in the corner by the door.
Then told herself: Relax. Jon couldn’t possibly know about this place.
They began to eat. Conversation meandered, from the energy industry, to climate change, to politics, to the scenery, to life out in the country, to Hannah’s school, to her uncanny ability to solve math problems. Parker supposed she’d want to talk about her passion — her selfies project — but had the good sense to keep mum on that topic.
When they were nearly finished, Frank froze, glass halfway to his mouth. He set it down.
“I want you two to go into the parlor.” His voice was commanding, far different from his laconic tone.
Hannah looked up in alarm. “What?”
Parker rose. “Han, we’ll do what Frank says.”
“Go on. Now.”
Parker and her daughter stepped into the dim room, dominated by an eerie elk head.
“Mom?”
“Shh.”
She caught glimpses of Frank walking from the kitchen to a gun case. Opening a drawer.
Then she too heard the noise that would have alerted him, a snap.
She walked to a window and gasped.
The figure was pushing through the tall brush that bordered the side of the house.
“Frank!” she called. “Outside!”
“Your mother and Marty Harmon hired me to find you,” Colter Shaw said to Allison Parker.
When he’d arrived at Villaine’s property, outside the small town of Greenville, Shaw hadn’t known if the Twins — as he called the pair of hired thugs from Sunny Acres — had gotten here before him. So he had parked on a side road and hiked in through the woods. He’d surveyed the house and then done a quick and silent surveillance. When it was clear there were no hostiles inside — Parker, Hannah and Frank Villaine were eating lunch — he’d walked from the side yard to the front, rung the bell, stepped back and kept his hands in plain sight.
Villaine had greeted him with a pistol. Parker had barked an astonished gasp and said, “No, no, Frank. It’s okay. I’ve met him. He recovered a reactor part that was stolen from the company.” To Hannah she added, “He’s the one I told you about.”
Now that identities had been verified, Shaw pulled out his phone. Parker eyed it warily. “Could Jon track it?”
“It’s a burner I haven’t used before. And I don’t think a Verizon or Sprint technician’ll risk going to jail for an ex-cop.”
She considered this and reluctantly nodded. Shaw called Marty Harmon.
“Colter.”
“I’m with them both.”
A sighing voice: “Oh, God. And they’re okay?”
“They are.”
“Merritt’s still at large. The police don’t have any leads. Is there anything I can do?”
“Not at this point. I can’t talk now. I just wanted to let you know. Call Ruth.”
“Of course.”
“I’ll call when we’re someplace safe.”
“Colter—” The man’s voice broke. “Thank you.” He disconnected.
Frank asked, “You’re a private eye?”
“Like that.”
“How did you find me?”
Shaw said, “Marianne Keller—”
To Frank, Parker said, “My boss’s assistant.”
“She was helping Marty’s head of security track down people you might’ve been close to in the past but Jon probably wouldn’t know. Frank’s name came up. He lived north — the direction you’d been driving. I thought it was a sixty percent chance or so you’d come here.”
Frank asked Parker, “But what’s the danger? Jon doesn’t know about me.”
“Maybe not. But he ransacked your house. Would there be anything there with Frank’s name and address?”
She closed her eyes briefly. “I don’t think so but maybe. Oh, Frank, I’m so sorry...”
Shaw continued, “We have to assume he and his two men know about it. They could be on their way here now.”
“What men?” Parker asked.
“I don’t know who they are. But the way they operated they’re probably pros, muscle. From some crew — a gang. Maybe they were hired by your husband or they owed him from when he was a cop and he called in a marker. They’re helping him find you.”
“Oh, no,” the woman whispered.
Frank: “You mean, like hitmen?”
Shaw nodded.
“Mom!” A gasp. Hannah’s eyes opened wide.
“They attacked the clerk in Sunny Acres and found your room. You left just before they got there.”
At this news Hannah looked away. She’d be thinking of her infamous selfie.
“Oh, Alli,” Frank whispered.
“The clerk?” she whispered.
“He’s okay.”
Hannah asked, “Was my dad with them? At the motel?”
“I don’t think so. They probably split up, to have a better chance of finding you.” Shaw looked at Parker. “If you’ve been offline, then you don’t know about your lawyer.”
“David?”
“He’s missing. Presumed dead. The police think Jon was trying to find your location from him.”
Tears flowed now. She covered her face with her hands. “Oh God, what a nightmare...”
There’d been enough talk. Shaw said, “We’ve been here too long. We need to leave now.”
“Where?” Parker asked.
“I know somewhere,” Frank said. “A fishing lodge on Timberwolf Lake. A friend of mine owns it. He’s out of town. There’s no connection to me, and it’s way out in the woods. Impossible to find.”
“Good,” Shaw said.
Parker said to Frank, “You come too.”
“I will. You go ahead. Let me get this place battened down. The shutters and doors. It’s break-in proof and there’s a central station alarm, if they try.” He gave Shaw the address of the lake house.
Shaw was then aware that Hannah was looking at him, her face a curious mix of defiance and caution. He smiled to put her at ease and said, “It’s Hannah, right?”
She nodded. He didn’t extend his hand. But she did and he shook the warm, dry palm.
He said, “It’s going to be okay.”
She regarded him with an expression that was eerily adult and seemed to ask, How on earth could you possibly know?
Placid.
The lodge that Frank Villaine had sent them to, a modest beige clapboard structure, was on a lake that, in this breezeless valley, was flat as a piece of glass. Surrounding the oblong body of water were a thousand trees, ten thousand, some clothed in vibrant color, some green, some brown, some dead and gray. The spiky skyline was inverted on the mirror surface of the water.
It would be a fine place to fish. Cold, clear, expansive.
He thought of Sonja Nilsson.
We took pike and bass mostly. Some muskie...
Shaw pulled the Winnebago to a spot behind the house and killed the engine. He climbed out. Inhaling deeply. Smelling, almost tasting, air rich with leaf and mud and water and decaying vegetation.
Parker and Hannah, in the gold Kia, arrived a moment later. She parked beside the camper. Shaw gestured for them to wait. He walked to the front door and punched in the key code Villaine had given him. The lock clicked and, hand near his weapon, he pushed the door open.
In a few minutes he’d cleared the homey three-bedroom place and walked onto the porch to join the other two. They carried their belongings inside. There wasn’t much: a shopping bag, backpacks and gym bags.
They all stepped inside and Shaw closed the door.
Hannah wasn’t feeling well; the last few miles of the road from Route 84 meandered in sharp curves. She walked to the couch, whose cushion covers featured a Native American design in red and black, and dropped onto it, her head back.
“It’ll pass,” her mother said.
“No, it won’t. I’m going to puke.” She moaned, with a touch of teenage drama.
It would pass, but there were a few more debilitating conditions than nausea. Shaw didn’t want her to feel bad, of course, but he also needed them both aware and present. No distractions. This was a good safe house. But they weren’t invisible.
Shaw walked into the kitchen and looked through the cabinets. He found what he was looking for and dumped some powdered ginger into a pan, added water and boiled the concoction for a few minutes. He strained it through a coffee filter into a mug and dumped in two generous spoonfuls of sugar, then stirred. He handed it to the girl.
She stared uncertainly. “Um, thanks. But...”
“Try it.”
The girl took a tentative sip. Then another.
Shaw left her and joined Parker, who had returned to the porch, looking out over the field. He walked to the back, collected his own backpack from the camper and returned. The lot was about seven or eight acres of grass and sedge, in which grew a few solitary oaks and hawthorns and maples. About two hundred yards from the house was a row of trees running parallel to the road that had led them here.
“Can be a good defensible position,” he said.
Parker gave a brief laugh. “You sound like we’re soldiers.”
“Here.” Shaw dug into his backpack and took out a gray plastic pistol case. He opened it and removed a Colt Python. This model, a .357 magnum, was considered the finest revolver ever made. It was competition accurate, and its mechanism operated as smoothly as a fine timepiece’s. This particular one had been given to a young Colter Shaw by his father. It was the same weapon that he’d used to drive an armed intruder off the family’s Compound.
He’d been thirteen.
Shaw offered it to her.
Parker shook her head.
“Take it. Put it in your waistband. It’s a revolver. It won’t go off by accident.”
“No.”
He said firmly, “I might need you to use it.”
In a voice equally stern: “Then you’ll have to think of something else.”
Hannah interrupted the argument, if that’s what the exchange was. “It worked.” Her eyes were on the gun as Shaw slipped it into his own back waistband.
The girl added, “It’s butter beer out of Harry Potter. Or what I imagine it tasted like.”
Shaw said, “We’re going to make this place safer. The odds’re with us, but even a one percent chance of being attacked means you prepare.”
Parker asked, “What do we do?”
“I’ll make an early defense system at the main entry points. The driveway and the lake.”
“The lake?” Parker frowned. “How could they come that way?”
Her daughter made the point Shaw had been about to. “We passed a Walmart. They sell boats.”
Shaw asked the two of them, “Can you cover the windows? Sheets, towels, whatever you can find.” He was nodding at the rustic landscape posters mounted on the walls. “There’ll probably be a toolbox somewhere, with a hammer and nails. It has to be dark. Use two or three layers if you have to.”
Hannah looked around. “How long’re we going to be here?”
“No way of knowing,” Shaw said. “I’ve got food and water in the camper. That’ll last us a week.”
Hannah said enthusiastically, “Oh, there’s a fire pit. We can cook out.”
Shaw said, “No. Too telltale.”
“How about now? Sun’s out.”
“You can smell smoke miles away. We’ll microwave.”
“There could still be smoke.” Hannah was looking at her mother, who confessed to Shaw, “I’m not much of a cook.”
She and her daughter both laughed.
Parker stepped away and began going through closets and kitchen cabinets. She found a small yellow plastic toolbox. She carried it to the dining room table, removed a hammer and a box of picture-hanging brads. The woman set off in search of blankets.
Shaw eyed the contemporary structure. To Hannah he said, “My father was a survivalist.”
Frowning, she seemed to be debating. Then finally asked, “But aren’t they weird? Like... Well, you know, racists?”
“Some, yes, but he wasn’t like that.” Shaw explained briefly about Ashton and the Compound. He then said, “The two fundamental rules of survival are never be without a means of escape, and never be without access to a weapon. So. The first. Escape? What do you think?”
Looking around. “Back door — to the deck. The front door, front windows. Side windows.”
“What’s best?”
She seemed to sense she was being tested but didn’t mind. In fact, she seemed to enjoy the challenge.
“Side,” she said firmly. “You could jump out and run there.” She pointed to the tall yellow and green brush, which was close to the house. “Good place to hide.”
“That’s right.”
“But the windows don’t open.” She glanced around and her eyes settled on the fireplace. “We have to break them out with that thing, the poker.”
“No. It’s too thin. That’d leave shards on the bottom.” Shaw was nodding to the kitchen. “See those cast-iron skillets?” They were hanging from a rack above the island. He walked into the kitchen and returned with two large iron frying pans. These he set under the windows Hannah had indicated. “We can break the glass with them and pound the bottom of the frame to crush the spikes.”
“The guy owns this place?” the girl said with a frown. “He’s not going to be, like, totally happy. You know, breaking his windows, nailing up his blankets.”
“We’ll pay him back.”
Allison Parker walked into the dining room bearing an armful of linens. She dumped them on a couch and surveyed the windows, then opened the packet of brads.
Shaw said, “I’m going to get our security system up outside.”
“Can I help you, Mr. Shaw?”
He glanced at Parker, who nodded.
Shaw asked her for the remote for the rental. She handed it to him.
He said to Hannah, “Let’s get to work.”
She’d heard from him.
Colter Shaw had called and said that the search had paid off. Alli and Hannah were safe.
Sonja Nilsson had asked if he wanted any help. He’d told her no; they would be on the run. It would be better to remain in Ferrington and continue to follow up on leads there. He’d hesitated a moment before answering, though. This told her he’d considered her offer.
She concurred with his decision. It was a good idea. A wise idea.
But after what had happened to her, and now feeling crosshairs on her back, Nilsson knew that sometimes you didn’t feel like doing what was good and wise.
You felt like doing something for yourself.
Still, she could be patient. The memory of the kiss remained, the memory of the contours of their bodies fitting together.
She was presently in her Range Rover, driving through the Garden District of Ferrington. She had canvassed around Dorella Muñoz Elizondo’s house, trying to find someone who had seen Merritt around the time he’d received a rubber-slug welcome from the woman.
No luck there.
She was now approaching John Adams High. The young man who’d boosted Merritt’s bait truck was a student here and she hoped a teacher or fellow student might have seen him — and, ideally, seen what his new wheels were.
As often happened, her mind went to her “situation,” as she thought of it.
Crosshairs...
The shot that had killed the target was not distant: eight hundred yards. Nor was it difficult. The day was windless and dry (moisture lumps the air and makes bullets do strange things on their route to kill). A soft pull, a hard recoil and two seconds later, the man stiffened as if under an electric current and dropped, the man who tortured his prisoners, who married children — yes, plural — who mesmerized a cult of foolish, unquestioning and dangerous followers.
An easy day’s work.
And, pre-internet, that would have been that. She’d have gone to other jobs, then retired, started work for a contractor. She might actually have married a man like the fictional sort in the tale she’d originally spun to Colter Shaw. Only kinder, nicer. Maybe someone who was a little like him.
But, that was not to be: thank you World Wide Fucking Web...
Which gave Michael Dean Thomas the opportunity to publish the thousands of pages of files he’d stolen from the Pentagon. Endless bureaucratic prose, dense and dull and remarkable for only one thing: its betrayal of hundreds of hardworking, patriotic individuals.
You just kissed a marked woman...
The Pentagon and other national intelligence officials sent her TARs — “threat appraisal reports.” They said virtually nothing, in effect: “Might be someone on your trail, might not. Just be careful.”
She couldn’t blame them. Five hundred people had been put at risk by the traitor’s leaks.
The traitor who, as last reported, was living in a beachfront villa on the coast of Venezuela, probably using the extradition notices sent to officials there from U.S. law enforcement to start the fire in his barbecue pit to cook dinner.
Nilsson now parked the SUV in the lot where the kid had reported he’d jacked Merritt’s pickup truck. She climbed from the vehicle, closed the door and locked it. She adjusted the Glock 43 on her hip. The nine-millimeter model. She believed Shaw had the same. Or possibly the 42, which fired the slightly smaller .380 slug.
She made the rounds, knocking on doors, displaying her private investigator’s license and Merritt’s picture, and telling those who answered she was looking into a suspicious individual who had been hanging around the school.
True, in the way that truth can wear several coats.
Everyone was happy to talk to her — who didn’t want to round up all the perverts? — though men spent more time talking to her than the women did. The reason for this was obvious. But the six-foot Nilsson, who’d done a bit of modeling in college, wasn’t troubled. As somebody had once said of advertising: sex sells.
However long the discussion, though, no one could provide anything useful.
Then it was time to get back to the office. There she would check with the police, get a status update for the Jon Merritt manhunt. She would also attend to a dozen other matters. Security for a nuclear reactor manufacturer wasn’t put on hold simply because of one employee’s abusive husband.
Or for a manufacturer that had been the victim of an attempted robbery of a vital component by two different thieves in the same few days.
As she approached the Range Rover, Sonja Nilsson pulled her phone from her side pocket, paused and typed on the screen.
She’d barely finished doing so when the improvised explosive device erupted in a ragged shape of orange flame and launched shrapnel in a thousand different directions.
Shaw and Hannah were in the Kia, driving slowly through the field to a stand of trees beside the lake. They were off the driveway and the car rocked gently on the soft soil.
Hannah pulled off her stocking cap. He was surprised she had long hair. He’d thought it would be cropped. The dark blond strands, streaked with red coloring, were pulled back in a ponytail, bound with a black tie.
When they were about forty yards from the entranceway to the property — a gate in a post-and-rail fence — Shaw steered right and nosed the car into a stand of pine and scrub near the lakeshore. He shut the engine off and climbed out. Hannah joined him.
Slinging the backpack over his shoulder, he walked toward the gate. She followed.
They hiked through the field of low vegetation, yellow and pale green; it had not rained for some weeks. Grasshoppers and leafhoppers and stinkbugs danced away from their legs in fast streaks.
“Ick. I hate bugs.”
“Those are insects,” Shaw said, recalling his father’s lesson on the distinction. “Bugs are a type of insect.”
“Like, all bugs are insects but not all insects are bugs.”
“That’s it.”
She’d be wondering why the entomological distinction was important but now was not the time for a lesson in the value of precision in survivalism. Toxic versus nutritional. While Hemiptera, true bugs, could destroy plants, none were dangerous to humans. Nine types were edible.
They arrived at the gate. The girl swatted a mosquito.
Shaw stepped into the woods bordering the property, looked down and ripped from the ground several floss flower plants. He tore off the leaves and handed them to her. “It’s got coumarin in it. Crush it and rub it on.”
She smelled it, wrinkled her nose. “Bet it doesn’t taste as good as ginger.”
“Doesn’t,” Shaw said. “And it’ll make you puke.”
He withdrew the car remote and pressed lock. The horn beeped. Good. He’d been concerned about the distance. There are ways to increase the range of a car remote — press it against a bottle of sports drink or your head or add a piece of metal to the antenna — but there was no need for that here.
He picked up a long flat piece of bark and studied the ground until he found a small round pebble. From his backpack he took a roll of electrician’s tape. With this he secured the pebble against the panic button, and the remote itself he taped to the bark. He set this, remote side down, in one of the tire tracks in the driveway.
She laughed. “So when the car drives over it, the alarm goes off.” She seemed delighted at the idea. “This’s so dope.”
“Try it.”
She stepped on the bark and the Kia alarm blared.
“It worked!”
Shaw quickly picked up the bark and pressed the lock button, which shut the alarm off. He replaced it on the ground and scattered some leaves to hide it further.
The two began hiking back to the cabin.
“You learn that from your father?”
“Yes, and no. Not the remote specifically. But he taught us to improvise.”
“Like, who’s ‘us’?”
“I have a brother and sister.”
He explained about Russell — to the extent he could. Much of the man’s government security work was so secret even Shaw didn’t know his employer. Hannah was particularly interested to hear about Dorion, who had a degree in engineering. “Like your mother. She’s got a disaster response company. Hurricanes, oil spills.”
“You have any kids?” Hannah asked suddenly.
“No.”
Hannah watched more insects shoot out of their way. “Mom wants me to be an engineer and scientist.” She shrugged. “I’m good at math. She says I’m a prodigy. I don’t know. Maybe. But I solve a calculus problem, and it’s right and I’m like, okay, so? What I really really like’s writing — poetry, mostly — and taking pictures.” She was frowning. “I’d do a series here except Mom took my phone. I did something stupid.”
“The picture of the water tower you posted.”
“Yeah.”
Shaw said, “Look at it this way: you hadn’t posted it, I might not’ve found you.”
“I guess.”
“What would you do a selfie of here?”
She looked around. “Most of it’s boring. Nature? Ugh.” She squinted. “I know, I’d take one of you. You’d be in the background. Looking at the lake or the forest — checking for a place where there could be somebody dangerous. It’d be just your back. Dark, a silhouette.”
As they walked through the grass, she was looking at the lake. “Timber wolf? Are they around here?”
“Could be. They’re rare.”
“Are they dangerous?”
“Usually they avoid humans.”
“But not always.”
“No.”
“You have your guns. If we’re attacked, you can shoot it.”
Shaw shook his head. “Don’t want to do that.”
“Why?”
“We’re in its territory. We’re the interlopers.”
“The what?”
“We’re the ones trespassing. If they see you, you don’t need to shoot. Just stand as tall as you can, open your jacket to make yourself look bigger. Don’t turn your back, just keep eye contact. Never run. If his tail goes up and his hackles rise...”
“What’s hackles?”
“The hairs on the back of its coat. If they go up and he’s growling, you growl back. Show him that you’re too much trouble to attack.”
“Have you ever done that?”
“A couple of times.”
“No shit.”
They were nearly to the cabin.
“Just one more alarm and we’re good.”
FPD had a bomb squad. Of sorts.
It amounted to two officers, a robot that didn’t work very well and a dog that did.
The latter two were intended only to find IEDs and were useless for the post-blast analysis work. It was up to the pair of lean men in their thirties, former military, to try to piece together what had happened.
So far they had learned that the device was made of some type of plastic explosive that had been surrounded by a layer of nails and Sheetrock screws.
The whole parking lot was cordoned off in a trapezoid shape of yellow tape. In it sat an ambulance and fire trucks and police cars. The flashing red, blue and green befit a carnival. Around the perimeter spectators watched, most recording the scene on their phones.
“We’re not sure about the detonator,” the taller of the two said.
Sonja Nilsson said, “Remote.”
“Not a timer?”
She didn’t bother to ask how a timed device might have worked here. The bomber would not have known when she’d return to the Range Rover. He’d had to lie in wait — which in this state made the offense attempted capital murder. Death penalty.
“And a shielded detonator with a dedicated frequency. So a kid playing with a drone wouldn’t set it off prematurely.”
They both looked at her, clearly wondering how she knew this. She might have told them it was because she had made one or two IEDs herself.
“We’ll look for the parts,” the smaller one said.
“You were lucky, Ms. Nilsson.”
No, luck had nothing to do with it. Vigilance did. One of her security habits was to do just what Colter had observed of her: looking not only for potential shooters but for potentially threatening objects. And so when she was approaching the SUV to head back to the office, she noticed something present that had not been there when she left the vehicle: an eighteen-inch length of terra-cotta drainpipe sitting against the curb by the driver’s side of the Range Rover.
The bomber would have seen the transit of her eyes and her body language and understood that she’d spotted it. When she stopped and pulled her phone out of her pocket, he’d decided there was nothing to do but to detonate it, hoping she was close enough that some of the projectiles would hit.
None did.
As she summoned police she’d done a fast search of the area, keeping her hand on her weapon. He would have to have been nearby. But she’d spotted no one fleeing.
An FPD detective joined her and the bomb squad officers. He was a large man with a notable sunburn that could only have come from a recent beach vacation. He verified that she was unhurt, then his eyes slowly scanned the site. She told him about one possible actor: someone connected to the Russian who wanted the S.I.T. trigger. There was also the possibility that the fanatics from her former life had found her. But this she would share only with her Army handler. She didn’t want to take down her cover just yet.
He jotted down her narrative. Then she showed him where she’d searched for the bomber — the likely places where he’d waited for her. The detective then sent two patrol officers, all the FPD could muster, to continue the canvass.
She glanced at the Range Rover. A dozen pieces of the wicked shrapnel had pierced the door of the vehicle. She would have died if she hadn’t noticed the device.
Crosshairs...
“Crime Scene’ll need it for a while,” the detective said.
“Understood.”
She couldn’t drive it off anyway. Only one tire remained inflated. She would arrange for a rental.
She’d call Shaw too and let him know.
First, though, she needed something else. She told the detective and the bomb squad men, “I want an expedited chemical analysis of the explosive.”
They regarded one another, the problem being she was, after all, civilian. There’d be rules.
She broke the silence with: “I was almost blown up.”
The bomb people deferred to the senior officer. The detective said, “All respect, what good’s that going to do you?”
Nilsson fixed him with a cool look. “Because once I know the percentage of cyclotrimethylenetrinitramine in the explosive, I’ll know where it was made.”
Russia or the Middle East.
He blinked and glanced at the taller of the bomb squad men, who offered a she’s-right nod. A bit of a smile too.
“Give me your email and I’ll make sure you get it.”
“ASAP.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“Like, what is it exactly you do, Mr. Shaw?”
“People post rewards. You’ve seen them.”
A nod. “For missing kids and things.”
“And the police post them for criminals they can’t find. Escaped prisoners. I see an announcement and I try to find who’s missing.”
“And you’re a bodyguard too?”
“Sometimes.”
“You know how to fight?”
“A few things.”
“Could you teach me? Like karate?”
“I don’t do that. It takes a lot of time to master martial arts. Too much. I’m hardly ever in a fight and when I am it’s a type of wrestling. Called grappling.”
“I got sent to detention for fighting.”
“What happened?”
“This girl, she was trash-talking to a trans friend of mine. And I’m like, ‘Bitch, back off.’ And she got in my face and it just happened. I was so frigging mad I was screaming and we were fighting and everything. Kicking, rolling around. She was bigger than me.” A shrug. “I guess she won. But she lost some hair. Got a bloody nose. I told the safety officer what she said about my friend. And he was like he didn’t care. And the principal said I should’ve told the sensitivity counsellor about it, and the school could’ve handled it.” She scoffed. “Sensitivity counsellor. Bullshit.”
For homeschooled Colter Shaw, this was a staff position new to him.
He said, “Some advice?”
She frowned. “One of your father’s rules: Never fight somebody who weighs fifty pounds more than you?”
Shaw smiled. “ ‘Never engage unless you have to.’ ”
“ ‘Engage’?”
“Engage your enemy. Fight. You weren’t going to change... What was her name?”
“Brittany.”
“You weren’t going to change Brittany’s mind. She was a bigot. What was the point?”
“She was a bitch was the point.”
“Fighting won’t make her less of a bitch.”
Hannah thought for a minute. “Okay, what was the point? It felt good.”
“Fighting’s not about feeling good. Take that out of the equation. Let’s say you’ve got to engage. Brittany was going to hurt your friend, bad. You have to stop it. Then remember the next rule: ‘If you have to engage, never fight from emotion.’ ”
“What’s that mean?”
“You’re not happy, sad, scared... definitely not mad. Distorts your tactical decisions.”
Hannah was absorbing every word.
Shaw asked, “Your fight? How long did it last?”
“Forever.” Hannah looked at the lake as a duck came in for a landing. Ungainly on land, but how elegant in air and on water. “I guess really? Five minutes. I don’t know.”
“It should’ve been over in twenty seconds. Her on the ground, breath knocked out of her. You without a scratch.”
“Dope... How?”
“You move fast. Surprise. A feint.”
“Fainting?”
“No.” He spelled the word. “A fake move. As if you’re going to hit her. She gets ready to block it but you drop to a crouch, wrap your arms around her thigh and just stand up. Legs are a lot stronger than arms. She goes down on her back, breath knocked out of her. You put an elbow in her solar plexus.” He pointed it out on his own torso. “Elbow. Not a knee. That could kill.”
“Oh, cool! Show me. Pretend I’m Brittany!” The girl turned and went into a fighting position.
Shaw gave a laugh and kept on walking. Hannah caught up.
He said, “The next alarm. The lake.”
“Fifty-nine, ninety-nine on sale.”
“What?”
“The Walmart boat. How come your father’s rules are always, like, ‘Never do this, never do that’?”
“He thought it made more of an impression. My brother called him the King of Never.”
They came to the shoreline.
“So, what’s the alarm?”
He told her, “We run fishing line through the grass about eight inches off the ground along the back of the property. Then we balance a box of kitchen pans on a plank or branch and tie the line to it. They trip the wire, the box falls and we hear.”
“Can I do it?”
He handed her the spool of forty-pound-test he’d taken from the house and they walked to the tree he’d indicated.
“Your father taught you all this?”
“Yes.”
“When you were my age?”
“Little younger.”
When he was Hannah’s age, Colter used what his father had taught him and rappelled a hundred feet off the top of Echo Ridge to where the man — his dad — lay, in the hope that he could save him. A futile hope, as it turned out.
“Tie it there.”
She started to but he stopped her. “No, this way.” He tied an anchor hitch, making sure she understood how to bind one. Then they walked along the shoreline, Hannah unspooling as they went.
Hannah looked over the property. “They could still come through the woods.” She was pointing to the dense forest to the right of the cabin as you faced the front.
“No defense is perfect. The point is to hunt time.”
“Hunt time?”
“My father. You know the expression ‘buying time’? He thought that was too mild. He said, ‘Survival is about hunting time — grabbing enough to assess the risk, enough to come up with a plan to defeat it or escape from it, enough to shelter in place until help arrives.’ ”
He looked at the woods. “They could come that way. But I put it at thirty percent. It’d mean circling around the property and hiking through forest. It’s almost a thousand yards. And it’d take a whole day for us to rig a line there. Too far.”
“You always do that, Mr. Shaw? Make percentages?”
“I do.”
“How come?”
“My father, again. You look at every possibility and assign a percentage likelihood of success. What’s the percentage of surviving a blizzard by sheltering in place versus hiking out? What’s the percentage I can free-climb this rock face when there’re no cracks to pound in a safety line piton?”
“You rock climb?”
“A hobby.”
“No way! We have a climbing wall at school.” She lifted the fishing line away from a sapling it had become stuck on. After a moment she said, “You could do percentages with boyfriends too, right?”
Shaw frowned.
She continued, “Like, there’s this guy you like, but he’s only like ten percent into you. You should forget it and look for a ninety percent.”
“Is there somebody you know who’s coming in at ten?”
“I don’t know. Maybe this guy Kyle. He’s a boarder.”
“Snow?”
“No. Well, I don’t know. Maybe. I mean skateboarder. Mom’s all, ‘Tell me about him, what do his parents do, maybe when you’re at the mall hanging with him, I can come by...’ Jesus.” She tugged at her ponytail. “It’s like we ignore the ninety percent ones and go for the ten percent, even if it’s a bad friggin’ idea.”
Amen to that.
They continued along the shoreline. Shaw broke the silence. “Something you should read. I think you’d like it.”
“Yeah?”
“An essay. Self-Reliance. Ralph Waldo Emerson.”
“Who was he?”
“Philosopher from the eighteen hundreds. A lecturer, poet, activist. An abolitionist.”
“We studied that. Antislavery. What’s the book about?”
“It’s about being yourself, a nonconformist, not relying on anyone else, or anything else. Not being swayed by other people’s opinions unless you respect them. My father gave me a copy. Think you’d like it.”
“Can I download it?”
“Probably. But it’s better to have a printed copy.”
Hannah pulled down a stand of tall milkweed and continued stringing the alarm line.
“That’s good,” he told her.
She nodded but appeared distracted.
“Mr. Shaw... can I ask a question?”
A glance her way. Hannah’s eyes were wide and there was something conspiratorial about her smile. “Will you teach me how to shoot?”
“Dad got me a BB gun when I was twelve. I was good!” She nodded toward his waistband. “Your father’s rules — never be without a weapon, right?”
“Don’t need one. You’re with me.”
“But I don’t have anything.”
“Guns take lots of training.”
“I know how they work. I’ve seen all the Mission: Impossibles... Just kidding! You can train me.”
“Your mother doesn’t like guns.”
“I’m here because of my mother.” Hannah said this in an even voice that once again was laced with an adult edge.
Shaw debated, then drew the revolver from his waistband. It was an elegant weapon, the six-inch barrel and the receiver richly blued, the grip splendid mahogany.
The girl stared.
He pressed the catch and swung out the cylinder. He emptied the six blunt .357 rounds into his palm and pocketed them.
Closing the cylinder with a sharp click, he ignored her outstretched hand, which she lowered.
“Colter, listen to me.”
“Okay, Ash.”
The children are encouraged to call their parents by their given names. This draws curious looks from friends and family but is in keeping with the philosophy of self-reliance encouraged by Ashton and Mary Dove.
Colter is ten years old. This is a milestone year, he will later learn. It is the firearms age in the Shaw family. He and his father are alone, standing behind the cabin in the Compound.
“This is a revolver because... the cylinder revolves.” The wiry man with a bushy beard and wild hair spins it with a satisfying series of clicks. “It’s also called a wheel gun.”
“All right.”
Ashton opens the cylinder and displays the empty chambers.
“Is the gun loaded?”
“No, sir.”
“Yes, it is.”
The boy looks from the cylinder, which is as empty as empty can be, to his father’s stern face.
“Never assume a weapon is unloaded. Even if you see it with your two eyes, then close it up yourself, it’s still loaded. You understand?”
Not exactly, but: “Yessir.”
“What’s the rule?”
“Never assume a weapon is unloaded.”
Colter wants to take the gun and start pulling the trigger and shooting. He will learn he is a long way off from that.
“There is nothing on earth more serious than a firearm. It is not a toy, it is not a tool, it is not a curiosity. It is in a category all its own. A gun exists for one purpose only. To take a life.”
The boy nods.
“Now. You never draw it unless you intend to use it. Repeat that.”
Colter is mesmerized by the solemnity of the moment. He does as told.
“Never point it anywhere but at your target or a safe place, and that’s down, never in the air. Some people disagree but a bullet in the ground is a bullet in the ground. One in the air could hit a schoolyard.”
“Target or down.”
“Never fire it unless you have a clear target. You never fire blind.”
More repetitions from the concentrating boy.
“You never shoot to wound. You shoot to kill. You shoot to take another life. So you don’t draw your weapon unless you’re prepared to do that. And, therefore, you never use a gun unless there is no other option for your survival. Repeat that.”
“You never shoot to wound. You—”
“—shoot to kill,” Hannah said. “And, therefore, you never use a gun unless there is no other option for your survival.”
“Good. Again. All the rules.”
She repeated everything. Word perfect.
And held his eyes, never looking away.
He pointed the muzzle toward the ground and pulled the trigger several times. “This’s double action.”
She was listening attentively, frowning, studying.
“The hammer’s down. You pull the trigger. Draws the hammer back and when it’s all the way back it releases and hits the cartridge.” He did this again. “It takes more effort that way and because of that it’s less accurate.”
She’d been watching. “Yeah, the end moves around.”
“The end. The muzzle. So if you can, you fire single action. You pull the hammer back until it clicks. That’s called cocking. Then when you pull the trigger the muzzle doesn’t move so much.”
He illustrated this too.
“I want to try it.”
He didn’t belabor the rules.
Never sell your students short...
He handed her the gun.
“It’s heavy.”
“Forty-two ounces.”
Math prodigy Hannah came back with “Two pounds, ten ounces.”
“Dry fire it.”
“Dry fire. Oh, without bullets. Even though it is loaded.”
“Go ahead.”
She aimed at the lake.
“Why don’t you want to shoot there?” he asked.
She considered this. “Because the bullets could bounce off the water?”
“Ricochet. Down, a safe place.”
Hannah targeted where he’d indicated.
“Double action first.”
She frowned in concentration, aimed and tugged the trigger.
Click.
She smiled.
He didn’t. “Too fast. You jerked. You would’ve missed. Squeeze. Slow.”
“But what if somebody’s attacking you?”
“Even slower then.”
She focused on the earthly target. This time, even double action, the muzzle was steadier.
Again.
“Good.”
“I want to try single action.”
“Go ahead.”
She cocked the gun with her thumb, mimicking Shaw. Aiming, then slowly pulling the trigger. The muzzle was solid on target. And the gun itself didn’t waver. She was strong. It’s not easy to hold a gun that size motionless for very long.
He asked, “You have a sport?”
“Volleyball.”
So, arm strength.
Keeping the muzzle down, she looked up into Shaw’s eyes and whispered, “I want to shoot a bullet.”
His momentary debate ended with a harsh voice behind them. “Absolutely not.”
Allison Parker was walking up fast. “Give that back to him.”
“Mom...”
“Now.”
A defiant sigh. Hannah handed the weapon to Shaw, keeping the muzzle pointed down. He reloaded the Colt and slipped it into his waistband. He told Hannah, “Get a box for the pans and lids. Put it on the top of that.” He pointed to a gardening shed on the side of the house near where the camper was parked. “Tie the line to it. Make sure it’s taut.”
“All right.” The girl was moody. She walked into the cabin.
“Basic safety instruction,” Shaw said. “There’re a lot of guns in this country—”
“Too damn many.”
“—and she’ll probably come across one in her life.”
“No guns,” Parker said emphatically. “I will not expose my daughter to firearms. She’s a child.”
Shaw didn’t mention the age he’d been when his first lesson occurred.
Icily she said, “And I’d appreciate it if you’d keep them out of sight when she’s around.”
“If I can.”
She stared at the lake for a moment, as that subject was put to rest.
But then it was time for another to surface.
Colter Shaw said to Parker, “Tell me.”
“What?”
“I need to know.”
Parker looked at him briefly, then back to the lake. “What do you mean?”
“I need to know why. The truth about what’s going on. I’ve heard a couple of reasons why he’s coming for you. But I haven’t heard anything from you. If we’re going to control this, keep you and your daughter safe, I need to know why.”
Another duck glided over the mirrored surface and touched down, sending a V of ripples toward the distant shores. They traveled far.
Allison Parker stared at the idyllic image for a moment. She was absolutely frozen in place. Then: “Let’s go inside.”
“Why are you doing this to me...?
She and this curious man, this adventurer, were in the living room of the cabin. The scent was of must and some pungent cleanser.
Allison Parker found herself touching her cheek yet again. As for the ridge from the break, her doctor was wrong. It was as prominent and sharp as a knife blade.
Was she really going to tell this man, a stranger, the truth?
He’d clearly already guessed something. He was tough and blunt but those qualities weren’t inconsistent with smart and perceptive.
But there was something beyond just his likely familiarity of domestic battling from his reward business that encouraged her to go ahead. It was the quality of his listening. When she spoke, or Hannah spoke, or Frank Villaine spoke, Colter listened. He wasn’t waiting for a moment to jump in with a comment about himself or offer unnecessary advice. The speaker was the center of his universe.
Now he waited, leaning back against the fireplace and watching Hannah dig in the kitchen for the cooking implements that would be their ADT alarm.
Speaking softly, Parker said, “Jon and I were good for years. Oh, how I loved him. He was smart. He was funny. Hard to believe now, but he was. He never smiled much but he’d get off some hilarious one-liners. A good father. He helped Hannah with her schoolwork. He used most of his vacation time for parental leave with her, when I had to work.
“Ah, but then the drinking. When we met, were first married, he didn’t drink much, but when he had more than one or two, he went into a different place. There were two of him. And the drinking Jon would get mad. Not just your pissed-off mad. It was in a different dimension.”
The pale seahorse, with its smile or sneer or sensuous gaze, rose into her thoughts.
Allison Parker didn’t bother to tell herself: Do. Not. Think. About. It.
Shaw said, “Jekyll and Hyde?”
A nod. “It came from his father. Being emotionally changed by liquor, I mean. A therapist told me about that. Mood can be passed down. But his dad, he got laid off from a factory on Manufacturers Row and started drinking in earnest. Drank himself to sleep almost every night until the end. But when he drank he mellowed out. Without the booze Harold was a prick, short-tempered, violent. Jon told me the family used to get him drunk so he’d stop insulting people and embarrassing them, whipping Jon and hitting his wife. Jon got the gene in reverse, I guess you could say.”
The coming narrative was as complicated as it was difficult to speak of, but she’d recited it to herself so often, like a journeyman Shakespearean actor, she knew the tale cold. “About three years ago, he was in the field with his partner. He was working a big corruption case. He gets a call that there’ve been shots fired in a house a block from them. This father’s gone on meth and threatening his family and shooting up the place. Jon and Danny were the only ones around. They suit up with body armor and go in.”
She found her throat thick. She could picture the incident clearly, as if she herself had been there.
“The minute they walk in, the father shot Jon’s partner in the head, then killed his own daughter. Danny wasn’t dead and the father kept shooting. Jon knelt in front of Danny, you know, like a human shield, protecting him. He took four or five shots in the chest — they hit the plate, broke ribs, but didn’t get through. One was low. Hit his leg. Jon killed the father and saved the rest of the family.”
Shaw asked, “And Danny?”
“He lived. Retired, of course. And Jon recovered well enough. The wound healed but there was a lot of pain. He tried everything. TENS, codeine, Tylenol. Nothing worked, so they went to Oxy. Finally, it helped. But... Well, you get what happened next.”
“Addicted?”
“Finally he got off the pills. And the pain came back, big-time. Stayed clear of the drugs. But he found a substitute.”
“The drinking.”
She lowered her head. Repeated in a whisper, “The drinking. The word should come with a capital ‘D’... I suppose it numbs pain, if you drink enough. But it had that other effect on him. Anger, bullying, sarcasm, physical fights.”
“Programs?”
“They worked for a while. Then they didn’t. He had good sponsors, but he still slipped. I went to Al-Anon, Hannah tried Alateen. Pointless. He couldn’t, or wouldn’t, change. I had the police out a dozen times, but he always seemed to sober up just enough to convince them I was exaggerating.”
Shaw said, “And they cut him slack. He was the cop who’d saved his partner.”
A sad smile. “The Hero of Beacon Hill, they called him — the neighborhood where it happened. I...”
Control it, she told herself. And kept the tears away, though her voice clutched and she had to start her sentence again. “I thought about leaving him. Like my mother left my father. He was a serial philanderer. I made plans to get away but then he’d come around. He’d take Hannah to her events, he’d bring us presents. It was all back to normal — until out came the bottle. And it was coming out more and more.”
Inhale, exhale...
“Then, November, last year, Jon was helping Hannah with a project for class. They were building something, soldering, bolting it together. Having a great time. Then, all of a sudden, like a switch got flipped, he stands up. I know he’s going out. And I know what that means. I tried to stop him. Begging.”
She could picture it so clearly. Her hand on his denim shirt, gripping the cloth. But he just kept going, into the snow.
“When he comes back, he stinks of whisky, he can hardly walk. And then, ten minutes later I’m on the ground, a broken cheekbone, blood everywhere.” Parker looked out the window and took in her daughter’s earnest job of setting up their security system. “The police couldn’t let that one go. Attempted murder, a firearm, me in the hospital. They had to arrest him. And I pressed charges. His lawyer and the prosecutor cut a plea deal. They dropped the attempted murder and gave him thirty-six months.”
She scoffed. “Except apparently in his case that meant ten months.” She lifted her hands, a gesture that silently repeated the mantra “Hero Cop.”
And the man who listened well listened now. He nodded, his face suggesting he was taking it all in. But then he looked her over closely and said, “Aren’t there a few gaps you want to fill in?”
Allison Parker stared briefly, then could only laugh.
She thought: As a matter of fact...
But the coming narrative was interrupted at that moment by a loud repeating blaring from the field in front of the house. Frowning, Hannah walked inside quickly from the back porch, and the three of them looked up the drive.
“It’s Frank,” Parker said.
Villaine’s silver Mercedes SUV rocked slowly up the driveway.
They walked outside to greet him.
The vehicle pulled to a stop about fifteen feet away.
The man who stepped out of the vehicle, though, was not Frank Villaine, but a hulk of a creature in a black suit and tie. His unsmiling face was ruddy with a rash. He leveled a pistol at the trio. He uttered an odd word. Parker wasn’t certain, but it sounded like “Dawn-doo...”
His black eyes scanned them all quickly, then settled on Colter Shaw. The faintest of smiles, then he shook his head.
Shaw didn’t bother to judge sites of cover and shooting preference-point angles and distance. At the smallest defensive movement, one — or all — of them would die.
He was just wondering about the second man from the motel when he heard behind him, “Hey, there. Be smart, be smart.”
The man in the tan jacket had dirty blond hair, severely parted at the side and slicked back. He too held a Glock.
Shaw looked at Hannah’s face, less scared than defiant.
The thirty percent chance had come to pass.
It happens. Thirty is not zero.
Parker raged, “Where’s Frank? What’d you do to him?”
Jacket said, “Shh there, pretty lady.”
“No,” Hannah whispered, understanding Villaine’s fate. “No! You asshole!”
Jacket smiled.
People give up information eventually. Everyone does. Pain is one of the most powerful forces on earth. Shaw hoped Frank gave up the address fast, and the Twins ended his agony: both the physical pain, and the psychic, from betraying them.
Toward the front of the property the alarm in Parker’s car shut itself off.
Eyeing Shaw, Suit said, “I know you are of a certain sort. That is clearly on the table. And you have a weapon.”
How did they know that? Both of his guns were hidden from sight. Then Shaw remembered that Merritt had seen him at Parker’s house and must’ve noticed the Glock before he slipped into the garage and escaped. He would have told the Twins about it.
Suit continued, “You do this for a living, I have no doubt. But here.” He aimed the muzzle at Hannah’s neck. The girl gasped and Parker started forward. She stopped when Suit moved the weapon closer.
Shaw said calmly, “I’m taking you seriously. Just move your aim aside.”
The men eyed each other for a moment, then Suit eased the gun to the side. He nodded to Tan Jacket, who handed his pistol over to his partner and stepped forward. Pulling on blue gloves, he frisked Shaw expertly, and relieved him of the Glock, the extra mags, the Colt and the phone. He unloaded the weapons and tossed the ammo into the lake. The guns and phone, he dropped into a fire pit filled with ashes and half-burned logs.
He then searched Parker; his hand started slowly down her spine. Fury on her face, she elbowed his arm back.
Eyes on his partner, Suit said, “Let us just move along here.”
Tan Jacket gave a laugh. He took her phone and Hannah’s from Parker’s pockets. She muttered, “My daughter doesn’t have anything. Don’t touch her.”
Suit nodded.
Tan Jacket shrugged and tossed the two phones into the pit, along with another one, taken from his pocket — probably a burner they had no use for.
And a burner it turned out to be. Tan Jacket had brought with him from the woods — where Shaw could see the white Transit parked — a large red can of gas. He poured a good amount into the pit. With a lighter, he set fire to the contents. Shaw watched his father’s gift, the Colt, burn.
Suit stepped back, keeping the gun in Hannah’s direction. He said to his partner, “The camper.”
Jacket took back his own gun and walked to the Winnebago. He stepped inside.
Hannah was staring at Suit. While her mother was livid, the girl was not. Her face was a mask of calm.
She’d be thinking:
Never fight from emotion.
Shaw would have to watch her. Now was not the time for bold moves.
“Where’s my husband?” Parker asked angrily.
“On his way.”
She said bitterly, “He’s paying you. How much?”
“Just hush... Better for everybody.”
She continued, “He’s poor. Whatever he told you, he’s lying. I have money. I have a lot of money. I’ll pay you more.”
“That hush thing.”
“Mr. Shaw,” Hannah whispered.
He saw her eyes were swiveling slowly from him to Suit. The muzzle of the gun had drooped as he glanced toward the Winnebago.
The girl would be suggesting that they take him together.
Fifteen seconds, on his back.
Shaw shook his head firmly.
Her mother perhaps mistook her calm focused eyes for paralyzing trauma. She walked to Hannah, embraced her, glaring and defying Suit to stop her.
Tan Jacket emerged. He was carrying Shaw’s laptop and a handful of burner phones. These went into the pit, and black smoke, astringent, rose as the plastic burned.
“Now,” Suit said, “you all. Into the camper.”
Hannah shot a look toward Shaw once more. He said, “We’ll do what they say.”
Parker, her arm around Hannah’s shoulders, walked to the Winnebago and climbed inside. Shaw looked over the men closely, then he too walked up the stairs and pulled the door shut after him.
Moll announced, “I do not like the looks of that man. Worse than I thought.”
“Worse?”
“Dangerous is what I mean. I did not like his eyeballing us. That was not comforting.”
Desmond grunted. Moll guessed this meant he agreed. His flute tunes were more expressive than what came out of his mouth.
Moll was looking over the lake. “Wonder what they catch here.” Avid outdoorsman though he was, Moll didn’t fish. Hooking something was different from shooting it.
“Bass.”
“You know that from looking at the water?”
Desmond said, “No. But anybody asks what do you catch in this lake or that lake, just say ‘bass.’ Who’s to know different?” He’d replaced his gun and took out the flute. Blew a note, then another. Lowered it away from his mouth. “That girl. She was downright hostile. And she thinks more of herself than she is.”
Moll’s eyes went to the camper. He said slowly, “That alarm thing he rigged?” Nodding toward the Kia half hidden in the bushes. “If we’d rolled up the Transit, he would have got a half-dozen rounds off with that Dirty Harry gun of his. And he shoots tight groups, I do not doubt.”
Desmond nodded.
Moll continued, “He might be in there right now making a gun out of a pipe and shotgun shell hidden somewhere.”
“Don’t disagree. I’m not in this to get blasted like a wild boar.”
“Do you know what I am thinking?”
“Hm...?”
“Not to wait for Merritt. Is there any downside to not waiting?”
Desmond’s face suggested he was pondering.
Moll answered his own question. “Do not see much of one.”
“Granted that. And I am more than a little choked that this has turned into ten times what it was supposed to be. So?”
Moll looked to the fire pit.
His partner’s eyes grew rounder. Hungrier. “Hell, we’re going to burn everything up, let me have at her.”
“And get past Motorcycle Man? I’ll pay for your next two visits to the truck stop.”
Desmond said, “Three.”
Moll sighed. Were they really negotiating over this? “Okay.”
Desmond lugged the gas can to the Winnebago and poured the contents on the ground under the engine compartment. The two had burned vehicles before and learned that flames could not breach the tank, but would quickly melt fuel lines under the motor, and fuel would gush out, spurring the fire on. Even diesel would go if the temperature was high enough.
When he finished, he turned to Moll. “Might be more, you know, humane to shoot. We could leave the door open. Get ’em as they come out.”
Moll shook his head. “Motorcycle comes out, with a bow and arrow and pipe bomb. No, they stay nice and tight inside. You know how it goes, a place small as that? The fumes will knock them out before the fire gets them. Be like going to sleep.”
Desmond noted a gardening shed. He opened it up and extracted a flat-head shovel. He carried it to the Winnebago and wedged the tool between the ground and the door latch. He tested it; the door wouldn’t open.
Desmond collected a broom from the shed and lit the bristles from the dwindling fire-pit flames. He carefully touched the burning end to the fuel.
With a muted hush, a bed of blue and orange flame rolled under the camper.
Desmond danced back, and Moll smiled at the sight.
The men sat down on chairs on the porch — like they were buddies sipping whisky and telling tall tales after a day in the field taking their quota of bobwhites or pheasant. They watched the relentless progress of the flames, the torrent of black smoke.
A few minutes later the screams began.
Desmond looked at his partner with a raised eyebrow and muttered, “Fumes my ass.”
Moll stood still, listening to the cries. He looked at the cabin. “Probably some things in there we should take care of. Computers. More phones.”
“Probably.”
The men walked inside. Moll shut the door behind them. He wondered if that would mute the shrieks of agony.
It didn’t.
Colter Shaw said to Hannah Merritt, “You scream like a pro. You ever do any acting?”
The girl shrugged. “Like, not really. Middle school I was in Pippin.”
She seemed unfazed by what had just happened. Unlike her mother, who was stunned.
The three were lying on the ground fifty feet inside the thirty percent forest. They’d made their way here after Shaw had popped the escape hatch in the floor of the camper under the bed. He’d cut and installed it himself and had had the suspension of the Winnebago raised to allow for such an exit.
When the pair had finished dousing the ground under the camper with gasoline, he’d raised the hinged bed and pulled open the hatch. “We’ll wait for a few minutes. The more smoke the better. When you’re out, crawl to the left. Stay low. They’ll be expecting us to try to climb out a window. And I want somebody to scream.”
Which Hannah had, at an ear-piercing volume.
Parker tried too, but it came out a squawk. Shaw had actually smiled. Partly to calm them, partly because of the sound.
When flames had been visible in the front window and smoke had breached the interior, Shaw decided that whatever cover there was would have to be enough. “Go,” he whispered.
Shaw went last in case one of them panicked and froze. Hannah first. Then Parker. Once outside, they had crawled through the grass until they were well into the woods, where they now lay.
He saw the Transit, not far away — parked on a logging trail Shaw hadn’t known about. Could he use the van in any way? Twenty percent yes, eighty percent he’d be spotted. Not worth it.
Parker now whispered, “They... They were trying to burn us to death. Why?”
Shaw had no answer to that. The Twins had the opportunity to shoot the three of them, which would at least be merciful. Merritt probably hadn’t wished that level of excruciating pain on them, though he couldn’t be sure. He had undoubtedly tortured Parker’s lawyer to find out where they were headed before he killed the man. And he would have known about the torture of Frank Villaine.
“It was your home,” Hannah said, looking at his stoic face. “It’s gone.”
True. But the vehicle was now a thing of the past.
Never let sentiment affect your decisions...
Parker asked, “We wait for the fire department? We can’t call, but somebody probably saw the smoke.”
Hannah said, “They might not come. Remember we saw those farmers burning the fields.”
Shaw: “And when they don’t find our bodies, those two’ll start searching. We leave.” He glanced up a path that led through the dense green and brown and gray woods, crowned by dark oaks and dotted with pine, brilliant green in the places were the sun lay upon them.
Thinking of what the Marshall County deputy, Kristi Donahue, had told him about this part of the state, he asked, “How far is Millton?”
Parker considered. “Ten miles, I’d guess. North. Whichever way that is.”
Shaw pointed. “We’ll head there. Get to a phone. I think we can trust those police. They won’t have any connection to Ferrington PD. I have a friend, former FBI. I’ll call him too.”
Parker said, “The highway we were on? Route Eighty-four? It leads right there. We can follow that. Maybe we could get a ride. At least we can use somebody’s phone.”
It was Hannah who said what Shaw was thinking: “I think we have to stay in the woods. They’ll expect us to hitch.” She sighed and her lips were tight as she said, “And when he gets here they’ll have two cars to search for us.”
The singular third-person pronoun was uttered with a punch of disgust. Jon Merritt was no longer “Dad” to her.
No one was answering.
Sonja Nilsson — the former first lieutenant and decorated sniper born Beatrice Anne Gould — was walking from her rental car to Ferrington police headquarters on Abbott Street.
Colter Shaw wasn’t answering. And Frank Villaine wasn’t answering. Allison Parker had sent one email to her mother but was no longer responding to Ruth’s, Marty’s or Nilsson’s own.
The woman was so damn paranoid that she wouldn’t even tell her mother where she was.
At the front desk, Nilsson asked for Dunfry Kemp, and was told he was presently unavailable.
In her best military voice she said, “If you could tell him I’m head of security at Harmon Energy.”
Four minutes later she was being ushered into one of the most cluttered offices she’d ever seen. The huge officer — a bodybuilder, maybe — was more than a little rumpled himself. How long without sleep? She bet twenty, twenty-two hours. She had much experience with the condition herself and could assess it in others.
“Detective. Sonja Nilsson.”
“Wait. You’re the lady who was almost blown up.”
She had called the sunburned detective from the scene of the blast about the forensic analysis of the explosives. He’d reported they weren’t ready yet. But he’d send them when they were. He absolutely would.
ASAP...
“I’m not here about that. You’ve been working with Colter Shaw on the Allison Parker disappearance.”
“Yes, that’s right. We have been. Sure have.” His eyes went to a stack of folders, as if asking, where did those come from?
“Mr. Shaw’s found her.”
Relief edged into his face. “So all is good.”
“No, not good,” she said. “They’ve vanished again. They were in Marshall County but went north. The last we knew they were right near the border, so we think they’re in Everett now. I want to get some deputies involved, looking for them. Will you help me with that?”
Never say: I hope you can help. Never ask: Can you help? Always hit them with a direct question: Will you? No way to wiggle out. Either agree or refuse.
She could have phoned Kemp, of course, but Sonja Nilsson had learned an in-person visit by a six-foot blonde, built like the soldier that she’d been, fixing the subject with her piercing green eyes, usually got better results.
“Fact is... I’m pretty busy here.”
She just looked at him. This technique worked too.
Kemp’s expression finally limped to: I guess. He picked up the phone. He wasn’t disgruntled, she sensed, he wasn’t irritated or resentful. He was just damn tired.
Welcome to the club.
Was it good for you?
Thinking of Colter Shaw.
Thinking of the kiss.
She forced herself to put that memory aside. Not easy.
As he was bounced around, telephonically, from one office of the Everett County Sheriff’s Department to another, Nilsson looked around the office. How many cases was he juggling? Dozens, at least. She noted a memo about the Street Cleaner, a briefing from last year. Was the poor detective on that one too? After all this time, it fell into the category of cold case, the hardest to solve.
The detective turned back to her, hand over the mouthpiece of the landline. “I’ve got a Corporal Shepherd on the line.”
She held her hand out and took the phone. Nilsson identified herself and explained briefly about the situation: A former cop had been released from prison after a domestic battery and was pursuing his wife. Two men were helping him. There’s already one homicide. The wife and daughter and a couple of others with them have disappeared. “And we’re dark on coms.”
“Ah. I see.”
She’d used the military expression, thinking he might be a vet himself; many sheriff’s deputies were. His reaction suggested this was the case, and therefore more inclined to help her.
“The latest is they probably crossed into your county in the last few hours. Probably on Fifty-five or Eighty-four, maybe a smaller road. Any cameras up that way?”
“None of ours. Maybe a town or two have one for speeding. We’re not linked into that. Let me ask, Miss Nilsson, what’s Ferrington PD doing, or Trevor County? Or Marshall?”
“You know how it is, fugitives out of their jurisdiction. Not that motivated. And they’re slammed to start. Will you get it out and free up a car to search?”
“Give me the particulars.”
“You’re looking for a Winnebago camper, beige and brown. A silver Mercedes SUV and a gold Kia.” She gave him the tags for the first two. She had none for Allison’s rental. “The suspects’re in a white Ford Transit. No known tag number. And they’re armed.”
“This’s a kettle of fish,” he said, sighing. “I’ll send it out on the wire. Now, as for a cruiser, I can assign one, but we’re a big county. Can you narrow it down?”
“Hold on.”
There was a map of this quadrant of the state on Kemp’s wall, partially obscured by folders. To the detective she said, “I’m moving these.” She gave him the phone and then removed the folders and set them on the floor.
Nilsson took the handset back. “I’m looking at a map. You have one?”
Shepherd chuckled. “I live here, miss. Forty-six years.”
She scanned the map. From Frank Villaine’s there were two towns they might go to, northwest to Millton, or due east to Stanton.
She mentioned these options to the deputy.
“Let me ponder.”
Nilsson studied the map. The first alternative, the route to Millton, would take them through a cluster of lakes. The bodies of water had colorful names: Crimson Rock, Snowshoe, Timberwolf, Halfmoon.
This put her in mind of her conversation with Colter about fishing.
Then the corporal was back on the line. He said, “Okay, what I’d do, I was them, I’d stick the cars in a garage and park the Winnebago in a big RV campsite. Needle in a haystack. And there’s only one place they could do both of those: Stanton. I can have a cruiser there in fifteen minutes.”
“I’ll rely on your expertise, Corporal. Appreciate the help.”
“Dawndue...”
Thinking of the first time the singsong mantra had wormed itself into his mind.
The melodious birdcall came from when Moll was sighting down the barrel of a Colt. The man, on his knees, looking back at Moll, crying, “Don’t do it, please! Don’t do it! Don’t do it. Don’t do—”
Dawndue...
That’d been a happy job, a good one, a fast one. A pull of the trigger and he had gotten $10K in his pocket and an infectious expression to carry about for the rest of his days.
This job was not like that one. Not at all.
This “Dawndue” was the obscenity version.
Moll rose on his thick haunches from where he’d been looking down at the grass, near the rear of the smoldering Winnebago. The men had found two computers in the non-soundproofed cabin and stepped outside to add them to the fire pit. Then Moll had squinted and walked to where he now stood.
The bent grass.
The scuffed dirt.
He scanned the woods and, seeing nothing, turned to the cabin. “Problem.”
“What?”
“They got away.”
Desmond scoffed. “Not likely that.” He rose and jumped off the deck, walked to the back of the smoldering ruins of the camper, regarding the tamped down grass, the marks in the dirt. “We heard screaming.”
“Because somebody screamed.”
“You let me have at mom, we wouldn’t be in this situation.”
“Just do not,” Moll snapped. He squinted through the smoke at what seemed to be a trapdoor in the bottom of the camper. Grimaced.
Desmond poked at the ash with a stick. “He’s not going to be happy.”
“No, he is not.” Moll stared at the dense woods. “You were them, where would you go?”
Desmond considered this. “Only one place. Millton. Ten miles, little less.”
“It’s Everett County. No friendlies in the sheriff’s office.” Moll looked around, squinting through the smoke. “What did we leave behind that could be a problem?”
Desmond nodded toward the forest, where he’d hidden the Transit. “Tread marks from the Ford.”
Moll scoffed. “Here? I do not think cops here even know what fingerprints are. Tread marks are in a different dimension to them.” He gazed at the daunting woods once again. Where are you, Motorcycle Man? He felt a wave of anger, which seemed to make his skin itch even more. He didn’t bother to fish out the spray. He was tired of both the sensation and trying to ease it.
“I’ll take care of the Merc.”
Desmond poured the remaining gas under Frank Villaine’s SUV and touched it off. He tossed the can in after. A tiny flame became a major flame. Then a torrent of flame that swept away all trace of the two men. “What about the Kia?”
“We didn’t touch it. And we wore gloves in the cabin. Anyway, no time now.”
They walked through a stand of trees to the path where Desmond had parked the white Ford van. They climbed in, Moll behind the wheel. In ten minutes they were cruising slowly along Route 84, the road that led to Millton.
“They won’t be hitching,” Desmond said.
“No. But they will stay close to the highway. Use it to guide them. Not like they have their GPS anymore.”
Moll hit the hazards and he drove slowly northwest, half on the shoulder when he could. Both men were scanning, Moll left, Desmond right, for any clue that gave away their prey. They knew what to look for. They’d done this before.
This is called a loaded march,” Ashton Shaw is saying to his three children. “Or a forced march. As in you’d rather be doing something else.” He chuckles and continues to stride along a mountainside path on the outskirts of the Compound.
Colter, Dorion and Russell are behind him, in that order.
On their backs are packs weighing thirty pounds or so. He had tried to give Dorion a lighter one, but she wouldn’t hear of it.
Their passage is fast, and the children are keeping up, though breathing hard. Their father is not. Ashton Shaw, an academic by training and in practice, had to be the most fit professor on earth.
Over his shoulder he calls, “Roman soldiers learned loaded marches before they ever touched a weapon. To become a legionnaire they had to hike twenty miles in five hours, with a forty-five-pound pack, and carrying a sudis. Who knows what a sudis is?”
Colter reads more than his siblings and he particularly likes history. “A sharpened stake they used to build nighttime defenses with.”
“Good,” Ashton says. Russell seems irritated his younger brother could answer.
“Hey, I know!” Dorion calls enthusiastically. “Let’s make some sudis and we can carry them like the Romans!”
Both Colter and Russell tell her to be quiet.
Shaw, Parker and her daughter were on their own forced march, in the woods north of the cabin on Timberwolf Lake. They were burdened by no packs but they were plenty challenged: the uphill terrain was dense with thick briars and brush, roots, rocks and trees — standing and fallen. The survivalist, the swimmer and the volleyball player were, however, making good progress.
The scorched skeleton of the Winnebago was now several miles behind them. Hannah was on point, a spot she’d seized. There was no reason for her not to be in the lead. Both Shaw and her mother had a good eye on the girl and any potential threats ahead.
They continued their hike in silence. Over them were branches and boughs of oak and pine, yew, beech, box elder and hemlock. Beneath, ground cover of eastern hay-scented fern, aster and ragwort. Moss everywhere. These were old forests. Damp and rainy Middle America rarely saw the purge of cleansing forest fires, and trees grew and grew until the stronger choked the weak.
Coming to a particularly formidable wall of greenery, Colter pointed to the left and they continued onward. Ashton Shaw had taught his children how to navigate by the sun and stars, ever challenging, as the earth had the inconvenient habit of spinning.
Never assume the sun and stars are your only source of nav. Use whatever works...
The words were probably a paraphrase of his father’s, but the point was clear, and today Shaw was not using celestial navigation but dependable Route 84, from which the occasional hiss of cars and of a tractor-trailer’s engine brake guided them north, to the safety of Millton.
They made better time once they moved into a forest that was mostly pine, with little tangled ground cover they had to work their way around.
Hannah said, “I’m thirsty.”
Shaw was too. He knew a dozen rules for finding and drinking water in the wilderness — such as, look for animal tracks around ponds because if it’s safe for other creatures it’s probably safe for you, and never drink from clear ponds because there’s a reason nothing’s living in them — but said, “We’ll wait. Don’t have time to find a safe source.” The day was moderate of temperature and the air humid. There’d be no danger of dehydration before they finished the trek. Thirst was an irritation, not a danger.
Never let discomfort trick you into taking a risk...
And few things were more devastating and dangerous than waterborne illnesses.
After forty minutes, they broke from the trees and found themselves on a riverbank over a wide, slow-moving river. There’d be a bridge nearby but Shaw hoped they could ford; he wanted to avoid any roads the Twins and Merritt might be on.
It didn’t seem that deep. The surface color told Shaw this.
The sound of a clearing throat startled them, and they turned to see, on the other side of a dense growth of brush, a gaunt and sallow-faced young man. He was hunched over, looking at the phone he held in his left hand and frowning in concentration. His right gripped a short spade, with which he’d just dug a small hole in the mossy earth. He wore sweats, a stocking cap not unlike Hannah’s.
He was suddenly aware of the trio and, as he gasped, his eyes first widened, then pinched into a frown.
“Hey,” Shaw said amiably.
No response.
Shaw looked down. “Sorry.”
Now confused.
“Lost a cat or dog? You’re burying it.”
“Uhm. Yeah. That’s right.”
But of course the truth was that what he’d dug was a meth or opioid dead drop. He was screenshotting the GPS coordinates of the location and would later text them to a buyer once the money was received. Shaw had heard that Bitcoin was all the rage for even the most backwoods of transactions.
He guessed it was a family business, given his youth. How many kin were nearby?
Parker frowned. “That’s sad.”
Hannah offered, “Yeah, sorry, dude.” Shaw could see from the tension in the girl’s shoulders she understood exactly what was going on.
Parker said, “Our camper, it burned up. We lost everything. Can we borrow your phone?”
Mistake.
He’d think they were either undercover narcs or, more likely, competitors, trying to get his cell away from him. Shaw’s plan had been to act casual and get close to the kid, then take him down and grab the phone from his hand. Parker had killed their advantage.
No one moved.
The quiet was broken by crow caws, the wind switchbacking through the dry, clicking autumn leaves, a jet’s faint engines, miles aloft.
The boy stirred. Thinking hard.
At least he wasn’t armed, or he would’ve drawn.
Another moment passed.
Then, fast, he lifted the device to his ear, commanding Siri or whoever the goddess of his phone was to “Call Dad!”
Hell...
Shaw charged forward. The boy was shouting, “It’s Bee. I’m at the place. There’re people. I need help!” He dropped the phone and took the shovel in both hands and started to swing. His face was desperate and terrified.
Shaw easily dodged and kept moving forward, driving the young man back.
After one fierce swing — Bee nearly stumbled — Shaw twisted the tool from his hands and the boy turned and took off in a panicked run.
There’d be company soon, but Shaw concentrated on the phone. He lifted and disconnected the call. Before it locked, he fished Deputy Kristi Donahue’s card from his pocket and dialed.
As it rang, he pointed north again and the three started moving quickly toward the river.
The call went to voice mail and he left a message about their general position and that they were heading north toward Millton, just west of 84. They were being pursued by the men from the Sunny Acres attack.
He’d decided that no one in this county likely owed anything to the Hero of Beacon Hill and was starting to dial 911 when he heard, almost simultaneously, the gunshot and the snap of the slug that hissed a foot over his head.
Jon Merritt was wrong.
There is one similarity between Dr. Evans and an outside-the-prison shrink.
They each have a large clock on the wall. The business of therapizing must fit tidily into the magic interval. It’s fifty minutes on the outside. Here, forty-five.
Every time he sits across from the doctor, safe in his personness, he thinks of the clock on the Carnegie Building, sitting just over the surface of the Kenoah.
The clock that stopped running and transformed its hands to angel wings.
The Water Clock...
“Let’s talk about your drinking, Jon.”
So he’s not picking up where they left off last week. He doesn’t remember — or care about — the insight Jon had started to tell him. But Jon the Charmer says amiably, “Sure, Doctor.”
Dr. Evans says, “You’re doing well in the program.”
There is an active twelve-step here. The majority of inmates have substance issues.
“Okay.” Merritt attends, he talks. He lies. It’s all good.
“You said that drinking makes you angry, Jon. Is that fair?”
Merritt doesn’t like the doctor using his given name. He’s heard about transference — a connection between doctor and patient. That’s the last thing he wants.
When you have a secret like the Truth, you don’t want to connect with anybody. Confessions sometimes happen.
But he nods agreeably. “Oh, that’s true.”
Watch the word...
“You mean you get mad at them.”
“I guess. At them, at everybody.” He shakes his head. “I don’t want to. It just happens.”
Then the doctor does the looking-off thing once again.
The light filters through the barred and thick-glass windows.
Dr. Evans returns. “When did you start drinking?”
“A kid. My dad’s bar. It wasn’t a bar. He called it that. Just a shelf in the kitchen.”
“He let you have some?”
“God no. Too stingy for that. I snuck it.”
“And replaced it with water, so he never noticed?”
“No.”
Tuna Doc lifts an eyebrow. “So maybe he knew. Maybe you wanted him to know.”
This sounds shrinky. Jon doesn’t want to keep going with it. But he says, “That’s good, Doctor. I think you might be right.”
And for half an hour, they run through the timeline of alcohol: When Merritt felt the problem got to be a problem, embarrassing or dangerous incidents caused by intoxication, putting people at risk, missed opportunities to turn his life around, what does he miss about drinking the most, now that he’s been in prison?
Jon the Charmer is a talented narrator.
Then Dr. Evans sails in a different direction. “You said your father was better when he drank. What did you mean by that?”
“It was so weird. Sober, he was a terror. Drunk, he was fine. He’d never beat me or hit my mother. We wanted him to drink. Then he was nice.”
“And you’re nice when you don’t drink, but bad when you do.”
“Yeah. What’s that called? Ironic?” Merritt smiles at this, but inside he is cautious. He has no idea where the doctor is going and needs to keep his arms wrapped protectively around the Truth, keeping it tucked out of sight.
“Did you and your mother try to get him drunk?”
“We had to. If he wasn’t... numb, I guess you’d say, if he wasn’t numb he could snap. That story I started to tell you—” Merritt says this before thinking. The doctor looks at him. He doesn’t know how to retreat. “I was nineteen. At Henderson Fabrications. I’d worked overtime.”
The doctor is frowning, like this is somewhat familiar.
Merritt grins and nods, fixing up the narrative for the doctor, but within him he boils. The one thing he’s telling the doctor that’s true and important, and goddamn Sigmund Freud here just doesn’t get it.
“I’d work overtime. I was putting myself through college and needed the shift differential. He thinks I’ve been screwing around and he’s going to whip me.” He doesn’t bother with explaining his father’s odd term, “crowning about.” He keeps the smile stoked up. “Nineteen! And he takes his belt off.” Merritt fixes up an astonished voice. “And you know what his concession to kindness was? To use the end without the buckle. He tells me to turn around. He’s going to whip me on the ass.”
“Nineteen, really?” Then Dr. Evans looks at the clock that is not the Water Clock; these hands never stop moving. And then back to Merritt. “Ah, but I see our time is up, Jon. Hold on to that memory. It might be a good one to explore.”
Without a thought, Merritt snaps like a tensioned wire. He rises fast and grabs his chair and flings it against the wall. He lunges forward, well within the doctor’s sphere of personness, and leans toward him screaming, “Fuck you, fuck you, fuck you!”
And Jon Merritt realizes he’s about to find out what happens when the panic button gets slapped.
They were fording the river.
The bottom was sandy and firm, and treading forward they moved as quickly as one could through the stubborn aquatic resistance. They were about halfway to the other shore when Shaw looked back. A trio broke from the woods behind them. It was Bee and probably Dad. With them was a skinny woman of about thirty, haggard, with a ponytail, shiny from the long absence of shampoo. She wore gray sweats and a Santa Claus T-shirt. All held pistols. They were moving cautiously to the riverbank.
Noticing Shaw, Parker and Hannah, they began shooting as they pressed forward, bullets flying mostly into the woods and water. None was trained, and helping the inaccuracy, they’d probably been indulging in their own product.
Shaw, Parker and Hannah dropped below the surface. Gripping their arms, Shaw muscled them toward the far shore, now about forty feet away.
Then thirty...
The tweakers were firing randomly, generally near the place where their prey had submerged, though one bullet shot through the water near Shaw’s head and the shock wave slapped hard.
Twenty...
The riverbed began to rise and soon they were on the muddy shore. “Stay low!” Shaw was dragging them with him. Hannah gave a yelp at his tight grip. He didn’t release it.
On this side of the river there was a low bank, which they had to climb, exposing them to more gunfire, but the shots continued to land short or long. Beyond the bank’s crest was a tall wall of marsh grass, white, beige and pale green. They pushed through it and stumbled into the soupy ground.
The gunfire ceased.
Shaw looked back and saw the tweakers standing in a circle talking among themselves. Another woman, older, fifties, approached. She was in a red and white gingham blouse and bulky jeans. She strode from the woods, carrying a long gun. The matriarch of the family, her angry lope suggested.
Bee was pointing toward the woods where Shaw and the other two now hid. One word from Gingham Woman shut him up. She spoke to Dad and the younger woman, maybe her daughter, and together they turned away and vanished into the forest, headed to their trailers or shacks, and the lab.
Hannah said, “You called the deputy. Let’s wait here.”
“No. We can’t risk it. I told her we’re going to Millton. We can meet her there.” He gestured around him. “This terrain, we can get there in three, four hours.”
He looked at Bee’s phone. The screen was blank. The unit might dry out and power up, though his experience was that, despite what YouTubers promised, mobiles rarely worked after a dunking. Besides, he was sure that even if the cell revived, it would be locked.
“Let’s get going.”
As he and Hannah started forward, Parker muttered something Shaw didn’t catch. He turned back. The woman said in a weak voice, “I don’t think I can.”
Hannah gasped, “Mom!”
“I mean,” Parker whispered, “I can try. But...” She held up a hand covered in blood.
One of the tweakers had shot accurately after all.
Yet again his ex and daughter had gotten away.
As the two triggermen burned the camper of the private eye, or whatever the man with the motorcycle was, the three had escaped north on foot, through the woods. The two pursuers would be searching the surface roads to Millton. Merritt himself was following on foot, trying to pick up their trail in the forest.
Where are you?
Goddamn it, Allison!
He found he was moving quickly, not paying attention to the noise he was making. He supposed that stalking your prey required silence. But he didn’t care. He had a gun, he had ammunition and he was mad.
No sin is worse than betrayal.
Looking at the ground, he saw no sign of anyone having passed by. Maybe there were broken branches and overturned stones that were a road map pointing him to where they were. But he’d been a city detective. He could read concrete and asphalt and hardwood and carpet and smears revealed by alternative light sources. Not this, not here.
Still, there could be little doubt where they were heading — north to Millton. Any other destination would have meant a trek of twenty, thirty miles. And the path he was on was the straightest line to that dingy town.
Where was it exactly from here? He pulled out his phone and loaded the map.
It was because he was looking down that, as he walked out of a stand of pine saplings, he nearly ran into a pale young man hugging a garbage bag in his skinny arms.
Both stopped fast.
Merritt moved first, drawing the pistol and aiming.
“No!” the kid cried. “Not again.”
No idea what that meant.
“Drop the bag.”
He complied, looking around. A desperate gaze in his eyes.
It meant he’d have kin or friends nearby.
Keeping that in mind.
“Turn. Your back to me.”
He did and Merritt pulled a gun from the kid’s back pocket. A revolver. An old Colt. Embarrassing for a drug runner, having a piece like this. Any cooker or supplier worth his salt would have at least a Glock, if not a big showy chrome SIG.
“Walk forward. The bushes.”
He headed into a cul-de-sac of foliage.
“Stop.”
He stopped.
“Can I turn around?”
“Why not? If you want to.”
The boy had the wild eyes of a sometimes user. “It’s my daddy’s property you’re on. Private.”
Merritt laughed. “Your daddy doesn’t own shit.” He was glancing back at three shallow holes he’d dug and the cheap shovel he’d dug them with. “You’re collecting product fast as a squirrel at first frost.”
He wondered: Did it have anything to do with some distant shots he’d heard earlier?
“Now, need to know: Some people came this way. In the last half hour. Three of ’em.”
“I don’t know.”
Merritt lifted the gun.
“Come on, man, okay, okay, yeah. Man, woman, a girl. Went over the Rapahan.”
“That river?”
“Yessir.”
“They have a run-in with you? I heard shots.”
“I don’t know.”
Merritt sighed long.
The boy whined, “They started it. This guy did. He was shooting at us! Just started for no reason.”
“With what?”
“Huh?”
“What kind of gun did he have?”
“I don’t know. A big one.”
“Funny since all the guns they had are burnt up, smoldering in a fire pit. And if there’s a Dick’s Sporting Goods ’round here, I missed it.”
The kid was looking at the ground.
No need to hassle him further. And the clock was running. “You traded shots. You and who else with you?”
“My sister, my aunt, my dad.”
“You hit any of them?”
“Believe so, yessir. The woman.”
“How bad?”
“Her leg, I think.”
Merritt turned and looked north. You could just see the flicker of lowering sun on the river. Wounded, she couldn’t move fast. Dusk would be coming soon, and they’d have to shelter.
“What’s between here and Millton?”
“Not much, sir. No towns.”
“Anything?”
“Few hunting cabins.”
“People in ’em?”
“I don’t know.”
Probably not. Deer season didn’t open till next month.
Merritt picked up the garbage bag. Inside were a half-dozen others, clear plastic. They contained packets of meth and opioids.
“This’s mine now.” Merritt stepped back, to put more distance between him and the tweaker, and slipped the bag into his backpack.
“Oh, man...”
“The minute I leave, you going to go running to daddy?”
The kid’s eyes were disks. “No, sir. No, sir! I promise. I’ll just stay here. An hour. Two, you tell me. I don’t want to do this shit. My aunt makes us. You can’t cross her. I want to be a mechanic. It’s a righteous skill and one I’m good at. I’m leaving this behind soon as I get a real job.”
Ramble, ramble, ramble...
The kid eyed Merritt’s gun, which was waving back and forth like wheat in a soft summer breeze.
“Oh, Lord, man, I got a girlfriend. She’s gonna have a baby. I think it’s mine.”
What Merritt was wondering: Would a gunshot give away his position or would the sound bounce around confusingly on the nearby rocks?
The second one, he decided, and pulled the trigger.
The young man cried out briefly as the slug tore through flesh and bone. His limp body dropped hard to the ground, on a pile of leaves that represented all the colors of autumn.
A gunshot.
Shaw waited.
No others.
How far away? A mile or two.
Had the Twins had a run-in with the tweaker family? Or had the shooter been Jon Merritt?
The shot was something to be aware of. But another priority loomed.
Allison Parker’s wound.
She lay on a bed of pine needles as Shaw examined it and Hannah held her hand.
The slug had missed the femoral vessels. Hitting one would have been fatal by now. He improvised a tourniquet with a strip of lining torn from his jacket. But they were always a stopgap; constant pressure, then surgery, were preferred to field tourniquets. Not options now.
He used a branch to tighten the strip and helped her to her feet. He found a larger length of wood to use as a crutch and handed it to her.
She winced but said, “Okay. I’ve got it.”
“Look,” Hannah said. She’d found what seemed to be a logging trail, running north. If the mills that gave the town its name were for sawing and not grain, maybe it ran all the way there. They couldn’t make it by nightfall but he wanted to narrow the distance to the town as much as they could.
Shaw glanced behind them. No pursuit that he could see.
They started along the wide path, Parker relying on the oak staff and her daughter. She asked, “Did it go through? The bullet?”
“No, it’s still in there.” This was good and bad. Bullets leave the muzzle of a pistol at over 400 degrees Fahrenheit. By the time they strike flesh, they’re cooler but they still cauterize many blood vessels. The large hunk of lead and copper also puts pressure on the arteries and veins. The bad part was that the tweakers’ guns and ammunition probably were not very clean, which upped the risk of infection.
“So.” Hannah was looking down, partly to check their route for roots and rocks, partly to avoid looking her mother’s way, it seemed. “I kinda was wrong. About Dad. I was a shit. Sorry.”
Parker glanced toward her daughter, and it seemed to Shaw that her face tightened in pain, not because of the wound but from seeing the girl’s expression.
“It’s nothing, Han.” The woman’s face seemed as troubled as Hannah’s.
“Yeah. But...”
They fell silent as the three kept pushing forward.
Surrounding the dirt route were more of the tall pines — here some green, some dead and bleached to bone. Deciduous too, oak and walnut and maple. There was deer sign and bear, a small one, but it wouldn’t be a cub; they’re born in January. So there would be no protective mothers around.
Hannah was vigilant, Shaw noted. She looked around as often as he did.
Shaw heard a clicking and a rustle of leaves. He was almost amused when Hannah, not shifting her gaze from the woods, reassured him and her mother. “It’s okay. Only the wind.”
They made it another mile — farther than Shaw had thought — before Parker pulled up, breathing hard.
“It’s hurting more.”
“The shock’s wearing off.”
Some people who were shot feel merely a tug or tap, nearly painless. That goes away soon and the ache begins to grow.
The woman sagged.
“Mom!” Hannah got her mother around the waist.
“I’m sorry,” she said. “I really can’t... It’s too much.”
Looking around, Shaw spotted a hollow. “Get down in there.” He and the girl helped Parker into the shallow dip and eased her onto a bed of leaves.
Shaw climbed out and studied the surroundings. He noticed the disturbed ground of a path left by the regular transit of animals — beavers, he decided. These would lead to a stream or lake and, now that it was clear the three would have to be in the woods longer than planned, he wanted a source of water. Choosing at random, he turned left and followed the trail. Only thirty or forty yards away he came to a ridge. He looked down and saw a large, dark lake. On the shore, not far away, was a cabin. In front of it was a grass-filled parking area, which was overgrown — no cars had been here for months. The exterior of the structure was faded and the porch leaf-covered but otherwise in good shape. Maybe they’d find medical gear inside.
And weapons.
He spotted no telephone line, though it could be underground.
Another meth lab?
Probably not, given the unoccupied appearance of the place.
Part of him, though, hoped it was.
As for any tweakers inside — Shaw’s surprise appearance would be their problem. He noticed a number of good-size rocks on the ground.
He made his way down the hill and, silently, up to a side wall. The drapes and shades were drawn open. Inside, the place was dark and dusty. No sign of any recent inhabitants, though it was furnished. And he could see animal heads on the wall.
He returned to the hollow.
As he relaxed the tourniquet, he told them, “There’s a cabin. Not far. Deserted. Doubt there’s a phone, but maybe medical supplies. We need to get that leg cleaned.”
He tightened the binding again and, with Hannah’s help, he got Parker to her feet.
Shaw said, “I can carry you.”
“No.” This was uttered defiantly. “I’ll walk.”
In fifteen minutes, they were at the structure, which he estimated was a little over a thousand square feet. A sagging covered porch extended across the entire front, a swinging bench on the right side. It swayed. There were two small windows in the front. As they approached from a shallow angle — it was easier on Parker than a straight climb down the steep hill — Shaw caught sight of a dock extending into the lake. It listed dramatically to the left and the wood was rotten. No boats. Nor were there any other visible houses around the lake, which he put at four hundred acres.
One problem was apparent: the driveway would lead to a larger road, which had probably been mapped on GPS; the Twins and Merritt could find their way here.
The good side to this was that Deputy Kristi Donahue might do the same.
Parker set one foot on the sagging first step, paused and said, “I think I’m going to...” She completed the sentence in silent pantomime, losing consciousness and sagging. Shaw caught her before she dropped more than a few inches.
“Mr. Shaw!”
“She just fainted. Pain probably, not blood loss.”
Shaw hefted her in both arms and nodded toward the cabin. “Try the door.”
She gripped the knob and turned. “Locked. Can you pick it? Did your father teach you how to do that?”
Ashton had, yes.
But now Shaw simply reared back and kicked hard — aiming for an imaginary target about six inches on the other side of the door, to give himself extra drive.
It slammed inward with a crack that was oddly similar to a gunshot.
The last abode they’d escaped from had been devoted to fishing.
This was a hunting lodge. Shaw got a better view of the dozens of deer and elk heads he’d seen from outside. The glazed button eyes gazed just past them.
Weapons? He guessed no, eighty percent. The overgrown parking area suggested the place hadn’t been used for a while, and hunters would not be inclined to leave armament for any length of time in a cabin easily broken into.
A living room spanned the front of the structure. A parlor was to the right, bedrooms behind that. To the left was a dining room and, beyond that, the kitchen.
Nothing contemporary or chic about it. A 1950s bungalow.
Shaw laid Parker on the sofa in the parlor and lifted her legs. She remained passed out.
“Mr. Shaw...”
He examined Parker’s color, checked her pulse and assessed her temperature. “She’s all right. But she’s dehydrated. See if the water runs.”
As the girl left, he tried two light switches. Nothing. The place probably had a well, which would be inoperative if there was no power. He looked at Bee’s phone once again. Still gone.
Parker came to, sweating, looking around as she tried to orient herself. “Hannah...”
“She’ll be back in a minute.”
Shaw was surprised to hear water running.
So, city supply. Maybe they were closer to Millton than they’d thought.
The girl carried three glasses into the parlor. “Is it okay? I let it run, but...”
The water had a brown tint. Shaw took a glass and smelled it. He sipped some. “It’s just rust. Not like the Kenoah.” Hannah helped her mother sit up and the woman drank. So did her daughter. Shaw too.
“Ick,” Hannah said.
“Iron’s good for you.” Shaw’s face was deadpan.
The girl rolled her eyes as she laughed.
He walked to a front window and looked out. No sign anyone was in the woods. He said to Hannah, “First aid kits and weapons. Guns preferably. A hunting bow’ll do.”
“You can shoot one?”
I can make them, Shaw thought. If he had time he’d do so now.
“Look everywhere. You take the kitchen. And dining room. All the closets and pantries. Oh, liquor too. It’s an antiseptic.”
She walked off to start the search. Shaw stepped into the nearest bedroom.
After a few minutes she called, “Got something here maybe you can use. Like, a weapon.”
“All right. Keep looking.”
In the two bedrooms all Shaw found was bar soap and washcloths.
He called again to Hannah, “The stove work?”
A clank, then a gasp. “Spiders!” After a moment: “No gas.”
So he couldn’t boil and sterilize bandages. He’d make do with soap. After running the water in the bathroom for a few minutes to clear the impurities, he soaked the washcloths. On one he rubbed the bar, creating a good lather.
In the parlor he called to Hannah, “Any knives?”
“A couple.”
“Bring me the smallest, a kitchen knife, not dinner.”
She appeared with a paring blade.
Shaw helped Parker roll over. He asked, “Aren’t ripped jeans in now?”
She offered a tepid laugh.
He undid the tourniquet and tossed it aside.
Starting at the bullet hole, he cut a long slit in the jeans and pulled the two sides open wide. He looked over the wound. The round had been clean enough so that no serious infection had set in. Nor had the bleeding increased. She was stable for now.
He gripped the soapy cloth.
She said, “This where you tell me it’s going to hurt?”
“Take a deep breath.”
She did, and as he washed the wound, she said, “Oh, well. My... Oh shit.”
He then rinsed the leg with the water-saturated cloth and patted the skin dry. He cut a long strip of cotton from a sheet, about six inches wide, and, after pressing a dry terry-cloth square over the wound, bound her leg tightly.
“Okay?” he asked.
“As can be expected,” Parker whispered. She blinked away tears and took a clean washcloth to wipe sweat from her forehead. A feeble smile. “Guess you turned the heat up.”
Smiling too, he rose. The patient was taken care of, as best he could do. Now it was time for weapons.
He walked into the kitchen. “You said you had something we could use?”
She lifted a plug-in air freshener.
He frowned.
She asked, “Like can’t you make it into a bomb, or something?”
“Glade?”
“MacGyver.”
“What?”
She said, “It was a TV show. This guy I went out with for a while? He liked it. So we binged. The hero made these things, like bombs, out of everyday stuff.”
“Not air freshener.”
“Oh.” She gave a shrug and returned to searching.
Shaw wedged a kitchen chair under the back doorknob and took its mate to the front, did the same. Off the dining room he looked through a utility closet. He found a canoe paddle. It would make a functional club. He set it on the kitchen table, along with two butcher knives, one ten inches, the other twelve.
“What about this?” Hannah asked, pulling a plastic bag from under the sink.
He smelled naphtha.
“Mothballs. If we had any quicklime we could make Greek fire.”
“What’s that?”
“The ancient Greeks used it like a flamethrower. You study history?”
“Yeah, some. It’s cool up to the Roman Empire, then it gets complicated. And boring.”
Colter Shaw couldn’t disagree.
“Can you make some?”
“No lime. It’s only good against moths.”
“Oh, there’s this.” Hannah held up a jar of cayenne pepper. “I got some in my eye once and it was like it was on fire. Can we make pepper spray out of it?”
“Is there a spray bottle?”
There wasn’t.
“Are we going to do a security thing, like with the fishing line?”
“No. We’d be too exposed.”
And what would they do anyway if the Twins tripped an alarm? At Timberwolf, they had real weapons.
Then something across the kitchen caught his eye.
He walked to the sink, where sat a large box of Tide detergent. He picked it up. Thought for a minute. He pulled a juice glass from a cabinet. Then he yanked down a curtain rod, bare of drapery, from above the window in the back door. He said to the girl, “Now I need a pen.”
She ripped through kitchen drawers. “Here’s one.”
“And one last thing. Any rubber bands?”
They found none.
He asked, “How ’bout that thing in your hair?”
“The scrunchy?”
“That’ll do.”
She tugged it off and handed it to him.
Hannah turned and looked at the detergent, pen, glasses and hair tie. “You sure you never saw MacGyver?”
“They are inside.”
Desmond asked, “How do you know?”
“Window, right. Curtain moved.”
The man leaned forward, stuck his head out of the bushes.
“Could be.”
“No, it is.” Moll went back to cover. Desmond too.
The men were across a weedy parking area from a brown clapboard cabin. Not having any luck in their search along Route 84, they’d pulled over and checked real estate records. They’d found this cabin on Deep Woods Lake. They had parked a half mile away, off an old logging road on the other side of the hill that faced the place. Moll, an expert at deer and elk sign, had spotted footprints, which led to the cabin.
One foot — Allison’s, Moll thought, by the size, was shuffling. It appeared her daughter was helping her. And he’d spotted blood. Those gunshots earlier.
“They armed?”
Moll shrugged. “Doubt it. Maybe found one inside there. Then again, I would not leave a weapon in a place like that. Too easy to break into.”
The broad, calm lake behind the cabin was dark blue. No other properties were visible around it.
“A trapdoor in the bottom of a Winnebago?” Moll’s voice was rich with disgust. He had no problem assigning blame to Desmond, or anyone else, but he wasn’t above taking responsibility himself. “I should have checked that.”
Desmond was still for a moment. “Who’d know? How could you know?”
Which Moll appreciated.
“So? What do we do?”
“As far as they know, we are somewhere else, probably on the highway. Has to be a back door. Leads to that dock.” Another glance at the complex green and brown surroundings. Thinking where he would set up the blind, if this was a recreational outing. At least on this hunt, he did not have to worry about upwind, downwind. Human noses were useless, unless a triggerman was wearing too much Paco Rabanne.
Desmond asked, “Where the hell is Merritt?”
Moll had checked texts. “On his way.”
“I feel like we’re doing all the work here.”
“Are we getting paid or not?”
Desmond’s lips grew tight in concession.
Moll said, “You circle around, to the back. I go through the front.”
A nod in reply. They drew their pistols and moved out, side by side, crouching, while they used the tall brush for cover. Moll smelled a sour aroma. Stinkweed. A memory from his youth arose, though it attached to nothing more concrete than simply being in the woods.
“Goddamn,” Desmond whispered.
“What?”
“Two grasshoppers spit tobacco on me.”
“I would focus. Can we?”
They paused behind an overgrown hedge.
“Give it five minutes, then pound on the back door. Call ‘Police’ or something. When they turn that way, I can get them from the window. You take anybody who tries to come toward you.”
“I like it,” Desmond said.
“And, remember, we should do Motorcycle Man first.”
Once again, Shaw’s percentages didn’t hold up.
The Twins had found the place.
He and Hannah were staring through the curtain in the front window as the pair slowly moved from cover and started toward the cabin, pistols in their hands.
They were approaching through the brush to the right of the house as you faced it. Suit paused and crouched, Jacket continuing on. They were going front and back.
Guns against a canoe paddle, kitchen knives and the latest weapon Shaw had found, a claw hammer.
Suit was going to take the front door, Tan Jacket the rear.
Hannah looked his way and he nodded. She moved aside the curtain over the right front window.
Then:
“Look!” Hannah whispered.
Suit glanced at the tree he was approaching, then the window where the curtain had moved. He froze and dropped quickly, prone, powdering his suit with dirt. In a harsh whisper he called out to his partner, who was about twenty feet in front of him. Jacket seemed confused but then he also dropped to the ground.
Suit glanced again to the window. Hannah moved the curtain again. And the two men quickly crawled back in the direction they’d come until they were under cover of the brush on the other side of the parking lot. From there, they hurried up the hill, using trees for cover and disappearing into the shadows of the late fall afternoon.
“It worked,” Hannah said, peering out and laughing. She squeezed Shaw’s arm.
Tide laundry detergent comes in a distinctive box. With its red and yellow concentric circle logo, it could easily be used as a firearm target by people who’d live in a cabin just like this and not have disposable money for commercial targets or the inclination to drive to a sporting goods store to pick some up.
So when Suit began making his way forward, he noticed the front of the Tide carton Shaw had mounted on the oak. He also would have seen the dozen holes tightly grouped in the center of the “bullseye” — holes that Shaw had made with the pen Hannah had found.
Then Suit’s glance at the house when the curtain moved revealed something else — what could be taken as a rifle mounted with a scope aimed his way from inside the darkened living room through the parted curtain.
So they’d fled — from a gun that was really the kitchen curtain rod on top of which was the juice cup mounted backward with Hannah’s scrunchy, looking for all the world like a rifle barrel and telescopic sight.
The belief that your opponent has weapons can be as effective as weapons themselves.
Hannah had pulled the curtain aside to better watch the retreat.
Shaw said, “No. Back from the window. Never present unless you’ve got to.”
“ ‘Present’?”
“Present yourself as a target.”
“What’re we going to do?”
A careful look out the windows. No sign of the enemy in all the places an enemy would be. “If the deputy doesn’t find us before dark, I’m going to start a fire at the end of the dock. There’ll be patrols for brush fires. They’ll see it. Send somebody.”
“Won’t those two assholes shoot them?”
“No. They’ll know that if the responders don’t call in, there’ll be police and the area’ll be sealed. They’ll figure it’s smarter to leave. Come up with another plan.”
She frowned. “But, we don’t have matches. Like, can you start a fire?”
He nearly smiled. “I can.”
Her look said, I should have known.
Shaw cut small holes in the curtain at one of the front windows. And one at each side. “Your peepholes. You’re in charge of surveillance.”
She seemed pleased he’d given her the assignment.
He added, “Don’t touch the curtains.”
“Never present,” she replied.
A nod.
Hannah said, “What about the back?”
“Maybe. But that’d expose them to our imaginary rifle.”
She looked out the kitchen window, nodding. “I’d make it a five percent possibility.”
“I think five percent is just about right.”
As the cabin’s interior grew dimmer with the lowering sun, Shaw assembled the meager weapons — the knives, the hammer and the paddle. He set them on the coffee table in the living room.
Using the tool, he pounded several bricks from the fireplace. He placed each into a separate pillowcase and tied it closed just beneath the stone. Crude bolos, the Argentinian weighted lasso. He could fling one fairly accurately, making an armed attacker dodge, giving him a chance to get within hand-to-hand combat distance.
Knife-fighting distance too.
He examined the ten-inch blade. The stainless steel was not high carbon. It was cheap and dull.
He pounded another brick out of the fireplace and began whetting the knife.
Hannah glanced back from her surveillance station at the broken fireplace. “Hm. Second house we’ve screwed up today.”
He lifted an amused eyebrow and continued honing. Shaw had always enjoyed sharpening blades. He liked the sound of steel against stone, he liked rendering dull into keen. He finished one and had just started on the second, when he heard Parker’s voice from the parlor. Soft.
“Colter? Can I talk to you?”
He said to Hannah, “Keep watch.”
“Got it.”
Shaw walked into the parlor. “You all right?”
“Feeling better. Something to say.”
He pulled a chair close.
“You asked me about November, if there were some gaps I wanted to fill in.”
“You don’t need—”
“I do.” She adjusted the cushion she was using as a pillow to sit up slightly higher. “That night. Jon’s back at the house. Drunk. I’m bloody, lying in the snow beside the pool, my cheek is cracked.”
“I remember.”
Another hesitation. She inhaled deeply, and this was not from the pain in her leg. Then: “Colter? Jon never touched me that night. November. He never touched me.” Her voice caught. She controlled it and continued, “I got his gun. I hit myself in the face a dozen times. Hard. Really hard. I crawled inside the house — left a trail of blood. I called nine-one-one and said he beat me and said he was going to kill me. Two squad cars came right away. Jon had passed out, and I was a bloody mess. They cuffed him and recovered the gun. I told them I got it away and threw it into the bushes.”
“Explaining why your prints were on it.”
She wiped a tear. “A wife of a cop knows cop things.”
“Was he so drunk he thought he’d actually hit you?”
“No. He knew I was setting him up. But his lawyer said the jury would never buy it. My word against his, and I would win. He could get twenty years for attempted. They worked out a plea for the thirty-six months.
“Oh, God, I didn’t want to do it. I tried everything I could not to. I got him into therapy, into programs, but none of it worked. If I brought up divorce, that only made him angrier. I knew some night he was going to hurt me or Hannah, bad. Maybe accidentally, thinking we were intruders. But it was going to happen. And then there was the psychic toll on her. I could see her declining. I wasn’t going to let that happen. When he left that night I decided: I had to sacrifice my husband for my child.
“So, in answer to your question, back at the fishing lodge: that’s why he’s after me. Every night I hear his voice as the cops led him off. Looking back at me and saying, ‘Why are you doing this to me? Why are you doing this to me?’ ”
“So, he never hurt you?”
“No.”
Shaw recalled that the only other person who’d said Jon had hurt her was her mother, Ruth. And she’d been referring to the attack he now knew was staged. “You haven’t told anyone else?”
She shook her head. “You’re easy to confess to, Colter.”
He heard that a lot.
“Hannah?” he asked.
“She suspects. It just sits there between us. It never goes away.” A sigh. “A thousand times I thought about confessing. But then I’d go to jail for perjury, and Hannah’d be raised by a dangerous, angry drunk. And my daughter would know what I did. No, I had to stick to my decision.” Her eyes looked around the parlor. “Now, Colter. One more thing.”
“Go ahead.”
“If anything happens here, get Hannah out. Leave me. Promise.” Her tone said that this was inflexible.
“All right.” No point arguing at a moment like this.
“Now, the Kia, at Timberwolf Lake, the glove compartment. You’ll find an envelope. Black. Fireproof. If I’m not around, I want you to get it to my mother. There’re instructions inside.”
A will? he wondered.
“It’s got blueprints and diagrams of a dozen inventions of mine. Technical things, control systems, industrial mechanics... I did them on my own time. They’re mine, legally. Not HEP’s. They’re not all finished, but I’ve got the names of some patent lawyers who can find some people to help. I’ve left notes, explaining everything.” She glanced toward where Hannah stood, peering out the front window. “She doesn’t know about it. I’ve kept it from her. I don’t need to freak her out with endgame strategies now. She’s been through enough.”
Shaw had a sense that the girl would be fine with endgame strategies. But he said, “I’ll take care of it.”
She squeezed his hand, a weaker gesture than he’d hoped. They’d need that hospital soon.
Parker closed her eyes and lay back.
He returned to the living room and finished sharpening the second blade. Good, not great. Sharp is a function of the quality of the metal, and this knife might cut paper once or twice but would need steeling right after. How would it do on flesh?
Well enough.
Then Hannah cocked her head. Shaw heard it too, the sound of tires in brush and on gravel. He gestured her back and looked carefully through the curtain.
A dark sedan rocked over the uneven, overgrown drive. It pulled into the parking area in front of the cabin. Though dusk was descending, it was still light enough to see the driver.
Sheriff’s deputy Kristi Donahue.
Shaw called, “Our ride is here.”
“Dope!”
The deputy climbed out, hitched up her service belt and, after looking around, started toward the cabin.
Shaw opened the door. “Deputy!”
“Colter! You’re here.”
“Keep down. Two hostiles, the high ground behind you. The pair from the hotel.”
She stepped back to the car, crouching, using it as cover. She scanned the forest, her hand on her gun. “You’re with Ms. Parker and her daughter?”
“They’re here. Allison’s hurt. Bullet wound. Missed the vitals but we need to get her to surgery.”
“There’s a hospital twenty minutes away. I’ll help you.” Staying low, Donohue started toward the cabin.
She got only halfway.
Jon Merritt burst from the brush beside the driveway, a backpack over his shoulder, a pistol in his hand. He leveled the revolver at the woman and before Shaw could bark a word of warning, he fired two rounds, striking her in the head.
The deputy fell like a discarded doll to the grass, which was by then already dotted with her blood.
Hannah screamed.
Allison Parker called from the parlor, “Han! What?”
Mouth open, eyes wide, the girl stared out the window.
Shaw watched Jon pocket the dead deputy’s pistol, her two extra mags and phone. He pulled the girl away from the windows and closed the drapes again, then he slammed the door and wedged the chair back under the knob.
Hannah was sobbing. “No...”
When Shaw looked again, Merritt was gone.
Shaw turned toward Parker. “It was Jon. He killed her. The deputy.”
“Jesus, no...”
It was then that Shaw noticed that the woman’s car was still idling.
Kristi Donahue hadn’t shut the engine off when she’d arrived. Merritt hadn’t noted this. He’d neutralized a threat and, in a hurry to rendezvous with his hitmen, he’d forgotten about the vehicle.
Scanning the forest. No threat from him or the Twins. Not yet.
How long would it take Shaw, Parker and Hannah to get to the sedan? Twenty seconds.
While the short move would be painful for the woman, there was no other choice. He’d carry her to the car and, basically, shove her into the back. They’d speed away before the three hostiles, hearing her scream, could arrive and start firing.
He called to Hannah, “We’re going to the car.” She was staring toward the window, not seeing a thing. He said firmly, “You with me? Hannah. I need you with me.”
And like flipping a switch her eyes came to life. She inhaled, wiped tears away with her fingers and nodded.
“Get your mother up.”
She vanished into the parlor. Shaw looked again outside. Still clear.
He joined the girl and they helped Parker into the living room. “Oh, no,” she whispered, looking through a gap in the curtain. The pool of blood was slowly growing.
Shaw got his arm around her shoulders and helped her to the front door.
Hannah glanced at her feet and saw the bolo. She picked it up. Hefted its weight.
Shaw started to open the door.
Just as a human form appeared in the woods, pushing through the brush.
Crouching, Jon Merritt hurried to the car once again. He stepped unceremoniously over Kristi’s body, reached into the passenger compartment, shut the engine off and pocketed the keys. He started to leave but noted something in the backseat. Opening the door, he took out a short black pump shotgun on a strap and a green and yellow box of shells.
He turned toward the forest to meet his triggermen, who would be easing carefully through the woods for the final attack.
Hannah exhaled slowly, her face a mask without expression.
She was no longer crying, though her mother was. “No, no,” Parker said breathlessly, wincing. She was leaning against the parlor doorjamb.
They would probably know by now the detergent box target was a trick — otherwise one of the occupants would’ve fired when Merritt came back to snatch the keys and scattergun.
“What now?” Hannah asked coolly.
It had come down to the twenty percent option.
Shaw pointed from one side window to the other. “Escape routes. Before they come, they’ll fire into the cabin. I’ll be watching. That’ll give me their positions. There’ll be a lull before they come in. They’ll be worried about cross fire, hitting each other. I’ll tell you which window’s best to go out of. Get into the brush and just keep going as fast as you can. Follow the shore. Circle around to the far side of the lake. It’s not that far to the highway, the one that leads to Millton. Flag down somebody.”
The girl nodded.
The twenty percent referred to the success of getting out of the cabin. Once they were in the bush their chances increased dramatically. The woodland was dense and the sun was nearly down; covering darkness was spreading.
But getting over the twenty percent hump was going to be tough. Would one or all of them be hit when the three men peppered the cabin? And if they did make it out, would they be picked off in the yard before they made it to the relative safety of the woods?
Parker said, “The lake... Swim?”
“Too cold and not with your leg.”
A scan of the grounds. Nothing out the front or the other side window.
Where were they?
The snake you can’t see is worse...
Hannah was studying the side yard, east, then west.
He saw her focused eyes, her stance.
This took him back to the Compound, when he was her age.
Sixteen. Stalking through woods similar to the ones surrounding them now, armed with the Colt Python, following two sets of tracks — his father’s, and those of the man who was hunting him.
Sixteen. Rappelling down a hundred-foot cliff to Ashton’s body.
Sixteen. Resolving to find and kill that killer himself.
Hannah’s voice was urgent. “Mr. Shaw, you made it sound like you’re not coming too. Aren’t you?”
“Not right away. I’m going to get one of their weapons.”
“I’ll help you.” The words were crisp and unwavering. She lifted a bolo.
“No. Your mother’ll need you.”
She paused. Finally she whispered, “All right.”
Shaw looked over the pathetic weapons they had: a kitchen knife and canoe paddle, bolos, a hammer.
MacGyver...
He was about to check the surroundings again. But just then Shaw’s eyes cut to the girl’s. He cocked his head. She nodded. Again, they’d heard something at the same time.
Footsteps were approaching the front door.
The attacker had come from one side yard while Hannah was checking out the other.
“Down.” He gripped the knife in one hand, the hammer in the other and walked to the door. Hannah helped her mother to the floor and picked up one of the bolos again. She swung it ominously back and forth.
Volleyball...
A moment of howling silence, tension flooding the room.
And then:
“Alli, Hannah. It’s me.”
“Jon?” Parker gasped.
Shaw looked out briefly. Yes, there he stood alone. “Merritt, I’m armed.”
A faint chuckle. “Armed? With a kitchen knife and some kind of slingshot.”
Thuds sounded on the resonant porch.
“All my weapons. There they are. My hands are up.”
Shaw glanced outside. Merritt stood at the bottom of the steps, wincing. He was in pain. His arms were skyward. On the porch were the deputy’s Glock, two revolvers and the shotgun. The backpack too.
He said, “Just tugging up the clothes, giving you a look.”
Shaw had, for no reason, expected a low, raspy voice. But Merritt’s was soft and tenor.
With his left hand, Merritt lifted his windbreaker shirttail and jacket and turned slowly. No other weapons. Shaw noticed a massive bruise on the belly.
“I’d just as soon not stand out here much longer. I saw those two assholes in the woods and they’re not very far away. Sorry, Han. Language.”
First, Shaw secured the weapons.
This was not governed by a never rule. Though if there were one, it would read: Never be stupid.
He took the Glock, made sure it was loaded and a round chambered. It went into his waistband, right rear. An easy, practiced draw. Two mags in the left front pocket of his jeans.
The others — the two revolvers and the shotgun — he checked and set in the corner.
“Car keys?”
“Right pocket.” A nod at the windbreaker. “Two sets. Mine and hers.”
“Toss it. The whole jacket.”
He did, wincing once more.
Shaw fished out and pocketed the keys.
“The wall.”
Merritt knew what Shaw meant and he complied, feet spread, palms flat against the ugly green wallpaper. Despite the lifted-shirt routine Shaw frisked him carefully, with his left hand, keeping the Glock muzzle near his neck. Shaw relieved him of a phone.
“PIN?” Shaw asked.
Merritt gave him the numbers. “But it’s not working, hasn’t been for a half hour.”
Unlocking the unit, he saw that the screen didn’t say no service. It was simply blank, though the unit was powered on.
“The radio.” He pointed outside to Kristi’s sedan.
“It’s not a sheriff’s cruiser,” Merritt said. “It’s her private car.”
Shaw said, “We drive out.” He looked at Merritt. “With you restrained.”
The man shook his head. “We wouldn’t get fifty feet. They’re up the ridge, those two, waiting for you. They’ve got long guns. With scopes. The Buick’s a half mile up the road. After dark, I’m thinking we’ll start the Chrysler.” A nod toward Donahue’s car. “Gun the engine. That’ll distract them. Then hike north through the woods to the Buick. Get to Millton.”
A look outside. Yes, if they were on the ridge — and it was a logical place to be — they could pepper the car with hunting rounds. Merritt’s plan was not a bad one.
Parker asked, “How long till dark?”
Shaw glanced to the sky, a rich blue, bleeding to gray. “Forty, fifty minutes.”
He then said, “Sit,” and Merritt did.
He looked over to his ex-wife sitting on the floor. “A.P., how is it, your leg?” Using what must have been a pet name from the old days.
She didn’t answer. She seemed capable only of staring at the man.
Shaw answered for her. “It’s not a bleeder. I’ve done what I can, but I want her in a hospital soon.”
“In the backpack,” Merritt said. “Pills. Painkillers. I took ’em off a tweaker about two miles from here. He told me you’d been hit.”
The shot he’d heard. Was it Bee he’d had the run-in with? And was the young man no longer of this earth?
Shaw unzipped the backpack and pulled out a plastic bag, large, though it contained only one small bag of white pills.
“Oxy,” Merritt said. “The real thing. Stolen from inventory. It’s safe. No fent or anything else mixed in.”
Parker said, “Not now. If I need it.” Maybe thinking of her husband’s addiction.
“No, A.P. You’ll have to be able to move. And move fast. Take one. Hannah? There water here?”
The girl’s cool façade had dissolved, and uncertain she glanced at Shaw, who nodded. She stepped into the kitchen, ran a glass and brought it to her mother, who took the pill that Shaw offered.
He looked at the larger bag, dusted with meth residue.
Noticing his eyes, Merritt said, “The kid had some deliveries of ice in there too. I dumped it.” He shrugged. “Once a cop...” He examined Shaw. “I saw you on your cycle, at Alli’s rental. I decided you weren’t blue, but that pat down, maybe I was wrong. You’ve done this before. You ever law?”
Shaw didn’t answer. He nodded to the backpack. He asked, “Other weapon?”
“Sort of.” The men’s eyes met and Merritt seemed almost amused at his own ambiguous response. “It’s wrapped up in a towel.”
Shaw dug through the bag. He found a bottle of Bulleit bourbon, what looked like an antique metal desk clock, food, papers, clothing and, at the bottom, something heavy wrapped up in terry cloth. He opened it. For a moment he didn’t move.
No...
He was holding the scorched metal frame of his Colt Python, the grip burned away. The last Shaw had seen of the weapon it was in the fire pit at the lodge on Timberwolf Lake. Merritt said, “Had to be yours.”
Shaw nodded.
“A fine weapon,” Merritt continued. “Thought you wouldn’t want to lose it. A gunsmith can fix it up. Good as new.”
Shaw now studied Merritt and was aware that prison had not been kind. He was pale, and eyes sallow. The thinning hair added to this image. He’d lost muscle recently. He slouched.
Hannah spoke in a whisper of disbelief. “You shot her!”
It was Colter Shaw who responded. “I don’t think Kristi was who she seemed to be.”
Merritt added, “She was a Marshall County deputy, that’s true. But she was working with them, those two who burned up your camper.”
“But,” Parker whispered, “you hired them...”
Merritt appeared confused. “Me? Where’d you get that idea?”
“This’s a trick,” Hannah blurted. She turned her fierce eyes toward him. “You killed Mom’s lawyer!”
“Oh, David? He’s fine. Well, pissed off, I don’t doubt. But fine. He’s out by now.”
“Out?” Parker asked.
“I thought he knew where you were hiding. He didn’t. After we had a talk I was convinced of that. But I didn’t know if I could trust him, so I taped him up in the basement of one of the old factories on Manufacturers Row. I mailed letters to the police and his paralegal telling them where he was. Mail, you know, with a stamp. I didn’t want him out too soon.
“No, Han. I didn’t hurt him. I didn’t hurt anybody, the past couple days. Not seriously. Shot a clay pot of your friend Dorella’s.”
“What?”
“No danger. Just needed her and her shotgun back in the house. And I stole this woman’s Buick. Mrs. Butler. Threatened her, scared her some. But I didn’t hurt her. That tweaker I got the drugs from? I shot him, yeah, but only in the foot. I couldn’t have him running back to his kin. I needed to get on your trail. He probably got a concussion when he fainted and hit the ground. Felt bad about it. But, then again, that boy did not make a very wise career decision.”
Parker seemed to be wrestling with all this. Trying to decide whether or not to believe him.
Colter Shaw was inclined to. About seventy to eighty percent.
A chill voice, Hannah’s, asked stridently, “And Mr. Villaine?”
“Villaine? What about him?” Merritt’s pale brow furrowed. “Oh, no... is he?” His shoulders slumped farther.
“He’s dead,” Parker said angrily.
“Jesus Christ... No, no...” He looked in the direction of the hill in front of the cabin. “They found out about him because of me.” Dismay flared. Merritt lowered his head to his hands. “I was so stupid...”
Parker said, “I don’t understand... Any of this.”
But Colter Shaw did. Finally. He looked over the former cop as he sat placidly in the stern wooden chair. “He hasn’t been trying to kill you. He’s been trying to save you.”
“That’s a fact, sir.” Merritt directed a smile toward his daughter. “And what’ve you two been doing the whole time? Playing hide and seek.”
“Something about me being released from County was wrong from the start.”
But then Merritt stopped talking, glanced at his daughter. “You colored it. Your hair. It’s nice.”
She gave no response, just looked back with a steady gaze, then returned to surveillance duty.
Shaw said, “You thought you were being set up.”
He nodded. “Didn’t make sense. Good behavior? Doesn’t get you out earlier, not unless it’s in the plea deal. And to free up beds? Since when does County give a shit about conditions in a fucking lockup?” To Hannah. “Sorry.”
“Look around,” the girl said. “Let’s take language off the table.”
“Somebody wanted you on the street,” Shaw said.
“Yessir.” He eyed the glass of rusty water sitting on the coffee table. “Can I?”
Shaw nodded. The man downed it in gulps, wiped his lips. He paused and lowered his head. Shaw wondered if he’d be sick. But he controlled the sensation. Breathing deep. Slowly.
“But who and why? One idea occurred to me. Yesterday, I went to see the head of one of the crews. Guy named Dom Ryan. The two of us, we had an arrangement a few years ago when I was running OC cases. He helped me take down a couple of the really bad crews. I looked the other way on a few of his deals. So yesterday I paid him to make some calls and find out if there’d been any special service orders involving me.”
Parker frowned and Shaw said, “He means contracts. Professional killing.”
Merritt continued, “Ryan found out that, yeah, somebody’d ordered a hit. My name was attached. But I couldn’t’ve been the target.”
Shaw said, “Nobody’s easier to kill than a con in prison. You’d get shanked in the yard and that would be it. Questions wouldn’t be asked.”
“Exactly. The hit had to be you.” He was looking at Allison.
“Me?” she gasped.
“Whoever got me released made sure I had a motive: I was supposed to be furious at you. The triggermen would make it look like a murder-suicide. I’d kill you, then myself.”
Bewildered, Parker asked, “What do you mean ‘furious’?”
“That was the other reason I knew my release was bogus. The letter from you to the discharge board, telling them not to let me out, that I was dangerous.”
“What letter?” Parker said. “I never wrote anything.”
He glanced at Shaw again, then to the backpack. Shaw nodded and Merritt retrieved some sheets of paper. “The letters about my release. Look at the last one.” He handed them to Parker and she flipped through them.
“This’s forged,” she whispered.
“I know.” He said to Shaw, “It’s all about how I hurt Alli and Hannah, was abusive all our marriage.”
Parker stared at the letter. “No, no, no...”
“I was an asshole, sure, but only for the last couple of years.”
Shaw remembered that Parker had said the marriage was good until the Beacon Hill shooting and his descent into drugs and drinking. And that he never physically hurt either of them.
“And that last paragraph.”
Parker skipped to the end. She frowned. “What on earth is this?”
“It says how she knows some secrets of mine that I don’t want revealed.”
She gave a pallid laugh. “Secrets? You? Makes it sound like you were mixed up in the corruption scandals.” She looked at Shaw. “He was the most honest cop on FPD. When he started, on Vice, on the riverfront? More pimps went to jail for trying to bribe him than running girls. Oh, and the day he was shot? He’d just found twenty thousand dollars of payoff money, skimmed from the cleanup fund. Hidden in a dead drop at a construction site. He could’ve pocketed it. But the first thing he did when he came out of surgery was tell his captain about the cash.”
Merritt said, “And look at the bottom of the letter. The redaction?”
Shaw saw two thick lines under the woman’s name.
“It’s not very redacted.”
She held it up. “You can see the address of our rental. Whoever did it wanted you to know where we lived.”
“I was supposed to go there right after I got out. Didn’t matter if I was going to warn you, or kill you myself, or just visit. The point was to get me to your rental house. The triggermen’d be waiting. They’d do the job.” He shrugged. “I didn’t know all this then. All I knew was: contract hit, you were the target, and I couldn’t trust police or anyone else. I had to find you both, get you out of town, until I figured out who was behind it.
“I didn’t have your new number, emails, social media. I couldn’t find you anywhere online. I had no idea where you were. And who was there to help me? Marty Harmon, your mother? They wouldn’t believe a word I told them.”
“So that was a lie somebody told David: about the prisoners you’d told you wanted to kill me.”
“What?” he scoffed. And didn’t bother to state the obvious: that was part of the setup too. To support the claim that he was in fact murderous.
Merritt slicked back his thinning blond hair, and his face deflated. “Then I made my mistake. Oh, man, did I screw up. I paid Ryan again — this time to help me find you. He says sure. And what does that prick do?”
Shaw said, “Called up the triggermen and whoever hired them and cut a deal. You gave Ryan the leads you’d found, and he sent them right to the killers. And when they found a lead, Ryan sent it to you.”
“That’s right. He didn’t have any quote ‘contacts’ in the county, like he promised me. It was those two.” An angry nod toward where Suit and Jacket waited atop the hill in front of the cabin. “I thought you might go to a women’s shelter. Ryan told them. They went to check it out. Thank God, you weren’t at any of them. Who knows what they would have done to the staff?
“And they were the ones that saw Han’s selfie and figured out about the motel. They told Ryan. He told me. I was heading up there when you got away.”
Bitterness flooded his face. “I might as well’ve been texting the triggermen directly.” Then a shake of the head. “I found the name Frank Villaine and thought that might be a lead. Could Ryan find the address? He did and gave it to those two, as well as me. He hoped the murders would go down there. But you were gone.”
Hell of a coordinated plan, Shaw reflected, wondering again who was behind it.
Merritt gave a grim laugh. “And finally... finally, I got it that something was wrong. They needed to get me to where they’d tracked you down — for the murder-suicide — at Timberwolf. But how did Ryan’s contacts know you were there?
“Just didn’t seem right. I went up there but stayed out of sight. I saw them burning the camper. And I saw you escape. And just after that, she got there.” A nod toward the front, where Donohue’s body lay. “The guy in the suit handed her an envelope. I went after you on foot. Then I got a text from Ryan, some bullshit about your being spotted in the cabin here by local police or somebody. Of course, the truth was the triggermen’d found you and told him where. I slipped around them and came through the woods from the north.”
Shaw asked, “And no idea who put out the contract?”
“No. Ryan said he tried, but — bullshit. He lied and took my money.” Merritt gazed toward his ex-wife. “So why? Why would somebody want you dead? All I could think was it was some project you’re involved with at HEP.”
Parker grew thoughtful. “Well, I’m the only one who could finish the fuel rod containment vessel on schedule. To find somebody else and bring them up to speed, the Pocket Suns’d be delayed at least a year. That might be the end of the company.”
Colter Shaw, however, had another theory. He said to Merritt, “So. You go to Ryan and ask about a special services contract.”
“Right.”
“And word comes back there is one — and your name’s attached.”
He nodded.
“But Allison’s not ‘Merritt.’ She kept her maiden name.”
Silence for a moment. Then Parker gasped. Merritt whispered, “Hannah?”
The girl’s eyes narrowed.
It was only a sixty, sixty-five percent hypothesis but it seemed logical.
“Why?” Merritt asked.
“I don’t know. Not yet. Maybe you witnessed something...” A thought occurred. “Maybe you photographed something. One of your selfies. At the fishing lodge, they burned your phone and computer. Why go to the trouble unless they wanted your files destroyed?”
At this thought he upped the likelihood to seventy-five percent.
The girl lifted her palms. “But, I mean, which one? I’ve taken, like, thousands of pictures.”
Jon Merritt pointed to the backpack. “The envelope?” Shaw handed it to him.
“I found these in your room. I thought they might have some clues about where you and your mother might go to.”
Hannah, while obviously concerned with the direction of the conversation, continued scanning for threats. She met Shaw’s eyes and he nodded. His encouragement clearly pleased her.
Shaw helped Parker onto the couch. He and Merritt sat beside her. Merritt began flipping slowly through the stack.
In the images, Hannah tended to assume the same expressions — cynical, doubtful, wryly amused, sardonic. Similar poses too: cocked head and hip. Sometimes fingers making signs that teens would know. Her outfits were more or less the same too: stocking cap, sweats and jeans, all of dark hue. Gloves without fingertips.
She stood in front of car wrecks and buildings being demolished, over dead fish in the Kenoah, bleak winter landscapes, collapsed buildings, protests about climate change and about the decision of United Defense to back out of their plans to build in Ferrington, a street demonstration about the Tasing of a Black motorist by angry white officers, factory scenes, snide teenagers mocking a gay couple, a pickup with four hunters in the bed holding shotguns, one of them about fifty sticking his tongue out flirtatiously at her, a drunk passed out in front of a tavern.
Dozens flipped by.
“Stop,” Shaw said.
“What is it?” Parker asked. “You see something?”
As he stared at the selfie in front of them, another theory arose — and if it panned out, it might possibly reveal the why of the hit.
And when you have the why, the who is often not far behind.
Shaw considered all the moving pieces as he stared at the dingy ceiling. He asked Merritt, “You got Frank Villaine’s address from Dom Ryan?”
“That’s right. I found a work email Frank sent you, A.P. I couldn’t get a local address. Ryan did.”
Shaw said, “Now, the question is, how did I get Frank’s name?”
Parker and Merritt regarded each other. She said, “Marianne, didn’t you say?”
“She gave it to me, yes. But she was only asking your coworkers about your old friends. Did you ever tell anyone in the office about Frank and where he lived?”
Shaking her head. “No. By the time I went to HEP, Frank and I had gone our separate ways.”
And with this bit of information, hypothesis became proof.
“Where did Marianne Keller really get Frank’s name and address? From Dom Ryan.”
“But Marianne works—”
Shaw finished her sentence. “For the man who ordered the hit. Your boss, Marty Harmon.”
“Harmon put this all together — getting you released, forging the letter from Alli — because he couldn’t let anyone see these.”
He laid out several selfies before him. He tapped one.
The image depicted Hannah in the foreground, wearing a bulky sweatshirt and a stocking cap. Behind her was a gaping doorway, forty or so feet high, opening onto a gloomy and gray warehouse. Five men stood inside, at work. What was distinctive visually was that while the image was largely monochrome, the orange safety vests of the employees stood out boldly and formed a pentagram. It was a striking photo, well composed.
Two of the workers seemed to be looking the girl’s way. One bore a troubled expression.
Inside, in the back, were hundreds of pallets of bottled water. And several tanker trucks.
Parker was squinting and sitting forward to see. “That’s HEP. Building Three. The warehouse near the river.”
Hannah said, “I took it when I was staying after school with Mom. I was bored, so I walked around and took pictures.”
“What’re you thinking, Colter?” Parker asked.
He found another of their daughter’s selfies. Two workers in Building Three were running a large rubber hose from one of the tanker trucks parked inside the cavernous building to a drain in the floor.
Shaw asked, “Does that drain lead to the river?”
“Probably. Building Three’s over a hundred years old. Most of the drains lead to the river. I thought they were sealed. They should have been.”
“They’re open now. It’s toxic waste. Harmon’s intentionally polluting the Kenoah.”
“Why the hell?” Merritt asked.
Shaw pointed to other pictures in front of him, selfies from the same series, taken at the company. He asked Parker, “Have you ever had a radiation leak at the plant?”
“No, never.”
“Anywhere in the area? Any accidents at all?”
“No...” Then she frowned. “Well, there was a traffic crash a few miles east of there. About six weeks ago. One of our trucks taking spent fuel rods to a disposal site missed a turn and—”
Shaw said, “And went into the river.”
“A tributary, I think. But, yes. Same thing.”
“Upstream of downtown?”
“That’s right. But there was no radioactive spill.”
“How do you know?”
“Because a spill would have to be reported. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. The state too.”
“That doesn’t mean there wasn’t a spill. It just means no one reported it.”
“But...” Her voice faded.
Merritt was catching on. The former detective asked Parker, “How was the crash handled? Police called?”
“No police. No need. Single-vehicle accident. Marty took care of everything himself.” Parker frowned. “You know, one thing was odd. The driver of the truck? He quit, just after the accident. Moved out West.”
“No,” Merritt muttered. “He didn’t move anywhere.”
Hannah turned away briefly from her watchman duties. “You mean, Mr. Harmon had him... killed?”
Her father nodded. “I’m afraid so, honey.”
Shaw said, “Now look at this one.” He tapped the image in front of him. Behind Hannah in this shot were pallets of chemical drums. One set of drums was stenciled with the letters ki, the others with dtpa.
Shaw said, “The first one’s the symbol for potassium iodide.”
“My God,” Parker said. “But that’s...”
“An antidote for radiation poisoning. The second one, DTPA’s diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid. It binds to particles of radioactive material in the bloodstream and they pass out of the body through urine.”
A look to Parker. “There was a spill when that truck went into the river and it got into the Ferrington water supply. Then Harmon polluted the river intentionally with toxins, so everybody at risk would drink the bottled water he gave them — water laced with the antidote. He couldn’t afford even the hint of a radiation leak.”
“How do you know about this stuff?” Merritt asked.
Hannah answered. “Mr. Shaw, like, knows everything. His father was a survivalist.”
Shaw, Russell and Dorion had had a hundred hours of training in toxins and antidotes, radiation included. His sister took a particular liking to all things nuclear.
Merritt scoffed. “The great benefactor of the city... Bullshit.” Then he was frowning. “But he’d do all this, just to cover his own ass?”
Parker said, “Oh, nuclear’s always controversial. We have to do everything right. The smallest accident, with any injuries? It could close down the company.”
Hannah now asked, “What do you think, Mr. Shaw? How much time till it’s dark enough to leave?”
He joined her and gazed up at the sky. “Twenty minutes.”
Merritt, his eyes on Parker, said, “Shaw, Hannah, you two keep an eye out, would you? I want a word alone with my wife.”
In the parlor of the hunting lodge, door closed, Allison Parker sat slowly back on the couch that had been her hospital bed for the past few hours.
The pill had been humming like a quiet engine and she was nearly pain free. And not as groggy as she’d expected. It was one hell of a drug and she could see why Jon had fallen for it.
She watched her ex-husband pull up a chair and sit opposite her, the same chair, the same spot where Colter Shaw had just been.
Jon Merritt... the man who had once been her husband, the man with whom she’d shared so very much.
With whom she’d spent joyous and energetic and playful times in bed.
With whom she’d created a child, a beautiful and smart and unique child.
With whom she’d fought bitterly to save herself and that very daughter.
He sighed.
And as he did, Parker cocked her head and inhaled. She tried not to react but suspected the tiniest of frowns crossed her face.
Jon laughed. “Can’t smell anything, can you?”
“I...” She was blushing.
“It’s all right. No, I haven’t had a drink since the day of my sentencing. And for the record, not a wise idea to show up drunk in front of a judge.”
She glanced toward the door, referring, in silence, to the bottle of bourbon, which Colter Shaw had removed from the backpack.
“I bought it yesterday morning. I needed to see that I could handle it. Never even opened it. The most powerful stuff I’ve been drinking since I’ve been out’s been Pepsi. Straight, no chaser.”
She said, “I heard about that — in the Al-Anon meetings. People who were dry would sometimes get a bottle and keep it close. To test themselves.”
He nodded. “You were in Al-Anon. Hannah Alateen. You did that for me.”
Parker shrugged. “Didn’t last long. For her. Me either.”
He sighed. “That’s not on you, A.P. The program only works if I meet you halfway. And I didn’t get close.” He rested his palm on her unwounded thigh, tentatively, as if prepared for her to whisk it off.
She didn’t.
He said, “We don’t have much time. Need to get a few things said.”
“Jon.”
“Need to.”
This was his imploring self. From the old days. Dead serious and orbiting around the important.
But, my God, he was a man who would talk to you. And listen. How rare is that?
“Okay,” she whispered.
“Beacon Hill.”
This wasn’t what she’d been expecting. She thought he would bring up her betrayal under the seahorse.
He spoke the next words slowly. “The Beacon Hill incident... Sounds kind of like a thriller novel, doesn’t it?”
Allison Parker wouldn’t know. Advanced Semiconductor Applications in Radioactive Environments was on her bedside table.
He said, “Truth’s like a splinter, don’t you think? That’s what the doctor told me in County. Dr. Evans. Good man. A splinter. It’s got to come out one way or the other.”
She had no idea where he was going. But nodded encouragingly.
“Beacon Hill... Meth-head father, family, hostages, barricade, weapons. Gunshots reported. Danny and I armor up and go in, no time for SWAT. We get inside, and right off, Danny’s hit. The shooter was in full body armor.”
Jon was breathing hard now, as if he’d just run a race. “Son of a bitch keeps firing and firing... Christ, there were bullets everywhere. The only cover in the room was this bookcase. With all the books, the slugs weren’t penetrating. Except there’s somebody hiding there. It’s his daughter, home from college.”
“The only victim who died.” She felt a chill within her. Was this going where she thought?
“And the father’s getting closer, firing constantly. Must’ve had a twenty-round mag. I had to get to cover. One slug was an inch from my ear. I could hear it over the sound of the gunshot. They break the sound barrier. He aims again and—” His voice clenched. “And I know he’s going to get me. So I just grabbed the daughter and pushed her out. I got behind the bookcase. She gets hit.”
She recalled the girl was shot multiple times.
“Oh, Jon...”
His pallid face was a mask, maybe the most wrenching expression she’d ever seen on him. Worse even than on November 15 as he was led off in cuffs.
“Then, finally, there’s a pause. He’s reloading. I step out fast and take him down. I know he’s gone. I call for medical and try to help the girl. But...”
Six shots, Parker was thinking. What could he do?
“She didn’t die right away, A.P. She stared at me, looking confused, like she’d asked me an important question and was waiting for the answer. And then she was gone too.”
Tears appeared in his eyes. She put her hand on his.
“But your leg... Oh...”
He nodded. Wiped his face. “I gloved up, finished reloading the perp’s gun and hit myself in the body armor, and then parked one in my thigh. Make it look real. I lay down in front of Danny, like I’d been hit, shielding him.”
“Jon...”
“I killed her, A.P. I told myself I did it because he’d stop shooting when he saw his own daughter. Give me a chance to acquire. But that was bullshit. I might as well’ve just used my own piece on her. I should’ve gone down for second-degree murder or aggravated manslaughter. But, no, I ended up the Hero of Beacon Hill. The ceremony, the articles, the looks when I walked into the station... The more adoring they were, the more it stabbed me.”
“So that was the pain you were trying to stop. The drugs, the drinking.”
“Oh, the leg? That was nothing.” He glanced at hers. “You’ll find that out in a couple of weeks. No, it was the girl’s eyes asking me that question. I saw her everywhere. I was lying in our bed, walking down the street, physical therapy, driving... doing anything. The drugs dulled it. After that the booze. But she kept coming back.
“Half the times I came home wasted? I’d been out to her grave in Forest Lawn. I’d buy a bottle before I went and finish it there or on the way home.”
Parker frowned. “November fifteenth. The anniversary of Beacon Hill.”
He nodded.
She touched the side of his head, the hair above his left ear. This was a place where she would seat her face when they made love, a connection that she found so very comforting and, when the moment arrived, electrical.
What plagued him wasn’t psychosis. It was guilt.
“You didn’t plan it,” she whispered.
“I made the choice.”
“Did you? Let the engineer have a word.”
He looked into her eyes.
“It was action, reaction. You pick up a hot pan, pull back and smack your baby in the nose. Not for all the money on earth would you hurt her. But it happened. You do things automatically to survive.”
Then her head was down and she felt tears. She whispered, “I did the same thing. I sent you to prison.”
“To save yourself and Han.” He shook his head. “Ain’t we a pair, A.P.?”
“Hannah suspects I did it.”
“Oh, her father can do no wrong in her eyes?”
Then his expression changed and another item on the agenda appeared.
“Have you noticed anything about my marvelous complexion? Don’t have much of a tan.”
She gave a laugh. “You’ve been in jail for nearly a year, Jon.”
“I’d still be looking this way if I’d been sunbathing in the Bahamas.”
He displayed some puncture wounds on his arm.
She frowned.
“Chemo.”
She stared at the needle marks. “Oh, Jon, no!”
“Found out about two months ago. Been with me for a while, looks like. I knew I was feeling bad, but they don’t have the best doctors in County. They had a good shrink, but the internist was a kid. Treating cons for practice. I had a session at Trevor County Med yesterday. Then went to my motel room and puked like I’d been drinking. Only, this time I was sober, so I could enjoy the lovely experience to its fullest.”
She was about to ask about the prognosis, which she had always found an ugly word, fit only for medical pros, not to be used among those we loved.
But she didn’t need to. He’d understand it was the next logical question. He said, “It’s not looking too good. They don’t tell you exactly, you know. But I got a little time left in me.” A grin. Then he said briskly, “Enough of this, A.P. Right now we got work to do. Let’s get to it.”
He turned his hand over and pressed hers, palm to palm, and he helped her stand.
Colter Shaw said, “Dark enough.”
The four were in the front room. Shaw and Hannah had been looking out the windows. He had seen nothing of the Twins. The girl confirmed that she hadn’t either.
“Ah, Han,” Merritt said to his daughter. “Something I brought for you.”
The incongruity was almost funny. The man sounded as if he’d just arrived at a party with a gift for the birthday girl.
He took the backpack. “We had a metalworking shop in prison. For rehab. Somebody’d try to make a crossbow or knife sometimes, but what we were supposed to make were coatracks and boot scrapers. You remember our project? That we were working on when I went out — that night in November?”
“For class. We had to make some historical thing. Something to do with Ferrington.”
“I said I’d be back and we’d finish it.” He clicked his tongue. “And we know how that ended.”
She nodded, her face solemn.
“Well, here it is.”
He pulled out the clock that Shaw had seen earlier when he’d searched the bag.
Hannah actually gasped, looking at the thing. She whispered, “The Water Clock.”
Shaw hadn’t paid attention before but he now saw that it was a faithful reproduction of what he’d seen on the Carnegie Building beside the Kenoah.
The only difference was that the hands were not in the angel wings pose.
“It really works. Water drips from here.” He tapped a reservoir in the top. “And turns the gears. Probably wouldn’t want to run railroads according to it, or schedule airliners, but it’s accurate enough. I tried it out.”
She hugged him. “It’s so cool! Bring it with.” And held it out.
Merritt stood away from the girl. “You hold on to it.”
She frowned. “But...”
He said, “You all go first.” He picked up the keys to the deputy’s car and handed the Buick’s to Shaw. “A half mile up the road, on the right. I nosed her into some juniper and forsythia.”
“No, Daddy, come with us!”
Merritt said, “We’ve gotta be smart about this. Trick ’em. You hike out through the woods. I’ll start up the car, drive it back and forth, like it’s stuck. You drive to Millton and send back the cavalry.”
“Jon, no!” Parker said.
“It’s all going to be fine. When I left prison yesterday, this guard, he said I was a lucky man. Well, he put it a little different. But he did say ‘lucky.’ And I am. Luckiest man in the world.” He cast a look to his daughter. “Hey, Han, come here a minute.”
Merritt stepped to the corner and Hannah joined him. He bent down, his mouth close to his daughter’s ear. He whispered. As he did her face grew still. Then he stepped back and watched her, his own expression one of uncertainty. After a moment she hugged him and she too whispered words that were also inaudible to Shaw and Parker.
Merritt joined Shaw and they distributed weapons. Shaw took the Glock, Merritt the shotgun, and he placed the revolvers and extra ammunition into the backpack, which he slung over his shoulder.
The men shook hands.
Merritt walked to his former wife, hugged her and kissed her cheek.
“Daddy, please...” Hannah tried one more time.
“All good, Han.” He laughed. “There’re only two of ’em. Against me? They don’t stand a chance.”
Lying in a clearing on the hill overlooking the cabin, Moll wondered how long it would be until their reinforcements arrived. Three more men, three more guns.
He scanned the scene, the barrel of the long Winchester, the gun he loved like kin, easing back and forth as he sighted along the porch. The moon was low and lopped in half, but it provided some light. Enough to shoot by.
A glance down. His phone showed the time, but there was still no signal. That wouldn’t last. Marty Harmon had told him the power to the local cell tower could only be cut for so long.
He let the gun sit on the sandbag he was using for a shooting rest and sprayed Benadryl on his arms and neck.
He scanned the cabin again, Kristi’s car, her body...
A crack of twig behind him. He turned, pistol ready.
The men Harmon had sent to help finish the job.
Desmond had led them from where they’d parked, next to the Transit, on a nearby logging road. Beside his partner was a heavyset redhead of about fifty and, behind, two men who seemed to be in their late twenties. They were all dressed in dark clothing, jackets and chino-style pants, tactical gear lite. The younger ones toted long gray plastic cases.
Moll had known Dominic Ryan for years. The man had hired him and Desmond a few times to make some bodies and dispose of them. And he’d also hired them to dispose of bodies that Ryan’s men themselves had made.
Crazy thing, this present job: Harmon hiring Moll and Desmond to kill the girl — along with her mother and Merritt himself, making it look like a revenge murder-suicide. Then, out of the blue, Merritt pays Ryan to find out if there was an open hit. Ryan jumped at the chance and called Moll, who put Ryan and Harmon together. It became a joint venture, which it needed to be because the missus and the kid took off. A four-hour job turned into this mess.
Moll stood, looked over the young coworkers. The bony pair had sneery faces, even when they weren’t sneering, and Moll could imagine them looking forward to beating people for late vig payments and protection money.
Moll thought again about the Irish rebels in a past life.
“The Rising of the Moon.” Ah, that was the song.
Moll and Harmon had decided that since the murder-suicide fiction would no longer work, they’d create a new scenario: the killing of the family would look like revenge for one of Merritt’s past cases. Maybe one of those ganja crews, maybe one of the corrupt county officials he’d brought down. Ryan would get some confidential informants to leak the word. Maybe one of the Irish kids had some weed and they would plant it here. Point fingers at the Jamaicans. Shaw would die too.
Dawndue...
Ryan didn’t introduce the skinny men who were with him but nodded them aside as he walked up to Moll, squatted in his sniper nest and looked over at the cabin.
“They’re in there?” Ryan asked.
“That is correct.”
“Who?”
“Merritt, his ex, the girl. And Motorcycle Man.”
“Thoughts?” Ryan asked.
Desmond said, “Merritt’s got a car somewhere, but it can’t be that close and I don’t think they’ll hike to it. One of ’em’s hurt. We saw blood, fresh.”
“Which one?”
Moll said, “Woman, I think. So. They’ll try and take Kristi’s car.”
“Where is she?”
“Can’t you see?” Moll asked, suddenly irritated.
Squinting and scanning the area, Ryan grunted when he noted her body. “Shit. She was good. She drove getaway a couple jobs for me and lost investigation reports at the sheriff’s office. That sucks.”
It did. All the more because a couple of times she’d spent the night at Moll’s house. It was after Chloe and before Jean. She’d been more interested in the faux furniture than the sex but that was more or less true for Moll himself. He said he’d paint her a piece but never got around to it.
The two kids removed Bushmaster M4s from the cases — short, black assault rifles. They went through the ritual of loading and charging. Moll had never understood the label, and the stigma attached to it. “Assault.” They were no different from any other semiautomatic rifle — one finger pull, one shot. A deer did not care one bit if it was hit by a slug from a scary-looking soldier’s gun or one from an elegant walnut-stock hunting rifle with an engraved, blued barrel and receiver.
Though, for his part, he would never own anything but the latter, like the Winchester he gripped now.
One sneery boy, the skinniest, said, “I’m a shot. Want me to take out a tire?”
Moll said, with a hint of exasperation, “Do you think it might be better to wait till they were all inside the vehicle? Or do you want to dig them out of the cabin?”
The kid said nothing, not appearing offended, and Moll supposed it was a helpful quality to be able to accept your own dimness.
The other sneerer asked, “What’d that kid do that Harmon wants her gone?”
“Do not know.” When Marty Harmon had hired him and Desmond for the special services, the CEO had not shared. Fine with Moll.
He said to the newcomers, “They think it’s only the two of us. No idea it’s five, and that we’ve got those.” A nod to the M4s. “They’ll keep the car dark and hit the driveway as fast as they can. They’ll think we’ll have time to get off maybe two, three shots and then they’ll be gone.”
Desmond said, “But when they get to that spot—” He pointed to a patch of dirt and grass at the end of the parking area. It was an unobstructed view from the ridge here. “—we’ll open up.”
“Good kill zone,” the chastised sneerer said approvingly, as if he spent a lot of time thinking about things like that.
Desmond led the two younger men down the ridge and positioned them with a good view of the clearing.
Ryan squinted once more. “Can’t see in the cabin.”
Allowing himself a contraction, Moll said, “We’ll know. When we hear the engine.”
Which, just at that moment, sparked to life.
When Jon Merritt started the deputy’s sedan, Colter Shaw climbed from the side window of the cabin and dropped into the brush below the sill. He scanned the landscape, sweeping the Glock, two-handed, from right to left, back again.
“Clear,” he whispered, then tucked the gun away, reached up and guided Allison Parker out and to the ground. She winced not a bit. The drugs that Jon had relieved the foot-shot tweaker of were doing their job.
Hannah climbed out after her mother, needing no assistance. She’d brought the brick bolo, which Shaw was ninety-five percent sure she’d never get a chance to use. With her too was the water clock. She had summarily rejected Shaw’s suggestion to leave it behind.
The three now moved north into the brush and forest — mostly pine and hemlock — that filled the land between lake and road, which ran parallel to the water. Across the overgrown driveway, to the right, the ground rose steeply to the hills where the Twins waited with their long guns.
They were about fifty feet into their escape when the sound of the engine revving hard reached them. This was followed by spinning tires. And then the grind of metal as Merritt would have driven the car onto a boulder, as if he hadn’t seen it. The engine roared and more dirt scattered. Hanging the car up and making a commotion to free it was a solid idea.
Hannah turned and gazed back, slowing. In the duskiness, her expression couldn’t be seen clearly. Was she alarmed? Proud? Worried?
Shaw touched her shoulder and nodded. She refocused on their transit. And on helping her mother, who might have been largely pain free for the moment, but was prone to stumbling, in her opioid haze.
Eighty, ninety yards from the cabin, a thick hedge of greenery arose on the right side of the road. No one on the hill would be able to see them, and Shaw directed the others onto the roadway itself, where they could make better time.
A snap. Another.
Like a soldier on point, Shaw held up a hand and they stopped. While it would have been impossible for a hillside sniper to target them, one of the Twins might have suspected an end run like this and come down here to see.
Shaw scanned around, peering into the dark. Two-handed again, he swept the ground with his pistol. No visual threat. He heard: wind, early autumn leaves rustling, the click of branches.
Another snap.
Then the intruder waddled past: the beaver that had led them to the cabin, or maybe its mate or sibling.
Offering an irritated glance toward the humans, it stalked on.
Shaw caught Hannah’s eye and they shared a smile, then continued along the overgrown road that promised at least the hope of safety.
On the ridge, the men looked down toward the grind and engine roar as those in the parking area below tried to dislodge the car from where it had beached on a rock.
Moll rose from his nest and joined Ryan. Together they walked into the trees just above the car.
“The hell,” Ryan muttered. “Didn’t they plan it out? Know where the rocks were? We don’t have a shot.”
Moll nodded. He wanted to pull the spray out and hit his arms and neck. But Ryan would see it as a sign of weakness. Later.
Now the sound of the car shifting: forward, reverse, forward, reverse. After a moment Moll could hear what sounded like a ratcheting jack. Tough to get a car free that way — the parking area was dirt and clay and the tool would sink under the big car’s weight. But it might lift the front end high enough to roll it backward off the rock.
Come on. Get it done.
Moll heard a voice from below, half whispering as it called, “Not working.”
Ryan said, “That’s Merritt.” After a moment: “We need to get this over with. We’ll give it a few minutes, then move in.”
“I do not want to do that,” Moll whispered in a foreboding tone.
“What choice is there, they can’t get that damn thing loose?”
Moll inhaled deeply, taking in the smell of tree bark and dirt and fragrance from petals brilliant during the day and colorless now. Soon, all scents would be hidden under the aroma of the chemical scent of burnt smokeless gunpowder.
What a few days this had been.
“See anything?” one of Ryan’s men called.
“Quiet,” Moll snapped in a whisper. You didn’t telegraph your location to a deer; why do so when your prey were armed humans?
Ryan glanced his way, eyebrows raised. It was an apology of sorts for his man’s carelessness. Moll wondered if either youngster was kin.
Kristi’s car still idled, but the jack was now silent.
Had they given up that—
The faintest of crackles behind them. He glanced to Ryan, who was frowning. Their eyes met and they turned.
The light was almost completely gone but there was no missing Jon Merritt holding a shotgun aimed steadily at the two of them. The man’s head was tilted slightly and his expression might have been one of surprise. Of course: He hadn’t expected other shooters, much less Dom Ryan himself.
So the car had been a diversion.
Maybe Motorcycle Man had come up the other side and was aiming at the farthest sneery kid.
Goddamn...
A standoff.
Now would come the demand to toss down their weapons. Negotiations would begin to figure out some way to let those in the cabin get away safe.
Jon Merritt, though, had a different solution. In a calm voice, not a whisper, he said to Ryan, “I was just thinking about you, Dom. That there’s no worse sin than betrayal.”
Then fired a shotgun load into his throat.
Racking another shell, he swung the muzzle toward Moll’s blood-flecked face.
His plan would have been good if, like he’d told his daughter, the only hostiles were the two triggermen.
Jon Merritt supposed he should have figured they’d bring in more people. Though he’d never guess one of them would be the snake Dominic Ryan.
After shooting the mob boss, there was immediate return fire from along the ridge, and Merritt had had to crouch fast, missing the chance to take out the big man in the black suit. He had flung himself into the bushes beside Ryan’s body and, though Merritt had fired, the load of pellets had missed.
He had slid and tumbled and run then slid some more down the hill, and when he hit level ground, he scrabbled back to the car.
There, crouching beside the driver’s door, he assessed. He had eighteen shotgun shells. The tweaker’s revolver had six in the cylinder. The other pistol — the one he’d bought from Ryan’s man — had five in the wheel and he had fifteen .38s the man had “generously” thrown in for free.
Of course, fighting an enemy in a forest in the dark? Well, obviously a scattergun was the best tool for the job.
He gave a chuckle, thinking, Don’t I sound like a combat veteran? Yet in his whole career as a police officer, even in the tough precincts of Ferrington, he’d fired his weapon but two times.
Not counting Beacon Hill.
They would regroup on the hilltop, trying to figure out the best way to come at him — well, them, since it seemed none of them had been tipped to the exodus by Allison, Hannah and Shaw.
They could easily flank him here. So he opened the door, which put on the dome light, and, staying down, pumped the accelerator by hand, the car now in neutral.
With their attention on the sedan, Merritt hustled back to the cabin, shotgun in one hand, backpack in the other, the pistols tucked into his belt like a righteous pirate. He eased through the front door. The maneuver sent another jolt of pain radiating through his body from the rubber-bullet-bruised regions. Another as well: from the scar of the bullet hole where he’d shot himself. The toughened circle of flesh throbbed on occasion. He sometimes felt it was God’s way of reminding him of his sin.
He closed the door and wedged the chair under the knob.
Inside, the cabin was almost completely dark now but he recalled the location of every window and the back door.
He peered out. He thought he saw some forms moving cautiously through the forest toward the car.
Not worth the twelve-gauge pellets yet.
Merritt reached into the backpack and extracted the bourbon. He stared at it. Then, with a laugh, he ripped off the plastic seal, uncorked the bottle and took a sip, actually coughing, just like he did the first time he stole some of his father’s bourbon, hoping the sting in his mouth would relieve the sting of the welts on his buttocks.
Another drink.
The second mouthful went down smoother.
Gripping the shotgun, looking out the right front window for a target.
Where were they?
A breeze came through the window, fragrant with some herbal smell. He’d learned something about horticulture helping his daughter in biology. He and Hannah were going to start another project. The water clock was for history. The new one would be for biology: hydroponic gardening.
One more sip.
And another after that.
“Nineteen, really?” Then Dr. Evans looks at the clock that is not the Water Clock; these hands never stop moving. And then back to Merritt. “Ah, but I see our time is up, Jon. Hold on to that memory. It might be a good one to explore.”
Without a thought, Merritt snaps like a tensioned wire. He rises fast and grabs his chair and flings it against the wall. He lunges forward, well within the doctor’s sphere of personness, and leans toward him screaming, “Fuck you, fuck you, fuck you!”
And Jon Merritt realizes he’s about to find out what happens when the panic button gets slapped.
But the man doesn’t summon help.
Dr. Tuna Sandwich is actually smiling. “But we’re not going to worry about the clock today. Let’s keep going. All right with you?”
Breathing hard, Jon stares.
Dr. Evans walks to the tossed chair, picks it up and replaces it. He gestures for his patient to sit.
He does.
“There’s a famous psychiatrist. He had this theory I like. He said that everybody has a prime disconnect. He means a constant and essential problem. Most of our unhappiness flows from that. We’ve talked for months now. You’re intelligent, fair, responsible... But you, like everybody else, have a prime disconnect. Yours is an addiction.”
“The drinking, sure, well—”
“No, not the drinking.”
This gets Jon’s full attention.
“You were a police officer. You run drug cases?”
“Yeah. Sometimes.”
“Then you know about precursor.”
“Chemicals used in the early stages of cooking drugs.”
“You have a precursor too. Alcohol. You’re not addicted to that. You’re addicted to what alcohol cooks.”
“Which is?”
“Anger.”
Jon gives one of his humorless laughs. “I’m addicted to anger? What does that mean?”
“We’re addicted to behaviors that numb us from uneasiness, depression, anxiety. Lashing out does that for you. But you hold back, it builds up, builds up... And you start drinking. Then the barriers come down.
“Now that we know that, we have to look at where the anger comes from. That’ll take some time to answer. Your father has something to do with it. A belt? At nineteen? Because you were working overtime? His reaction, his behavior were inexcusable. You were furious... But you didn’t say anything.”
“No.”
“Because you were afraid he’d go away from you.”
Jon says nothing.
“I think that’s true. And something to think about. But that’s only part of your disconnect. I’ve been thinking about this quite a lot.”
Answering the persistent question: the doctor is an obsessive wrestler for his inmate patients, and not a morose-housewife daydreamer.
“I looked at your PD record. Not a single disciplinary problem in your career. No citizen complaints. Not one.”
A certain resident of 8248 Homewood in Beacon Hill might have a say about that, but she’s no longer able to fill out the paperwork.
“You saw terrible things in your job and you couldn’t react. Abuse, murder, predators, cruelty, right?”
A shrug.
“Tell me about some.”
“Of the cases?”
He nods.
Where to start?
“The father on Monroe Street who raped his daughter. The husband on Prescott I cuffed with his wife’s blood still on his knuckles. The DUI’d businessman driving when he was 2.0 and knocked an elderly woman twenty yards into the middle of Ferris Street. The M.E. said she was dead before she hit the ground. The mother with a cigarette-burned baby in the ER swearing to me that the daughter did it herself.” His voice begins trembling, and by God, yes, he feels the anger now. “And the pricks — the suspects — come into court, and they’re: ‘Oh, sorry, it’s not my fault, you don’t understand.’ ”
He inhales to control the rage. “They say you get used to it. No. Never, never, never, not for me. I was on fire the whole time, from the scene to the arrest to booking to court.”
“And you handled it the way you should have. Professional. But that meant you put it all away. And there it sits. That fury. Just waiting for you to take a drink so it can escape.”
Jon barks the first laugh he’s ever uttered here that isn’t sarcastic or fake. “You planned that. The our-time-is-up thing.”
Dr. Evans smiles. “I had to see it. Had to see you angry. It didn’t work the first couple times — when I said our time was up at a critical point. And when I kept staring out the window, like I was lost in the ozone. Well, finally you blew. And I got a good look at the dynamics of your anger. And there’s more where that came from, a lot more.”
Jon hunches forward, breathing hard. He’s tired and he aches. He hasn’t been feeling well lately. The chair incident, a small thing physically, has exhausted him. Is he sick? He’ll check in to Med later.
The doctor continues. “Now, something else I’ve observed. You haven’t had a drinking problem all your life. It’s fairly recent. Something happened in the last few years to make it worse. A lot worse.”
Ah, the crosshairs scanning for the Truth like a sniper on the battlefield.
And Jon says, “Maybe.”
He is thinking the dots are connecting. The Truth — killing the meth head’s daughter. Then the drinking, more and more. Then the anger pouring out.
And flooding his life, sweeping away his wife and daughter and profession.
The doctor is looking at him with staunch patience.
But Jon Merritt is not prepared to reveal the secret that he is a murderer, the man who substituted the life of that girl in a Beacon Hill bungalow for his own.
Not yet.
The doctor seems to understand that this will be a conversation for another day. Perhaps with him, perhaps with someone else. The man seems satisfied to have gotten where they are.
He looks Jon up and down. “I don’t even think you like the taste of liquor.”
“You know, I really never did.”
Notes are tapped into the tablet.
“What have we learned today, Jon?”
“If I take a fucking drink, I’m going to get mad as shit.”
The doctor smiles. “My psychiatrist’s handbook couldn’t’ve put it any better.”
At this particular moment, however, in this backwoods cabin, what would soon be the bullseye of a deadly shooting gallery, it was the perfect time to take a fucking drink.
Which he now did again.
No, he didn’t like the taste, but the enemy was coming.
And he needed to be filled with rage, not reason.
He squinted into the night, noting that beside the deputy’s car a lush stand of brush that had not been moving a moment ago was moving now.
Jon Merritt aimed the shotgun at it and slowly squeezed the trigger.
“All that shooting!” Allison Parker said.
“Mom, shhh,” Hannah said, just as Shaw lifted his finger to his lips.
He motioned them along the road. He believed he’d counted four different weapons, in addition to the distinctive-sounding shotgun. So Marty Harmon had apparently called in additional guns. Shaw hadn’t thought that a likelihood, given the cell outage, but maybe Jacket or Suit had driven into a different zone and called for help.
And where was Jon Merritt now, and how was he faring against that firepower?
As if in answer, there was a lull in the shooting.
Then two more pistol shots.
And silence.
Another hundred yards and they were at the Buick. Colter Shaw quickly cleared it and the surrounding brush. He returned and covered Parker and Hannah as they walked to the vehicle. They got into the backseat. Before starting the engine, Shaw hit the accessory function and when the dash came alive, he quickly dimmed all the lights.
“Belts,” he said. It could be a rough ride, some possibly off road.
They all clicked in.
“Han,” Shaw said, subconsciously using her nickname. “Watch the ridge to the right. That’s where they’d be.”
She pressed her face against the window.
“You see anyone, tell me and move to the left side. You and your mother keep down.”
“Okay.”
“We move fast once I hit the ignition. Ready?”
The girl nodded. Parker did too. She winced. The meds were wearing off. She’d refused to take another one. It was just as well. Shaw would need her to be alert too.
Shaw pressed the start button and immediately slammed the shifter into drive, speeding onto the rough surface of the road. He drove fast but slower than he could have in full light; to the left were steep drop-offs to the stream or river that fed the lake behind the cabin.
There was, at least, no issue with directions; the cabin lay at the end of this lengthy dirt road, which would take them straight to a highway. Once there they’d be in Millton in ten minutes.
He listened again for gunfire.
Still nothing.
The shotgun had been the first weapon fired; Shaw suspected — hoped — that Merritt had surprised the party and taken one of them out. Was it one of the Twins? A creepier pair of men Shaw had never met. Who were the others? Dom Ryan’s crew, maybe.
“No one. So far,” Hannah said. Then she added softly, “There’s no more shooting.”
“He’s retreated,” Shaw said.
Hannah: “Or he’s killed all of them.” Her voice faded toward the end of the sentence.
Or...
Another half mile.
They entered under a canopy of trees. It was darker now. Shaw had to slow down.
Hannah said to her mother, “Daddy was saying something to me, at the cabin? Just before he left?”
“I saw.”
“About forgiveness.”
Did this have to do, Shaw wondered, with the woman’s keen fear: that Hannah would learn of what she’d done to her father?
“He wanted me to forgive him.”
“For what?”
“For hitting you with his gun that night in November. He said drinking wasn’t an excuse.”
“Did you?” Parker asked in a soft voice.
After a pause, Hannah said, “I don’t know what it really means when you say you forgive somebody. It’s, like, more complicated, isn’t it?”
“It is, yes,” Parker said.
“Well, I told him I forgave him.” The girl sighed, Shaw believed. She added, “You know, I thought you might’ve done it to yourself. To get him arrested. I’m sorry I thought that.”
Parker said nothing for a moment. Then: “It’s behind us now.”
Life gets by on ninety percent truth and ten percent deception. And not all of those lies are bad. Sometimes honesty derails a train bound for important destinations. In any event, this wasn’t Colter Shaw’s game. He was here to make sure they survived in body, not in heart and soul.
He gave the phone to Hannah. “Signal?”
“No. Still blank.”
Shaw decided, to be safe, he’d use the navigation app in the car and find a circuitous route to get to Millton, back roads and neighborhoods exclusively.
The odds of pursuit?
If there was still gunfire, he’d say ten percent.
With the silence, he guessed sixty. No, Jon Merritt had not killed them all. But they might think that he, Allison and Hannah had fled on foot into the woods and be looking for them there.
They must be only—
Suddenly there was a flash of white to the right.
Parker screamed, Hannah said, “Mr. — !”
The Ford Transit thundered through the brush and broadsided the Buick hard.
The impact shoved the vehicle over the embankment. It rolled two and a half times, crushing emaciated pine saplings, and came to rest, upside down, in the middle of the steep hill.
Shaw smelled the sweet aroma of gasoline.
“Out!” he called, rolling down the windows, unlocking the doors. All of the airbags had blown. Parker and her daughter didn’t seem badly hurt, though they were stunned. “Gas. Get out!”
He undid his belt, dropping to the ceiling. He turned and undid Parker’s. She’d been fumbling with it. She landed in a pile, barking a muted scream of pain. Hannah hit her own harness and twisted as she fell, landing like a cat on all fours. They crawled out.
Hannah reached back for the water clock.
Shaw said firmly, “Han. No.”
She looked toward him and nodded.
“Stay low. Move that way.” He pointed downhill — and lateral. Not only was the sedan at risk of catching fire, but it teetered at a twenty-degree angle on soft earth. It wouldn’t take much to start it tumbling.
Shaw stood and fired one round into the windshield of the Ford van. There was no human target; he wanted only to tell them he was armed, which would buy some distance and time, and allow them to set up a good defensive position. He heard shouting: directions given, possible sightings. It seemed to be only the Twins. Had Merritt gotten the others? Shaw had a feeling that he had.
Hannah was helping her mother.
As the three continued down the slope, Shaw glanced up the hill and saw the two forms coming after them. Yes, the Twins. They had drawn their handguns and were beginning to shoot in the direction of the ruined car. Their tactic with the van hadn’t quite worked. They too had been slammed by the airbags and, still stunned, weren’t firing accurately.
Still, a random bullet could be just as deadly as one fired with precision.
When they were about fifty feet below the Buick, Shaw noticed Parker slowing.
Looking back up the hill, he saw Tan Jacket standing to fire. The man dropped just as Shaw squeezed off a round.
A miss.
Thirteen shots left in the weapon, two fifteen-round mags in his pocket.
Never lose track of remaining ammunition...
Ahead of them, Shaw spotted a culvert about three feet deep. “There.” He gestured them into it. Then he rolled in and peered over the top like a soldier in a trench, scanning with his weapon. He looked behind them. No escape that way. The hill, descending to the river, offered limited ground cover and the moon was up, its cool light bright enough to spot targets.
He looked back over the lip of their trench, scanning to the left.
“Mr. Shaw!” Hannah whispered. She’d ignored his order to stay low. “Right! Look!”
It was Suit.
Shaw acquired and was about to fire when the man vanished.
They’d be flanking, he assumed. And they’d need to finish up quickly. The highway wasn’t far away, and on a pleasant night like this, car windows might be down, drivers and passengers would be wondering about the shots. No hunters at this hour, of course.
“What should we do, Mr. Shaw?”
He looked around the immediate area. “Cover yourselves up with leaves as much as you can.”
She hesitated. The girl who wanted a gun didn’t seem happy at the thought of hiding.
But then she got to work, piling leaves on her mother and then hunkering down and burrowing under the rustling blanket herself.
“I’m moving up there.” He pointed to high ground. “I need to get into position.”
She gave a smile. “That’s what people like you say. They get into position to engage.”
He nodded to her and went over the top of the ridge and began a soldier’s prone shuffle to the left.
Where are you? Where?
The breeze was troubling dry leaves and branches, covering up the sound of his transit, but also making it difficult or impossible to hear the Twins’ steps.
He rose and stood before a thick swath of tall grass. He couldn’t see much: the top of the Transit, the inverted Buick.
Gazing from left to right, looking for any sign of movement that was not caused by the wind.
Left, right...
Except flanking was not their tactic.
Maybe assuming his attention would be to the sides, they went for a frontal assault.
One of them, high on the hill, began covering fire in Shaw’s direction, while the second, hunched low, like a linebacker, rushed through the tall grass, directly toward him.
In a crouch, he aimed at where the man would be, judging from the sound and the disturbed greenery.
He inhaled, exhaled leisurely, holding the firearm out.
What if somebody’s attacking you?
Even slower then...
Forty feet away, thirty-five, thirty...
Now.
Shaw fired. The Glock kicked.
The man kept coming.
Two more shots, slightly left and right of where he’d first aimed.
Neither did these hit him.
Impossible. Shaw hadn’t missed. Body armor?
The man was now only twenty feet away. He’d break from the grass into the clearing any minute. Shaw aimed at the spot where he’d exit.
By the time he realized that this wasn’t the enemy at all but the spare tire from the Transit they’d rolled his way, the wheel sped from the grass and slammed into Shaw’s chest, sending him tumbling down the hill.
The Twins charged forward in the wake of the tire.
Shaw had dropped the Glock under the impact. He rose to his knees, struggling to breathe and scanning for the weapon. Suit fired a shot his way and kept coming. Shaw rolled into a thicket of brush to take cover.
Jacket turned to his left, searching for Parker and Hannah. He was not far from the culvert where they lay, but with the darkness and under the camo, he was having no luck spotting them.
From his cover, Shaw scanned the ground and saw his own gun lying twenty feet away, directly in the path of cautiously approaching Suit.
Maybe he’d miss it...
But, no, the big man paused and then stepped forward fast, snagging the gun. He whispered, “Dawndue...” Like a weird birdcall. The man had said the same thing at the house just before they burned the camper to the ground.
Suit stood upright and looked around. He called, “Come on, Motorcycle Man. I have your six-shooter. Show yourself.”
Shaw noted that he had another weapon. Something strapped behind his back. Maybe one of the .223 assault rifles.
After a moment Suit called, “You left those ladies alone for my friend to find. That is a shame on you. He is not a normal fellow when it comes to that topic. Come on out and we will make it quick. I will see to it my friend does not misbehave.”
He somehow had the idea that Shaw had continued to the river. That was the direction in which he was scanning, trying to see through the tangles and shadows. He called, “Come on. Going once, going twice...”
Jacket yelled, “I got ’em.” He was pointing toward the culvert. “Get up!” He fired a shot. Parker screamed but out of alarm. She wasn’t hit. Neither was Hannah. “Come on, rise and shine. Up you go.”
The two climbed from their nest. Leaves clung.
Suit kept scanning for Shaw.
Jacket said, “Where is he?”
“Down the hill. Maybe knocked out. Wheels can be formidable.”
Jacket was looking over the landscape. “Don’t see him.” He turned to Parker but his eyes settled on Hannah. To his partner he called, “Listen. I’ve been patient. You were right when we were going to do it the first way. Now things’ve changed.”
“You think we have time here? Really?”
“ ’Course not. We’ve got the body-mobile. Let’s take her with us.”
Suit sighed, grimacing, a man finally worn down by a persistent argument. “All right, all right. Get her in there. Fast. Truss her up and then we’ll find Motorcycle Man.”
“No!” Hannah cried.
But this was not a reaction to Jacket’s plans for her. She was staring at what Suit had unslung from behind his back.
The shotgun they’d last seen in her father’s hands in the cabin.
Answering for certain the question that had been on all of their minds.
Hannah launched herself at Jacket.
“Whoa. Feisty.” He sidestepped and grabbed her around the chest. To Suit he said, “Told you she was attitudinal.”
Parker climbed to her feet, crying out against the pain in her leg and with fury at seeing the man grip her daughter. Jacket glanced at her, noted the wound and kicked her in the damaged leg. She screamed and fell back, clutching the limb, sobbing.
Jacket kissed the top of Hannah’s head and laughed when she spit at him. “Come on, let’s get you inside.”
Shaw quietly moved ten feet to his right, keeping under cover to pick up what he’d been looking for — a rock the size of an orange. He drew back and flung it as far as he could over Suit’s head. When it landed, the man turned toward the sound, firing the shotgun. This deafened him, as Shaw had planned, so he couldn’t hear the sprint behind him on the crisp leaves. When Suit saw there was no target, he started to turn. But too late. Shaw powered into him.
He had aimed low, his shoulder targeting the man’s kidney. The blow, he knew, is nearly paralyzing from the pain it delivers, and Shaw followed up by simply gripping the man’s pants cuffs and standing fast — the same maneuver he’d described to Hannah. The man went down on his face. Shaw stood and dropped a knee onto his other kidney. Suit screamed, releasing his grip on the shotgun. Shaw scooped it up, along with his Glock and Suit’s pistol, which he pocketed.
Jacket aimed but didn’t shoot. Shaw was kneeling beside his partner.
But he had a similar problem. He had no sight solution with Jacket holding Hannah. She was virtually a shield.
Shaw called to him, “We’re near the highway. People’ve heard the shots. Marty Harmon has no pull in this county. Get on the ground, arms and feet spread.”
Jacket said nothing, just continued to sweep his gun in Shaw’s direction.
Suit stirred but he was no threat; enough pain was coursing through his body to keep him down for ten minutes.
Shaw said, “On the ground.”
“Okay, tell you what. Help my buddy up and we’ll just go our own way. Put this down to a bad coupla days all around. What do you say?”
The man was just buying time to find a target. And he would have a far easier shot than Shaw would, since Hannah was in front of most of his body. Shaw was an expert marksman but, in the dark, this was not a shot to attempt.
When would he point the gun toward Hannah and Parker and tell him to toss down his weapon? Surprised he hadn’t already.
But of course Ashton Shaw had an answer for that.
Never surrender your weapon. There are no exceptions...
“You understand there are records leading to you and your friend. There’s nowhere to hide. It’s over with.”
He didn’t answer.
Silence.
Which was broken by Hannah’s voice. The girl swiveled toward Jacket and said, with a calm that was unsettling, “Hey, mister. Look at me.”
This was followed by a high-pitched scream.
Coming from Jacket’s mouth. He released the girl, dropped his gun and began wiping at his eyes furiously. “Oh, Jesus, Jesus...”
Shaw looked at Hannah’s hand. What was she holding? He realized it was the jar of cayenne pepper from the cabin.
The man was wailing. He dropped to his knees and was wiping at his eyes with his sleeves and the tail of his jacket.
Hannah stepped away from him slowly, looked down at her feet and picked up his gun. She pointed it at him.
“Hannah!” Shaw called. “No.”
Any death from this point on would be murder.
The girl didn’t move. She kept the muzzle on the man as steadily as when she’d practiced with his Colt Python. “They killed him.” A whisper.
Parker struggled to her feet. “I know, Han. But don’t do it. Give me the gun.”
The weapon was a Glock. Point and shoot. A five-year-old can fire a Glock.
It also has a light pull and her finger was on the trigger. Shaw was surprised it hadn’t discharged yet.
“They killed him,” the girl said again.
Parker hobbled closer. “Han, please?” Her mother wasn’t ordering, she wasn’t threatening. This was simply a request from one adult to another.
The girl didn’t move.
Jacket cried, “We’ve got money! A lot of money.” Still wiping. To no effect.
Hand out, Parker stepped closer yet.
Shaw said, “Remember our rule. Never engage unless you have to.”
The gun remained where it was for a moment. Then she lowered it and her shoulders slumped. She handed the weapon to her mother, just as Shaw had taught her, the muzzle in neutral aim.
The woman put her left arm around her daughter’s shoulders and they stepped farther away from the sobbing man, who’d stripped off the jacket and was using it to blot his eyes.
Parker lowered her head to her daughter and spoke — words Shaw couldn’t hear. Hannah frowned. Parker spoke again, apparently repeating what she’d said. The girl nodded and stepped back. She covered her ears.
No, Shaw thought. No...
Parker turned the weapon toward Jacket and, in a two-handed combat shooting stance, shot him in the head.
He dropped. She walked up and fired a make-sure round.
Wincing, breathing hard from the takedown, Suit climbed to his feet. Parker turned the gun on him. Suit stared not at the gun but at the body of his partner. He seemed as paralyzed as when Shaw had taken him down moments ago.
Parker studied the man closely.
Shaw stepped away.
Suit’s shoulders lowered, hands drooping at his sides. This was a man programmed never to beg. He was now resigned to death.
But Parker didn’t fire. The gun lowered.
She called to him, loudly because of the deafening gunshots, “Month and a half ago you killed someone.”
He tilted his head in cautious acknowledgment.
She continued, “Marty Harmon hired you to kill a truck driver. There was an accident on the Hawkins Road Bridge. A truck missed a turn. It went into a tributary near the Kenoah.”
Suit nodded slowly, thinking maybe that honesty might be a way to survive.
So, this was the man who had killed the driver of the radioactive waste truck.
Suit looked toward Shaw. Then back to the woman who held his life in her hands, unfailing justice in the form of an efficient, mass-produced Austrian pistol.
Parker was nodding. “The driver was in the water trying to get the truck out. You went in too, to kill him. Your skin, it started right around then.”
Suit’s eyes narrowed.
“You’ve got radiation poisoning. It’s advanced. There’s nothing you can do about it now.” She shrugged. “Except die. Slowly.”
He was looking at his hands, then to her.
Parker said, “Get out of here.” When he didn’t move, she fired a shot at his feet. He jumped back. She raged, “Go!”
He looked around uncertainly, then backed away. He turned and began to jog into the darkness.
Shaw joined Parker and she offered him the pistol — just as carefully as her daughter had done. She said, “I don’t like guns. That doesn’t mean I don’t know how to use them.”
“No, it’s all right. It’s our time now. Little sooner than we’d planned is all.”
“What’re you thinking, Marty?” Marianne Keller’s voice, through the phone, was subdued as she took all this in.
Marty Harmon was in his Maserati Quattroporte, in a tawdry truck-stop parking lot, thirty miles west of Ferrington. Overhead lights, green and fluorescent, lit the lovely camel-tan interior of the fine vehicle. Quite the contrast to the surroundings.
“We’ll have to be smart. Two separate planes. I’m going now. Yours is booked for eleven tomorrow.”
“Morning?”
“Morning.”
“Marty...”
Marianne usually wore the supreme confidence of beauty born. Now, though, her world was shaky. Still, while her voice hinted at concern, it wore a blush of pleasure. She’d be thinking of good outcomes looming. For two years she’d wanted him to leave his wife and be with her, and if it took the bottled water cover-up falling apart to move things along, well, okay. As long as she was... protected.
Harmon understood this about her.
“We’re leaving from Granton Executive Airport, the private one. You know where?”
“Off Fifty-five north.”
“I’ve got you a Learjet. The number is... Can you write it down?”
“Go ahead.”
“The number is N94732. It’ll take you to the fixed-base operator terminal in Atlanta. I’ll meet you there.”
“We can’t go together?”
“No. Safer this way. I’m flying to Charlotte and then driving to Georgia. From there, St. Croix and eventually France.”
There was a company in Paris that had an active small modular reactor operation. He and Marianne had talked about opening a joint venture between HEP and Fabrication de Systèmes Nucléaire de la Loire.
“You’ve been brushing up on your French, right?”
“Oui. Like you said.”
“That’s my girl. Now, there’s a go-bag for you in the bottom of my office closet.”
“You made one for me?” Her voice was now adoring.
“Of course I did.” He gave a kind laugh. “There’s about two hundred thousand in it. Go into the office in the morning, act like nothing’s happened. If anybody asks where I am, tell them I’ve gone to Washington for a meeting with the NRC.”
“Marty, what do they know?” The adoration had slipped.
“I think we’re safe. There’s no evidence. No traceable phone calls, no emails, no paperwork. I’ve planted stories that those two men wanted to kill Allison because of her containment vessel. Sabotage. And the move overseas? I’d had enough. Armed spies stealing the S.I.T. trigger? Attempted murder of my engineer? Maybe I’d be next. And we left together... because we’re in love.”
“Oh, Marty...” The worship was back.
“I should go. Eleven tomorrow.”
“N94732.”
“Good, baby. I love you.”
“Love you, Marty.”
Harmon disconnected, started the car and drove to the edge of the truck stop, a particularly dingy area of crumbling asphalt, discarded truck parts, patches of grease and oil, sickly vegetation dying from spilt chemicals. He parked under a large, full beech tree — the species that loses its leaves last of all deciduous trees. He was next to a black Cadillac sedan, engine idling. The sedan was registered in the name of Harmon Energy.
He nodded to the sturdy driver, who rolled down the window. He was wearing latex gloves. Harmon handed him an envelope of ten thousand dollars and his phone. The man put the car in gear and sped from the lot. He had instructions to drive to an international airport a hundred miles away, where the car would be left in long-term parking, after imprinting its presence on a half-dozen video cameras.
Harmon opened the trunk of the Maserati and took from it a large backpack and his own go-bag, which contained several passports — his picture, but different names and dates of birth — and eight hundred thousand in cash. This was merely spending and bribe money for him. The bulk of his resources were in Bitcoin vaults.
He still resented that his coffers were diminished by the $200K he’d set aside for Marianne Keller. He had debated a figure. Then decided that a fifth of a million would make her believe that he was sincere and truly wanted her with him in his new life.
She’d never suspect what was really going to happen: that she’d be arrested as she left HEP to catch a private jet that didn’t exist, carrying cash that Harmon’s anonymous call would report she’d stolen from the company.
Then a police search of her computer would find it brimming with those very incriminating memos and emails that he claimed didn’t exist — linking her to Moll and Desmond and the death of the truck driver and the cover-up of the spill.
They’d find emails too from Dom Ryan, who had — thank you, God — been killed up at that lake house. The best kind of witness.
Oh, everything would all lead back to Harmon ultimately. But the essence of escape is diversion and misdirection. By the time they tied the pieces together, he would be safely ensconced in his new home, immune from extradition.
A home that was not in the French Republic.
Leaving the lovely car unlocked, he tossed the keys on the floor. He smiled sadly in farewell; he had no idea what its fate would be. But in this part of the state it would disappear within the hour. What exactly a meth cooker would do with this masterpiece of a vehicle he had no idea. Probably he’d just change the plates and drive it; the market for chopped parts from an Italian supercar was somewhat limited.
A moment later a box truck drove slowly under the beech tree, its back door open.
The vehicle didn’t stop but was going slowly enough that Harmon could easily toss in his bags and jump inside after them. He pulled the back panel down. Security cameras and any extremely unlikely drones would have seen zip.
Harmon slapped the front of the box and the driver began to accelerate.
Quite the elaborate plan.
But then it had to be.
The problem wasn’t, of course, the Ferrington Police Department, which still employed a few men and women on his payroll — that was the advantage of committing crimes in a poor metropolis populated by the desperate.
No, the trouble was that the feds were involved now.
Thanks to the man that Harmon himself had hired to be yet another player in the death of Hannah and her mother: Colter Shaw.
Well, it had seemed like a fine idea at the time.
But that was, of course, just the nature of being a brilliant inventor. After all, Thomas Edison had as many failures as he’d had successes.
Very likely more.
The Kenoah River was tainted only in and around the city of Ferrington, where twentieth-century capitalism and, more recently, Marty Harmon himself had laced the broad waterway with exemplary toxins.
As the current flowed downstream and the chemicals dissipated, the river took on a different tone, the color mellowing from bile to gentle brown. Now here its banks grew lush with trees and plants that could never survive within the city limits. Thirty miles along, where the river broadened to a width of two hundred yards, waterfront development blossomed. Restaurants, shops and pleasure craft docks.
Also working piers, where transport ships were tied up. These weren’t big oceangoing container ships or Ro-Ros — roll on, roll offs. They were old-style break-bulk vessels that carried not containers but pallets.
The ships were usually named after individuals; the owners didn’t paint on the stern clever phrases and puns like the ones doctors and lawyers with sailboats come up with after a martini or two. The ship Martin Harmon had chosen was the Jon Doherty — the first name ironic in the extreme.
Measuring one hundred and ten feet, stem to stern, she was sixty-two years old, abraded and rusty, aromatic of grease and diesel fuel, but she had one feature for which Marty Harmon had paid the captain a hundred thousand dollars: a scuffed but spacious stateroom for a passenger. It would be his home for the next week — which was as long as it took the Jon Doherty to travel west to, and then down, the Mississippi River, terminating in New Orleans.
There, another ship — this one a container vessel, with bigger and better accommodations — would take him to the Lagos Port Complex in Nigeria.
Africa...
The continent that was the future of the world.
The continent in which he would begin to seed his small modular reactors, once he got his new company up and running. He would be two years late, but no matter; the miraculous devices would see the light of day. He actually smiled at the clichéd thought.
A long voyage, and boring, though he would have his computer, a printer and reams upon reams of paper. Also, an encrypted satellite phone, on which he would spend the time laying the groundwork for his new life.
The truck turned off the highway and the ride grew rougher.
As he held tight to canvas tie-downs, Harmon thought of the incidents of the past six weeks: the radioactive spill, killing the driver, racing to find the toxic sludge to pump into the Kenoah and arranging for the iodide water to hand out to the good citizens of Ferrington.
A smart plan, constructed on the fly... and all brought down by a goddamn sixteen-year-old girl and her selfies.
Jesus Christ...
The truck squealed to a stop. The driver banged twice on the wall. They hadn’t settled on a code, but it was obvious this meant they’d arrived at the pier where the Jon Doherty was docked.
He lifted the door and looked out. At 11 p.m. the area was deserted, except for a few workers loading boxes onto pallets and tying them down. Latin music played from a boom box.
He hopped out and grabbed his bags, then walked to the driver’s side of the truck. Harmon handed him another $10K. “Thank you, Ramon Velasquez.” A reference to the fact that he was undocumented and Harmon knew his full name and if he didn’t keep quiet, he would be shipped back to Mexico by Customs and Border Protection in a lick.
“Is all good, Mr. Harmon.”
The transmission clattered into gear and the truck drove off.
Smelling fuel and a faint but rich swamp scent, Harmon walked toward the pier where the ship was docked. A half-dozen lights were on inside the superstructure. He’d been assured by the captain that he was welcome at any time.
A hundred K in small bills buys one an armful of hospitality.
The tied-up ship rocked gently. Low waves lapped. No spray. The night was sedate. Lewisport had once been a tribal village and later a trading post and way station for travelers. At this time of night, it probably looked much the same as it had then: a cluster of low, darkened structures, the river’s rippling surface, on which moonlight danced, the silhouette of uneven and uninhabited swamp and forest on the far shore.
He was now feet away from the gangplank and he had a sense that when he set foot on board he would be immune. Of course, it wasn’t as if he’d be in international waters. He would be subject to the laws of whatever state the ship was passing through. Still, the protection he was afforded was not of legality but of anonymity. Which was by far the better of the two.
And he had the added safety net that even if the hounds were focusing on him they would be pursuing hapless Marianne, the remnants of Dom Ryan’s crew and a black Cadillac.
Ten feet, then five. His footsteps gritted on the asphalt.
The chunky pulse of marimbas and horns and guitar filled the air.
Then he heard:
“Martin Harmon! FBI! Drop the bags and put your hands up!”
“Hands up!”
“Now!”
He exhaled in disgust.
He turned. The three workers were not workers at all. And they were joined by a number of other men and women, wearing navy-blue windbreakers with the letters of their employer on the front and back. All had pistols in their hands and half were aiming directly at him. The others were scanning the dock for any hostiles Harmon might have invited along.
Jesus Lord...
“Drop the bags! Hands up!”
He complied.
Several charged forward, clicking on handcuffs and frisking, removing everything in his pockets, looking through the luggage and backpack.
“Weapon,” one called.
Harmon had brought an old revolver and a box of ammunition. He hadn’t fired a gun in years but he thought it might be helpful.
The gun was unloaded and sealed into an evidence bag.
The man who seemed to be the lead agent approached and formally arrested him on a blur of charges, flight to avoid prosecution, conspiracy to commit murder, wire fraud, battery... Harmon lost track. He did not waive his right to remain silent.
Another figure approached.
Ah, but who else could it possibly be?
The FBI agent looked to Colter Shaw. “You got it right. What’d you say the odds were that he’d trick the drones at a truck stop and head here?”
The man said laconically, “I recall, it was about eighty-five percent.”
The agent looked Harmon over. “Mr. Shaw had the idea that the only place you could hide is Africa and the only way you’d beat the watchlists was to take a cruise.”
“What proof do you—”
Shaw interrupted. “Sonja matched the explosives in the bomb at her Range Rover to what was used in the Pocket Sun triggers. And she got you on tape going into the Secured Substances room at HEP an hour before the explosion. And before you ask how could a CEO like you make a bomb, remember that you’re an engineer with a chemistry degree.”
Shit...
An agent gripped the man’s arm. “This way.”
Harmon, though, turned and looked from Shaw to the agent. “You have to understand. I wanted to improve people’s lives. Get them out of poverty. My Pocket Suns could do that! I did what I did to make the world a better place.”
The look Shaw gave him seemed to say: Which is exactly what we’re doing right now.