Again, Davis felt her grip tighten, this time enough to make the veins on the back of her hand stand out.
“Alright, bye.”
A moment later, the sound of the phone being dropped into its cradle could be heard, followed in order by the wheeze of the springs on Charbonneau’s desk chair. One heavy step at a time, he crossed the floor, loud breaths escaping with each one until he emerged at the door.
“Hey, you ready?”
With her back turned, Davis paused a moment, her eyes and lips all three mashing into straight lines.
She had come to the office specifically for the reason of meeting with him, had been going through the motions of filling out paperwork ever since simply to give herself something to do that didn’t involve scrolling through her cell phone.
Of course she was ready.
Ready to get out of the office and home to strip out of her sweaty uniform.
“Absolutely,” Davis said, grabbing up the spiral bound notebook from the desk beside her as she rose. Turning to face the man, all she caught was his back as he retreated into his office, saying nothing as he went.
Turning her head to the side, Davis pushed a silent obscenity out through gritted teeth, picking her way past Adams’s desk and into the Sheriff’s office.
Almost as large as the bullpen, most of it could easily be classified as wasted space, a full-size sofa and mini fridge taking up one whole side. In the corner, the newest in window air conditioners pushed frosted air into the room, the space significantly cooler than the rest of the building.
“So,” Charbonneau said, dropping himself unceremoniously in his seat, the chair sliding a few inches beneath his bulk, “what’d you find today?”
Settling herself onto the straight back wooden chair across from him – far and away the most uncomfortable seating option in the room – Davis didn’t bother flipping open her notebook.
“The long and short of it is, nobody saw anything,” Davis opened. “It being a Monday night, a lot of the cabins weren’t rented, meaning there weren’t that many people around. Of those that were, most were pretty intent on whatever they had going at the time.”
She didn’t bother explaining further, having no need to rehash the trio of meetings she’d had after the Rileys, almost all being some form of the same.
They were drunk, or otherwise incapacitated, intent only on their own defilement.
An a-bomb could have hit right in the middle of the lake and it was doubtful they would have noticed.
“Hmm,” Charbonneau said, leaning back so as to raise his feet to the desk, crossing them at the ankle. “And the witness? The woman that found him...”
“Peg Bannister.”
“Yeah, her,” he said, extending a finger her direction, “what did she have to say?”
“Outside of a whole lot of wistfulness about the past and the way things used to be up there?” Davis began. “Not much that was useful. She didn’t know the victim or the owners of the cabin, just happened to be walking her dog yesterday and spotted the blood.”
She opted to leave out any mention of Adams, or Bannister’s attempts at setting Davis up with him.
Already she knew she was the subject of rampant office speculation. No need to add any more kindling to that fire.
“I see,” Charbonneau said. Folding his arms over his stomach, he sucked at his teeth, a noxious sound filling the room as he stared at the ceiling, processing the information.
Across from him, Davis tried not to think about what might be lurking between his molars, having to stare at his mustache every day already bad enough.
“And the ME?” he asked.
“The ME?” Davis replied, her brows coming together. “What about her?”
Shifting his focus to stare at her, Charbonneau’s eyes bulged slightly. “You mean, you haven’t spoken to the damn medical examiner yet?”
Narrowing her eyes in response, Davis felt a stab of something pass through her, confusion coloring her features. “The medical examiner? No, why would I? You told me to canvas the neighborhood.”
“No,” Charbonneau replied, “I told you to work the case. I assumed that meant you’d be smart enough to go and talk to the damn ME covering it.”
Chapter Twenty-Five
Earlier in the day, Deputy Marshal Abby Lipski had anticipated a full afternoon agenda. After arriving a bit late from putting her kids on the school bus, having spent most of the day out of the office the day before checking in on her local cases, she needed the time at her desk to clean some stuff up.
Lingering paperwork, research for a possible incoming assignment, the sort of work that never seemed to abate for a person in her position.
With the arrival of Marshal Burrows hours earlier, all of that had gotten shot to pieces, a change of direction so abrupt she hadn’t even bothered to finish eating, the remains of her salad now sitting on her desk, no doubt wilted and well beyond edible.
“Okay, people, what have we got here?”
Standing at the front of the small conference room in the rear of the Portland U.S. Marshals field office, Lipski paced back and forth. Gone was her suit jacket, her shirtsleeves rolled to the elbow.
Also gone was any chance of picking her kids up from daycare or of making dinner, her husband having been alerted hours before that he was on his own for the night.
Which meant the rest of her family would soon be grouping up for Pizza Hut and Pixar without her.
In front of her, a polished wood table was extended almost a dozen feet in length, the emblem for the U.S. Marshals stamped upon it.
Filling no more than half of the available chairs sat a small cadre of colleagues, Burrows the only one that could be considered anything close to senior, the remainder so new they still had their spots.
Given recent budget cuts and growing demands, it was the best she could hope for, especially on short notice.
When nobody feigned to respond to her question, Lipski stopped her pacing and turned, pressing the front edge of the table flush against her thighs.
“Come on! I asked, what have we got here people?!”
At the volume and tenor of her question, the room seemed to snap into focus, a pair of the youngest Marshals on the far end visibly flinching.
“We have the phone call,” Burrows ventured, kicking things off. “It was made at eight p.m. Same as always.”
“Right,” Lipski said, letting a glare linger on the back end of the table for a moment before beginning her pacing anew.
New or not, this was no time for them to be acting like it.
“Lasted just twenty-nine seconds,” Alan Grossman said from the opposite side of the table, the analyst that had first flagged the conversation. Wearing khaki chinos and a pale yellow dress shirt, his face seemed to bear the same sallow color, his entire being an exercise in monochrome.
“Rang five times, followed by a machine kicking on, and the message being played.”
Leaving his explanation to simply the message, Lipski knew there was no need for him to go into further detail.
They’d all heard it enough times at this point to know it verbatim.
Casting a glance to her left, Lipski looked to the whiteboard beside her, everything that had just been said already scribbled out in blue ink by her own hand.
“Good,” she said, “that puts us at one minute after eight. And then what?”
A few of the younger people in the room shuffled papers, pretending to look busy, being sure to avoid eye contact.
“From there, we can’t be certain,” Burrows said, “until sixteen minutes before ten, at which point he arrived at the Delta ticket counter and purchased a direct overnight flight to Chicago.”
Nodding, Lipski grunted in agreement.
The move was a bold one, at best. For the first three years Scarberry was in the program, he had been completely forbidden from travel without a marshal escort.
Not once had he even tried, though it was clear his demeanor and
interaction with them grew more churlish with each encounter.
Since then, he had been taken off their red flag list, though he had been warned many times over to vet all upcoming travel with them at least a month in advance. Only once they were able to assess the possible threat level, to get further security in place if need be, would he be able to go.
Even at that, though, not once had he tried. Nothing beyond the phone call he had fought so hard to secure.
Until this.
“Chicago,” she said, extending the tip of the marker in her hand and tapping it against the board. “And then what?”
“And then he rented a car from Avis,” Jessica Marlucci, a woman just north of thirty with auburn hair pulled back into a ponytail, said. Squinting through a pair of wire-rimmed glasses she added, “Kept it for only four hours, drove south to Indianapolis, returned it to a satellite office there.”
Flicking her gaze to the whiteboard, Lipski nodded. This much they had down cold, a clear trail of flight manifests and car rental records paving the way.
It was thereafter that things got tricky, the trail completely disappearing.
Once Marlucci was done, almost every person in the room went back to keeping their face locked on whatever was before them, nobody wanting to make eye contact, to be the subject of her next barrage of questioning.
“Okay,” Lipski said, raising her voice, in no mood for any games. “And from there? What have we got?”
“Nothing financial,” Grossman said. “No credit card activity at all.”
Pursing her lips, Lipski nodded, having expected as much. If Scarberry was going to the trouble of picking up a rental car, of switching cities and disappearing, he likely wouldn’t be foolish enough to use the cards again.
Not until or unless he wanted to be found.
“Right,” she said. “How about visuals?”
“We’ve got requests in with every agency in Indy,” Burrows said. “Right now, they’re trying to use traffic cam footage to track his movements, but it’s a pretty tough process. They had him moving south for a while, but once he got out into the suburbs, their coverage becomes spotty.”
There he stopped, letting insinuation fill in the rest.
The guy had gone beyond the full reach of the grid, making it highly unlikely they would spot a useful image of him anytime soon.
Not unless they went the extra step of putting out an APB, an option they really weren’t privy to, that kind of publicity jeopardizing his anonymity.
Which was, after all, the point of his being in the program to begin with.
“His apartment?” she asked, jerking her attention toward the back end of the room.
For a moment, the pair of young men both stared at each other across the table, mouths sagging, not sure which should speak.
“Apartment!” Lipski snapped, slapping her hand down on the table, the movement again causing them both to flinch.
“Uh,” the one on the left said, his ruddy cheeks the size and color of ripe apples, “nothing. Place barely even looked like he lived there, let alone left much behind.”
Having been inside the night before, Lipski knew he wasn’t wrong, even if it was exactly what she didn’t want to hear.
“Anything written down? Any internet search history?”
“Nothing written, no computer at all,” the young man on the left said, his straw-blonde hair plastered by sweat to his forehead.
Feeling both nostrils rise a bit in a snarl, Lipski turned her attention back to Burrows. “Phone?”
“Turned off outside of Portland International,” he said. “Hasn’t been on since.”
Using her hips, Lipski shoved herself away from the table. “Shit,” she muttered, rotating the marker from one hand to another as she went back to pacing.
Tim Scarberry had been a pain in her ass for years now, someone that had forgotten exactly what role she was playing, the service they provided.
He was alive because of them.
She didn’t expect a thank you, but she damned sure didn’t feel she deserved this.
“I guess that leaves us with just one thing,” she said, thinking out loud, never once breaking stride. “We might not know where he is, but we know what sent him on his way, who he’s going to find.”
Stopping at the head of the table, she turned to face them, and asked, “So what do we know about this guy he’s been calling every month for the past six years?”
Chapter Twenty-Six
The front half of Radney Creel was sunburned slightly, a shade of pink that stopped in the middle of his rib cage on either side. Heading it off by putting his t-shirt back on before things got any worse, that did nothing to save his face and the lower part of his arms, all three bright red as he walked through the front door of the house.
As he did so, Elijah Pyle jerked his head up from the table, a k-bar knife and a wet stone stretched out before him, the overhead light glinting off the fresh edge.
Why he felt the need to sharpen it, Creel didn’t have a clue, bearing witness just two days before to what the razor honed weapon was capable of.
“Damn,” Pyle opened, “you look crispy.”
Nodding slightly, Creel said nothing.
Eight hours had been spent out in the sun, staring intently at the front of the cabin. Any longer and he would have given himself up as too obvious, no human alive being able to endure the afternoon sun any longer.
From then on it would be the job of the motion activated camera he was able to get secured on the back deck, a task as simple as walking up and peering in the rear windows, posing as just another of the half-dozen curious gawkers he’d spotted throughout the day.
Seeing Pyle bent over with his knife now, he couldn’t help but think that if they had any idea exactly what it was that had been stretched out on that rug the day before, there was no way they would be within a hundred yards of the place.
Setting the knife and the stone down, Pyle leaned back in his seat, snaking a hand out and taking up a cigar beside him.
Thus far in the days they’d been sharing space, Creel had seen the man eat nothing and smoke two dozen cigars.
And that was just during the time that he was around.
“Anything?” Pyle asked.
Going to his back pocket, Creel extracted his phone, wagging it before him. “Got the camera in place, clear feed to the phone. I’ll patch you in later if you want.”
Contemplating the offer for a moment, Pyle brushed it off with a twist of his head, sniffing loudly.
“Naw, I’m good. You do your thing and I’ll do mine.”
Not once had Creel ever thought that the two had clearly delineated roles, certainly nothing that could be explained as his thing, but didn’t press it. After the day he’d had, the aching in his lower back coupling with the burn on his skin, his next hour was already planned out.
Beginning with retreating to his room for some exercise. While far from ideal, a few quick rotations of sit-ups, push-ups, and body weight squats would do wonders for his body. Shove blood into places it hadn’t been in a few days. Heighten his endorphin and energy levels, better preparing him to deal with the presence of his unwanted partner.
Follow that up with the iciest shower the old house could muster, sitting beneath the steady spray until he shivered from the cold, emerge and leave his hair and body wet and dripping, hoping it would manage to offset the rise in core temperature he had from a day spent in the sun.
Once all that was complete, returning him to a state somewhat resembling human, he would call Baxter and report.
Doing so before then would be a bad look, his agitation with the heat and the situation and the lack of their target’s arrival having his acrimony up.
In such states, he’d long since found it was better to err on the side of prudence, to refrain from any interaction unless he wanted his true feelings to get out.
And one thing he knew for damned certain was that the man paying the bills had no int
erest in anything he was feeling.
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Forcing myself to wait until sundown would have been a better option, but after what I’d seen back at Uncle Jep’s house, there was no way I could do that. My nerves, the cocktail of raw emotions pulsating through me, would have never allowed it.
Barely able to retreat from the top corner of the house without bellowing toward the heavens, letting my rage echo through the home and out into the forest, it took me just ninety seconds to extricate myself. Taking the spare key with me, I stole away from the house before turning and openly sprinting back toward the Charger, oblivious to how much noise I was making.
Hell, at that moment I almost dared something – whether it be human or a damn mountain lion – to get in my way.
By the time I made it back to the car, my entire body was soaked with sweat, pools of it collecting on the middle console, thick swaths of it striping the steering wheel.
Running a hand across my brow, allowing the congregated droplets to fall where they may, I fired the engine up and tore away from the cabin, leaving it without a second glance.
At some point, I knew I would have to return, the place likely now mine, but when that day might be I didn’t yet know.
Couldn’t rightly say I gave a damn either.
In their stead, my thoughts were squarely on my second location, the scene in Uncle Jep’s room making it clear what had occurred, what would be needed in the coming days.
Pop always liked to refer to his friend as an idiot savant. Give him a written exam on most anything, and you were likely to get back a page covered in obscenities or doodles of naked ladies.
Schooling just wasn’t his thing, but that didn’t keep him from being one of the most intelligent men I’d ever met.
He was the person that taught me how to cast a fishing pole, how to drive a car.
How to play chess.
That’s how I knew when I walked into his bedroom and saw the single piece atop the dresser, an item we had shaped with our own hands from a walnut tree nearby, what had transpired.
The Subway ; The Debt ; Catastrophic Page 9