The Subway ; The Debt ; Catastrophic

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The Subway ; The Debt ; Catastrophic Page 11

by Dustin Stevens


  As far as they knew, it was the family of a buddy that passed in the service, friends I had made a promise to keep in touch with.

  Corny as hell, but damn if they didn’t jump at the chance to believe that one.

  For all that, at the end of the day, there was the chess piece, as sure a sign as any that he was gone.

  Leaning back, shifting my gaze toward the water, I considered the second possibility for why nothing was coming up in my searches, one that I had had an inkling of since leaving Portland but hoped to be able to sidestep.

  Thus far nothing had shown up because the powers that be hadn’t wanted it to.

  Which meant they were trying to keep something under wraps, something hidden that they knew might put the public in a state of panic.

  Something that had started exactly six years before.

  Reaching out, I closed the lid of the laptop. Without looking over, I slid it onto the nightstand, sending a shower of wrappers to the floor to make room. Pushing my bare backside down the rough sheets, I settled my head on the pillow, staring up at the textured ceiling above, allowing a single thought to play through my mind as I drifted off to sleep.

  I knew exactly who had killed Uncle Jep.

  And I also knew that I was the reason why.

  Chapter Thirty

  The clock in the corner of Deputy Marshal Abby Lipski’s computer said it was fast approaching nine p.m., though there was no chance of her returning home anytime soon.

  A timeframe that couldn’t be measured in terms of hours, but rather days.

  An unknown stretch of time without seeing her husband, being there to help with her children, sleep in her bed, or even wear the clothes she wanted to. Instead, she was stuck with the go-bag in the corner of her office, the items put there nine months earlier with barely a passing thought to what was making it inside.

  All for an ungrateful ass named Tim Scarberry.

  The thought made her stomach turn, adding to the tension already knotted tight at the thought of the meeting she was about to have, just ninety seconds away from starting.

  With her desk chair turned sideways to her computer monitor, she sat with her fingers laced over her stomach, her chin pulled toward her neck. Eyes glazed over, she replayed the meeting with Scarberry back time after time, trying to pick out anything that might have tipped her off that he had one foot out the door.

  As best she could tell there was nothing, the man just as insolent as their prior meetings.

  The call, the message, had to have meant something.

  Down to the second, the screen beside her sprang to life, a video monitor appearing before her. A harsh sound echoed out through the speakers, the private marshal network conference system alerting her that a caller was on the other end of the line.

  As much as she really didn’t want to answer, to have the conversation she knew was about to take place, she knew that deflecting it, or even worse ignoring it, would only lead to something bad.

  Using the toe of her shoe, she turned to face the monitor square. Reaching out, she used her mouse to click on the button to accept the call.

  On cue, an image of West Coast Director Cyrus Knoth came up on screen, his camera zoomed in close enough so his face took up nearly the entire frame. With his arched eyebrows pulled in tight and his thin mustache, he looked almost like a caricature of an angry person.

  A visage that Lipski and colleagues had laughed about many times before.

  Just so long as it was always aimed at somebody else.

  “Good evening, Director Knoth.”

  “No, it is not!” the man spat, his voice much deeper than would be expected from someone with his countenance. “Not by a long damn shot. You know what would be a good evening?”

  Figuring the question was rhetorical, Lipski didn’t bother to reply, letting the Director have the floor.

  Second only to not answering at all, interrupting him would be a move she could ill afford at this point.

  “Me, home with my wife, eating dinner,” he finished. “Instead, I’m here trying to figure out how the hell one of my senior marshals messed up this badly!”

  It being only the third time Lipski had ever spoken to Knoth directly, she wasn’t sure exactly how he could deem her one of his marshals, but that too was a point she knew better than to get into.

  Peering back at her, Knoth fell silent. For a moment, there was nothing further from either side, the older man’s eyebrows eventually rising a quarter inch up his forehead. “Well?!”

  Prickly heat ran the length of Lipski’s spine, matching the clutching sensation in her stomach. Forcing in a bit of air, she nodded, launching straight into the story she had rehearsed in her head a dozen times throughout the evening.

  In this telling, she chose to leave out the parts about her personal feelings on Scarberry, even her lack of sympathy for Knoth missing one dinner with his wife when she was about to be flying across the country from her family. Regurgitating only the most pertinent of details, she rallied through the call and disappearance, summarizing everything in less than two minutes.

  Thirty seconds better than her previous run through.

  Which meant her side commentary must have comprised a larger chunk of it than she realized.

  As she spoke, she saw the look on Knoth’s face only intensify, color rising into his cheeks, a shiny veneer coming to his skin, like the polished surface of an apple under bright light.

  Glancing to the side, he twisted his head slightly, showing his scalp through his thinning hair.

  “Remind me again how he was able to board a damn plane without anybody knowing it?”

  “Two years ago, his status was downgraded, sir. There was no reason to be tracking his movements.”

  “And you didn’t think the events of the call last night warranted tracking?” Knoth shot back, a snarl forming along with the last word.

  “There was no time,” Lipski replied. “I was made aware of the conversation first thing this morning, at which point we began looking into his whereabouts.”

  Pushing himself back from the camera, Lipski got a full shot of the suit and terrible tie he was wearing before he reappeared before her.

  “Jesus Christ, Marshal, what kind of operation are you running down there?”

  Feeling her own ire starting to rise, not appreciating what he was asking or the underlying insinuation it carried, Lipski peered back at the camera. Everything had been done by the book. WITSEC was not the Secret Service, and they both knew it.

  If a malcontent like Scarberry wanted to go offline, they only had to ask.

  The protection was for their benefit, it wasn’t a sentence.

  “You are aware that this agency has never lost a single person under their protection?” Knoth said, reciting the maxim that every marshall had heard more times than they cared to remember.

  “I am.”

  “So then you’re also aware that you just let someone under our direct supervision get on the subway, correct?”

  Wanting so badly to look down at her hands twisting in her lap, to jerk her attention to the side, to focus on anything but the man sitting before her, Lipski forced her gaze to remain forward.

  The subway was company speak for allowing a protected subject to go underground. The place where the agency wasn’t aware of their whereabouts, or even if they were alive or dead.

  Of everything the protection service ever faced, it was far and away the worst.

  Not only did they lack control of a situation, they didn’t even have working knowledge of it.

  “I am,” she said, her voice barely more than a whisper.

  Keeping his features twisted up, looking as if he were holding back an explosion just seconds from occurring, Knoth turned his head to the side.

  “So what the hell are you going to do about it?”

  “Right now, my team is waiting for me downstairs,” Lipski replied, the words spilling forth, a last attempt to shove the conversation toward a conc
lusion. “We are outbound in one hour, headed to Bangor.”

  Chapter Thirty-One

  The lights inside the warehouse had been dimmed for the night, turned off at exactly nine p.m., just as they were each night. A rule instituted a half-decade earlier, Vic Baxter hadn’t done it out of any real concern for his employees getting home to their families in time.

  It was done because an operation as large as his, tucked away in the woods of Northern Georgia, needed to be inconspicuous. It needed to abide by the cover story that it was nothing more than an auto garage and junkyard, keeping something resembling normal business hours.

  Otherwise, it was just a big shiny beacon, a lone point of light projected out from the middle of thick timber, practically begging law enforcement to come and take a look.

  The local authorities were easy enough to keep at bay, the overburdened and underpaid excuses for lawmen content with a few grand a year for looking the other way. Even agreeing to occasionally come by and give them a nothing citation, just for the sake of really ingraining the front.

  The problem was the boys from a few states north, the feds all but fondling themselves at the notion of bringing him down, the situation he was now dealing with proof positive of that very thing.

  Tucked away in the office carved out on the second floor, Baxter stared down at the warehouse below, the shadows of the place made to look even darker by the tinted film covering the glass.

  The last worker had left more than two hours before, finishing the pallet he was working on and moving out for the night, departing without so much as a glance up to the man watching over everything.

  Not that he really needed to. Baxter was almost always there, a fact that everybody in the area knew all too well.

  Once upon a time, he had had a home and a life, a place that he retired to at the end of each day.

  Of course, that was before he ever heard the name Tim Scarberry.

  Reclined in his rolling desk chair, he stared at the silent machinery spread throughout the shop, the items looking like miniature roller coasters, his very own amusement park built to scale and fit inside the enormous corrugated metal building.

  Which, in a way, was a fitting name for the place.

  The items he produced brought joy to thousands of buyers, and the money they forked over in return certainly made him a happy man.

  If only he could clean up this one loose end, snip away this final thing that had been nagging him for so long. Maybe then he could return to sharing the load, being able to exit the building, having some form of a life again.

  Without taking his gaze away from the scene below, he reached over to the desk beside him. Taking up his cell phone, he pressed a single button before tossing it back down, the sound of ringing filling the air.

  A moment later it was answered, the voice on the line awake and alert, sounding as if it had expected the call.

  “Boss,” Radney Creel said.

  “Has he surfaced yet?” Baxter replied, skipping any form of introduction and getting right to the reason they were speaking.

  “Nothing,” Creel replied.

  “You’re certain?”

  “Positive,” Creel answered. “I was onsite all day, put cameras in place covering the rear entrance and kitchen where we’d left the body. No way he shows up without us seeing it.”

  Grunting, Baxter shook his head.

  In the wake of his brother’s trial, it had taken more than two years to find any link to Tim Scarberry’s life. His parents were dead, his immediate backstory scrubbed away by the fact that he had been in the army, bouncing around the globe.

  They effectively had nothing, searching for years before they finally found a thread, the single person in the world that might still be able to link them to Scarberry.

  It was only by fluke that they had managed to stumble across him, to this day not even knowing where the man lived. Moving on him when they did had been premature, messy as hell even, but it was the best they could do.

  There wasn’t a chance that Baxter could consider waiting so long for another chance to pop up again.

  “What about the authorities?” Baxter asked.

  “The deputy, the chick with the dark hair, has been working the houses along the lake, but otherwise nobody has even been by the place.”

  Narrowing his eyes, Baxter pondered the information, superimposing it onto what he knew, what he would have expected out of the situation.

  “Nobody else? No detectives from the city, crime scene technicians, search dogs?”

  “Not a thing,” Creel replied, “just the one woman, working the thing like a damn noise complaint.”

  Steepling his fingers, Baxter rested his elbows on the arms of the chair. The old man was the only possible link they held to Scarberry, a longshot that they had to play.

  Whether or not Scarberry still even kept in touch with his adopted caretaker, there was no way of knowing. Since the day he walked out of the courthouse six years earlier, delivering the damning information that had put Eric Baxter away, nobody had seen or heard a word.

  He had become a ghost, sucked up into the Witness Protection Program, never to be heard from again.

  For as much bad press as the feds received, Baxter had to admit they’d been airtight on this one, nary a whisper of anything coming back, no matter how hard they looked.

  Even after finding Lynch, changing the voicemail on his cell phone was the only shot they’d had, hoping that would be enough to pull Scarberry out of hiding.

  Now, it appeared that alone might not be enough.

  “Orders?” Creel asked.

  Remaining silent for a moment, Baxter allowed the next few days to play out in his head, ways that he might be able to nudge the process along. Hopefully, bring about the end result they’d been looking for for so long.

  “Stay in place,” Baxter said. “Let me make a call, see if I can’t speed this shit up for us.”

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  In a county with a population as low as Monroe, there was no full-time coroner available. Just getting a medical examiner to show up onsite was a stroke of pure luck, a former forensic expert in Nashville having retired to the area years before and offering his work on a volunteer basis.

  Which was basically to say, he would show up, make all initial determinations and assessments, and then send the victim on their way to Sevierville, where the real heavy lifting would be performed.

  Also meaning that Talula Davis’s day started even earlier than usual, the meeting with Charbonneau the prior evening making it clear that this was her investigation to perform and she was expected to do everything associated therein.

  What all that included, she didn’t pretend to know the full answer to, having never been trained as a detective, or even having shadowed one before.

  All she had was the minimal training she’d obtained when joining the department.

  A time or two over the years she had debated moving up, joining a police force, trying to work her way through the system. Any such thoughts had ceased long before though, her time with Monroe County making it clear just how much of a Boys Club law enforcement could be.

  At this point, she was merely biding her time, doing her due diligence before making a clean break.

  Only the third car in the lot outside the Sevierville County Coroner’s Office, Davis slammed the door shut on her Bronco, the morning sun promising that there would be no hope of clouds or rain to bring reprieve to the area. Already feeling a light film of moisture settle on her skin, she cut a diagonal path toward the front door.

  Stepping inside, she found the front to resemble a lobby from a tiny elementary school, a small square of space with black and white tile, hallways extending in either direction.

  To her right was a sliding glass window, a woman with short gray curls and pointed glasses sitting behind it, staring intently at her.

  “Good morning,” she said, unleashing one of the thickest accents Davis had ever heard.
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br />   “Morning,” Davis replied, catching a bit of twang creep into her tone as well, a subconscious attempt to match the sound. “Looking for Dr. Asay?”

  “Good thing,” the woman said, revealing a gap-toothed smile, “Doctor’s the only other person in the building so far.”

  Tipping her head to the side, she said, “In the basement. Can’t miss it.”

  Her eyebrows coming together slightly in confusion, Davis offered only a nod of thanks. Following the direction of the woman’s gesture, she took a plain black metal door down a flight of stairs, depositing her in the basement a moment later.

  Underfoot, the same color scheme stretched out on the tile before her, the light shifting from fluorescent white to filmy yellow, a slight hum in the air. On one side of the hall sat a pair of matching wooden benches, a trash can between them.

  On the other, metal double doors, the faint sound of music carrying out from them.

  Following the sound, Davis walked forward and tapped against the doors with the back of her knuckles before shoving the left side one and peering in.

  Never before had she been inside a coroner’s lab, though the space looked exactly as she’d expected, television doing a surprisingly real job of putting together what a general setup looked like.

  What they hadn’t prepared her for was the sight of the deceased splayed out on the table in the center of the room, a spotlight shining down, illuminating it from above.

  Certainly not the competing scents of chemicals and blood in the air.

  Or of someone she presumed to be Dr. Asay standing perched over the body, a bone saw in hand.

  “Yes?” the doctor asked, a high-pitched female voice loud enough to be heard over Etta James wailing in the background.

  Wincing slightly at the increased volume, Davis kept her gaze on the doctor, making a point of not looking at the spread between them. “Talula Davis, Monroe County Sheriff’s Department, I’m here about-“

  “Oh, yes,” Asay replied, her forehead crinkling behind the plastic shield and surgical mask she wore, a gesture Davis presumed to be a smile. “You’re here about this one.”

 

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