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The Wolf in Winter
  • Текст добавлен: 3 октября 2016, 22:27

Текст книги "The Wolf in Winter"


Автор книги: John Connolly


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Текущая страница: 26 (всего у книги 27 страниц)

54


Thomas Souleby tried to pack a bag while his wife looked on. Constance was growing increasingly disturbed at the casual way in which her husband was tossing his clothing into the big leather duffel. He never could pack for shit, she thought. She didn’t say this aloud, though. Even after forty years of marriage, her husband still professed to be shocked by what he termed her ‘salty’ tongue.

‘Here, let me do that,’ said Constance. She gently elbowed Thomas aside, removed the shirts and pants, and began folding them again before restoring them to the bag. ‘You go and get your shaving kit.’

Thomas did as he was told. He didn’t opine that there might not be time for the proper folding and placement of his clothing. She was working faster and yet more efficiently than he could have done anyway – he was all haste without speed – and there was little point in arguing with his wife, not when it came to the organizational details of his life. Without her involvement, they would never have achieved the degree of financial security and comfort that they now enjoyed. Thomas had never been a details man. He worked in concepts. His wife was the meticulous one.

When he returned to the bed, she had half filled the bag with shirts, a sweater, two pairs of pants and a second pair of shoes with his socks and underwear neatly fitted inside them. To it he added his shaving kit and a Colt 1911 pistol that had belonged to his father. The Colt was unlicensed. Long ago, his father had advised him of the importance of keeping certain things secret, especially in a place like Prosperous. As Souleby had watched the slow, steady ascent of Lucas Morland, he came to be grateful for the bequest. Thomas Souleby considered himself a good judge of character – he couldn’t have succeeded in business were he not – and had never liked or trusted Lucas Morland. The man thought he knew better than his elders, and that wasn’t the way Prosperous worked. Souleby had also noticed a change in Morland in recent weeks. He could almost smell it on him, an alteration in his secretions. Hayley had sensed it too. It was why, before her death, she had been planning to remove Morland from his post and replace him with one of his more malleable deputies. Souleby could still feel the old woman’s hand on his arm, the strength of her grip, as she had spoken to him for the last time the day before.

‘You listen, Thomas Souleby, and you listen good,’ she said. ‘I’m as healthy as any woman in this town. My mother lived to be ninety-eight, and I plan on exceeding that age with room to spare. But if anything happens to me, you’ll know. It’ll be Morland’s doing, and he won’t stop with me. You’re no friend to him, and he sure as hell doesn’t care much for you. He doesn’t understand the town the way that we do. He doesn’t care for it the way we care. He has no faith.’

And then the call came from Calder Ayton: Calder, who was everyone’s friend, but hadn’t been the same since the death of Ben Pearson. Souleby figured that Calder had loved Ben, and had Ben not been resolutely heterosexual, and Calder not a product of a less enlightened, more cloistered time, the two of them could have lived together in domestic bliss, protected by the amused tolerance of the town. Instead, Calder had settled for a sexless relationship of a sort, aided by Ben’s status as a widower and Calder’s share in the store, the two of them clucking and fussing over each other, snipping and sniping and making up like the old married couple that they secretly were. Calder wouldn’t last long now, thought Souleby. Morland wouldn’t have to kill him, even if Calder had the backbone to stand up to him, which Souleby doubted. Calder had been widowed, and without Ben to keep him company he would fade away and die quickly enough.

It was Calder who phoned to tell Souleby of Hayley Conyer’s passing. That didn’t surprise Souleby. They were two of the last three selectmen, and he had always been closer to Calder than to Luke Joblin, who was too flash for Souleby’s liking. What did surprise Souleby was Calder’s tone. He knew. He knew.

‘Who found her?’ Souleby asked.

‘Chief Morland,’ Calder told him, and it was there in the way that he said ‘Chief’. ‘He thinks she might have had a heart attack.’

‘And I’ll bet Frank Robinson is signing off on it as we speak.’

‘That’s what I hear.’ A pause. ‘Morland will be coming for you, Thomas.’

The phone felt slick in Souleby’s hand. His palms were sweating.

‘I know,’ he said. ‘What about you?’

‘He’s not afraid of me.’

‘Maybe he’s underestimated you.’

Souleby heard Calder chuckle sadly.

‘No, he knows me inside and out. This is my little act of defiance, my last one. I’ll be resigning from the board.’

‘Nobody resigns from the board.’

Only death brought an end to a selectman’s tenure. The elections were just for show. Everyone knew that.

Calder was sitting in the back of Ben Pearson’s store. In reality it was as much his as it had been Ben’s, but Calder didn’t regard it as anything other than Ben’s store, even with Ben no longer around. He looked at the bottles of pills that he had been accumulating since Ben’s death.

Soon, he thought. Soon.

‘There are ways, Thomas,’ he said. ‘You step lively.’

Now, with his bag packed, Thomas kissed his wife and prepared to leave.

‘Where will you go?’ asked Constance.

‘I don’t know. Not far, but far enough to be safe from him.’

Calls had to be made. Souleby still had plenty of allies inside the town, but he couldn’t see many of them standing up to Morland. They weren’t killers, while Morland was.

‘What will I tell him when he comes?’ asked Constance.

‘Nothing, because you know nothing.’

He kissed her on the mouth.

‘I love you.’

‘I love you too.’

She watched him drive away.

He had been gone less than an hour before Lucas Morland arrived at her door.

Souleby drove as far as Portland and parked in the long-term garage at the Portland Jetport. He then took a bus to Boston, paying cash for the ticket. He didn’t know how far Morland would go to track him, and he was no spy, but he hoped that, if Morland did somehow discover the whereabouts of the car, it would throw him a little. He asked his son-in-law to book a room for him under the name Ryan at a club off Massachusetts Ave that advertised through Expedia. Souleby knew that the club didn’t ask for ID, but simply held a key for the name listed on the reservation. He then walked over to Back Bay, sat in a coffee shop across from Pryor Investments and waited. When Garrison Pryor eventually appeared, cell phone to his ear, Souleby left the coffee shop and followed him. Souleby caught up with Pryor when he stopped at a pedestrian signal.

‘Hello, Garrison,’ he said.

Pryor turned.

‘I’ll call you back,’ he said, and hung up the phone. ‘What are you doing here, Thomas?’

‘I need help.’

The signal changed. Pryor started walking, but Souleby easily kept up with him. He was considerably taller than Pryor, and fitter too, despite his age.

‘I’m not in the helping business,’ said Pryor. ‘Not for you or your board.’

‘We’ve exchanged information in the past.’

‘That was before tridents began appearing in the woodwork of houses in Scarborough, Maine. Have you any idea of the trouble you’ve caused me?’

‘I counseled against that.’

‘Not hard enough.’

‘We’re having difficulties in Prosperous. Serious difficulties.’

‘I noticed.’

‘Our chief of police is out of control. He has to be … retired before we can restore stability. Recompense can be made to you and your colleagues.’

‘It’s gone too far.’

‘Garrison.’ Souleby put a hand out to stop Pryor, forcing the shorter man to look up at him. ‘Morland is going to kill me.’

‘I’m sorry to hear that, Thomas,’ said Pryor. ‘Truly, I am. But we’re not going to intervene. If it’s any consolation to you, whatever happens, Prosperous’s days are drawing to a close. In the end, it doesn’t matter who is left standing: you, Morland, the board. There are men coming to wipe you from the map.’

Souleby’s hand dropped. ‘And you’ll let this happen?’

Pryor took out his cell phone and redialed a number. He watched it connect, raised the phone to his ear, and patted Souleby on the shoulder in farewell.

‘Thomas,’ said Pryor, as he walked away, ‘we are going to watch you all burn.’

* * *

Morland sat in his office. He was frustrated, but no more than that. Souleby would have to return. His life was here. In Souleby’s absence, Luke Joblin and Calder Ayton had agreed that elections to the board should be held just as soon as Hayley Conyer was safely interred. Neither had objected to Morland’s list of nominees for the three vacant positions.

Morland had a fourth name ready too. He had a feeling that another vacancy would soon arise.


55


Chief Morland next faced Thomas Souleby as they stood over Hayley Conyer’s open grave. In recognition of her long and generous service to the town of Prosperous, she was buried in the old cemetery, in the shadow of the church whose legacy she had done so much to protect, and in which her body had reposed on the night before its burial. Only a handful of the most important citizens were permitted to enter the church for her funeral service, although a temporary sound system relayed the proceedings to the townsfolk who stood outside. God played a part in the proceedings, but so too did nature, and the metaphor that ran through Warraner’s oratory was of the changing of the seasons, the life’s journey from spring to winter and thence to a new form of rebirth.

Once the coffin was lowered into the ground, it was left to the selectmen, assisted by Morland and Warraner, to fill in the grave. It was a sign of respect, but Morland was inevitably reminded of the last time he had wielded a spade in service of a body. The townsfolk started to leave. Tea and coffee were being served at the Town Office, where memories of Hayley Conyer would be exchanged, and talk would turn to the election of the new selectmen. In addition, nobody wanted to miss the chance to gossip a little under the fag of mourning: Thomas Souleby’s absence until the morning of the funeral had not gone unremarked, and the tension between him and Chief Morland was common knowledge in the town, even if the catalyst for this particular bout of hostilities – Hayley Conyer’s forced departure from this world – was not.

Morland caught up with Souleby halfway across the churchyard. He grabbed the older man’s arm, steering him away from the gate.

‘Walk with me a while, Thomas,’ he said.

Souleby’s wife was waiting for him outside the railings. Morland thought that she might spring over them to protect her husband when she saw the chief approach him, but Souleby raised a hand to let her know that he was okay. If Morland intended him harm, he would do so another day, and under other circumstances.

‘We missed you,’ said Morland. ‘Your absence was unfortunate. The town was in mourning. It looked to the board for leadership, and the board, in its turn, looked to you as the senior selectman, but you weren’t there.’

Souleby wasn’t about to accuse Lucas Morland of murder, not here, not anywhere. There remained a possibility that he could still survive this, and even turn the situation to his advantage. The three nominees to the board were comparatively young and open to manipulation. They were not his creatures, but neither were they Morland’s. He could not give Morland an excuse to act against him, although the flaw in this line of reasoning was easily apparent to him, for Morland might not even need a reason to act.

‘I had business to conclude,’ said Souleby.

‘You mind my asking what kind of business?’

‘Private. Personal.’

‘You sure about that? Because, if it had to do with the town, I really ought to know about it. This is a delicate time. We all need to pull together.’

Souleby stopped walking, and faced Morland.

‘What do you want, Chief Morland?’

‘I want you to give up your place on the board.’

‘You know that’s not possible. Under the rules—’

‘The rules have changed. The board met while you were away.’

‘There was no board,’ said Souleby. ‘Two members isn’t a quorum.’

‘Like I said, this is a delicate time. We didn’t know what had happened to you, and your wife was of little help. Decisions had to be made. Calder Ayton and Luke Joblin consented to temporary measures pending the election of a new board and the permanent retention of those rules. Selectmen will no longer serve for life, and no selectman will be able to serve more than two terms in succession. I’d have informed you of the changes before now, if I’d been able to find you.’

Souleby understood what was happening. If he resigned from the board, any power that he had would disappear. He would have no protection.

And, eventually, Morland would come for him. He would do so because, alive, Souleby would always be a threat. Calder Ayton would be dead soon, while Luke Joblin was on Morland’s side, and perhaps always had been. Only Souleby knew the details of what had been done in the board’s name, and what Morland himself had done.

‘And if I refuse to resign?’

Souleby noted movement among the trees, and saw that many members of the senior families had not left the environs of the cemetery. They were watching from the woods, and as he stared they began to turn their backs on him, one by one, until he could see their faces no longer. Then, and only then, did they begin to disperse.

‘The will of the people will prevail, Thomas,’ said Morland, and Souleby knew that he was alone.

Morland smiled sadly and walked away. Only when Souleby had seen Morland’s Crown Vic drive off, and was certain the chief was gone, did he join his wife outside the railings.

‘What did he say to you?’ said Constance.

‘I want you to go and stay with Becky and Josh,’ he told her.

Becky was their eldest daughter. She lived down in New Haven. Her husband Josh was Calder Ayton’s nephew. Souleby trusted him.

‘No, I won’t.’

‘You will,’ he said. ‘All this will pass, but for a time things will be difficult. I can’t be worrying about you while I try to make this good.’

‘No,’ she said, ‘no, no …’

She started to cry. He held her.

‘It’ll be all right,’ he lied. ‘Everything will be all right.’

Constance left that afternoon. Becky drove up to collect her. Becky tried to question her father, but he would not answer her, and she knew the ways of Prosperous well enough to pursue the matter no further for now.

Souleby poured himself a glass of brandy. He watched the sun set. He felt drowsy, but he did not sleep.

It was Luke Joblin who came for him, shortly after eight. His son Bryan waited in the back seat. Souleby saw him when the interior light came on as Luke opened the driver’s door. He could have fought them, of course, but what would have been the point? Instead, the old Colt now lay under his wife’s pillow. She would find it there, and she would know.

‘Come along, Thomas,’ said Luke. He spoke gently but firmly, the way one might speak to an elderly relative who refused to do what was best for him. ‘It’s time to go …’


56


The call came through the following evening as Morland was preparing for bed. He was fresh out of the shower, and had changed into pajama pants and an old Red Sox T-shirt. He was quietly eating a late-night sandwich in the dark prior to hitting the sack and maybe spending some quality time with his wife. They hadn’t made love in over a week. Understandably, Morland hadn’t been in the mood. His wife didn’t like him eating late at night but Morland took the view that what she didn’t know, or couldn’t prove, wouldn’t hurt her. It was, he thought, true of so many things.

He had just returned from a visit to Souleby’s bitch wife Constance at her daughter’s house, accompanied by Luke Joblin and three representatives of the most senior families. They’d commented upon Constance Souleby’s lovely grandchildren, and the fine house in which her daughter and son-in-law lived, for the best kind of threat was the one that didn’t sound like a threat at all, the kind that planted bad pictures in the imagination. Becky, Constance’s daughter, offered coffee, but nobody accepted.

‘What have you done with Thomas?’ Constance asked Morland, once the pleasantries were done with.

‘Nothing,’ he said. ‘We just want him to stay out of the way until after the election. We don’t need him interfering, and you know he’ll interfere. He’s safe.’

The election was scheduled for Saturday. Elections to the board were always held on Saturdays, just to be sure that the maximum number of people could vote.

‘Why hasn’t he called me?’

‘If you want him to call, we’ll have him do that,’ said Luke Joblin, all reasonableness and reassurance. ‘We had to take away his cell phone. You understand why.’

If Constance Souleby did understand, she wasn’t giving any sign of it.

‘You had no right,’ she said, ‘no right.’

‘The town is changing, Mrs Souleby,’ said Morland. ‘We just barely survived the mess of the last couple of weeks. That can’t happen again. There can be no more blood spilled in Prosperous. The old board, and all that it did, has to be consigned to history. We have to find a way to survive in the twenty-first century.’

A shiver of unease ran through the three representatives of the senior families, two men, one woman, all as old as any in the town. Morland had convinced them of the necessity for change, but it didn’t mean that they weren’t frightened by it.

‘Thomas can adapt,’ said Constance. She was trying not to plead, but it bled into her voice nonetheless.

‘That’s not the issue,’ said Morland. ‘The decision has been made.’

There was nothing more to be said. Morland, Joblin and the three other visitors got to their feet. Someone mumbled an awkward goodbye, to no reply.

Morland was almost at his car when he heard Constance Souleby begin to wail. Luke Joblin heard it too. Morland could see him tense, even as he tried to ignore the old woman’s cries.

‘Why did you tell her that her husband would call her?’ said Morland. Thomas Souleby wouldn’t be calling anyone ever again. There would probably be no body. Once the elections were concluded, he would be reported missing.

‘I was trying to keep her calm.’

‘You figure it worked?’ said Morland, as the cries rose in intensity and then were smothered. Morland could almost see Constance Souleby’s daughter holding her mother’s head, kissing her, shushing her.

‘No, not really,’ said Joblin. ‘You think she knows?’

‘Oh, she knows.’

‘What will she do?’

‘Nothing.’

‘You sound very certain of that.’

‘She won’t turn on the town. It’s not in her blood.’

Now, as he listened to the ringing of his cell phone, he wondered if he had been right to sound so confident. Great change was always traumatic, and with trauma came actions that were unanticipated and out of character.

His wife appeared on the stairs, come to see where he was. She was wearing a sheer nightgown. Through it he could see the curves of her body. He tossed the remains of the sandwich in the sink before she noticed. He’d get rid of them in the morning. He was usually awake before her.

‘Can’t you ignore it?’ she asked.

‘Just let me see who it is.’

He went to the hall and looked at the display.

Warraner.

He had yet to tackle the pastor. Rumors of what Morland was proposing had certainly already reached him. Warraner would have to be convinced of the necessity of acceding to the will of the town, but it would not be easy. Still, he could continue to tend his church, and he could pray to his god behind the silence of its walls. Perhaps the pastor also hoped that, when bad times came, the town would turn once again to the church, and the old ways could resume. If that was the case, Morland thought that Warraner’s prayers to his god would have to be powerful as all hell, because Morland would send Warraner the way of Hayley Conyer and Thomas Souleby before he let another girl end up kneeling by a hole in the cemetery.

Morland considered ignoring the call, but he remained the chief of police. If Warraner wanted to argue, Morland would put him off until the morning, but if it was something more urgent …

He hit the green button.

‘Pastor,’ he said. ‘I’m just about to go to bed.’

‘There’s a homeless man in the church grounds,’ said Warraner. ‘He’s shouting about a murder.’

Shit.

‘I’m on my way,’ said Morland.

He looked to his wife.

‘I’m sorry,’ he said.

But she was already gone.

Warraner hung up the phone. In a corner of the living room lay the body of Bryan Joblin. It was Joblin’s misfortune to have been present at Warraner’s house when the men arrived, and to have reached for his gun at the sight of them. Joblin had died instantly. He had recently fixed his eye on Warraner’s eldest daughter Ruth, a development about which Warraner had been deeply unhappy. That problem, at least, now appeared to have been solved.

Nearby, Warraner’s wife and children were under a gun. One not dissimilar to it was only inches from the pastor’s face. If he focused on the muzzle – and he was focusing, because it was very, very close to him – the masked face of the man holding the weapon became a blur. Warraner could only see one or the other properly, but not both: the instrument of killing, or the man who might let him live.

‘You did good.’

Warraner couldn’t reply. It was all that he had been able to do just to keep his voice steady as he spoke to Morland. He managed to generate some spittle in his mouth, and found his voice.

‘What’s going to happen to my family?’

‘Nothing,’ replied the gunman. ‘Although I can’t promise the same for you.’

The Prosperous Police Department kept one officer on duty at night. In the event of an emergency, that officer could call the chief, or even the Maine State Police, but so far no nighttime incident had ever been sufficiently serious to require the assistance of the MSP. The officer on duty that night was named Connie Dackson, and she was trying to rewire the plug on the coffee machine when two men entered the Town Office. One carried a shotgun, the other a pistol. Both wore black ski masks.

‘Not a move,’ said the one holding the shotgun, which was now pointing at Dackson.

Nobody had ever pointed a gun at her before. She was so scared that she couldn’t have moved even if she wanted to. She was forced facedown on the floor, and her hands were secured with her own cuffs. A gag was placed over her mouth, and she was shown into the town’s single holding cell. It was over one hundred years old, just like the building that housed it. The bars were green, and Dackson had a clear view through them as the two men began disabling the department’s entire communications system.

Morland couldn’t raise Connie Dackson on her cell phone as he drove. He wasn’t worried, though, not yet. She might have left it in her vehicle if she was patrolling, or simply be in the john. She might already even be with Warraner, trying to coax some bum out of the churchyard, a bum who was muttering about murder. That was when Morland knew that he was tired: Warraner wouldn’t be dumb enough to call Dackson if there was a chance that she might hear something she shouldn’t. This was up to him, and him alone.

The first thing that struck him as he reached the churchyard was the fact that the door of the church was open. The gate to the churchyard was unlocked, the chain lying on the ground. The chain had been cut, just like the one farther down the road.

The second was that he could find no trace of any bum.

He didn’t call out Warraner’s name. He didn’t have to. He could now see him kneeling in the doorway of the church. Behind him stood a tall man in a ski mask. He held a gun to the pastor’s head.

‘Chief Morland,’ said the man. ‘Glad you could make it.’

Morland thought that he sounded like a black man. Prosperous didn’t have any black residents. It wasn’t unusual in such a white state. Maine was one of the few places where nobody could try to blame blacks for crime. The white folks had that one all sewn up.

Morland raised his own gun.

‘Lower your weapon,’ he said.

‘Look around you, Chief,’ said the man.

Morland risked a glance. Three other figures, also masked, materialized from the gloom of the cemetery. Two were armed, their weapons pointing in his direction. The third held a coil of wire, and the sight of it caused Morland to notice for the first time the cables that crossed the cemetery and hung over some of the gravestones. He moved slightly to the right, and saw one of the holes that had so interested the state police investigators when they’d come looking for Kayley Madsen. A length of wire led into its depths.

‘What are you doing?’ said Morland.

‘Putting the finishing touches to thermite and Semtex devices,’ said the man. ‘We’re about to destroy your town, starting here. Now put down your gun. I want to talk. The pastor has been telling me a lot about you.’

But Morland wasn’t about to talk to anyone.

Instead, he simply started shooting.

Nobody lived on Prosperous’s Main Street. It was strictly businesses only. As midnight approached, the street and its surroundings stood empty.

Slowly, men began to emerge from the shadows, eight in all. Ronald Straydeer led them, his features, like those of the others with him, concealed. Beside him walked Shaky.

‘You sure you’re okay to do this?’ asked Ronald.

‘I’m sure,’ said Shaky.

He held an incendiary device in his good hand. A cold wind was blowing from the east. That was good. It would fan the flames.

There came the sound of breaking glass.

Minutes later, Prosperous started to burn.

Morland was running for his life. Shots struck the old gravestones, or whistled past his ear to vanish into the forest beyond. He stayed low, using the monuments for cover, firing, weaving and dodging, but never stopping. He was outnumbered, and these men could easily surround and kill him. Anyway, staying in the cemetery was not an option, for it was now one massive explosion waiting to occur.

He didn’t head for the gate. That would be too obvious. Instead he sprinted for the railings and scrambled over them. He took a shot to the upper arm but did not stop. The forest was ahead of him, and he lost himself in its darkness. He risked only one look back and saw that the church door was now closed. The shooting had stopped, and in the silence Morland heard Warraner’s voice raised in song from behind the old stone walls. Somehow, in the confusion, he had managed to lock himself inside.

When men begin to weed,‘ sang Warraner, ‘The thistle from the seed …’

The figures in the churchyard started to run. Morland reloaded his gun and drew a bead on the nearest man. Perhaps he could yet stop this. His finger tightened on the trigger.

But he did not fire. Was this not what he wanted, what he sought? Let this be an end to it. He lowered his gun and retreated deeper into the forest, faster now, putting as much distance between him and the church as he could. If he could get to his car and return to town, he and Dackson could hole up in the Town Office while they called for backup.

He reached the road and saw an orange glow rising from Prosperous. His town was already burning, but he barely had time to register that fact before a massive blast rent the night. The ground shook, and Morland was knocked from his feet by the force of it. Debris was hurled high into the air, and earth, stone and wood rained down on him where he lay. He could feel the heat of the detonation, even from the road.

He covered his head with his hands, and prayed to every god and none.


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