In South Dakota, at 8.30 p.m. on the day of Andrew Rington’s funeral, Dan Lansdale was sitting in the bleachers of his grandson’s Little League stadium. The description of ‘stadium’ was too grand because it wasn’t much more than a diamond set in well-trampled sun-dried earth, a lean-to dugout and a chain-link fence, surrounded by triple-tiered rows of wooden benches on metal scaffolding. But it was known as ‘the Stadium’ by the local townsfolk and had been since Dan was a boy. When he was a kid he’d taken his first practice swings out on the same diamond, observed by his grandfather in turn. He wasn’t watching his own grandson now: the boy was home with his parents, as he should be this late in the evening. Dan had come here because it held such fond memories for him, thinking they might push aside the terrible things he’d been forced into recalling since hearing of Andrew’s murder.
The sun was low in the heavens, setting fire to the low-lying clouds shrouding the nearest peaks of the Black Hills. Occasionally Dan turned his gaze away, blinking until the colours etched on to his retina faded, before looking west again. He was sitting in the tiny town of Whitehead, far enough off Interstate 90 that sightseers heading for the nearby national park and Mount Rushmore missed it, but his mind was on his deceased friend in San Francisco. Occasionally it drifted to a different place but he was quick to shove the thoughts away. He chose to dwell on better times, or at least attempted to because thoughts of the basement kept coming back to him.
Dan had been born here in Whitehead, into a large Evangelican Lutheran family, and but for a spell spent abroad had lived here most of his adult life. Whitehead was his sanctum, the place he felt that his other life had no business invading and until the telephone call he’d received a couple days ago it had left him alone. Being a religious man, he had no truck with the concepts of fate or karma, but believed that a man’s sins would come back to repay him tenfold. He was therefore unsurprised when he heard the soft thud of footsteps and turned to see a man approaching across the deserted baseball ground. Though he wouldn’t admit it, Dan had come here for more than the purpose of reminiscing. He had suspected that he was next on the list and didn’t want to be found at home where his wife could be hurt the way Yukiko was when the man had gone for Andrew.
Dan didn’t get up.
There was no point in trying to run, not with bad legs that required the support of a walking stick these days. But that wasn’t the reason; he fully accepted that he was about to die and wouldn’t give the man the satisfaction of chasing him down like a coward.
As the man approached he kicked up dust, small zephyrs lifting dust devils in his wake. The man was wearing a black jacket over a plaid shirt, jeans and boots. He had a baseball cap pulled down low, and sunglasses that reflected the burning clouds. He stopped ten feet from Dan and regarded him through the links in the fence. The effect of the sunglasses added to the man’s soulless scrutiny. The image took Dan way back to that basement again, and how he’d struck a similar set of glasses from a man’s face. He wished now he could do likewise, but even with the added reach of his stick the man was out of range.
Without saying a word his would-be executioner pulled a folding knife from out of his jacket pocket. He was wearing gloves, the latex type favoured by surgeons. The blade also reflected the fiery sky as the man opened it.
‘You shot Andrew Rington.’ It wasn’t a question, or recrimination; Dan was simply stating a fact.
‘That’s right. I shot Newmark and Tennant as well.’ The man watched the colour drain from Dan’s features. ‘I see the news about your other two buddies hasn’t reached you yet.’
‘There aren’t many of us left…’
‘No. Soon there won’t be any.’
‘And what will you do then, when this misguided crusade ends? You’ll go back to your normal life? Have you stopped to think about that? Can it ever be normal again?’
‘I doubt it. I’m beginning to enjoy being judge, jury and executioner. There’s still a penance to pay. My life has been hell; maybe I’ll make others suffer the way I have.’
Dan hung his head. ‘I accept now that what we did was wrong. I’ve made my confession, begged forgiveness from God, but from the fact you’ve shown up here, it seems my prayers went unheard.’
‘Don’t expect leniency from me either.’
‘I don’t. I accept my punishment. But please…’ Dan lifted his head to stare directly at the man. ‘Stop then. There’s no need for anyone else to get hurt. There’s been enough killing already.’
The man shook his head, an almost sad motion at odds with his sneer. ‘It can’t stop here.’
‘It can.’
‘It can’t and I won’t stop.’ The man held the knife close to his hip. ‘Not while there are three still alive. And I won’t stop while the other ones who concocted those lies breathe either.’
‘They weren’t lies,’ Dan said as the man approached him, pushing through a gate in the fence. He pointed an arthritic finger at the murderer. ‘And you know it.’
The man kept on coming, hopping up on to the first tier. The first sign that Dan’s accusation struck a chord was in the way his jaw tightened. Then there were his words. ‘I chose to bring a knife here because there was a danger a gunshot would be heard, and a knife was a more silent way of killing you. I wasted my time. For what you just said, you’re going to scream, old man.’
Dan lowered his head. He put aside his walking sticks and clasped his hands in his lap. Perhaps he was praying for strength, the fortitude to deny his killer. But once more God didn’t appear to be listening.