The Thunder Keeper

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The Thunder Keeper Page 20

by Margaret Coel


  “Oh, they have every intention of operating a mine. Our tests prove conclusively that the diamonds at Bear Lake are gem quality. Yes, yes, the very best, worth millions.” He slapped one hand against his thigh. “By the time Loesseur gets results from their own tests, I’ll be in Brazil. Kurt here—” He glanced up at the man glaring at him. “Where will you be, Kurt? Switzerland?”

  “Shut up, Roz.”

  Vicky glanced from Baider to Kurt. An old story, a legend she’d heard as a kid, flitted at the edge of her mind. The con artists in the Wyoming wilderness a century ago, duping the big-money boys in New York City by making them believe there were gem-quality diamonds in a deposit, when the only gems found were the ones they had sprinkled around.

  “You salted the deposit,” she said.

  Roz Baider threw his head back and laughed, then ran a hand under his eyes and dabbed at the moisture. “Funny, isn’t it?” he said. “Company out west scamming an international diamond company. By the time Loesseur’s geologists figure it out, the deal will be closed and I’ll have twenty million dollars in an account in Brazil.”

  “Shut up, you damn fool.” Kurt took hold of Baider’s shoulder and pushed him down onto the table. “You’ve got a big mouth.”

  Baider pulled himself free and sat back up, rubbing at his shoulder, an aggrieved look in his eyes. “What difference does it make? She’s not going to be around to tell anybody.”

  Vicky slid down the sofa, trying to put as much space between herself and the two men as she could. A chill had taken hold of her, as if a cold wind had swept through the house. There were no sounds of any other humans—no cars passing outside, no phone ringing. She was alone with the men.

  Keep talking. “You killed Vince Lewis.” She locked eyes with the man in the black raincoat. “Roz gave the order, and you drove the sedan. Vince was going to blow the whistle, wasn’t he? Why? Did the man have a conscience?”

  Roz Baider gave a nervous laugh. He was still rubbing his shoulder. “Lewis didn’t like it I was screwing his wife, despite the fact he was screwing half the women on Seventeenth Street. He thought if he ruined me, Jana wouldn’t want me. She wouldn’t divorce him and throw him out of the mansion. He could keep his rich man’s life. The bastard would have blown the whole deal out of the water. Fortunately I overheard him making an appointment with you on the telephone. I knew what he intended to do, and I couldn’t let him do it, now could I?”

  “Why did you kill Jana?” Vicky glanced at the man in the raincoat. “She couldn’t have done any harm. She didn’t have any evidence.”

  Kurt reared back. “You got it wrong, sweetheart. The lady’s sudden demise wasn’t my doing.” He gestured to Baider, still rubbing at his shoulder.

  “An unfortunate accident.” Baider turned his gaze on some point above the sofa. “Jana was a very silly, stupid woman. She asked too many questions, got hysterical over what happened to her husband. Said she didn’t want anything to do with murder. The woman should have been thanking me.” He shrugged. “You never know about a lush.”

  Vicky felt like she was going to be sick. The man perched across from her had beaten Jana Lewis to death. Had he dumped her body? Or had he called in Kurt to mop up after him?

  “Enough stalling!” Kurt shot forward, and Vicky felt herself being lifted off the sofa, his fingers digging into her bones, shooting pain through her body.

  “You have information we want,” he shouted. “We can make this easy, or we can make it hard. You cooperate, or you’re going to be in more pain than you could ever imagine. Do you understand?”

  Vicky tried to wrench herself away, but his grip tightened. The man’s face came close to hers: lips peeled back from clenched teeth. “Who have you talked to beside Ferguson and the scientist at Global Vision? Who else knows about the deposit?”

  “Everyone,” she said. The pain pulsating through her body seemed remote and unimportant. All of her energies were concentrated now on staying alive. “Detective Clark. He’s on his way over now.”

  “You’re lying.” The sharp, open-palmed blow across her face sent her spinning backward onto the sofa.

  “He’s already talked to the sheriff in Lander,” she managed. She could taste the blood in her mouth. “That was the sheriff on the phone wanting more information.”

  The house went quiet. Kurt seemed to hold his breath for a long moment. Then: “Check the phone, Roz.”

  Roz lifted himself from the coffee table and disappeared into the dining room. Vicky was aware of his footsteps clacking across the wood floor, and something else: the almost imperceptible sound of a door opening. Cool air floated over the room.

  Baider was back, his gaze on the receiver in his hand. “She’s right. This says Fremont County Sheriff.”

  “Let’s get her out of here.”

  Vicky leaned away, but Kurt had hold of her again, lifting her upright. She let her weight go dead, and the man pulled her across the coffee table. She felt the table edge cut into her shinbone.

  “Nobody’s going anywhere.” The voice boomed from the entry, and Vicky jerked back onto the sofa. Past Kurt, past Roz, she could see Nathan Baider standing in the archway: He was all in gray: gray overcoat hanging open over a gray suit, thin strands of gray hair combed back from a gray face.

  “What have you done?” The man kept his eyes on his son.

  “Dad! Stay out of this.”

  The older man remained motionless, never taking his eyes away. “You lied to me. You said there was nothing in what this lady told Charlie Ferguson. I decided to come over here and talk to her myself. And what do I find? My own son—”

  Suddenly, like a rattler striking out, Nathan Baider sprang across the room and began pushing his son backward. “You think I don’t know about the kimberlite pipe at Bear Lake?” Pushing. Shouting. The phone thudded on the floor. “I found that pipe forty years ago and kept it secret all this time. Bear Lake is holy, you fool. You think I wanted some bozo up there desecrating a sacred place?”

  Vicky had the sense of watching a film fast-forwarding: Roz rolling backward into the dining room, the old man’s fists crashing into his face and chest, pummeling his stomach. “You ruined my name. Ruined the company I spent my life building.”

  “You crazy son of a bitch.” Kurt lunged after them and threw his weight against the old man, who stumbled sideways, fists flailing in the air. Kurt’s hand shot out, his palm sliced at the man’s neck, and, in slow motion now, Nathan Baider began falling forward, dropping onto his hands and knees, collapsing at his son’s feet. Kurt raised his hand again, but Roz grabbed hold of it and wrenched it to the man’s back. “My father! Stop, you idiot! He’s my father!”

  Vicky was on her feet, darting around the coffee table. She scooped up the telephone as she ran, aware of Kurt pulling free and starting after her. She was through the entry, out the door, across the porch—running down the cement walk, rain slapping at her face, fingers groping for the 911 keys, scarcely aware of the shadowy figure coming up the steps until she had run into him.

  “Vicky. Vicky. What is it?”

  She stared up at Steve Clark, trying to make out if he was real or only a vision conjured up out of her own need. She’d prayed for help, and a spirit had arrived.

  She grasped the smooth, moist fabric of his raincoat and pressed against his chest. She could feel his heart pounding. He was real.

  “They’re inside!” she heard herself scream.

  “What happened?”

  “Nathan Baider. I think they killed him.”

  Beyond Steve, coming up the steps, were two officers. They stopped on either side of them, and Vicky could sense the coiled energy beneath the dark uniforms.

  “Who else is inside?” Steve’s voice.

  “Roz and his security chief, Kurt. I think Nathan—”

  “Stay here,” Steve cut in. He brushed past her, pulling out a small black pistol from beneath his sport coat, issuing orders to the officers. “Johnson around back. Adler
, you and I go in front.”

  Vicky sank onto a small boulder in the flower garden next to the sidewalk and lifted her face into the rain and thanked the spirits.

  32

  The quiet awakened her. Even the drumming of rain against the roof had stopped. Vicky stretched against the rough fabric of the sofa in the study upstairs and winced at the pain that stabbed at her head and chest. She adjusted the ice pack on her cheek and glanced at the clock on the table next to the phone. The green numerals floated in the shadows: one-thirty.

  She’d dozed for almost an hour. It surprised her. She hadn’t expected to fall asleep; she’d still felt coiled for flight when Steve had led her upstairs. When did the noises downstairs stop? The footsteps scuffing the floor; the buzz of voices, the squawk of a police radio?

  She listened to the silence, wondering if the officers and technicians had left. After a few moments she heard the footsteps on the carpeted stairs, followed by a soft knock. The door swung open, and Steve Clark stood in the opening. “You awake?” he said softly.

  “Come in.”

  He stepped into the room and stood looking down at her, like a hesitant visitor to a hospital room, unsure if the patient was still alive. Finally he reached around, pulled the desk chair over, and sat down. “How are you feeling?”

  “I’ll be okay.”

  He was quiet a moment. “The techs have pretty much finished up downstairs,” he said finally. “Just got word from the emergency room. Looks like Nathan will recover.”

  Vicky closed her eyes a moment. She found that she was shaking with relief. The image of the man in the black raincoat karate-chopping the old man’s neck, was burned into her retinas. “He saved my life,” she said. “If he hadn’t come when he did—”

  “I know.” He placed a hand over hers. Outside, a car splashed through the wetness.

  “I’ve spoken with Detective Slinger up in Lander. He’ll be here tomorrow to interview Roz and Kurt. I expect we’ll have enough evidence to charge them with masterminding the murder at Bear Lake, as well as the murders of Vince and Jana Lewis. Not to mention charges of conspiracy, kidnapping, assault, and attempted murder.” He drew in a long, considered breath and exhaled slowly. “I’ll need a full statement from you tomorrow.” He glanced at his watch. “Make that this afternoon.”

  She’d already told him everything. After the officers had taken Roz and Kurt out the front door, hands cuffed behind their backs, and the ambulance had driven off with Nathan Baider, and the medics had handed her an ice pack, she’d sat at the dining-room table across from Steve, pouring out a torrent of words, as if the words could dispel the terror and pain. Why had he come when he did? she’d asked him.

  Her friend had called, he’d explained. Father O’Malley. Said to get to the house. A killer could be there. He’d had the dispatcher send a car, and he’d come as fast as he could.

  Now he said, “You shouldn’t be alone, Vicky. Why isn’t Lucas here? I’ll call him for you.”

  “No.” She shook her head.

  “He’s your son. He should be with you.”

  “I don’t want to upset him.” She drew in a breath. “I’ll talk to him later.”

  He didn’t say anything for a moment. “Is there someone else I can call. A friend?”

  She pressed the ice pack into her face. Laola, a young woman with next Saturday’s date the most serious thing on her mind; colleagues at the law firm—she didn’t even have their home numbers; a couple of neighbors with whom she exchanged good mornings. There was no one. She was alone. Hisei ci nihi.

  He said, “I can stay downstairs if you like.”

  “I’ll be okay,” she told him with as much confidence as she could muster. “Thanks.”

  He sighed and got to his feet. “I’ll lock up on my way out,” he said. Then: “By the way, I hung up the phone downstairs. It’s working now.”

  The phone. She’d run outside with it, trying to dial 911, and then she’d bumped into Steve. She vaguely remembered setting the phone down somewhere—the dining-room table?—after Steve had brought her back into the house. She must have left it turned on. Anyone trying to call would have gotten a busy signal.

  “Call me if you need me,” he said, heading into the hallway. She heard his footsteps pounding on the stairs. After a moment the muffled thud of the front door shutting.

  She started to get up, then dropped back. The room whirled about, and her head throbbed. She’d spend the night on the sofa, she decided. As she reached for the throw at the end, the phone rang. She leaned over to the table and lifted the receiver.

  “Vicky. Thank God.” John O’Malley’s voice. She knew it instantly. “I’ve been trying to reach you all night. Are you okay?”

  She curled up against the back cushion and allowed the comfort of his voice to wash over her. “Steve got here in time,” she heard herself explaining. “I’m all right.” She pushed away the memory of the blows and hurried on, telling him how Nathan Baider had walked in, like a spirit suddenly appearing out of nowhere, and how she had run out of the house.

  The line went quiet a moment. “One of Baider’s men died tonight at Bear Lake,” he said. He told her about Wentworth and Delaney, how Delaney had broken down and told the detective everything. How Wentworth had spotted Grover at Bear Lake, the Indian who had worked for him at the Kimberly Mine. He’d assumed Grover had found out about the deposit somehow and had come to Bear Lake to spy on them, intending to blackmail Baider Industries or blow the whistle. He went up to the ledge to kill him. Delaney had gone along, but he hadn’t expected Wentworth to kill the Indian.

  Vicky tried to follow what he was saying through the throbbing in her head. Nothing was making sense. “Grover was on a vision quest,” she managed.

  That was right, he said. “The irony is, Grover didn’t know anything about the deposit. Neither did Eddie, but when Wentworth spotted Eddie in Lander, he figured Grover and Eddie were working together. Eddie also had to die. They went after him. When they picked him up this afternoon, the guy was so scared he told them Ali Burris knew they’d killed Grover and was going to tell the sheriff, so they picked her up, too.”

  Vicky didn’t say anything for a moment. It made sense now, the picture was clear. She uncurled her legs and set her bare feet on the carpet. “There’s another irony,” she said. “There won’t be a mine at Bear Lake after all.”

  “I know,” he said. “Delaney told Slinger how he and Wentworth had salted the mine. They sent Baider soil samples that included gem-quality stones, which Baider used to prove that the deposit was valuable. He was determined that his scheme would succeed, Vicky. He was willing to have people killed. He would have had you killed.”

  “You, too, John O’Malley,” she said. Then she got up and walked over to the window, still feeling shaky. Outside, a section of pavement shimmered like a diamond under the street lamp. But it wasn’t a diamond. Was nothing as it seemed? Everything an image of something else?

  “I’d like to see the kimberlite pipe,” she said.

  “I have a good idea where it’s located.”

  “Well, I know the exact location. And . . .” She drew in a long breath. A car broke through the diamond of light. “I want to come home.”

  33

  Father John saw Vicky standing next to the Bronco by the clump of willows. She was peering up through a pair of binoculars, seemingly lost in another reality. He turned into the parking area and stopped a few feet away.

  It had been six weeks since the night they’d talked. Six weeks, and his ribs were still sore. Her call this morning had caught him by surprise. He knew she’d come home for a visit, but he didn’t know when.

  “I’m here for the weekend,” she’d said, lightness and anticipation in her voice. “How about a hike in Bear Lake Valley this afternoon?”

  Not until he got out of the Toyota and slammed the door did she seem to realize he was there. She took the binoculars away and walked toward him. She resembled the image of her he
carried in his mind: dressed in blue jeans and a jean jacket, unbuttoned over a white T-shirt. Her black hair trailed around the collar. A red backpack dangled on her back. Her beaded earrings shimmered in the sunlight as she moved. There was a flush of color in her cheeks, a hint of red in her lips.

  She handed him the binoculars and nodded toward the ledge where he’d gone after Eddie and Ali. “Look up there,” she said, as if they’d been having an ongoing conversation.

  He lifted the binoculars and focused beyond the lakeshore, moving slowly up the mountainside. The petroglyph leaped out at him: white arms, hands, and feet, the masked face, the round eyes. An otherworldly figure—spiritual—floating in space, so close he could almost reach out and touch it.

  “Beautiful, isn’t it?” Vicky said beside him.

  “Yes.”

  After a moment she said, “Look this way.” He felt the cool touch of her hand on his, guiding the binoculars toward another petroglyph, another spirit. “They’ll leave here, you know, if the land is disturbed.”

  He understood. The spirits had been sent here by the Creator to help human beings and, when necessary, to chastise them.

  He found another petroglyph, smaller, with deeply chiseled eyes and an upturned mouth that gave the face an amused expression. Spirits manifesting themselves in stone? It defied scientific theory and all the Jesuit logic he had absorbed through the years, both of which seemed inadequate to account for the reality. He believed in spirits. He believed in angels and saints. He believed in sacred places where the Creator was close, very close. Often he felt an unworldly presence at St. Francis.

  He took the binoculars away and turned to Vicky. She was studying a small black box in her hand.

  “GPS,” she said. “The data analyst who found the pipe insisted I bring this along. He loaded the coordinates. All we have to do is follow the directions. A satellite up there somewhere”—she glanced at the sky—“will take us to the pipe.”

 

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