by Josh Lanyon
He raised his hand and stared at the pale marble-sized object lying in his palm. The tiny scales, the delicate fins, the arch smile.
Yes. He knew her. He’d have known her anywhere. Honey’s mermaid.
Chapter Twenty-One
Go. Go now.
Jason studied the signal bars. Or rather the lack of signal bars. No service.
No kidding.
What are you waiting for? Go.
He could wait for darkness to fall, but he didn’t think that would gain him much advantage. There was only one way out of the cellar of the lyceum, and by now Gervase must be in position to pick him off when he stepped outside.
Jason could stay put and wait for Kennedy to show up with the cavalry. Except maybe Kennedy wouldn’t have the cavalry. Maybe the cavalry was on the other side this time.
And if Kennedy walked into Rexford looking for Jason, he would put himself in the line of fire.
Jason waited by the door of the cellar, watching the panes in the window overhead turn gray with twilight.
Maybe Gervase hadn’t made it to Rexford yet? Maybe he was still hiking in? In which case Jason was wasting valuable minutes hovering in this doorway.
No. No, Gervase was in great shape for his age—plus he had desperation to fuel him. No, he would have reached the village by now. And he would know exactly where Jason was.
All he had to do was wait for Jason to stick his head up.
Whac-A-Mole. Only with police issue mallets.
Angrily, Jason realized he was shaking. He told himself it was from the cold water. He was not going to come unglued at the idea Gervase was standing up there waiting to put a bullet in him.
Think.
First of all, if Gervase was going to kill him—kill a federal agent—it was going to be because he believed he could get away with it. He was acting to protect himself, so he could go on living his life as police chief and solid citizen. So he wasn’t going to murder Jason outright. That would be idiotic. Aside from having to also and immediately deal with Kennedy—and how the hell would he explain the murder of two federal agents?—he’d bring the full investigative resources of the entire federal government down on himself.
No. Gervase was intelligent. And practical.
Even if his original idea had been to shoot Jason on the spot, he’d had the entire hike from the highway to calm down and think.
And what he would think was that if he was going to get rid of Jason, he would need it to look like an accident. Gervase would need to fix it so that even in a worst case scenario, there would be a nice big reasonable doubt in his favor.
Therefore…he was not going to pop Jason when he walked out of this cellar.
He would not want to kill Jason in Rexford at all, if he could help it.
Jason focused on this thought, breathing slow, calming breaths as he continued to reason it out.
An accident. That’s what Gervase would be thinking.
Maybe he would sabotage Jason’s car? Or maybe he would ambush Jason on the way back to the car. He was not going to shoot Jason when he walked out of the cellar unless Jason didn’t give him a choice.
Which meant if Jason could walk out of this cellar looking like he was not expecting trouble…Gervase might give him the benefit of the doubt long enough for Jason to make it to some kind of cover where he wasn’t completely pinned down.
Either way, he could not continue to stand in this doorway, paralyzed by indecision.
No. Call it what it was.
Paralyzed with terror at the idea of being shot.
He had made it all the way to this point—spent how long in that swamp downstairs?—and now he could not get himself to walk out the fucking door. Just thinking of it was turning his breath fluttery and shallow, making him feel light-headed and unsteady.
Because he could not forget how it felt to have a bullet slam into his chest. Could not forget the sound of metal chewing flesh and bone, the smell of gunpowder and blood, could not forget the sight…
He swallowed down the sickness.
He had promised Kennedy he was fine. Promised him that if Kennedy needed him, he would be there to back him up. And now he couldn’t force himself out the door.
Even though he didn’t know for a fact Gervase was there, waiting.
And even though he did know for a fact Kennedy was on his way. Was he going to just stand here and let Kennedy be shot?
Coward. You useless, gutless coward. His eyes stung with the revelation. He wiped them impatiently.
How long had he already wasted standing here?
Minutes.
Half an hour?
Long enough that his hands had dried.
What are you waiting for?
The idea seemed to come from nowhere. A single thought taking form amidst all the swirling doubt and confusion.
If you let something happen to Kennedy, you’re going to shoot yourself anyway.
He listened to the words echo through his brain.
His breathing slowed, calmed. He stopped shaking. Yes. That was the truth. If Gervase opened fire on Kennedy, Jason would be out that door in a heartbeat. So why not move now when there was still a chance everyone could walk away alive?
It was almost comically simple when you looked at it that way. You don’t have a choice.
Jason took a deep breath, released it, loosened his shoulders, and stepped through the doorway.
His heart thundered in his ears. His vision seemed to blacken around the edges. Nothing happened.
He kept walking.
He could see the half-sunken buildings to his right, like broken puppets peeping out of the water. And to his left, the long and straggling line of derelict buildings he had searched with Kennedy only days earlier.
Where the hell should he go?
His boots were squelching with each step. It was physically painful not to reach for his weapon, not to at least let his hand rest on the butt of his pistol.
Where to take cover? Where to take shelter? Should he just keep heading out of town, making for his vehicle?
Uneasy awareness rippled down his spine. He was being watched. Every step of the way. That feeling was unmistakable. Like a weight on his shoulders.
He was not going to get as far as his car. He was not going to get as far as the edge of town.
Well, he had never claimed to be a profiler.
“All right,” Gervase called from behind him. “That’s far enough.”
Jason kept walking.
“Stop walking, Agent West.”
The little blue building to his left… Twin broken windows on either side of a front door half-hanging from the frame. Whatever it was, it was his only option now.
“Agent West!”
The dust kicked up beside his boot before he heard the shot. The sound seemed to blow apart the sky. Birds took flight from inside the crumbling buildings like scattershot.
He doesn’t want to shoot you in the back.
Jason had no idea where the thought came from, but he knew it was the truth. For whatever reason, Gervase balked at the idea of shooting him in the back.
He leaped for the porch, hitting the ground, rolling, and landing on his haunches. He crashed through the broken front door, knocking it the rest of the way off its hinges.
Jason scuttled over behind what looked like an old soda fountain bar. He pulled his weapon.
His heart was racing, but his mind was actually focused. Not calm, but not panicked. He had not been shot. He was under fire, but he still had his weapon, and he was trained to deal with this.
So deal with it.
He looked around himself. Beneath the dirt and animal droppings and leaves he could see black and white linoleum, curling up in places. No furniture beyond the bar itself, which at least was heavy and solid wood. There was probably a back door somewhere down that shadowy recess to his left. The lack of any light coming from that direction meant that exit might be boarded up.
Okay. He was pinned
down again. But at least he had better visibility—and he wasn’t standing in wet muck up to his shins.
Kennedy had implied Gervase would have already worked through whatever objections his conscience might make to murdering a fellow law enforcement officer. It couldn’t be that easy. Not for a man who had dedicated his life to upholding the law. Gervase might be capable of murder, might feel driven to it, but he wasn’t going to enjoy it.
He would need to justify it to himself. He would want to justify it to Jason.
You didn’t have to be a behavioral specialist to know that much. It was basic human nature. Nobody saw themselves as the villain in their own story.
“Why’d you do it, Chief?” Jason called. “Why’d you kill her?”
The shot came through the broken window and hit the wall low behind the bar where Jason crouched.
Not good. Gervase already knew exactly where he was.
“You must have had a reason. It had to be an accident.”
There was something halfhearted about the shot that followed. It was a foot away from Jason’s hiding spot.
“You brought us into this. If you’re going to kill me, you at least owe me that much.”
“I didn’t bring you into it,” Gervase returned. In a strange way it was a relief to hear his voice. “I didn’t ask for you. This isn’t on me.”
“You brought Kennedy into it. Which makes me think you wanted to get caught.”
“Which makes me think you’re dumber than dirt.” Gervase’s next shot grazed the top of the bar above Jason’s head. Jason stared up at that pale, splintered gouge in the darker wood.
He swallowed. Yelled, “Why the hell did you call for the FBI then?”
“I didn’t have a goddamned choice!”
Well, that made no sense. Regardless of the actual words, the fact Gervase was willing to talk meant there was still a chance of reaching him.
Or maybe not; the next bullet plowed a couple of inches lower, and Jason flattened himself to the dusty floor.
Shit. Shit. Shit.
He looked around for a better position. To his right there was a staircase leading up to the second floor, but it looked like it had torn away from the landing. And Gervase, who appeared to be positioned outside the front window also on the right, would have a clean line of fire.
Jason moved to the end of the bar and trained his weapon on the window where he could just see the edge of Gervase’s shadow.
“If it was an accident, why didn’t you report it right away? Why did you try to cover it up?”
“It doesn’t matter what it was. It’s too late now.”
“It does matter. You kill a federal agent in cold blood, you’re done.”
“I’m done if I don’t kill you.”
“Kennedy knows. For Christ’s sake. Everybody in your station must have figured it out by now.”
“I know Kennedy knows. The bastard never stopped phoning me the whole way here.”
If that was true, Kennedy must have been desperate to stop Gervase. He’d deliberately abandoned any element of surprise.
“Then what the hell is the point of this? You’re not going to get the drop on him. It’s too late anyway. You have to know that. You’re making it worse for yourself.”
And me. You asshole.
Maybe he should swallow the charm. That was one way of preserving it, just in case Kennedy didn’t arrive in time. Or didn’t survive. Chances were good it would be found in the autopsy. It would certainly trigger a few questions. A lot of questions.
A grisly thought, but…kind of hard not to consider it when someone was firing round after round at you. Except Gervase hadn’t fired for a few seconds.
Motion on the right. Jason brought his weapon up.
“I’ll deal with Kennedy.” Gervase stepped into the empty window frame. His weapon was leveled at Jason. He could hardly fail to notice Jason’s weapon was also trained on him.
Great. Straight out of Hong Kong Cinema.
Gervase stared coldly down at Jason. Jason stared back.
Were they really going to shoot each other?
There did not appear to be another option. If Jason was going down, he was taking Gervase with him. He was not leaving Gervase to deal with Kennedy. That much he knew for sure.
Three.
This was so stupid. So pointless. So unbelievably…
Two.
Don’t think. Don’t talk. Squeeze the trigger.
“You’ve never shot anyone before, have you?” Gervase sounded suddenly weary.
“I have,” Kennedy’s voice said clearly from behind Gervase.
Kennedy fired.
Chapter Twenty-Two
“You could have told me to drop it,” Gervase muttered as he was lifted onto the stretcher that would carry him to the waiting helicopter.
“I could have blown your head off too,” Kennedy said. “I didn’t.”
“You should have.”
“I probably should have,” Kennedy agreed. Always there with the warm and fuzzy.
Or maybe he was doing Gervase the courtesy of being honest with him. Since he had not obliged him by helping him commit suicide.
While they had waited for the state trooper and the med chopper, Gervase had talked. He said it was to keep his mind off the pain of his gunshot wound. Jason believed he had been longing to get the story off his chest since the homicide had happened.
Except it wasn’t homicide. Manslaughter at most. And if Gervase had just owned up to it at the start—
“I should have taken early retirement,” Gervase said as Kennedy shoved his own jacket against the wound in Gervase’s shoulder.
“You should have taken something,” Kennedy said.
Gervase winced as Kennedy applied pressure to the wound. “I didn’t have the patience to deal with the bullshit anymore.”
“What happened that night?” Jason asked.
“It was an accident. I went out there to tell the Madigan kid to turn the goddamned music down or else. She told me to fuck off. Right to my face. Like I was her peer, like I was her servant. She told me her parents paid my salary. Paid the salary of all my officers. Spoiled, mouthy little bitch. I slapped her. Which I shouldn’t have. I know that. I knew it as it was happening. Big mistake. And then it got worse. She fell and hit her head on a rock.”
Gervase stared at them in disbelief. “Just like that. Boom. Lights out. I couldn’t believe it. She was dead.”
“Why the hell did you try to conceal it?” Kennedy asked.
Gervase’s eyes were still dark with horror. “My God. What was I supposed to do? You’ve seen her parents in action. I wouldn’t just have lost my job. They’d have taken me for everything I own. And I don’t own that much, not after a lifetime of public service. They would have destroyed my family. And it wouldn’t have stopped there. I’d have gone to jail. They’d have seen to that. A cop in jail. You know what happens to cops in jail? But they wouldn’t have cared. They could afford the best lawyers. I’d have lost everything because of a mouthy little brat.”
“Because you struck and killed her,” Kennedy said.
Awareness seemed to come back to Gervase’s face. He looked away. “Yeah,” he said thickly.
Jason said, “Why the hell did you drag Kennedy into this? Why involve the Bureau? You’d probably have got away with making it look like a sex crime or something if you hadn’t tried to make it look like the Huntsman was back.”
Gervase gave a strange laugh. “I know! I think I lost my mind there for a while. I’d seen you on the news the night before.” He was staring at Kennedy. “And I thought what a lucky sonofabitch you were. Everybody else does your grunt work, and you get to be the big hero who saves the day.”
“You don’t know what you’re talking about,” Kennedy said.
“A governor called you out right there on TV, and you still walked away with your job. Anybody else would have been fired. Hell, you were getting credit for solving that case too!”
Jason repeated, “Why did you bring him in?”
“Because I couldn’t see how not to. I knew how to stage Rebecca’s body, make it look like maybe the Huntsman had a copycat, but then if we really did have a copycat, we’d bring in Kennedy. So how could I not bring him in? What would be my excuse?”
Maybe it was true. Jason thought there was more to the story. Resentment? Jealousy? Hatred? On the surface Gervase seemed like a decent, well-balanced guy. As sane as they came. But to harbor such bitter feelings for so many years? Was this because of how good Kennedy was at his job? Or because he didn’t bother to pretend he wasn’t that good?
Maybe Kennedy felt the same thing, because he rose and walked away from the little ring of light created by their flashlights.
“How did it happen that nobody saw you with Rebecca?” Jason asked, watching Kennedy’s straight, motionless silhouette.
“She was on her way into the house when I pulled up. She walked out to meet me. It took…no more than a couple of minutes.”
“You goddamned fool.” Kennedy’s voice was a growl from the darkness. “You should have reported it immediately.”
“That’s easy to say. You weren’t there. You’ll never be there because you don’t have anything to lose. This is your life.”
Kennedy didn’t answer.
Jason said, “What about the mermaid charm found with Rebecca? Where did that one come from?”
Gervase groaned. “I found it years ago where Ginny’s body was discovered. I go out there sometimes, into the woods where we found each of the girls. And one day I spotted it lying there in the grass. Right where we’d searched a dozen times. I carried it on my own keychain ever since because I never wanted to forget.”
The low and distant thwack-thwack-thwack of an approaching helicopter reached their ears then. Jason had spotted lights skimming the black tree tops, heading their way.
Chief Gervase’s light, pain-filled eyes followed Kennedy. “You don’t know what those murders did to us. We’re haunted to this day. Those ghosts will follow us until Kingsfield crumbles away like this town. It was just another case for you. Another big career triumph. Not for me. I knew those girls. Every one of them. I had to face their parents. I don’t ever get to forget. To walk away.”