by Jan Burke
I noticed there were no trees on the lot. “Very out in the open, isn’t it?” I said.
“Yes,” she said. “Not much cover, but no neighbors to speak of—no one with a view of this place. Looks like there’s an alley in back. Let’s check it out.”
She drove around the corner and stopped the car just at the alley’s entrance, illuminating it. There were no cars parked in the alley.
We drove slowly down it, past the graffiti-covered, empty corrugated tin buildings of the foundry, along the backyard of the house. There was less light here, but we could see two more double doors on this side of the garage, and a cluttered yard. An old bathtub, a sagging clothesline, a broken swing set and other objects were surrounded by weeds. The back screen door was off, propped up against one wall of the house. The chain-link fence on this side of the house was slightly taller than the one in front; there was another short drive leading from this end of the garage to the alley, but it didn’t look as if it were much used; the weeds were taller, and a large padlock and heavy chain held a double gate shut.
We continued past the house; the opposite side of the alley was a high cinder-block wall, the back of a shopping center. The other end of the alley let out onto a street bordered by warehouses and a truck yard.
Rachel pulled around to the front of the house, parking on the opposite side of the street again. She seemed to be trying to make up her mind about something. She moved the car a few feet, and said, “This will give you a better view of the back gate, I think. If you need to move the car a little, do it when we first get out, okay? Otherwise you’ll start it up and we’ll be wetting our pants over nothing.”
We all got out of the car. I walked around to the driver’s side just as Rachel handed him the keys.
I was feeling uneasy, but when I looked at Travis, he seemed more worried than I was. He got into the car and rolled down the window.
“You okay?” I asked.
“Yes. Be careful.” He looked over at Rachel. “Both of you.”
“We’ll be fine,” I said.
“Piece of cake,” Rachel said. “This shouldn’t take long.”
She never should have said that. Later I told her I thought she put the jinx on the whole deal right then and there.
33
We crossed the street quietly. Following Rachel, I could see that she was much better prepared for this adventure: she wore gloves, a holstered gun and an equipment belt that wasn’t bulky but kept her hands free —it held her flashlight and a few tools. Her dark pants had lots of pockets.
My pants were dark, too, but while my pocketknife was tucked away in one of the four pockets, I had to carry the flashlight. I hadn’t thought of the knife as anything more than a last-ditch sort of weapon; I brought it because it might come in handy as a tool. Rachel would have—quite rightly—counted my carrying a gun in the liability rather than the asset column. I hadn’t thought of gloves.
I whispered this last concern to Rachel when we reached the foot of the driveway.
“You won’t be touching anything—a lookout, remember?” She glanced down at my shoes. “Good—running shoes—that’s all you need. You see Gerald, just warn me and then get the hell out of here.”
At the corner of the building, she asked me to stay close to her. “Don’t get involved in watching what I’m doing, just keep your eyes moving on the local scenery.”
She checked each side of the building, then moved to a door on the side facing the house. While the double doors at each end of the garage were locked with heavy padlocks, this door was locked with a much smaller lock.
“Watch the windows of the house, too,” she whispered. “Just in case anyone is home.”
She had pulled out something that looked like an eyeglasses case. Less than a minute later, I heard a snick, and saw that she had managed to pick the padlock. She pocketed it, tried to open the door, and found the knob locked as well. This took even less time than the padlock.
“Stay out here,” she said. “If you hear or see anything, tap lightly on this door, then get yourself back to the car.”
She went inside, closing the door behind her. I walked a few feet, looked quickly down the alley, walked back. I kept watching the house. There wasn’t a sound to be heard from the garage. I heard the sound of a car, looked, realized it was on another street—the street at the end of the alley. I waited, but the car kept moving, didn’t stop near the alley or Reagan Street.
What the hell was taking so long? It should have only taken a few seconds to see if there was an El Camino in the garage, get its plate number and leave. Plates could be taken off or switched, though, so maybe she was getting the vehicle identification number instead. I moved around a little, checked the other side of the building, came back to the door. It shouldn’t be taking so long.
It was with more than a little relief that I saw her open the door again and step outside. I was relieved until I saw her face. She looked angry; there was a harsh determination in her eyes and the set of her mouth.
“The car’s not there?”
She had bent to open one of the pockets on her trousers, was pulling something from it. “The El Camino? No.” She straightened up, held out a pair of latex gloves. “Here, put these on. You think you can go in there without being bothered by—you know, the confined space?”
“I’ll be okay.” I took the gloves, started putting them on. “What’s in there?”
“I’ll show you, but we have to hurry. I don’t want to keep Travis wait-ing.
She stepped inside, I followed. She closed the door behind me. She turned on her flashlight. The garage was more orderly than the backyard, but was nevertheless crowded with lawn equipment, tools and lumber. A fixed wooden ladder led to a half loft above us, where more lumber was stored. I couldn’t see much of it, and wasn’t really interested in the supplies for the renovation. My attention was focused on the dusty, dark-colored Camry sitting in the middle of the garage. The front bumper was off, and on a workbench, but it was clear the car had been in an accident.
“The right headlamp has been replaced,” she whispered. “But the old one is in that barrel—he’s using it as a trash can.” She moved the light toward a large cardboard drum with a metal rim. “I had a look underneath. There’s blood, hair and fabric. It should be enough. You want to look?”
“No,” I said, feeling sick.
“Okay. We’ll lock up and call the local cops. I’ll refer them to McCain. He should—” She suddenly stopped talking. We had both heard it. The sound of the Volvo starting up.
And then, almost immediately, the sound of breaking glass.
34
Rachel’s eyes widened. She turned and reached the door before me, peeked out, motioned me to stay back. “Listen!” she said. “Hide in here. I’ll come back for you. If not, take that crowbar off the wall and pry the hinges off the door from the inside. Or smash your way out with a sledgehammer—whatever it takes.”
“Rachel—!”
But she was shoving me back from the door, and to my horror, I heard her locking it.
“No!” I whispered, but I could hear her moving away from the door.
Do what she asked you to do, I told myself. Concentrate on that. I narrowed the beam of the flashlight, tried to work my way back from the door to find a hiding place. I heard a car door slam. I managed to get to the double doors facing the street; I turned the flashlight off and looked through the crack between the doors.
It didn’t afford much of a view, but enough to see Travis being held at gunpoint by Gerald Spanning. As I watched, Spanning took hold of Travis’s injured hand and jerked it hard behind Travis’s back. Travis made a sharp cry of pain, stumbled slightly. The gun was pressed ruthlessly beneath his jaw. It was then I noticed that his face was bleeding.
It was all I could do not to launch myself against the doors in rage.
Spanning forced him across the street, toward me. Behind them I could see the Volvo, the driver’s side window smash
ed out. Spanning stopped at the foot of the drive and said, “Come on out, all of you. I won’t hesitate to shoot this bastard.”
Rachel didn’t answer. I had a frantic impulse to shout back at Spanning, to do something, anything. Given the distance and the darkness and the fact that she had nothing more than a handgun, I knew Rachel was waiting for a better opportunity to act—but would she wait too long?
Spanning jerked at Travis’s hand; Travis’s face contorted and he made a soft sound, but he did not cry out. Spanning, not satisfied with this, changed his grip slightly and made another motion, and this time Travis gave out a sharp bark of pain.
I couldn’t see or hear Rachel.
A second voice called out from the direction of the alley. “Drop it, lady, slow and easy. I’m a good shot.”
Deeny.
Spanning laughed. “She’s a damned good shot.”
“Put your hands on your head and walk away from the building, slowly,” Deeny said.
I saw Rachel come into view.
“Careful, Deeny!” Spanning said. “There’s another one of ‘em around here somewhere.”
“Irene?” Rachel said with scorn. “You think she’d come along with us after that whipping you gave her?”
Spanning didn’t look convinced.
“Yeah, that’s what she told you,” Travis said bitterly—perfectly. “But she wouldn’t have anything to do with a Spanning if she could help it. They’ve always snubbed us. If she wasn’t hoping to get her hands on my money, she wouldn’t give me the time of day. My dad told me the Kellys always thought they were better than the Spannings.” He smiled a little. “You should have seen her face when I asked her to come with me to a trailer park to help me find my uncle.”
“Yeah? I’m sorry, kid,” Rachel said, moving a little closer to them. “Some people are just born snobs. You should have heard what she had to say when she got back from that trip. And when I told her she had probably just visited the guy who kicked her ass, she was shitting herself.”
“I know,” Travis said. “I thought she’d never shut up.”
“Yeah?” Gerald said. “Well, I’ll tell you whose gonna shut up right now—and that’s the two of you. And you,” he said to Rachel, “stay back.”
He moved Travis a little farther away from her.
“Deeny,” he called out, “come on over here.”
So, I thought, it worked; they were convinced Rachel and Travis came alone. But unarmed and locked in the garage, I might as well have been at home.
My narrow view did not allow me to see Deeny, but apparently she covered Rachel as Gerald roughly bound Travis’s wrists behind his back. Next he gagged his mouth, saying, as he tightened the strip of cloth, “This is just until we get a few things settled, then you and me are going to have us a nice, long talk.” He took the injured hand and squeezed it hard, pressing his thumb into Travis’s palm; Travis made a horrible sound behind the gag, fell to his knees. Gerald kicked him over, onto his face in the dirt.
I saw Rachel make the slightest shift of position, the only sign she gave of being affected by what was being done to Travis. I don’t think either Gerald or Deeny saw it. Gerald was now taking Rachel’s gun and tucking it into his belt. He handed a piece of rope and a gag to Deeny and told her to tie Rachel’s hands. I began to wonder if she would submit to being tied up. She was perfectly capable, even unarmed, of taking at least one of them out of action, if not both. But could she do it before one of them killed Travis?
Apparently, she decided to wait for a better opportunity, because when Deeny—having given her shotgun into Gerald’s care—began tying Rachel’s hands, Rachel stood silently and put up with it.
They were now standing so that I could see only Rachel’s back, and Deeny as she worked on removing Rachel’s equipment belt and then binding her wrists together. The two women were fairly close to me, only a few feet away. I moved back slightly from the door, and still it seemed that if Deeny turned suddenly, she might catch me staring out. But all of Deeny’s concentration was spent on tying a thin rope around Rachel’s wrists, a task that seemed somewhat daunting to her.
Rachel was taller than Deeny, and when Deeny tried to reach up to gag her, I heard Spanning say, “No, that will ruin that lovely mouth, and I might have a use for that mouth a little later on.”
Deeny dropped her hands and tucked the strip of cloth into one of her back pockets, but I wondered if Spanning would have thought her such a tame conspirator if he had seen her face at that moment.
I heard a scuffling sound, a grunt of pain and then Gerald’s laughter. “What do you know? Arthur’s pup has some fight in ‘im. That your girlfriend there, little bastard? That your girlfriend?” Another grunt of pain. I felt my nails digging into my palms, even through the latex gloves. “Well, being as we’re family, you won’t mind sharing her with me, will you?
There was no mistaking the look of anger on Deeny’s face as she stood behind Rachel’s back. I began to wonder if she was purposely hiding behind the taller woman, not wanting Gerald to see her reactions.
“Shit,” Gerald was saying. “Little fucker passed out on me. Goddamn it, I don’t want to carry his ass into the house. You people are making more damned work for me. Search those pockets, Deeny. Oh—and by the way—this your cell phone?”
Rachel didn’t answer. I heard the sound of something being smashed, probably my hope of sneaking out to the car and phoning for help.
Rachel had still not said a word to him, and she stayed silent as Deeny started emptying the pockets of her trousers.
“Goddamn, woman,” Gerald said, “you’re a damned pack mule.”
“No,” said Deeny, opening the case of lock picks. “She’s a thief.”
35
“A thief?” Rachel laughed. “A thief has to take something. That’s not why I’m here.”
“Shut up!” Gerald barked. “Deeny, check the locks on the garage.”
Deeny dutifully turned and rattled the padlock just in front of me, then moved to the back of the garage and rattled at the lock on the alley side.
I heard Travis groan. Rachel, just in front of me, made a circle of her thumb and forefinger at her back. An “okay” sign.
There was another groan. It didn’t sound as if he was okay to me. “Just stay still now, boy,” I heard Gerald say.
Deeny had moved to the side door, the one we had entered by, and pulled at that lock. “It’s still locked up,” Deeny said. “It hasn’t been opened.”
“Maybe, maybe not,” Gerald said. “Could have already been in and out again. Of course, that depends on how long they been here, right?”
“Oh, not long,” Rachel answered easily. “I’m kind of curious about how you managed to know we were here at all.” Deeny had come back now, and moved toward Gerald. Rachel moved slightly, and now I could see both Deeny and Gerald, too. Travis was still out of my line of vision. There was a mess of broken plastic near Gerald’s feet—the cell phone.
Deeny took her shotgun back from Gerald, who still didn’t move any closer to Rachel.
“Well, when Deeny here got off work tonight, she happened to remember that she made the mistake of telling somebody about this place. You do see that was a mistake now, don’t you, Deeny?”
She didn’t answer.
“I’m a fellow that just can’t rest when something like that stirs me up. I decided we might need to come by and take a look,” he said. “Just check on things. We drove past the street and saw a familiar car sittin‘ over there. Just what made you decide to pay a call, darling?” he asked.
“Looking for a car,” she said, and I was gratified to see both of them widen their eyes. After a slight pause, Rachel added, “But I don’t see the El Camino here. Where is it?”
Their relief was visible. She sent them straight back into hell.
“We have some excellent photos of it, of course. Taken on the day Travis’s camper had a little problem with its remote key. Plate numbers, everything. And I
suspect that a good police lab could do wonders with the image of the driver. Lord knows how many people have copies of Mr. Richmond’s photos.”
“Richmond!” Deeny said scornfully. “As if we need to worry about that has-been. I’ll buy him a couple of drinks at the Wharf and he’ll hand the negatives over to me.”
“That’s enough, Deeny!” Gerald said sharply. “Damn it, I’m going to put a gag in your mouth in another minute.”
Deeny gave him a mulish look, then went back to emptying Rachel’s pockets. “Here’s her ID,” she said. I was afraid it would be Rachel’s investigator’s license, but as Deeny held it up, I could see it was only her driver’s license.
“What’s her name?” Gerald asked, then laughed at the look of fury Deeny gave him. “All right, all right. Bring it to me.”