Desperate Measures

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Desperate Measures Page 20

by David R. Morrell


  “Here,” Jill said.

  Pittman came over. Stooping toward where Jill pointed at lower shelves, he found several rows of thin oversized volumes, all bound in black leather, their spines stamped with gold numbers that indicated years, arranged chronologically, beginning with 1900.

  “I thought Caradine said the school went back a hundred and thirty years,” Pittman said. “Where are the other yearbooks?”

  “Maybe the school only started the tradition at the turn of the century.”

  Pittman shrugged. “Maybe. Millgate was eighty. Assuming he graduated when he was eighteen, his last semester at Grollier would have been…”

  “The spring of ’33,” Jill said.

  “How on earth did you do that so fast?”

  “I’ve always been good with numbers. All my money, you know,” Jill said, joking to break the tension. “Of course, Millgate might have graduated when he was seventeen.”

  “And the other grand counselors aren’t all Millgate’s age. Let’s try a few years in each direction—1929 to 1936.”

  “Fine with me,” Jill said. “I’ll take up to ’32. You take the rest.”

  “There’s a table over here.”

  Sitting opposite each other, they stacked the yearbooks and began to read.

  “At least the students are presented in alphabetical order. That’ll save time,” Jill said.

  Pittman turned a page. “We know that Millgate, Eustace Gable, and Anthony Lloyd went to school here. The other grand counselors are Winston Sloane and Victor Standish. But we also have to look for someone else.”

  “Who?”

  “Duncan. The way Millgate said the name… It had the same intensity as when he said ‘Grollier.’ I have to believe the two are connected. The trouble is, Duncan can be a first name as well as a last.”

  “Which means we’ll have to check every student’s name in all these books.” Jill frowned toward the stack. “How large a student body did Professor Folsom say Grollier had? Three hundred at one time? We’ve got a lot of names to read.”

  They turned pages intently.

  “Dead,” Pittman murmured.

  Jill looked at him, puzzled.

  “Old photographs always give me a chill,” he said.

  “I know what you mean. Most of these students are dead by now. But here they are, in their prime.”

  Pittman thought of how he coveted every photograph of his dead son. His mouth felt dry.

  “Eustace Gable,” Jill said. “Found him. Nineteen twenty-nine. A freshman.”

  “Yes, I found him as a senior in 1933. Here’s Anthony Lloyd. Nineteen thirty-three. A senior,” Pittman said.

  “I’ve got him as a freshman in ’29. And here’s Millgate.”

  “But that doesn’t do us any good. We already knew they went to school here.”

  “Hey,” Jill said. “Got another one.”

  “Who?”

  “Winston Sloane. A freshman. Nineteen twenty-nine.”

  “So I was right. He did go to school here, but the son of a bitch didn’t include that in biographical facts he gave to researchers. He wanted it off the record.”

  “Got another one,” Jill said excitedly. “Victor Standish.”

  “Every damned one of them.”

  “We don’t need the other books,” Jill said. “The names are repeated from year to year. They entered in ’29 and graduated in ’33.”

  “But what about Duncan? I didn’t come across even one student with a first or last name of Duncan. What was Millgate trying to tell me. What’s the connection between… ?”

  10

  A shadow loomed beyond the door’s opaque glass window. Although Pittman wasn’t looking in that direction, he sensed the brooding presence and turned just as the door came open. The stranger who entered took long, forceful steps. He wore the gray slacks, navy blazer, and red striped tie that were Grollier’s uniform. He was tall, rigidly straight, in his fifties, with a pointed jaw, a slender patrician nose, and an imperious gaze.

  “Would you mind telling me what you’re doing?”

  Pittman stood. “Why, yes. I’m planning to write a book about your school, and—”

  “You didn’t answer my question. What are you doing?”

  Pittman looked at Jill in feigned confusion. “Research. At the moment, we’re looking at yearbooks.”

  “Without permission.”

  “Mr. Caradine, the librarian, said we could—”

  “Mr. Caradine doesn’t have the authority to give you permission.”

  “Perhaps you could tell me who—”

  The man’s eyes flashed. “Only I can. I’m the academy’s headmaster.”

  “Ah. Mr. Bennett.” Pittman remembered the name that the boy outside had mentioned. “We wanted to speak with you, but since it was lunchtime and you weren’t in your office, we thought we’d come over here in the meanwhile.”

  “It wouldn’t have done you any good. There are procedures that must be followed, letters to be submitted, applications to be filed.”

  “Letters? Applications? But you just said that you’re the only one who can give permission for—”

  “I said I’m the academy’s headmaster. I have a board of supervisors who must be consulted about the sort of breach of privacy you’re suggesting.”

  “But my book would be for the benefit of—”

  “I’m afraid I must ask you to leave.”

  If he cuts off one more of my sentences… Pittman thought.

  “Whatever you want,” Pittman said. “I’m sorry for the misunderstanding. Perhaps we could go back to your office and discuss the problem.”

  “Yes, there is a misunderstanding, but not the one you suspect. I did not mean leave this room. I meant leave the campus.”

  Bennett glared toward Pittman, pointing toward the open door.

  “Very well.” Pittman worked to control himself. He was suddenly conscious that Jill stood next to him. “I’ll write you a letter explaining what I want.”

  “I doubt that the letter will accomplish anything.”

  “I see.”

  “Good day.”

  “Good day.”

  11

  “Friendly place.” Jill drove from the parking lot.

  “Yeah, I’ve been kicked out of a lot of spots, but never a prep school.”

  Jill followed the paved section that flanked the square, passed several classroom buildings and the administration building, then headed along the lane through the valley. “Is he still watching?”

  Pittman turned to look. “In front of the library building. I can feel him glaring all the way from here. Mr. Personality.”

  Jill steered past the stables, then reached open grassland. The lane began to rise. “What touched him off? Do you think he’s really annoyed that we didn’t ask permission from him instead of the librarian?”

  “Something tells me it wouldn’t have done any good if we’d gone to see him first. This way, at least we got into the archives. Looks like we’ve got company.”

  “I see it in the rearview mirror. A brown station wagon leaving the school. Millgate’s people?” Jill tensed. “What if they were waiting in case we came here?”

  “I think they’d have moved against us before now.”

  “Unless they didn’t want to cause trouble at the school. All those kids. Too many witnesses. Maybe a few miles down the road, they’ll catch up to us and…”

  Jill crested the hill. The lane sloped sharply toward the building that reminded Pittman of a sentry’s station. He lifted the back of his sports coat and pulled the .45 from behind his back.

  “What are you doing?” Jill asked nervously.

  “Just in case,” Pittman said.

  At once Jill was past the small building, driving through the open gate, reaching the country road.

  “No, don’t turn left. Go the other way,” Pittman said.

  “But left takes us back toward Montpelier.”

  “That’s the wa
y they’ll expect us to go. If Millgate’s people are in that station wagon… For now, they can’t see us from the other side of the hill.”

  Jill veered right, tires squealing, onto the narrow country road. She stepped on the accelerator so hard that Pittman was pressed against the back of his seat. He gripped the dashboard as she swung around a curve.

  Pine trees lined the road.

  “Take it easy.”

  “There’s nothing wrong with my driving.”

  “That’s not what I meant. You’re doing great. But I want to get off the road. Look for a—There. Between those trees.”

  Faster than Pittman expected, Jill stamped on the brake, twisted the steering wheel, and jolted off the road onto a semiovergrown, wheel-rutted lane that disappeared among pine trees. Sunlight became shadows as the Duster scraped past bushes. The impact of lurching over a rock slammed Pittman harder against the seat.

  He stared through the rear window. “We’re hidden from the road. Stop.”

  The moment Jill did, Pittman shoved his driver’s door open and hurried out. Stooping, doing his best not to expose himself, he chose an angle through the pine trees that would lead him back to the curve in the road. Sensing that he was close, he slowed, stepped carefully over a log, and crept among undergrowth. Immediately he came into sunlight and sank to the ground, seeing the road.

  Across from him, to his right, was the open gate that led to the academy. Beyond it, the station wagon came rapidly into sight at the top of the wooded hill. As it sped down toward the gate, Pittman saw two husky men in the vehicle. They didn’t look happy.

  But to Pittman’s surprise, the station wagon didn’t pull out onto the road and speed toward Montpelier in pursuit of the Duster. Instead, it skidded to a stop at the gate. The two men got out angrily, swung the gate shut, and secured a chain and lock to it. With the gate fully in view, Pittman noticed a sign that he hadn’t been able to see before: NO TRESPASSING. VIOLATORS WILL BE PROSECUTED.

  I bet they will, Pittman thought as the two men stalked back to the station wagon, slammed their doors shut behind them, and drove back up the hill, disappearing over it toward the school.

  Pittman waited to make sure that no one else was coming, then slowly stood. As he turned toward the forest, he saw Jill rise from bushes not far behind him.

  “I don’t get it,” she said. “If they were Millgate’s people, wouldn’t they have followed us?”

  “Maybe they were ordered not to leave the campus.” Pittman entered the cover of the trees.

  “Or maybe that’s just Grollier’s physical education staff,” Jill said. “The football coach. The rowing instructor. Bennett might have told them to make sure we were off the property, and if we weren’t, to give us some physical incentive.”

  Pittman stepped over another log. “Until reinforcements arrive. Bennett was testier than he needed to be. Someone might have warned him to be suspicious of visitors.”

  “And now he’ll make some phone calls.”

  “Right,” Pittman said. “But maybe they’ll think we’ve really gone.”

  “We haven’t?” Jill frowned. “You mean you don’t plan to go back to Montpelier?”

  “Where would we go from there?” Ahead, through the shadows of the trees, Pittman saw the gray Duster. “What other leads do we have?”

  “But what else can we do here? We found out that no one named Duncan, first or last name, went to school with the grand counselors. Millgate must have been rambling. Duncan and Grollier have nothing to do with each other.”

  “No. I have to be sure.” Pittman reached the Duster and leaned against its side. “I’m going back. Tonight.”

  12

  As Pittman climbed the slats in the chest-high wooden fence, a quarter moon in a cloudless sky provided sufficient illumination. He dropped to the other side and entered the darkness of trees. He wore sneakers and the dark sweat suit he had stored in his gym bag. In addition, he wore a black wool cap, jacket, and gloves that he had bought, along with the knapsack, in a village ten miles farther along the road from the school. The jacket had roomy pockets, one of which contained his .45, the other a small flashlight.

  He crept through the trees and soon emerged again into moonlight, crouching on an open ridge, staring down a grassy slope toward the murky silhouettes of Grollier’s buildings. The time was almost midnight, and lights were off in every structure except the administration building. Exterior lights illuminated the square and the front of every building. There wasn’t any sign of activity.

  Nonetheless, Pittman waited, thinking, sensing. The weather report on the car radio had predicted a low of thirty-five degrees, and Pittman believed it, seeing frost come out of his mouth. He shivered, but only partially from the temperature, mostly from fear. He couldn’t help contrasting how he had felt the night he entered the estate in Scarsdale with how he felt now. Back then, he’d been nervous but fatalistic. What did a man about to commit suicide have to lose? But now…

  Yes? Pittman asked himself. What about now?

  You’re scared. Which means you do have something to lose. Are you suddenly afraid of dying?

  Why?

  Jill?

  The thought came unexpectedly. What are you hoping for?

  Hope. Pittman realized that the word hadn’t been part of his vocabulary in quite a while. And with hope came fear.

  He started down the grassy slope. The night was silent, making him conscious of a subtle breeze. His jogging shoes became wet, chilling his feet with moisture from the grass. He ignored the sensation, concentrating on the shadows of the equestrian ring that he passed and then the football field. The buildings of the school were outlined against the mountains.

  He’d done enough newspaper stories about the military to be aware that someone with a sniper’s rifle and a nightscope would have no trouble seeing him in the dark and killing him. With each step that brought him closer and with each second of awareness that he hadn’t been shot, he gained confidence. Maybe the school is safe, he thought. Maybe it won’t be as difficult as I feared.

  A horse whinnied from somewhere behind him, and he froze, self-conscious, worried that the noise would attract someone’s attention. The second time the horse whinnied, Pittman became mobile again, hurrying forward, reaching the shadows at the back of one of the buildings.

  The night became quiet once more. Moving as rapidly as caution would allow, he skirted the perimeter of other buildings, taking care to avoid spotlights. When he came to the side of the square that was opposite the ridge from where he had entered, he pressed himself against a classroom building, intensified his senses, and concentrated on every detail in the darkness around him. The fact that he’d gotten this close continued to encourage him. But fear persisted in making him tremble, and he knew he couldn’t take anything for granted.

  Mustering his determination, he crept from the side of the classroom building and reached the library building. He didn’t dare go to the front and expose himself to the spotlights. Instead, he approached the back door, turned the knob, and discovered that the door was locked. Remembering how the librarian had bragged that the school’s successful honor system made it unnecessary for doors to be locked, Pittman realized the degree to which he and Jill had made the academy’s headmaster nervous. Almost certainly, Bennett had been warned to watch out for strangers. But why? Pittman thought. What are Millgate’s people trying to hide?

  Earlier, when he’d been in the library building, Pittman hadn’t seen any indication of a security system. At least that was one thing he didn’t have to worry about as he took out his tool knife and used its lock picks. The scrape of metal made him wince. It seemed terribly amplified, certain to draw someone’s attention. Nonetheless, he kept working, freeing one pin, then another, continuing to apply pressure to the cylinder, suddenly feeling it turn. As the lock’s bolt slipped free, Pittman turned the knob, worrying that someone might be waiting for him on the other side. He drew his pistol, lunged through the open
ing, aimed toward the darkness with his right hand, and quickly used his bandaged hand to shut the door.

  He listened. The echoes of his rapid entrance diminished. Enveloped by silence, he held his breath, straining to see in the darkness, on guard for the slightest sound. A minute passed, and in contrast with the chill he had felt outside, his body now streamed sweat.

  He locked the door behind him, felt his way upstairs to the main floor, listened, crept up to the second floor, listened again, and approached the door to the archives. Its opaque window revealed a hint of moonlight glowing into the room. It, too, was locked, but this time he wasn’t surprised.

  Quickly he freed the bolt on this door, as well. He entered cautiously, shut the door behind him, crouched, and waited. If gunmen were in here, they had ample opportunity to move against him. After thirty seconds, he decided to take the risk. First he twisted the dead bolt’s knob, locking the door behind him. Then he crossed to the windows and pulled down blinds. Finally he crept toward the middle shelves, turned on his flashlight, made sure that its modest beam was aimed toward the floor, where it wouldn’t cast a glow on the windows, and reached for the yearbooks that he and Jill had examined that afternoon.

  The gap on the shelf dismayed him. The yearbooks from 1929 to 1936 were gone. Hoping that they might still be on the desk where he and Jill had left them, he spun, but the flashlight revealed that the table was bare. Bennett must have taken them away.

  Jesus, what am I going to do? Pittman thought.

  Sweat continued to stream from him. He shut off his flashlight and slumped on the floor, propping his back against a shelf.

  Check the other yearbooks, he told himself. Look at 1937.

  Why? What’s the point? The grand counselors had graduated by then.

  Well, what other choice do you have?

  Maybe there are other records.

  Earlier, when Pittman and Jill had searched the room, they had concentrated on finding the most obvious research tool—the yearbooks. Pittman hadn’t paid much attention to binders and boxes. Many of them were labeled SEM REP, followed by sequential, overlapping numbers—51–52, 52–53, 53–54, et cetera—and the pressure of a time limit had prevented him from investigating the contents. Now, with no alternative, he roused himself, stood, turned on his flashlight, and approached other shelves in the room.

 

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