Текст книги "Lucas Davenport Novels 1-5"
Автор книги: John Sandford
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Текущая страница: 93 (всего у книги 105 страниц)
CHAPTER
9
They headed back to town, Climpt riding with Lucas.
“Kind of liked your style back there,” Climpt said.
“Thanks. I’ve worked on it,” Lucas said.
The radio burped: Carr. Need to see you guys at the courthouse.
“Did you find the kid?” Lucas asked.
Nothing yet, Carr said.
Off the air, Lucas told Climpt, “I fucked up. The school principal was worried about cops talking to kids without the parents’ permission. I took the kid out to his house so I could explain to his father. Goddammit.”
“You didn’t fuck up,” Climpt said. He fumbled a cigarette out of a crumpled pack and lit it with a paper match. “That’s not the kind of thing you can know. You’re dealing with a crazy man. And you’ve got a reputation. People around here think you’re Sherlock Holmes.”
“I’m not. But I have dealt with psychos before. I should have known better than to show an interest in one witness,” Lucas said. “I . . . Oh, shit.”
“What?”
“Do you know where the doctor’s house is? Weather Karkinnen?” Lucas asked, his voice urgent.
“Sure. Down on Lincoln Lake.”
Weather lived in a rambling, white-clapboard house with a steep, snow-covered roof. A fieldstone chimney, webbed with naked vines, climbed one end, a double garage anchored the other. A stand of red pines protected it from the north wind. Two huge white pines, one with a rope dangling from a lower branch, stood in back, along the edge of the frozen lake. The neighboring homes were as large or larger than Weather’s, most of them with aging boathouses at the edge of the lake.
As Lucas and Climpt pulled into the driveway, a pod of snowmobiles whipped by on the lake, heading for a bar sign at the far end.
Weather’s house was dark.
“Just be a minute or two,” Lucas said, but a chilly anxiety plucked at his chest, growing heavier as he climbed out of the truck and hurried up to the house. He rang the doorbell, and when he didn’t get a response, pounded on the front door and rattled the knob. The door was locked. He stepped back off the porch and started down the sidewalk, intending to try the garage doors, when a light came on inside.
He felt like a boulder had been lifted off his back. He turned and hurried back to the door, rang the doorbell again. And suddenly he was nervous again, afraid that she might think he was here to hustle her.
A moment later Weather opened the inner door, peered through the glass of the storm door, then pushed the storm door open. She was wearing a heavy throat-to-ankle terrycloth robe. She pulled the robe together at the neck as she leaned out and looked past him at the truck, still running in the driveway, and said, “Okay, what happened?”
Another boulder came off his back. She didn’t think . . .
“There’s a kid missing—after I talked to him at school today,” Lucas blurted. “He might have wandered away from his house, but nobody really thinks so. He may have been taken by whoever did the LaCourts. Since we’ve spent some time together, you and I . . . You see . . .”
“Who’s out in the truck?” Weather asked.
“Gene Climpt.”
She waved at the truck, then said to Lucas, “Come on in for a moment and tell me about it.”
Lucas kicked snow off his boots and stepped inside. The house smelled subtly of baking and herbs. A modern watercolor of a vase of flowers hung on an eggshell-white wall that faced the entry. Lucas knew almost nothing about modern art, but he liked it.
“Who’s the kid?” Weather asked.
“John Mueller,” Lucas said. “Do you know him?”
“Oh, God. His mom works at the bakery?”
“I guess . . .”
“Aw, jeez, I’ve seen him up there doing his homework. Aw, God . . .” She had her arms crossed over her chest, and was gripping the material on the sleeves of her robe, her knuckles white.
“If the killer took the kid, then he’s out of control. Nuts,” Lucas said. He felt large and awkward in the parka and boots and hat and gloves, looking down at her in her bathrobe. “It’d be best if you got out of here. At least until we can set up some security.”
Weather shook her head: “Not tonight. I’ve got surgery in”—she looked at her watch—“seven hours. I’ve got to be up in five.”
“Can you cancel?” Lucas asked.
“No.” She shook her head. “My patient’s already in the hospital, fasting and medicated. It wouldn’t be right.”
“I’ve got to go downtown,” Lucas said. “I could come back and bag out on your couch.”
“In other words, wake me up again,” she said, but she smiled.
“Look, this is getting nasty.” He was so serious that she tapped his chest, to hold him where he was standing, and said, “Wait a minute.” She walked into the dark part of the house and a light came on. There was a moment of rattling, then she came back with a garage-door opener.
“C’mere . . . don’t worry about the snow on your boots, it’s only water.” She led him through the living room to the hallway, opened the first door in the hall. “Guest room. The right bay in the garage is empty. You come through the garage door to the kitchen, then through here. I’ll leave a couple of lights on.”
Lucas took the garage-door opener, nodded, said, “I’ll walk around your house, look in back. Keep your doors locked and stay inside. You’ve got dead bolts?”
“Yes.”
“Then lock the doors,” he said. “You’ve got a lock on your bedroom door?”
“Yes, but just a knob lock. It’s not much.”
“It’d slow somebody down,” Lucas said. “Lock it. How about a gun. Do you have a gun?”
“A .22 rifle. My dad shot squirrels off the roof with it.”
“Know how to use it? Got any shells?”
“Yes, and there’s a box of shells with the gun.”
“Load it and put it under your bed,” Lucas said. “We’ll talk tomorrow morning. Wake me up when you get up.”
“Lucas, be careful.”
“You be careful. Lock the doors.”
He went to the entry, pulled open the inner door. As he was about to go out, she caught his sleeve, tugged him back, stood on her tiptoes and kissed him, and in almost the same movement, gave him a little shove that propelled him out through the storm door.
“See you in the morning,” she said and closed the door. He waited until he heard the lock snap, then went back down the walk to the truck, still feeling the fleeting pressure of her lips on his.
“She okay?” Climpt asked.
“Yeah. Gimme the flashlight. In the glove compartment.” Climpt grunted, dug around in the glove compartment, handed him the flash, and Lucas said, “I’ll be right back.”
The snow around the house was unbroken as far back as he could see. A low railed deck stuck out of the back, in front of a long sliding-glass door. A bird feeder showed hundreds of bird tracks and the comings and goings of a squirrel, but nothing larger. As he waded ponderously through the snow, returning to the truck, another pod of snowmobiles roared by on the lake, and Lucas thought about the sled used in the LaCourt attack.
Climpt was standing next to the truck, smoking an unfiltered Camel. When he saw Lucas coming, he dropped the cigarette on the driveway, stepped on it, and climbed back into the passenger seat.
“Find anything?” he asked as Lucas got in.
“No.”
“We could get somebody down here, keep an eye on her.”
“I’m gonna come back and bag out in her guest room,” Lucas said. “Maybe we can figure something better tomorrow.”
Lucas backed out of the drive and they rode in silence for a few minutes. Then Climpt, slouching against the passenger-side door, drawled, “That Weather’s a fine-looking woman, uh-huh. Got a good ass on her.” He was half-grinning. “She’s single, I’m single. I’m quite a bit older, of course, but I get to feeling pretty frisky in the spring,” Climpt continued. “I been thinking about calling her up. Do you think she’d go out with an old guy like me? I might still be able to show her a thing or two.”
“I don’t believe she would, Gene,” Lucas said, looking straight out through the windshield.
Climpt, still smiling in the dark, said, “You don’t think so, huh? That’s a damn shame. I think she could probably show a fellow a pretty good time. And it’s not like puttin’ a little on me would leave her with any less of it, if you know what I mean.”
“Stick a sock in it, Gene,” Lucas said.
Climpt broke into a laugh that was half a cough, and after a minute, Lucas laughed with him. Climpt said, “Looking at you when you went up to her door, I’d say you’re about half-caught, my friend. If you don’t want to get all-caught, you better be careful. If you want to be careful.”
Carr was gray-faced, exhausted. Old.
“I’ve got to get back out there, on the search line,” he said when Climpt and Lucas walked into his office. Lacey was with him and four other deputies. “It’s a mess. We got people who want to help who just aren’t equipped for it. Not in this cold. They’ll be dying out there, looking for the kid.”
“The kid’s dead if he’s not inside,” Climpt said bluntly.
“And if he’s inside somewhere, looking for him outside won’t help.”
“We thought of that, but you can’t really quit, not when there’s a chance,” Carr said. “Where’s this photograph Henry’s been telling me about?”
Lucas took it out of his pocket and flipped it on Carr’s desk. Carr looked at it for a moment and said, “Mother of God.” To one of the deputies, he said, “Is Tony still down the hall?”
“Yeah, I think so.”
Carr picked up the phone, poked in four numbers. They all heard a ringing far down the hall, then Carr said, “Tony? Come on down to my office, will you?”
When he’d hung up, Lucas said, “I had dinner with Weather Karkinnen and people have seen us talking. Gene and I stopped at her place. She’s all right for now.”
“I’ll send somebody over,” Carr suggested.
Lucas shook his head. “I’ll cover it tonight. Tomorrow I’ll try to push her into a safer place, maybe out of town, until this thing is settled. I just hope it doesn’t start any talk in the town.”
The sheriff shrugged. “It probably will, but so what? The truth’ll get out and it’ll be okay.”
“There’s another problem,” Lucas said. “Everything we do seems to be all over town in a few minutes. You need to put the lid on, tight. If John Mueller’s missing, and if he’s missing because he talked to me, it’s possible that our killer heard about it from a teacher or another kid. But it’s also possible that it came out of the department here. Christ, everything that we’ve done . . .”
Carr nodded, pointed a finger at Lacey. “Henry, write up a memo. Anyone who talks out of place, to anyone, about this case, is gonna get terminated. The minute I hear about it. And I don’t want anybody talking about substantive stuff on the radios, either. Okay? There must be a hundred police-band monitors in this town, and every word we say is out there.”
Lacey nodded and opened his mouth to say something when a short dark-haired man stuck his head in the office and said, “Sheriff?”
Carr glanced up at him, nodded and said, “I need to talk to Tony for a minute. Could we get everybody out of here except Lucas and Henry? And Gene, you stay . . . Thanks.”
When the others had gone, Carr said, “Shut the door.” To Lucas: “Tony’s my political guy.” When the dark-haired man had closed the door, Carr handed him the Polaroid and said, “Take a look at this picture.”
Tony took it, studied it, turned it, said “Huh,” and nibbled on a thumbnail. Finally he looked up and said, “Sheriff?”
“You know that woman?”
“There’re half-dozen people it could be,” he said. “But something about her jaw . . .”
“Say the name.”
“Judy Schoenecker.”
“Damn,” the sheriff said. “That’s what I thought soon as I saw it. Gene?”
Gene took the photo, looked at it, shook his head. “Could be, but I don’t know her that well.”
“Let’s check it out,” Carr said. “Lucas, what’re you going to do? It’d be best if you stayed away from the Mueller search, at least for a while.”
Lucas looked at his watch. “I’m going back to Weather’s. I’m about to drop dead anyway.” He reached across the desk and tapped the photograph. “Why don’t you call this a tentative identification and see if you can get a search warrant?”
“Boy, I’d hate to . . .” the sheriff started. Then: “Screw it. I’ll get one as soon as the judge wakes up tomorrow.”
“Have somebody call me,” Lucas said.
“All right. And Lucas: You couldn’t help it about the kid, John Mueller,” Carr said. “I mean, if he’s gone.”
“You really couldn’t,” Lacey agreed.
“I appreciate your saying it,” Lucas said bleakly. “But you’re both full of shit.”
CHAPTER
10
Sleep had always been difficult. The slights and insults of the day would keep him awake for hours, plotting revenge; and there were few days without slights and insults.
And night was the time that he worried. There was power in the Iceman—movement, focus, clarity—but at night, when he thought things over, the things he’d done during the day didn’t always seem wise.
Lying awake in his restless bed, the Iceman heard the three vehicles arrive, one after another, bouncing off the roadway into the snow-packed parking lot. He listened for a moment, heard a car door slam. A clock radio sat on the bedstand: the luminous red numbers said it was two o’clock in the morning.
Who was out in the pit of night?
The Iceman got out of bed, turned on a bedside lamp, pulled on his jeans, and started downstairs. The floor was cold, and he stooped, picked up the docks he’d dropped on the floor, slipped them on, and went down the stairs.
A set of headlights still played across his side window, and he could hear—or feel—an engine turning over, as if people were talking in the lot. As he reached the bottom of the stairs, the headlights and engine sounds died and a moment later someone began pounding on the door.
The Iceman went to the window, pulled back the gingham curtain, and peered out. Frost covered the center of the window in a shattered-paisley pattern, but through a clear spot he could see the roof-mounted auxiliary lights on Russ Harper’s Toyota truck, sitting under the blue yard-light.
“Harper,” he muttered. Bad news.
The pounding started again and the Iceman yelled “Just a minute” and went to the door and unlocked it. Harper was on the concrete stoop, stamping the snow off his boots. He looked up when the Iceman opened the door, and without a word, pushed inside, shoving the door back, his face like a chunk of wood. He wore a red-and-plaid wool hunting coat and leather gloves. Two other men were behind him, and a woman, all dressed in parkas with hoods and heavy ski gloves, corduroy or wool pants, and pac boots, faces pale with winter, harsh with stress.
“Russ,” said the Iceman, as Harper brushed past. “Andy. Doug. How’re you doin’, Judy?”
“We gotta talk,” Harper said, pulling off his gloves. The other three wouldn’t directly meet the Iceman’s inquiring eyes, but looked instead to Harper. Harper was the one the Iceman would have to deal with.
“What’s going on?” he said. On the surface, his face was slack, sleepy. Inside, the beast began to stir, to unwind.
“Did you kill the LaCourts?” Harper asked, stepping close to him. The Iceman’s heart jumped, and for just a moment he found it hard to breathe. But he was a good liar. He’d always been good.
“What? No—of course not. I was here.” He put shock on his face and Harper said “Motherfucker,” and turned away, shaking his head. He touched his lip and winced, and the Iceman saw what looked like a tiny rime of blood.
“What are you talking about, Russ?” he asked. “I didn’t have a goddamned thing to do with it. I was here, there were witnesses,” he complained. Public consumption: I didn’t mean to; they just fell down . . .
As his voice rose, Harper was pulling off his coat. He tossed it on a card table, hitched his pants. “Motherfucker,” he said again, and he turned and grabbed the Iceman by his pajama shirt, pulled him forward on his toes, off-balance.
“You motherfucker—you better not have,” Harper breathed in his face. His breath smelled of sausage and bad teeth, and the Iceman nearly retched. “We don’t want nothing to do with no goddamned half-assed killer.”
The Iceman brought his hands up, shoulder height, shrugged, tried not to struggle against Harper’s hold, tried not to breathe. Kill him now . . .
Of the people in their group, Harper was the only one who worried him. Harper might do anything. Harper had a craziness, a killer feel about him: scars on his shiny forehead, lumps. And when he was angry, there was nothing calculated about it. He was a nightmare you met in a biker bar, a man who liked to hurt, a man who never stopped to think that he might be the one to get damaged. He worried the Iceman, but didn’t frighten him. He could deal with him, in his own time.
“Honest to God, Russ,” he said, throwing his hands out to his sides. “I mean, calm down.”
“I’m having a hard time calmin’ down. The cops was out to my house tonight and they flat jacked me up,” Harper said. “That fuckin’ guy from Minneapolis and old Gene Climpt, they jacked my ass off the floor, you know what I’m telling you?” Spit was spraying out of his mouth, and the Iceman averted his face. “You know?”
“C’mon, Russ . . .”
Harper was inflexible, boosted him an inch higher, his work-hardened knuckles cutting into soft flesh under the Iceman’s chin. “You know what we been doing? We been diddlin’ kids. Fuckin’ juveniles, that’s what we been doin’, all of us. All that fancy bullshit talk about teachin’ ’em this or that—it don’t mean squat to the cops. They’d put us all in the fuckin’ penitentiary, sure as bears shit in the woods.”
“There’s no reason to think I did it,” the Iceman said, forcing sincerity into his voice. And the beast whispered, Let’s kill him. Now now now . . .
“Horseshit,” Harper snarled. He snapped the Iceman away as though he were a bug. “You sure you didn’t have nothing to do with it?” Harper looked straight into his eyes.
“I promise you,” the Iceman said, his eyes turning away, down, then back up. He pushed the beast down, caught his breath. “Listen, this is a time to be calm.”
The man called Doug was bearded, with the rims of old pock-scars showing above the beard and dimpling his purple nose. “The Indians think a windigo did it,” he said.
“That’s the most damn-fool thing I ever did hear,” Harper said, turning his hostility toward Doug. “Fuckin’ windigo.”
Doug shrugged. “I’m just telling you what I hear. Everybody’s talking about it, out at the Res.”
“Jesus Christ.”
“Judy and I are outa here,” the man called Andy said abruptly, and they all turned to him. Judy nodded. “We’re going to Florida.”
“Wait—if you take off . . .” the Iceman began.
“No law against taking a vacation,” Andy said. He glanced sideways at Harper. “And we’re out of this. Out of the whole deal. I don’t want to have nothing to do with you. Or any of the others, neither. We’re taking the girls.”
Harper stepped toward them, but Andy set his feet, unafraid, and Harper stopped.
“And I won’t talk to the cops. You know I can’t do that, so you’re all safe. There’s no percentage in any of you coming looking for us,” Andy finished.
“That’s a bullshit idea, running,” Harper said. “Runnin’ll only make people suspicious. If something does break, bein’ in Florida won’t help none. They’ll just come and get you.”
“Yeah, but if somebody just wants to come and talk, offhand, and we’re not around . . . Well, then, maybe they’ll just forget about it,” Andy said. “Anyway, Judy and I decided: we’re outa here. We already told the neighbors. Told them this weather was too much, that we’re going away for a while. Nobody’ll suspect nothing.”
“I got a bad feeling about this,” said Doug.
A car rolled by outside, the lights flashing through the window, then away. They all looked at the window.
“We gotta get going,” Andy said finally, pulling on his gloves. To the Iceman he said, “I don’t know whether to believe you or not. If I thought you did it . . .”
“What?”
“I don’t know . . .” Andy said.
“Why did you people think . . .”
“Because of that goddamn picture Frank LaCourt had. As far as I know, the only person he talked to was me. And the only person I talked to was you.”
“Russ . . . I . . .” The Iceman shook his head, put a sad look on his face. He turned to Andy. “When’re you leaving?”
“Probably tomorrow night or the next day,” Judy said. Her husband’s eyes flicked toward her, and he nodded.
“Got a few things to wind up,” he muttered.
Andy and Judy left first, flipping up their hoods, stooping to look through the window for car lights before they went out into the parking lot. As Harper zipped his parka he said, “You better not be bullshitting us.”
“I’m not.” The Iceman stood with his heels together, fingertips in his pants pockets, the querulous, honest smile fixed on his face.
“ ’Cause if you are, I’m going to get me a knife, and I’m gonna come over here and cut off your nuts, cook them up, and make you eat them,” Harper said.
“C’mon, Russ . . .”
Doug was peering at him, and then turned to look at Harper. “I don’t know if he did it or not. But I’ll tell you one thing: Shelly Carr couldn’t find his own asshole with both hands and a flashlight. No matter who did it, we’d be safe enough if Shelly is doing the investigation.”
“So?”
“So if something happened to that cop from Minneapolis . . .”
Harper put the lizard look on him. “If something happened to him, it’d be too goddamned bad, but a man’d be a fool to talk about it to anyone else,” he said. “Anyone else.”
“Right,” said Doug. “You’re right.”
When they were gone, the Iceman took a turn around the room, the beast rising in his throat. He ran a hand through his hair, kicked at a chair in frustration. “Stupid,” he said. He shouted it: “STUPID!”
And caught himself. Controlled himself, closed his eyes, let himself flow, regulated his breathing, felt his heartbeat slow. He locked the door, turned off the lights, waited until the last vehicle had left the parking lot, then climbed the stairs again.
He could go to Harper’s tonight, with the .44. Take him off. Harper had handled him like he was a piece of junk, a piece of garbage. Yes, said the beast, take him.
No. He’d already taken too many risks. Besides, Harper might be useful. Harper might be a fall guy.
Doug and Judy and Andy . . . so many problems. So many branching pathways to trouble. If anybody cracked . . .
Judy’s face came to mind. She was a plain woman, her face lined by forty-five winters in the North Woods. She worked in a video rental store, and she looked like . . . anybody. If you saw her in a K Mart, you wouldn’t notice her. But the Iceman had seen her having sex with the Harpers, father and son, simultaneously, one at each end, while her husband watched. Had watched her, watching the Iceman, as he taught her daughters to do proper blowjobs. She had seen her husband with their own daughters, had seen the Iceman with Rosie Harris and Mark Harris and Ginny Harris, the yellow-haired girl.
She’d seen all that, done all that, and yet she could lose herself in a K Mart.
He again approached the problem of what to do. Fight or run? This time, though, the problem seemed less like an endless snaky ball of possibilities and more like a single intricate but manageable organism.
He was far from cornered. There were many things he might do. The image of John Mueller came to mind: red spots on white, like the eight of hearts, the red in the snow around the boy.
John Mueller was an example.
Action eliminated problems.
It was time for action again.