The driver’s-side door on the other car opened, and a man got out. He was dressed in a black raincoat and he said, “You are . . .”
“Here to meet you,” Carl said. “Anyway, my grandpa is.”
“Come around the car with your hands up where I can see them.” The Russian looked like a Mafia guy from television; but then, so had Oleshev.
Carl lifted his hands over his head and the other man moved closer, darkly visible in the thin security light from the museum. Carl saw that one hand hung down, long; he had the gun out. As he cleared the car, hands up, Carl said, “I’m not the one, I’ve got to get, uh, help Grandpa . . .”
The passenger door popped then, and Grandpa pushed it open. He croaked, “Carl? Is this the man?”
The man had moved closer and now his hand was up, at his side, the gun pointed at Grandpa’s door. The car’s interior light had come on when Grandpa pushed the door open, and the old man swiveled, and put his feet on the ground, his hands on his knees.
“Carl? Could you help me get up?”
“Yeah . . . Uh, he’s got a gun, I think . . .”
“Of course he has a gun,” Grandpa said. “Could you help me, please?”
The man was closer now, watchful, and Carl edged up the side of the car, both of his hands overhead, and he said, “I don’t have any kind of a gun or anything . . .”
Grandpa tried to heave himself out of the car and stumbled, went down on the blacktop. “Ahhh . . .”
“Ah, Jesus, Grandpa.”
Carl stooped to lift him; actually had to lift him, and was amazed as his great-grandfather’s feathery weight. The old man might not weigh even a hundred pounds, he thought. Grandpa had him by the sleeve, steadying himself, and the other man was now only eight feet away.
“Tell me who you are,” the other man said.
“I’m the man who called the embassy,” Grandpa said. “I am the head of the Cherry Orchard ring.”
“What? I was told that you were with Rodion Oleshev . . .”
“What’d you expect me to say? The last man you talked to, you tried to kill. We want to know what’s going on—we’ve been working loyally for seventy years, and here you come trying to kill us.”
“There hasn’t been a Cherry Orchard ring since the nineteen sixties,” the other man said. “We looked at the histories.”
“That’s one thing you’re wrong about,” Grandpa said. He looked at Carl. “Carl, you don’t want to hear this.” He pointed to the swale between the parking lot and the road. “Stand over there where you can look down the road.”
“I’d like to hear it,” Carl said.
“Not yet,” Grandpa said. “Over there.”
CARL MOVED TWENTY feet away, and Grandpa slumped back against the car. He began talking to the other man, gesturing. Carl could feel the gun pressing against his back, walked over to a curb, stood on it, then stood on his tiptoes, saw from the corner of his eye the other man glance at him, then turn back to Grandpa. Carl pulled the back of his shirt over the butt of the gun, so the butt was clear.
The other man said, “Nineteen eighty-one, we’d already lost touch with Glass Bowl.” Carl could tell that he was focused on Grandpa now.
“I believe you . . .”
Carl said, “If we’re going to have a long talk we should go somewhere else. Somebody’s gonna come. Kids’ll be coming down here to neck after the game.”
“The game?” the other man said.
“Football,” Grandpa said. “You probably saw the lights when you came into town.”
Carl stepped toward them. “Grandpa?”
“We should talk some more,” Grandpa said to the other man. He glanced toward Carl, but he never said the words. “You should know that we are not interested in Russia, per se. We are Communists, and we are proud of it, and the party will come back. When that happens, we’ll be waiting.”
“The party,” the other man said contemptuously. “The party is . . .”
They never found out what the party was, because Carl, in one smooth motion, lifted the gun from his belt, leveled it, and fired a single shot through the back of the other man’s head. The other man dropped straight down and his gun clattered on the blacktop.
“Good,” Grandpa said. He smiled and rubbed his hands together. “Quick now, put him in the back. And get that gun. We’ll find a place . . .”
Carl dragged the man to the back of the Taurus, popped the hatch, picked him up, and threw him inside. They took one minute to look at the other man’s car: took the keys, took a briefcase, looked in the trunk. The trunk was empty. Carl scooped up the other man’s gun.
“Move, move,” Grandpa said.
Carl hurried around the car, got inside, pulled the door shut. “I know where there’s a hole in the mine fence. We could throw him off the side. He’s in a black raincoat, they might not find him, you know, for a long time.”
“Good as anything, if we can get there with a car,” Grandpa said.
“We can get close enough,” Carl said. Grandpa was touching his own face, looking at his fingers. “What?”
“I don’t know.”
They were backing out, then out to the road. Carl risked flicking on the interior lights, looked at Grandpa. “Oh, Jesus, you’ve got blood all over your hair. Must’ve come out of the guy.”
“I need, I need . . .” Grandpa scuffed open the center console, got out a travel pack of Kleenex, and began wiping his hair. “Just drive.”
They were moving again, down the dark roads. Grandpa said, “Much farther?”
“A minute. Did he tell you anything?”
“Yes. They don’t know who we are. Not our names. They only know the Spivaks, and they’re not sure about them. But this Oleshev called me. So there must be an Oleshev group that has my name, and an official group that has the Spivaks’ names.”
“It wasn’t possible to make a deal?”
“No. He had seen our faces, he’d seen this car, he would have seen more before he left. He no longer had to make a deal; he had the information he wanted. He had to be erased. When in doubt, erase.”
Carl, nodded, eased his foot off the gas, and said, “This is close. It’s right up over that hump, by the curve sign.”
“I don’t see anybody. We must be quick.”
Carl pulled to the side, got out, popped the hatch, grabbed the other man by the back of his raincoat. He dragged him up through the bushes, the other man a dead weight, his feet bouncing over the loose rock. Once away from the car, the night was almost perfectly dark. This wouldn’t work. Carl let go of the body, found his way back to the car.
Grandpa: “What?”
“Isn’t there a flashlight in here?”
“Glove compartment.”
Grandpa fished out a cheap plastic flashlight, tried it, got a thin, pale light. “Will this work?”
“Have to,” Carl said.
“Hurry.”
Carl took the flashlight, went back to the body. Took the man by the collar, dragged him to the break in the chain-link fence, then across. The Rust-Hull mine was an open-pit mine, with vertical rock walls hundreds of feet high. Carl, like most kids, knew it reasonably well; and knew he didn’t want to fall in.
The flashlight worked just well enough to pick out the ground a few feet ahead, and then the downslope that led to the vertical wall of the pit. He pulled the man down the slope, braking him on the steeper parts, onto a shelf. He edged up to it, then peered over the side of the shelf with the flashlight. He could see nothing at all. Nothing but air.
He pulled the body around, ready to launch it over the edge, and as he did, the man moaned.
Carl was so startled that he dropped the man’s collar, staggered backwards, and nearly went over the edge himself. “Whoa,” he muttered. He took the gun out of his belt, shined the flashlight on the man’s face. His eyelids flickered in the light. Carl leveled the pistol and shot the man between the eyes.
“Jesus.” He should have checked to make sur
e the man was dead; but now, there was no question. He was dead, and in another ten seconds, he was over the edge. Carl listened for a thump, heard nothing, and scrambled back to the car.
“Done?”
“Done.” Carl put on the safety belt and started the car. “You cleaned up?”
“Good as I can,” Grandpa said. He looked stressed now, and even older than he usually did. “I think I got some on my shirt . . . I didn’t even notice when it happened, the noise, the flash . . . it’s all over me.”
“Back home in five minutes.”
“All over me,” Grandpa said, scrubbing at his hands with the last of the Kleenex. “All over me . . .”
CARL DIDN’T GET home until after midnight. Jan Walther was ready for bed, and came out to see him. “It’s late,” she said. “Your homework?”
“Done. Did it in study hall,” Carl said, hand on his bedroom doorknob.
“Still have to get up early. What kept you?”
“Ah, you know Grandpa. He doesn’t sleep so well anymore. He wanted to talk.”
She smiled and said, “Okay, big guy. But get some sleep. You have to be in school in less than eight hours.”
“No problem,” said the Imperfect Weapon.
He never dreamed about the dead: he dreamed of girls in varying states of nakedness, of black cars street-racing in LA, of himself posed in a shadowed hallway somewhere with a pistol, muzzle upraised as he slid along the hall, back to the wall . . .
Carl still dreamed a child’s dreams.
14
AFTER HIS EXPERIENCE with the cops in Virginia, Lucas decided not to take a chance on the Hibbing police. Instead, he called the head of the BCA’s northern office in Bemidji, asked him to be the intermediary, waited ten minutes, then took the call from the Hibbing chief of police.
“We’ve got a situation,” he told the chief. “The FBI’s involved, counterintelligence people, and the whole thing is way too complicated to talk about over the phone, but what it is, is, I need somebody to run out to the Greyhound Museum to look around. If you have a Greyhound museum.”
“We’ve got one,” the chief said. He sounded sleepy, but cooperative. “I can get a car up there in five minutes. Are my boys going to run into anything?”
“Tell them to take care,” Lucas said. “We’re talking about a killer. He’s done two people that we know of, that Russian over in Duluth and the old lady a few days later.”
“Holy smokes, I been reading about it. All right, I’ll get somebody up there—hell, I’ll get my pants on and go up there with them. Can I call you back?”
“I’ll be sitting here,” Lucas said. “Call no matter what.”
WEATHER SAID, “I want to know how this comes out, but I’ve got to go to bed. I’m working early.”
“Be up as soon as I can,” Lucas said. “Whatever happens, we won’t go back to Duluth tonight. It’s too late, and there’d be nothing to do.”
“I am very worried,” Nadya said.
Lucas raised his eyebrows and said, “Well . . . you guys didn’t have to have a shadow. We told you that.”
“A shadow was convenient for everybody,” Nadya said. “If all this trouble was an artifact of the past, we could leave it. If not, we could settle it with your FBI, informally. The shadow could act in ways that you, perhaps, could not, with your TV and newspapers . . .”
“I’ll leave you two to work it out,” Weather said. She yawned, kissed Lucas on the forehead, and disappeared back up the stairs.
THE HIBBING CHIEF, Roy Hopper, called back twenty minutes later. “We found a running back from the high-school football team in the backseat of his dad’s car with his girlfriend. The boy didn’t have his pants entirely on. Hope this doesn’t turn out to be a distraction.”
“Distract from what?” Lucas asked.
“He’s rushing for better than a hundred yards a game so far this season . . .”
“Chief . . .”
“ . . . and we found an empty car, doors unlocked, nothing inside but a cell phone on a charging cord. We ran the plates. It’s a rental from Avis at Duluth International. Checked out a week and a half ago to a Martin Johnson.”
“Hang on,” Lucas said.
He repeated the information to Nadya, who said, “That is surely the car, do you think? I don’t know the name. Is this policeman near the cell phone?”
Lucas to Hopper: “Where’s the cell phone?”
“Still here, in the car.”
“Tell him, I will call,” Nadya said. She ran upstairs, got a calendar, ran back down, and punched a number into Lucas’s cell phone. A minute later, the chief said, “It’s ringing.”
“Oh my god,” Nadya said. “I must call in. I must call.”
“Better treat that area as a crime scene, Chief,” Lucas said. “We’ll be back up there at the crack of dawn, or nine o’clock, whichever is later.”
When Lucas got off the phone, he said to Nadya, “Call in, and then get a few hours of sleep. I’ve got an Ambien if you need one. I’ll get you up at five-thirty, we’ll get out of here at six.”
Nadya nodded and started dialing. Lucas was at the bottom of the stairs, headed up, when she called after him, “I’m thinking I’m not liking this Minnesota too much.”
“It ain’t Minnesota,” Lucas said. “Minnesota’s just fine.”
LUCAS WAS UP at five forty-five, groggy until he got out of the shower, which he shared with Weather; she got his blood moving, anyway. Weather didn’t have to shave, so she was dressed and downstairs first, having stopped to knock on Nadya’s door.
When Lucas got downstairs, Weather said, “Nadya’s up. She’s repacking. I’ll put some coffee in a thermos. You want some peanut-butter toast?”
“That’d be great. I’m sorry about the quick turnaround. Gotta make a couple of calls.” He called Andreno, talked with him for a moment; then called Andy Harmon, who sounded as though he’d been up for hours, and filled him in on the shadow.
“Interesting,” Harmon said. “We’ll get back to you.”
Nadya came in, rubbing the back of her head. She had her carry-on bag, which she’d used as an overnighter, in her hand. “Are we ready?”
“You want something to eat? Cereal, or peanut-butter toast?”
She shook her head. “I just want to go.”
AT SIX FIFTEEN, they were in the car. Nadya kept yawning, couldn’t stop. “I have no sleep at all,” she said as they backed out the driveway. She yawned and blinked. “I should have taken the pill.”
Lucas braked, put the car in park, said, “Hang on,” and ran into the house. A minute later, he was back and handed Nadya a sleeping mask. “We’re three hours away. Crank the seat back, see if you can doze off. Any little bit will help.”
She was gone before they got out of the Cities.
THE DAY WAS brilliant and warm, with a gusty wind from the south. Lucas didn’t want to disturb Nadya with the radio, so they rode in silence, running just over the speed limit in light traffic.
Time to think: but not much to think about. The case was all in pieces. Andreno was keeping an eye on Spivak, though he couldn’t do a full surveillance. Nevertheless, when Lucas shook Andreno out of bed at six o’clock, he said he’d taken Spivak home at one o’clock in the morning, and had seen him, off and on, in the tavern during the day and all during the evening. The only place he’d gone all day was to a hardware store, this just before noon, where he’d bought two fluorescent lightbulbs, and to a Wal-Mart, at seven twenty.
“He went inside, and I lost him for a minute or so and then I found him back in the DVDs. He got one, and then he trailed around the store some more and I got the impression he was looking for a tail, but he wasn’t very good at it. So I stayed back a little and let him run, and just before he walked out, he made a phone call from the public phones. He wasn’t on for more than a minute.”
“That sounds like something. I’ll have the feds see if they can do anything with it.”
“Okay. We might b
e getting a little tangled up here, though,” Andreno said. “The cops already got a call about my van. The chief short-stopped it, but somebody along the main drag here is getting suspicious.”
“Get a different vehicle,” Lucas said. “Get Spivak in the bar during the day, and trade that one in for another one. I can make a call, get you the right one.”
“Do that. But don’t call me back until about ten o’clock, which is when I’m going to get up.”
WHOEVER HAD MET with the shadow, it wasn’t Spivak. What else? The laptop was a possibility. He should hear something from the FBI during the day. The street person, the woman who called him: Was there any way to hook into her? She almost certainly had a criminal record. If they could get a single print off anything in that shack, they should be able to get a name and a mug shot and maybe some idea of where she was. He made a mental note to call Reasons and push the Duluth crime-scene people to take the shack apart. There had to be one print . . . And Marcy would talk to the attorney for Larry the Fence, see if they could squeeze an ID out of him. Whoever the woman was, she’d hooked into Larry in a hurry, so maybe they had a history.
TWO HOURS OUT, Lucas got off I-35 at Cloquet, finished the rest of the coffee from the thermos, and pushed on north, as Nadya continued to sleep. Lucas understood exactly: she hadn’t been able to sleep all night in a good bed because she felt like she should be doing something. The next day, when she was actually doing something—heading north—she could sleep like a baby. He was the same way . . .
Thirty miles north of Cloquet his phone rang.
“Lucas . . . Andy Harmon.”
Lucas glanced at Nadya. “Yeah,” he said quietly. “I’m in my car, heading north to Hibbing. Nadya’s with me. She’s sleeping, I think.”
“Okay. First, Spivak got a call yesterday evening. I can read you what he said.”
“He’s tapped?”
“Well . . . yeah. What the caller said was, ‘Is Tom White there?’ And Spivak said, ‘This is Spivak’s Tap. We don’t have no Tom White here.’ I’m reading from a transcript.”
Lucas Davenport Collection: Books 11-15 Page 152