by Jason Melby
The front tire dipped precariously, compressing the front forks to the hilt. The bike's momentum stopped abruptly, vaulting Lloyd over the handlebars and into the trees, where he cart-wheeled like a rag doll through the brush before the ground rose up beneath him and delivered a knockout punch.
Chapter 65
Blanchart got out of his unmarked cruiser and sidestepped a puddle to approach the locked storage unit. "Were you the first on scene?" he grilled the deputy patrolman wearing a yellow rain parka and holding a pair of bolt cutters in his hand.
"Yes Sir," the young officer answered. "Dispatch said someone reported sounds of gunfire in the area. I rolled up and searched the premises." He pointed to the Geo Metro with a broken antenna. "I found the car when I arrived."
"You find the owner?"
"The car was empty when I got here."
"Did you run the plates?"
"The vehicle's registered to a Joshua Sullivan. I got a last known address if you want it."
Blanchart squinted at a crimson smudge on the storage unit handle. "Looks like blood. We might get a usable print."
Blanchart poked the padlock shackle with a pen. "Did you touch the lock?"
"No Sir. I grabbed the bolt cutters from the trunk, but I waited until you got here."
"Back up," said Blanchart. He unholstered his service pistol and fired two rounds at the latch. He lifted the corrugated aluminum panel and recoiled at the smell of death inside the unit, where flecks of blood and brain matter spackled the roof and walls.
The deputy dropped the bolt cutters and covered his mouth with his hand. "What happened in here?"
Blanchart assessed the crime scene with a visual inspection of the crumpled boxes and a trampled collage of bloody shoeprints. "Don't step there," he told the deputy about to add a fresh boot print to the mix.
The deputy moved behind the sheriff and knocked over a pile of boxes on the horizontal freezer. "Sorry."
Blanchart slipped his hand in a latex glove and opened the freezer lid to find Josh's body with a hole in the side of his head. He touched the neck. "He's still warm. What time did the call from dispatch come in?"
"About forty-five minutes ago."
"Did you see anyone at all when you rolled up?"
"No Sir." The deputy leaned forward for a better look at the .38 revolver in the victim's hand. "Looks like two rounds were fired."
Blanchart noted the spatter pattern on the walls and ceiling. "Call the coroner and tell him to send the meat wagon."
The deputy stepped back and held his stomach. He vomited a leftover meatball sub on his shoes.
"Do that outside," said Blanchart. "You're puking all over my crime scene." He backtracked to his cruiser and grabbed the camera. "Stay away from the scene until the coroner gets here."
"No problem."
Blanchart snapped pictures of Josh's body in the freezer and studied the bloody boot prints leading outside.
"What about the gun?" asked the deputy.
Blanchart followed a diluted blood trail that tapered away from the property. "Bag it and have it processed for prints."
"You find something?"
"Maybe..." Blanchart noticed the contours in the sand and studied the narrow tire track. Too skinny for a car. Too wide for a bicycle. "I want road blocks set up at every intersection out of town. We're looking for someone on a motorcycle."
"You think he's still around?"
Blanchart retrieved a broken ankle monitor from a cluster of overgrown weeds. "You ask a lot of questions."
"Just trying to be thorough. Sir."
Blanchart held the device by a piece of torn strap.
"Looks like a GPS monitor," said the deputy.
Blanchart read the serial number from the back. "Looks like someone doesn't want to be found."
"What's it doing out here?"
Blanchart burned the serial number in his memory and dropped the evidence where he found it. He hustled back to his cruiser and jumped in the driver's seat. "Stay here until the coroner's finished."
"Where are you going?"
"To catch a killer."
Chapter 66
Jamie shivered in her silk camisole, confined inside a dark sarcophagus beneath her husband's toolshed. Her heart pumped wildly to feed exposed extremities crawling with red fire ants inflicting painful injections of alkaloid venom.
Trapped in a devil's tomb, she confronted the darkness surrounding her, more petrified at the thought of never seeing Lloyd again than death by suffocation. Her life was hers to save or lose amidst a seething vengeance that simmered over years of abuse and neglect. Her fear transformed into anger. Her anger morphed into determination.
She twisted her wrists, rotating her hands back and forth to rip her bonded fingertips from the epidermal layer on her thighs. With both hands free, she swatted at the red ants clamoring over the human tapestry of red welts and pustules dotted with bloody fingerprints.
She pounded the plywood above her head, kicking and screaming until her voice gave out. An inner strength welled up inside her. Beaten but not defeated, she stoked her desire to see Alan suffer for the countless acts of cruelty he'd thrust upon her and the people she loved.
She pushed up with her arms, straining from her chest and shoulders to move the three-quarter-inch thick sheet of wood. The unbearable weight seemed impossible to budge at first—a monumental impediment barring her path to escape and any chance of freedom from the husband she loathed.
She bit down hard on the scarf in her mouth, her neck tendons straining from the effort to maximize her efforts against the Goliath enemy above her. Anger fueled her adrenaline rush, compelling her muscles to perform beyond their normal capacity and leverage her untapped strength.
She pushed and squirmed until she raised the plywood far enough to topple the work bench on its side, shifting the enormous weight far enough to pry herself out from under the makeshift coffin lid and emerge like an animal from an underground cave.
Barefoot and trembling, she pulled the scarf down and smacked at ants crawling on her hair and ears. She pounded on the padlocked exit and cried for help, oblivious to the angry figure charging across the lawn.
* * *
Prodded by a loud scream, Lloyd regained consciousness and rolled himself over from a face-down position in a patch of soggy grass at the base of a red maple tree. He curled his arms toward his chest and made a fist in one hand. The throbbing pain in his leg returned. Rain water dripped on his forehead from the wet leaves above.
Dazed and disoriented, he stood up with the backpack still strapped on his shoulders and remembered a fuzzy sequence of events. He dug the disposable cell phone from a zipper pocket and pressed redial to call Samantha's phone.
Real or imagined, Jamie's screaming voice reverberated inside his head like a gong at the mercy of a drummer's mallet. He could feel the desperation in her words as if she stood face to face with him. She needed his help. And she needed it now.
Chapter 67
Brenda propped herself up with her hand on the back of a kitchen chair. She covered her nose and mouth with an oxygen mask attached to a cylinder on wheels and glared at her unwelcome guest.
"It's important that I find your son," Blanchart said in a monotone voice. He poured Brenda a glass of water from the kitchen sink buzzing with flies from an empty tuna can. In some ways, he felt sorry for the stubborn mother who resolved to squander her final moments on a fight she couldn't win. In other ways, he admired her tenacity. "I was hoping you could tell me where he is," he said, handing her the glass.
Brenda pulled the mask to her chin and sipped. "This tastes like piss. If you're trying to poison me, you're too late."
Blanchart searched the house for clues to Lloyd's whereabouts. After countless investigations, he'd learned how even the smallest details proved useful, no matter how benign they first appeared. "When was the last time you saw Lloyd?"
"I'm not his keeper," said Brenda, her voice cracking through the mask.
"He comes and goes."
"Your son is a fugitive, Mrs. Sullivan. That title paints a target on his back. Men are eager to find him. Men who won't hesitate to shoot."
Brenda wheeled the portable oxygen tank to follow Blanchart through the house. "You won't find him here."
Blanchart plucked a family photo from the magnet on the refrigerator door. He recognized the man holding an arm around Brenda's shoulder. "I knew your husband. It was a shame he checked out the way he did. In the end, it's always the people you love who disappoint you the most."
"Get out of my house."
"That's not going to happen."
Brenda ambled toward the door. "You have no right to be here."
Blanchart slapped the magnet on the fridge. He had the old woman on a spit. Now it was time to turn up the heat. "Your husband's never coming back. Unless you want the same for Lloyd, I suggest you tell me where to find him."
He laid a photo on the table. "Your son Josh is dead, Mrs. Sullivan. We found Lloyd's fingerprints on the gun that killed him."
Brenda glanced at the photograph. "You're a liar."
"I'm a realist. You've already lost one son. Are you prepared to lose another?" Blanchart tapped the nightstick handle on his duty belt. "Time is our enemy, Mrs. Sullivan. The sooner you help me find your son, the sooner I can help him."
"Don't threaten me." Brenda spoke defiantly above the hiss of pressurized gas. "You've no interest in helping Lloyd."
"He'll end up like Josh."
"Josh got what he deserved."
"That's harsh," said Blanchart.
"The world's a harsh place."
Blanchart pulled the solid hickory from the brass ring holder on his duty belt and smacked the baton in his hand. "I'm the only friend Lloyd has. One way or another, you're going to tell me where he is."
"Fine," said Brenda. "Wait here."
* * *
Brenda rolled the steel canister down the hall to her room and parked herself on the edge of the bed beyond Blanchart's line of sight. She inhaled several breaths from the mask before she removed it and reached between the mattress for the lever-action Winchester. "My husband never liked you," she said to herself out of earshot from Blanchart. "And neither did I."
"People change," Blanchart replied as if he heard every word Brenda spoke to herself in confidence. He closed the blinds at the front of the house to ensure his efforts would go unnoticed.
"Evil stays the same," Brenda mumbled. The rifle sagged in her fragile arms as she lugged the loaded firearm across the room toward the hall. "I wish I could be more helpful," she said facetiously.
"He'll come to me eventually," Blanchart called out from somewhere inside the house.
"Why?"
"Because I have what he wants."
"And I have the same for you," said Brenda. She reached the end of the empty hall and steadied herself with the rifle. A sense of calm come over her. A peaceful premonition of a better life than the one she'd leave behind.
"Last chance," Blanchart's voice trailed off.
Brenda rounded the corner with the rifle barrel waist high and studied the empty room. "Sheriff?"
Despite her body's protest, she nestled the Winchester's stock against her shoulder the way her father taught her as an only child on the family farm. The effort met with stiff resistance. Her lungs hungered for the supplemental oxygen supply. "You're a coward," she said as loud as she could.
"Your boy can't hide forever."
Brenda shuffled toward the patio entrance. The stationary hammock swayed under its own power. "Stand out and show your face," she said, loping around the corner toward the bathroom with her finger on the trigger.
She nudged the shower curtain with the end of the rifle barrel, perplexed at the sheriff's ability to come and go unseen, like the devil himself. "You're an evil man," she said when she discerned Blanchart's presence behind her. She tried to pivot with the rifle but her efforts proved futile at best.
Blanchart hammered her about the head and neck with his baton. Blood splattered the shower curtain and walls.
"God won't forgive you for this," Brenda hissed through a broken jaw and shattered teeth.
Blanchart smiled and wiped his brow. "Perhaps," he growled, "but God's not the one in charge."
Chapter 68
Marsha Hollan parked her rented Nissan in the grass along the edge of a moonlit retention pond and killed the lights. She focused a pair of ten-by-fifty binoculars at Sheriff Blanchart's empty driveway. "It's hard to tell if someone's home," she said to Lloyd and Samantha who occupied the back seat. "The blinds are closed. I don't see any lights on."
"That doesn't mean she's not there," said Lloyd. His leg throbbed despite a copious amount of Advil and a padded field dressing around his ankle.
Marsha scanned the other houses down the street. "Everyone else has their trash cans at the curb. Either Blanchart forgot his or he's not home to do it."
Samantha shook her head. "Jamie always takes the trash out."
Marsha steadied her elbows on the Altima's door frame. She'd dealt with men like Blanchart before. Men who flaunted their narcissistic attitude and kept their spouse on a leash. Drunken tyrants who believed they ruled the world and everything in it. But this time the abuser was cold, calculated, and sober. He also carried a badge and a gun. "Maybe she got on a bus?"
"That wasn't the plan," said Lloyd.
"Plans change," Marsha countered.
Samantha gripped the front seat headrest and leaned toward Marsha's ear. "Jamie would have called by now. For all we know, Blanchart has her locked inside."
"We can't just storm the sheriff's house," said Marsha.
Samantha bristled at the do-nothing attitude from the Annie Oakley wannabe she'd hired to do what no one else could accomplish. "We can't just sit here."
Marsha handed the binoculars to Samantha. "We need to be patient and see what plays out."
Samantha checked the side of the house. "I'm all out of patience. What if Blanchart found out about her plan? What if Jamie's life is in danger?" She lowered the binoculars. "We have to search the house. It's the only way to know for sure."
Lloyd grabbed the binoculars from Samantha and searched for any sign of movement at the windows. "He could be watching us right now. Waiting for us to make a move."
"Then we confront him," Samantha argued.
Marsha turned around to face both passengers. "That's not a good idea."
"Why not? You're the one packing heat. He'd have to listen to you."
"He's a cop," Marsha reminded her overzealous client, who'd obviously seen one too many action movies. "I'm a civilian with a permit to carry. He could shoot us for trespassing—not to mention aiding and abetting a wanted fugitive." Marsha looked at Lloyd. "We have to be careful about this. For all we know, your girlfriend could be halfway to Mexico by now."
"No way," said Samantha.
"How do you know?"
"Because I know her."
"Do you? You said yourself you hardly talk to her anymore. Women in abusive relationships seldom act rationally. It's possible she changed her mind and decided not to leave her husband. It happens."
Samantha swallowed her pent-up rage. "Her husband forced himself on me. I'm not afraid of him, and I'm not afraid to testify in court. Jamie told me about the videos in his study. I need the evidence to prove my case—whether Jamie's home or not."
Marsha unwrapped a stick of spearmint gum and chewed it hungrily. "Men like Blanchart operate outside the law. Your testimony won't mean shit in court."
"It will if I show him raping me on tape."
"He'll argue consent. Make it sound like he did what you asked him to. The sex was rough but not forced. You never reported a crime. You have no physical evidence."
"That's bullshit."
Marsha spoke with her hands. "That's how the system works."
"Whose side are you on?"
"It's not about sides. It's about what you can or can't prove in a co
urt of law. He's the fucking sheriff!"
"Who might have killed his own wife," Samantha added.
"We don't know that."
Lloyd gave back the binoculars and opened his disposable phone. "We need to search the house—to know for certain. But Marsha's right. The risk's too great without knowing if Blanchart's home."
"Then what are you getting at?" said Samantha.
"I'll make a bogus 911 call and leave a tip about myself hiding out in a motel. If Blanchart's inside, he'll leave in a hurry."
"And what if he doesn't?" said Marsha. "What if he stays inside and sends a deputy to field the call?"
Samantha sided with Lloyd. "It's worth a shot."
"I still don't like it," said Marsha, regretting her decision to skip her flight and stay in Florida.
"Neither do I," said Lloyd. "But right now it's the only play we've got."
Chapter 69
Lloyd peered inside the etched windowpane embedded in the oak-stained four panel door. "I don't see anyone," he told Samantha, who searched the ground at the front of the house for the spare key concealed inside a faux rock.
Marsha's voice came over the FRS walkie-talkie on Lloyd's belt. "What's happening?"
Lloyd unclipped the radio and pressed the transmit button. "We're still looking for the key."
"This is taking too long," Marsha's voice replied.
"Just keep your eyes open," Lloyd spoke into the mike. "I don't like surprises."
He helped Samantha comb the ground along the hedge that framed the front yard landscaping. "I thought you knew where it was?"
Samantha dug her painted nails in the mulch bed. "Jamie must have moved it." She brushed her hand on a lump in the soil and unearthed the man-made stone. "I found it!" she cried triumphantly as she opened the bottom compartment.
Lloyd watched a minivan wind through the gated subdivision. "What about the alarm?"