Текст книги "The Bone Tree"
Автор книги: Greg Iles
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Текущая страница: 39 (всего у книги 58 страниц)
“I ain’t goin’ no further,” Mose said flatly. “Not for all the damn money in the world.”
“Yes, you are,” Caitlin said, her heart hammering in her chest.
“No, I ain’t.”
“Jordan,” Caitlin said, peering over the water, “Dr. Cage couldn’t have been killed more than . . . I don’t know, fifteen or sixteen hours ago. Could his body already stink like that?”
“I wouldn’t think so. Not with the temperature this low.”
A new terror struck Caitlin. “But other people have gone missing over the last few days. Those three boys from Concordia Parish, remember?”
“I didn’t pay much attention to that.”
“They worked for Brody Royal’s oil company.” Though Caitlin couldn’t let her mind rest on the thought for more than a split second, some part of her was already certain that the dead man in the water was Tom Cage. “They might have dumped Tom where other victims were dumped earlier this week.”
“Don’t borrow trouble. Let’s just get over there and find out.”
“You gonna have to swim,” Mose said.
“For God’s sake,” Jordan snapped, “he’s just a man who drowned.”
“No, he ain’t. A blade cut dat head off. See dat dere?” He pointed at the severed neck, but Caitlin had already noticed the wound. “They used to hunt men back in here in the old times, you know.”
“How long ago were the old times?” Caitlin asked.
“Back in the twenties, I know. Maybe the forties and fifties, too. My daddy told me about the year of the Great Flood, how they brought colored men in to hunt that year. And in slave times, too, he told me. A man ain’t the fastest or the strongest game, but he’s the smartest. And some men got a taste for dat meat. Call it ‘long pig.’”
“I don’t care,” Caitlin said. “You take us up to that body so I can try to identify it.”
“No, ma’am. I ain’t got to do dat. I’m takin’ you back to your car.”
Almost crazed with fear and exasperation, Caitlin remembered the radio Carl had given them. “Jordan, call Carl and tell him to get his ass back here.”
Jordan wasted no time, and she seemed quite at home with the radio. But when Carl’s voice came from the speaker, Caitlin’s feeling of dread only deepened.
“We’re on our way back to the airport,” Carl said. “I was just about to call you and tell you to get out of there.”
“Why?” Jordan asked, peering into the trees as though an army might emerge from the shadows.
“We weren’t over Valhalla for more than sixty seconds when the sheriff called us. Somebody at the camp called in and complained. He ordered us to get the hell out of their airspace. Said we were ruining a hunt and spooking their breeding animals. Can you believe that?”
Jordan was shaking her head. “All that’s academic now,” she said. “We just found a body in the swamp. I presume the sheriff won’t write that off to natural causes.”
“What do you mean, a body?” Carl asked.
“A dead man in the water. And he doesn’t have a head. If you guys could start this way, we damsels in distress would sure appreciate it.”
The radio crackled and hissed for half a minute. Then Carl said, “We’re coming to you. I’ll call you in a few minutes to guide us in.”
“Thanks. And while you’re at it, would you tell our guide to take us in where we can get an idea of who the deceased might be? Caitlin is worried it might be Dr. Cage.”
The radio crackled some more. Then Carl said, “Mose, you do whatever those ladies tell you to do, or I’m bustin’ you for all the stuff I know you do when you think we’re looking the other way.”
In the stern of the johnboat, the old fisherman hung his head.
“Ten-four,” Jordan said. “I think he got the message. Out.”
KAISER SHOULD NEVER HAVE asked Sonny Thornfield about JFK. Not until after the plea deal was done. The old Eagle is sitting as smug as a mob soldier who knows his godfather will have him out of jail in time for happy hour at his favorite bar.
“John, come on,” I say in the most reasonable voice I can muster. “Don’t let him play you like this. How critical is the Kennedy stuff, given the overall situation? Even if he tells you Frank Knox killed JFK? Frank is as dead as Kennedy, and he has been for nearly as long.”
As tense as a pointer nearing a quail, Kaiser holds up his hand to silence me. “It’s not enough to say Frank killed him. He has to prove Frank killed him. Can you do that, Sonny?”
Again the little-boy smile animates Sonny’s mouth, and his eyes flicker with secret knowledge. “I can give you chapter and verse, boss. Frank himself told me the story one night, when he’d drunk damn near a gallon of moonshine.”
Kaiser looks like Ahab after having sighted the milky head and spout of the white whale. Nothing could turn him aside from his obsession now. I feel like slapping him upside the head.
“He’s read you like a book,” I say angrily. “He’s telling you what you want to hear, and there’s no way to cross-check anything he says. Make him give you details on crimes we know about. The Double Eagle killings. Then we’ll know whether he’s full of shit or not.”
Thornfield gives me a ratlike glare. “I ain’t sayin’ shit about that until my family is here and they agree to protection.”
As Kaiser works his mouth around in frustration, my cell phone vibrates. This time, when I take it out of my pocket, I see Carl Sims’s name in the LCD window.
“Carl?” I ask. “What’s up?”
A burst of static makes me jerk the phone away from my ear, but then Carl’s voice pops from the speaker with a tinny timbre. “Penn . . . girls found a body . . . swamp. . . . No ID yet. . . . Caitlin trying to reach it. . . . Altitude, Danny. . . . Penn?”
“Carl!” I cry. “I can’t hear you! The girls found a body?”
“Ten-four. . . . Lusahatcha Swamp. . . . Haven’t reached it yet. . . . Going down to try to help. . . . Call you soon as we know. . . . Out.”
My pulse pounds in my ears as the phone goes dead. A body in the swamp? From the sound of Carl’s voice, he wasn’t talking about old bones, but a fresh corpse. An image of my father floating facedown in the swamp rises behind my eyes, and my legs go weak. What if I had to call my mother and tell her that Dad had been found dead? Impossible—
“What’s happened?” Kaiser asks. “Is it your father?”
“It sounds like it. Caitlin and Jordan found a body in the swamp. They haven’t ID’d it yet, but Carl wouldn’t have called me unless he was afraid it’s Dad. Goddamn it!”
I take two steps toward Thornfield, then force myself to stop, my face burning with rage. “Did Snake kill my father and dump him in Lusahatcha Swamp?”
Sonny gapes at me in genuine terror. “I don’t know! I truly don’t. I hope he didn’t, but he could’ve. Or that Redbone, Ozan. He’s a bad sumbitch.”
Kaiser pulls me away from Sonny, then interposes himself between us, his back to me.
“This is getting out of hand, Sonny,” he says in a cold voice. “Let me tell you something. My superiors badly want to talk to Dr. Cage. If he turns out to be dead, it’s going to be tough for me to make any kind of deal for you. My bosses won’t approve it. I can’t believe Snake wouldn’t tell you what he was going to do with him.”
“That’s the whole ever-lovin’ point!” Sonny cries. “He didn’t trust the rest of us not to break under pressure. Not after what Glenn done. And I reckon he was right not to, wasn’t he?”
“If I sent you back to the cellblock, could you get it out of Snake?”
“Shit. I do that, I might as well tell him I’m in here trying to cut a deal with you.”
“If Snake Knox doesn’t trust you anymore,” Kaiser muses, “I can’t believe Frank Knox ever did. If you want your family brought here on a government plane, you’ve got to give me something to justify your deal.”
Thornfield grimaces so hard he bares his teeth, which makes him look like a possum cornered between two garbage cans.
“Look, I know,” he insists. “I know all there is to know—twice as much as Glenn ever did. But how can I prove it without giving away the store?”
While Kaiser wrestles with this dilemma, my mind fills with an image of Caitlin rolling over a bloated white body in the black water of the Lusahatcha Swamp. I’ve seen many floaters in my career, rotted and half eaten by turtles, snake, and fish. I can’t bear thinking about my mother having to view my father’s body in such a state. I’m not sure I could bear it myself.
“Turn off the camera, John,” I say sharply.
“What?”
“Just do it. And find us a bedsheet to cover the observation mirror.”
“What exactly do you have in mind?” he asks, getting up and walking to the camcorder.
“A way for Sonny to let us know what he knows without implicating himself or giving away the store.”
Sonny looks worried now. “I ain’t saying nothing you guys can record. I know you got all kinds of fancy hidden microphones and shit.”
“It’s nothing like that,” I assure him.
“Then what is it?”
“Have you ever worked a jigsaw puzzle, Sonny?”
He gives me the cornered possum look again, but finally he nods.
“This is just like that.” I sit down in Kaiser’s chair and start writing in his notebook. “Get the bedsheet for the mirror, John. You’ll need some duct tape to hold it up.”
“All right, hell. But I’m not leaving you in here alone with him. I’ll send one of my men.”
As he goes to the door, I begin writing words across the top of a page.
VICTIM
KILLER(S)
WEAPON/METHOD
DUMP SITE
“And bring some scissors, too.”
Kaiser pauses at the door. “You can’t bring scissors into an interrogation room.”
I look up angrily. “You want to break these cases? Bring me some goddamn scissors!”
FORREST HAD FINALLY TIRED of fighting the wind out on the deck. He’d moved into the great room of the Bouchard lake house, and Ozan had built a fire in the stone fireplace. A hidden gas jet made it easy work, and Forrest had moved forward to warm his hands when his cracked StarTac rang.
“I’m waiting,” he said.
“Bad news,” said Spanky Ford. “I think one of your guys may be talking.”
A shiver ran the length of Forrest’s body. “Who?”
“Thornfield.”
Sonny? he thought skeptically. But after a few seconds, it made sense. Sonny was probably the smartest of the Eagles. He would sense that things were spinning out of control. And Sonny had family that didn’t actually hate him outright.
“They’ve got him locked in the main interrogation room,” Ford said. “Snake and Will Devine are locked in questioning rooms, too, but there’s nobody in with them. I think Kaiser stuck them in there so they wouldn’t know what was going on.”
“Have you told Snake about this?”
“I just managed to before an FBI agent took up station in front of his door.”
“What did he say?”
“He said tell you that Dr. Cage is alive but he’s where he can’t hurt anybody. Don’t waste effort looking for him, Snake said.”
Relief washed through Forrest. If Tom Cage was alive, then he still had some flexibility in dealing with Penn Cage and his fiancée. Of course, if Sonny Thornfield turned state’s evidence, everybody was going down. Then a new possibility came to him.
“Deputy . . . do you think Snake was telling the truth about Dr. Cage?”
Ford didn’t answer immediately. Then he said, “I didn’t know he might have a reason to lie, Colonel. I really couldn’t say, sir.”
“Okay. But you believe Sonny’s really flipping?”
“All I know is, Cage and Kaiser are the only ones in there with him, and they’ve taped a sheet over the observation window.”
“Okay.” Forrest thought furiously. “Here’s what I want you to do. The first chance you get to pass a message to Snake, tell him I said to get ready to shut down any talk, and for good. Tell him I’ll get him his chance. Snake will know when to move. You got that?”
“Yes, sir.”
“You’ll have a job, too, but I’ll get back to you with it.”
“I’m ready.”
“Last thing . . . you tell Snake he’d better bring Dr. Cage to me on a silver platter after I get him out of there.”
“Will do, Colonel. Is there—”
“Boss!” Ozan called, walking into the room with an armload of firewood. “I got news! Good and bad. What you want first?”
“Gimme the bad. Is Dr. Cage dead?”
“I don’t know, but the Black Team found the guys they left to guard the doc tied up in the Roadtrek at the back of that oil field. They said Snake and his crew took the doc, all right. They’re ready to rip his lungs out.”
Forrest nodded slowly. He’d never really doubted that Snake had taken Dr. Cage. The question was, what had he done with him?
“What’s the good news?”
“One of our highway units stopped Claude Devereux on the causeway outside Lafayette.”
Forrest pumped a fist in the air. “I’ve got to go,” he told Ford. “You tell Snake what I said.”
“I will if I can.”
“And call me in fifteen minutes if they’re still talking to Thornfield.”
“Will do. Out.”
Forrest clicked off and pocketed his phone, then turned to Ozan. “You tell whoever stopped Claude to escort him all the way back to his office in Vidalia. And if Claude raises a fuss, arrest him.”
Ozan nodded. “So Dr. Cage is alive?”
Forrest blew out a lungful of air. “I don’t know. Snake sent word that he is, but that doesn’t mean a thing now. He’s just trying to get out from under those meth charges. For all I know, the doc has been dead since last night.”
CHAPTER 61
TO SPARE MYSELF the torture of waiting to hear whether or not the body in the swamp belongs to my father, I’ve designed a puzzle that will allow Sonny Thornfield to tell us what he knows without it being recorded in any way. I did this by drawing a grid on a piece of notebook paper, then listing the known murder victims vertically on the left side of the page. Across the top I created columns for the killers, the murder weapons or torture methods, the dump sites. Then I gridded a second page and filled it with names, murder weapons, torture methods, and dump sites (multiple copies of each place name). Finally, using Kaiser’s scissors, I cut that page into small rectangles with one word on each. As I did this, an FBI agent helped Kaiser tape a bedsheet over the one-way observation mirror. And though he did it quietly, I also heard Kaiser post an FBI guard at the cellblock door with orders not to let me inside under any circumstances. After what he witnessed in the utility closet, he isn’t going to let me near Snake Knox again.
With the interrogation room’s two doors shut and the camcorder unplugged, I spread the columned page on the table in front of Sonny Thornfield and pile the rectangular “puzzle pieces” beside it. Then Kaiser and I take up stations on either side of the old man so that we can watch his progress, like parents watching a toddler work a puzzle.
Thornfield is hesitant to begin, but Kaiser finally convinces him we have no way to record what he might do. That’s the beauty of this method. The revelation only exists for a moment, and once the puzzle is completed, Sonny can simply toss the rectangles in the air, obliterating all evidence of what he’s “told” us.
After staring at the collection of names and words for a while, Sonny finally sets to work. His wrinkled hands move tentatively across the page, trembling as though he’s in the early stages of Parkinson’s disease. Time seems to slow as the quivering hands slide the rectangles across the page, and every second that ticks by feels like weight being piled on my heart. At any moment Carl Sims could call back and say they’ve found my father dead.
I feel trapped in some bizarre, real-world demonstration of the physics paradox known as Schrödinger’s cat. At this moment, while an old murderer uses a child’s puzzle to reveal the knowledge that resides in his aging brain, a body floats facedown in the Lusahatcha Swamp. At this moment, that body both is and is not my father. It exists as a superposition of probabilities, and I must somehow hold myself together while accepting both outcomes as possible. But soon Caitlin—or Carl Sims, or Jordan Glass—will turn that body over, and all possible states will collapse into the single observed reality: the corpse will either be my dead father or it will not. And even if one believes that this choice has already been made, or is known, until it is made known to me, both realities must be endured.
“Look,” Kaiser whispers, pointing over Sonny’s shoulder.
Thornfield hasn’t filled in the second column—the killers’ identities—but the third and fourth columns: the weapons and methods of torture or killing, and the dump sites.
Albert Norris
flamethrower
Pooky Wilson
flamethrower
Bone Tree
Joe Louis Lewis
flayed
Bone Tree
Jimmy Revels
shot
Bone Tree
Luther Davis
shot, drowned
Jericho Hole
Viola Turner
overdose
Home
Glenn Morehouse
overdose
Home
“You haven’t filled in the killers’ column,” Kaiser points out. “I get you leaving the dump site blank for Norris, because he died in the hospital. But if you want lifetime protection for your family, you’ve got to give me every name of the killers.”
Sonny looks up like a reluctant child. Then, slowly, he tears off a new sheet of paper, writes about twenty names on it—many of them repetitions—and asks Kaiser to cut them into rectangles. Once Kaiser has complied, Sonny slides most of the new squares onto the paper. After he’s finished, Kaiser stands so still that I’m sure he’s stopped breathing. The first two columns of the puzzle now read:
Albert Norris
Frank
Royal
Snake
Glenn
Pooky Wilson
Frank
Snake
Royal
Joe Louis Lewis
Frank
Snake
Glenn
Jimmy Revels
Snake
Glenn
Forrest
Royal
Luther Davis
Snake
Viola Turner
Glenn Morehouse
Royal
Snake
Forrest
As I stare at the gridded page, I note that our prisoner has not only omitted his own name from every murder, he’s listed no killers beside Viola Turner’s name. Before I can comment on this, he lifts the makeshift puzzle and shakes it in the air, creating a snowstorm of paper. While the rectangles flutter to the floor, he puts his head down on his desk like a schoolboy.
I give Kaiser an angry, questioning look.
“All right, Sonny,” he says, “we’ve got two problems. First, if you’re not willing to implicate yourself, this is worthless. You’ll be given immunity, but you have to tell the whole truth. And second, we need to know who killed Viola.”
“I need to know my grandkids are safe,” Sonny replies without looking up. “I ain’t saying nothing else, or doing no more damn puzzles.”
Crouching beside the table, I look into Thornfield’s one exposed eye. “Did you love your father, Sonny?”
The eye widens, then blinks slowly. “My father?”
“You see . . . if that corpse in the swamp turns out to be my father, my mother won’t be able to stand it. My little girl, either.”
“They can stand it,” he says. “People can stand almost anything, when they have to.”
Kaiser taps my shoulder, but I don’t move. “I’m not letting myself believe that corpse is my dad, Sonny. Any minute, I’m going to get a call saying it was some other poor bastard who crossed the Knox family. And when that happens, you’re going to go back into the cellblock and find out where Snake took my father.”
“Get up, Penn,” Kaiser says sharply.
As I stand, I say, “If you don’t, I’m going to flush this deal you two are making straight down the toilet.”
“No, he won’t,” Kaiser says, pulling at my arm. “He can’t, Sonny.”
“You don’t think so? All I have to do is let Forrest Knox know who’s been blabbing in here. I talked to him face-to-face less than an hour ago, and I’ve got a phone that’ll put me right back in touch with him.”
Thornfield’s eyes have locked onto mine, and the terror in them gives a measure of the fear Forrest inspires in his ranks.
“Get your ass out of here, Penn!” Kaiser explodes, his face bright red. “Now!”
“Not until I find out whether my father’s dead or alive.”
WHEN MOSE FINALLY BROUGHT his boat within reach of the corpse, Caitlin felt no relief. She had hoped for some distinguishing mark that would tell her the dead man wasn’t Tom, but she saw nothing like that. The skin of the back was pale, as Tom’s was, and since most of the corpse was jammed under some limbs, she couldn’t turn it over. She looked for the red marks of psoriasis she had sometimes seen on Tom’s back, but the water had probably soaked the skin to the point that they wouldn’t show, especially under the surface.
Mose cut the motor.
“Do you have a pole or something?” Caitlin asked.
“Pole no good for that. You need a hook. Grappling hook.”
“I think we’re going to have to wait for Carl,” Jordan said. “Maybe even for divers. Or at least waders.”
The longer Caitlin stared at the submerged corpse, the more terrified she became. She had to know whether that was Tom or not. Carl was probably going to call Penn on the way over here, and the first question he would ask would be who the dead man was.
“We have to identify him,” Caitlin said.
“How?” Jordan asked. “He doesn’t have a head.”
“I have to know whether or not it’s Tom.”
“Dat body missin’ a leg, too,” Mose said, craning his neck. “Look. A gator took it off.”
Caitlin squinted into the muddy water, but she couldn’t tell.
“How did the body get caught up in the branches like that?” Jordan asked.
“Gators do that,” Mose said. “They stuff their kill up under a bank or in some tree roots underwater, just like us puttin’ meat in the Frigidaire.”
A shiver ran the length of Caitlin’s body. She had been close to a feeding alligator before, and she wanted no part of it again.
“We gotta get out of here,” Mose said. “Dis business for the high sheriff.”
“How deep is the water here?” Caitlin asked, slowly untying the bandanna from her neck.
“Can’t be sure,” the fisherman replied. “Could be four feet, could be ten.”
“Guess.”
The old man surveyed the trees that bordered the patch of clear water, then studied the fallen tree that held the corpse in its branches. “Probably six, eight feet deep here.”
A sun-faded life jacket lay in the bottom of the boat near Jordan’s feet. Caitlin picked it up, slipped it on, and tightened the straps as best she could.
“What the hell you doin’?” Mose asked, starting to stand. “This boat ain’t gonna turn over.”
Before he could reach her, Caitlin bent her knees, then let herself fall backward over the gunwale, the way she’d been taught to enter the water when scuba diving in the Caribbean. She prayed that the splash would scare away any scavengers.
The black water enveloped her like an icy blanket. She’d expected it to be cold, but not this cold. After a stunned second or two, she bobbed to the surface, the life jacket bringing her upright. Jordan and Mose were screaming from the boat, telling her to get back in, but having gone this far, she wasn’t about to stop now. She didn’t think she could climb back into the boat without tipping it over anyway.
She couldn’t feel bottom beneath her, so she kicked toward the corpse. The reek worsened as she got closer, and her shoes grew heavy in the twenty seconds it took her to come within reach of the body. Catching hold of a waterlogged branch, Caitlin catalogued the physical traits that might identify Tom. The cold made it hard to concentrate, and the stink worsened the problem, but her fear was stronger than her revulsion.
Deformed fingers, she thought. Spooned fingernails. Coronary bypass scar . . . Tom had his chest cracked in 1987. Would the scar still be visible after all these years? Gray chest hair . . .
The way the corpse was situated, Caitlin realized that the quickest way to see anything was to simply swim under it rather than try to shift it. As she struggled to shed the life jacket, Jordan began shouting at her again, but Caitlin ignored her. She simply had to know.
The buckles of the life jacket were stuck. Caitlin pressed and jerked as hard as she could, but none of the damned clasps would come undone. Some part of her knew she must be doing something wrong, yet she couldn’t solve this simple problem. The life jacket was strangling her! At last Jordan’s shouts broke through her wild frustration.
“Catch this!” Jordan yelled. “There’s a knife in it!”
Caitlin’s head cleared as though she’d been slapped. Looking up, she saw a dull flash of metal and somehow snatched it out of the air. Jordan’s multi-tool. Flicking open the largest blade, Caitlin sawed through the three straps. Then she looked up and threw the knife back at Jordan. By the time the tool clanged against the bottom of the boat, she had kicked free of the life jacket. With that freedom came the memory that Tom had been shot in the shoulder on Tuesday night.
Which shoulder was the bandage on? The left.
Caitlin screeched in terror as something bumped against her leg, then scooted away. It hadn’t felt like a fish, unless it was a damned big one. A gar, maybe. Or a catfish.
“Caitlin!” Jordan shouted. “Get back in this boat and wait for the chopper!”
Caitlin shoved all her fear down into a deep hole, took a huge breath, then dived deep under the tree and kicked hard. When she felt mud, she rolled over and opened her eyes.
She could see amazingly well, but what she saw almost made her vomit. The corpse had no left shoulder. It had been eaten away. Likewise both hands. Fighting panic that scrambled in her chest like a crazed animal, she grabbed a limb that was jammed into the mud and tried desperately to remember her thoughts only moments ago.
Gray chest hair . . .
She couldn’t see any hair on the chest. As she stared, something long and dark passed between her and the body, then disappeared. Primal terror surged through every fiber of her being. She let go of the branch and drove her feet against the bottom, desperate to reach the surface. As she broke through to air and sunlight, the last thing she had seen finally registered in her cerebral cortex.
Black pubic hair.
At the crotch of what remained of the dead man’s legs, a thick thatch of black hair had been plainly visible. Caitlin had never seen Tom naked, but Penn’s father was seventy-three years old, and he had silver-white hair and a beard of the same color. No way was his pubic hair black.
Jordan had braced one hand against the gunwale of the johnboat and was holding out a small boat paddle.
“Grab it!” she cried. “Grab it, goddamn it!”
“It’s not Tom!” Caitlin shouted. “It’s not Tom!”
“Thank God. Now get your crazy ass back in here.”
She grabbed the paddle but found herself too weak to pull. Mose Tyler took the paddle from Jordan and hauled Caitlin to the edge of the boat with surprising strength. Then an eerie hissing sent adrenaline surging through her again. She jerked her head in every direction, looking for snakes or any other threat, but it was only the sound of fresh rain on the water. As her heartbeat steadied, Mose and Jordan reached down and dragged her up into the listing boat. When Caitlin came over the gunwale and collapsed onto the green metal bottom, she heard the heavy beat of approaching rotor blades.
“It’s not Tom,” she said again, relief flooding through her like a drug.
Jordan knelt above her and looked into her eyes like a doctor examining a patient. Apparently satisfied that she was not seriously hurt, Jordan said, “Not bad, little sister. Not bad at all.”
“Crazy is what dat was,” Mose said. “Craziest damn thing I ever saw.”
Caitlin felt a sudden panic, as in a nightmare when she’d lost something but didn’t know what it was. Then she knew.
The map.
She dug into her pocket and pulled out what remained: a soggy mess like wet toilet paper, faintly stained with blue ink.
“I lost the map,” she said. “Toby’s map.”
“Don’t worry about it,” Jordan said, squeezing her hand. “It’s nothing.”
TEN SECONDS AGO, KAISER took out his phone and summoned two agents to drag me out of the interrogation room. As pounding feet sound in the hall, I see Sonny Thornfield pick up the pen I used to create the puzzle pieces and begin writing on the large page.
“Look!” I cry. “John, look!”
The door crashes open, and two agents rush into the room. Kaiser holds up his hand long enough to look where I’m pointing, then walks to the metal table. After looking down at the page, he motions me forward.
With his trembling hand, Sonny Thornfield has written seven uppercase letters in the blank square next to Viola Turner’s name. My breath goes shallow as I read the childishly written letters:
TOM CAGE
Sonny lays down the pen and then looks up at me, his eyes filled not with triumph or revenge, but with some unreadable emotion.
“You happy now?” he asks hoarsely. “Is that what you wanted?”
I cannot voice the thought that has arced through my mind like a rocket against a black sky: Two nights ago, Brody Royal told me my father killed Viola. Now Sonny Thornfield has told me the same thing.
“Let’s go, Penn,” Kaiser says, signaling the two agents to help me out of the room.
“He’s lying, John,” I insist, as much to myself as to Kaiser. “How could he possibly know that?” I lunge at Sonny, but strong hands yank me back, and a thick forearm locks around my neck. “How could you know that unless you were there?” I shout.
Kaiser lays the flat of his hand on my chest. “Penn, I’m on your side, but you need to step out of this room.”
I start to protest when my cell phone rings. “Let me answer, John!”
Kaiser nods, and after a moment the agents release me. I pull my phone from my pocket and answer it. “Caitlin?” I ask, my arm and voice shaking.
“Penn! Can you hear me? Stay on . . . we’re airborne and climbing!”
My heart leaps at the sound of her voice. “I hear you!” I yell into the static. “Whose body was it? Was it Dad? Tell me now!”
“No! It wasn’t Tom! Repeat, not your father. It was a much younger man. The sheriff’s office down here thinks it’s one of those missing boys from Vidalia, Casey Whelan.”
“It wasn’t him,” I echo, though my brain has spun into some zone where it feels disconnected from my voice. “It was one of those missing kids . . . Whelan.”
Thornfield’s head whips up at the mention of the name.
“Thank God,” says Kaiser, squeezing my shoulder. “What about Jordan? Is she okay?”
Dizzy with relief, I half fall toward the metal table. Kaiser steadies me by taking hold of my shoulders, and I rest one hand against the table’s edge to regain my balance.
“Tell John Jordan’s fine,” Caitlin says, the connection much clearer now. “We’ll probably be stuck down here talking to Sheriff Ellis for a while, but we’re both good. There’s no other word on Tom?”
“No.”
“Please call me the moment you hear anything.”
Already the euphoria of relief has begun to evaporate. “All right.”