But they hadn’t even gone the same direction as the bicyclists, had they? She hadn’t heard them pull their car around the wreck, had she? Could she have been so focused and tuned out to her surroundings that she missed that, too?
What the fuck?
She wanted to give it more thought, try and hash her way to a reason for that supreme level of incompetence on her part, but the monitors started beeping to indicate that Deputy Harris’s heart rate was crashing, and suddenly she didn’t have an ounce of thought to devote to that mystery anymore.
***
Reeve had listened to Arch’s story without interrupting him, not once. Arch was trying to decide if that was a very good thing or a very bad thing, and he hadn’t really landed on which yet. The old Reeve, the one he’d known before demons started showing up in Calhoun County and wreaking havoc, would have reacted one way, and it was a fairly predictable way.
This new Reeve just stood before him, almost impassive, watching Arch stone-faced as he spun a tale of two federal agents who had asked him and Erin for help, then led them in a chase down a mountain against bicyclists on the run for reasons that hadn’t been elaborated on by the agents—save for to point the finger at them for at least some of the deaths in Midian. Arch wasn’t proud of it, but at least his lies were mostly truthful. He was really just leaving a lot out of his story, that was all.
Because a lie of omission wasn’t a lie—except for that whole part of it that was plainly stating it was a lie.
“Well,” Reeve said once Arch had finished. And then he stopped, just stopped like “Well” was all he had to say on the matter.
It did not sound good to Arch. Not at all.
Reeve just stared at him for a minute and then drifted back toward Fries’s car, which was how he’d gotten to the scene. Arch spared a glance back at his Explorer, and it looked like it had been through the mill. The ringer, too. Dings and damage to the bumpers and huge scratch on the left side where something had ripped it up. Not as bad as the sheriff’s own car, which was being winched up onto the back of the tow truck after being righted. The roof of it alone looked like aluminum foil that had been crumpled off the top of a casserole dish.
Arch just sat there, watching the car and stealing a look at Reeve every now and again. The sheriff had eased into the front seat of the cruiser and was on the radio. Arch could see his lips moving, but couldn’t hear a word of what was being said.
And that concerned him more than a little.
***
Mick had been waiting at the Surrey Diner for Molly for an hour after she’d promised to show up. It wasn’t exactly a tough thing for him to do, since he didn’t have anywhere else to go. He was just hanging there, drinking free coffee refills and getting the increasingly unpleasant looks from the waitress for doing it.
She’d started out real friendly, but that had faded as the hour wore on, and the “sugars” and “huns” had been dropped about half an hour ago. He figured she’d rather let him sit here all night than get unpleasant enough to kick his ass out, but you just never knew, did you? Plus, the proprietor was giving him a look from behind the counter. Like there weren’t a hundred other seats in the place unoccupied by paying customers, he had to worry about the one guy drinking his coffee.
But when Molly walked in, every increasingly ugly word from the waitress and every suspicious glare from the owner had been worth it. He’d thought about leaving, maybe giving up on this town and waiting to fill his need until the next one, but dammit, he didn’t want to. This place had the right feel, and being a hotspot it was bound to get a little warmer than a normal place, right?
Right. This was the town.
And, he reflected as he caught a glimpse of her knees under a skirt that reached almost low enough to cover them—this was the girl.
“Hey,” he said as she sidled up. She had a look like she’d maybe dressed up a little, changed what she was wearing since he’d seen her this morning, but she’d gone just as casual so he couldn’t be sure. It was probably a tactic, trying to gussy up without looking like she was trying. He was pretty sure she was trying, though, at least a little. That was a good sign.
“Hey,” she replied. She was playing it cool, though; he knew that much from watching humans for as long as he had. She was taking this seriously. Probably because she hadn’t been on many actual dates.
“How was school?” he asked, offhand, like he was more curious than he really was. How interesting could the answer be, after all? Math class was super neat, factoring polynomials is the best! He would have bet on her answer before he got it, and he was not surprised when it came.
“Okay, I guess,” she said, shrugging her shoulders like it was no big deal. Which it wasn’t. After all, that was a daily grind for her. “Just another day, really.” Playing it cool.
“Sure,” Mick said, shrugging his shoulders a little, too. “I was just curious because—well, you know.”
She flickered with a little bit of annoyance. Of course she didn’t know. He knew she didn’t know. But he was playing it cool too, and she didn’t have a clue he was doing it on purpose. “No, I don’t. What?”
“I was just wondering because I’m not in school anymore,” Mick said. “Never really went to a regular one, so I’m just … wondering what it’s like?”
“Really?” There was a hint of earnestness in her answer, and he could tell he’d broken through the first brick of that wall of cynicism she carried for her own defense.
“Yeah,” Mick said, like it was nothing. It was nothing to him; he didn’t care. But for however long it took her to answer, he was going to pretend it was the most interesting damned thing in the world to him.
“It was … a normal day,” Molly said, a little less guarded this time. “We only have six classes a day, see, and I start with algebra …”
Mick nodded as she went, trying to follow along. Sure, it was boring as shit, but it would be worth it if he could just get through that wall that surrounded her—and into her damned panties.
***
Hendricks felt like he was taking forever getting down the hall. In rough terms, he probably was taking forever. He could feel himself dragging, the material of his coat scuffing against the white-painted wall. Alison stood off a few inches from him, hovering, ready to try and catch him if he fell. It was a laughable idea in his mind, since he weighed far, far too much for her to help without toppling over.
“Ali?” came a smooth voice from ahead of them. The hallway looked like it was extending, growing as he shuffled down it. Hadn’t it only been twenty feet earlier? Now it looked like a hundred. Two hundred. Shit, it was still growing.
“Right here, Daddy,” Alison said, and Hendricks watched her take her eyes off of him. He tried even harder not to stumble at that moment. As though she weren’t hovering enough as it was, he sensed that if he keeled over now she’d never let him go unwatched. He just needed to get to Spellman, post-haste, get this pain and these wounds taken care of. He shifted his neck to look at her and the demon bite screamed at him, hard enough to make him fall against the wall an inch or so. It didn’t quite light his ribs afire again, but close. It took him a minute to control his breathing.
There were pictures on the wall that rattled as he shifted against it, his arm knocking against a wooden frame. “Urgh,” Hendricks murmured, keeping it down.
“Is your friend all right?” came that voice again—smooth, like an announcer on the radio. A voice you could trust to sell you a used car or a water filter.
“I’m fine,” Hendricks managed to get out before Alison could answer for him.
“All appearances to the contrary, son,” the voice came again, and Hendricks managed to get his head up enough to see the guy this time. He was tall, powerful-looking, looked to be in his sixties. Not a guy Hendricks would have cared to get into a scrape with, if he could have avoided it. “You look like you could use a doctor. Or a drink.”
“I need something, that’s for sure,�
� Hendricks said and tried to straighten up. It didn’t go so well, and he found himself still against the wall a few seconds later, no better off than before. “You might be right. I should get to the car. That’ll … I need to …”
“To get to the doctor, yes,” Alison said. “Daddy, can you help him?”
“Certainly,” Alison’s father said, shuffling closer to him. He was damned big; not quite Arch’s size, Hendricks thought, but maybe close. Hard to tell at this distance and without Arch here for comparison. “What happened?” he asked as he placed Hendricks’s good side of undamaged ribs against his, wrapping Hendricks’s left arm around his shoulder.
“Bar fight,” Hendricks lied. It wasn’t so far off; he had been in a bar fight a few days earlier.
“Huh,” the man said. “What’s your name, son?”
“Lafayette Hendricks, sir,” Hendricks replied.
“Well, Lafayette Hendricks, I’m Bill Longholt.” He could feel the scrutiny. “Army?”
“Heh,” Hendricks said, feeling a little lightheaded. “No. Marine.”
“Oh, you’re one of those,” Longholt said. “I was Army.”
“I’m sorry for you,” Hendricks said, unable to avoid the needle jab. “You know what Army stands for? Ain’t Ready for Marines Yet.” He felt a sudden, sharp pain as Longholt readjusted his position, causing his side to jar, just a little, pressing his wrecked ribs together.
“Oh, I’m sorry, Marine,” Longholt said, not sounding contrite at all. “Thought I was losing my grip on you there for a second. You know what Marine stands for? My Ass Really Is Navy Equipment.”
The hallway swam around Hendricks, and he could see a white door up ahead. “Lordy.”
“Say, is that a bite on your neck?” Longholt asked him.
“My girlfriend got a little rough last night,” Hendricks said, vision swimming. Did that even make sense?
“Daddy, he needs a doctor,” Alison said from somewhere in the periphery of his vision. It was dark in the hall, and growing darker by the second, swirling motes of blackness crawling around in his eyes.
“Right you are, dear,” Longholt said, and Hendricks felt his legs drag forward in motion. “Bar fights and a girlfriend who bites you so hard, your hicky bleeds. That does sound about like the Marines I knew.”
There was sound and motion in the corner of Hendricks’s eye, and suddenly there was a newcomer there. All Hendricks could tell about him was that he was a white guy with dark hair, and he was shorter than Hendricks, even in his crumpled-up state.
“What the hell happened to the dimestore cowboy?” the guy asked.
“Fuck off, Brian,” Alison said, stronger than Hendricks had ever heard her speak before, and they just kept on going, out the door.
***
The waitress at the Surrey Diner had gotten miraculously friendlier when Molly showed up. The “huns” and “sugars” made a sudden return, and the coffee refills came a lot quicker. The owner’s glare softened, too.
The boring fucking stories portion of the evening had commenced as well, but there was a price for everything, right? A tradeoff, Mick figured.
It’d be worth it.
***
Lauren didn’t panic in crisis situations. She had that detached part of her brain, the part that saw everything from a distance, that evaluated coldly and without emotion, and that part always worked overtime during these moments. It was training, beaten into her head through long practice just as sure as if it were a nail hammered into a board through repetition. She’d had a moment when she was a kid—before she’d had a kid of her own—when she’d seen a friend damned near lose a toe in a bike chain. Panic had taken over, and she’d tried to help her friend yank it out. Hysterics, crying, screaming—from both of them—and an emergency room visit later, she’d been stuck in the waiting room feeling like an impotent failure. That was probably the catalyst moment for her, looking back. She never wanted to feel that panicked and out of control again.
And she hadn’t, except for when she’d fallen in love with Molly’s father. But that was panic and loss of control of a different kind, when she’d realized she couldn’t hold on to the sonofabitch. Now she realized that there wasn’t much worth holding onto in him, but her teenage self had seen it differently and always would.
She did what she had to do. Stabilized the pulse, got the deputy breathing again. The beeping of the heart rate in the background was steady, repetitive, maddening. Like it should be.
Lauren sat back, took a breath. “Don’t check out on me yet, Deputy,” she said, staring down at the face of Erin Harris, the massive bruises on the girl’s cheekbones just starting to appear. This was going to be some surgery, she suspected, and she was glad—not for the first time—that it wasn’t her specialty. The ambulance bumped, the sirens still blaring as the shot down the interstate toward Red Cedar. Pretty soon they’d get her there, get her triaged. That’s where Lauren’s responsibility would end, and it couldn’t come soon enough for her.
***
“Turn here,” Hendricks said as they reached an old, overgrown driveway. There were gravel tracks that perfectly mirrored tire placement, and a big wedge of green in the middle of the path where grass stood tall. It made the place look like no one had driven up to it in a while, though Hendricks was pretty sure that was all illusion and bullshit.
He was sitting in the passenger seat, just about ready to pull a bullet out of his .45 so he could bite down on it to stifle the pain. He’d never tried it, but the thought of chomping down on something seemed like a nice idea at the moment. Anything, if it might help ease the pain. He would have sworn something in him was about to break if he wasn’t already sure something had.
“That was your brother, right?” he asked, trusting the words would make their way out of his mouth and find Alison wherever she was sitting—in the driver’s seat, probably, about two thousand miles or an arm’s length away. Same difference at this point, since he didn’t want to move his arm. Or anything else.
“Yeah,” she said tersely, and Hendricks wrote off that line of inquiry for later. Family was a touchy topic for lots of folks; he couldn’t see it being much of an issue for Alison, though. For crying out loud, her dad had offered to accompany them to the hospital. Seemed like a nice guy, got along with his daughter.
There was a farmhouse ahead, and the sight of it jolted Hendricks back to the here and now. It looked like any other farmhouse to Hendricks’s eyes. His attention was a little scattered at the moment, just enough to give Alison the directions he’d had in his mind but not enough to pay attention to every detail along the way. Or even most of the details. She was from here, he figured, she could pay attention. Or that was how he justified it to himself as he squinted his eyes shut through ninety percent of the trip and focused mostly on not whimpering.
He opened his eyes and tried to take a harder look at the farmhouse. Didn’t happen. He’d bitten his own tongue at some point during the journey, blood filling his mouth, and frankly, it was the least of his hurts. He was sunk down in the leather seat.
“We’re here,” Alison said, like he hadn’t noticed the car bump to a stop. It was the bump that did it, sent him wailing in his own head. He’d gotten off the bed somehow, but dammit, a car ride on an uneven country road had just about fucking done him in. How did that happen?
Hendricks tried to open the door and failed on his first attempt. Just couldn’t get it pushed open, and it closed back. Not completely, though, that little annoying click telling him the door was still partially open. He tried again and failed, not able to use his strength to throw it open and not able to lean far enough to get it clear of the fucking latching mechanism.
This was pathetic, even by his somewhat weakened estimation.
“Wait just a second,” Alison said, and he heard her get out.
Fuck waiting. He wasn’t going to be that much of a pussy. He pushed hard and nearly tumbled out. When he opened his eyes, the car door was still only open ab
out six inches. But at least he hadn’t hurt himself in the process. Victory.
Then Alison tugged at the door and he felt a thundering agony run down his side as she pulled at him in a way that his body DID NOT FUCKING LIKE AT ALL and he spent the next thirty seconds—or maybe ten years—trying to keep from cursing at her in every possible way, starting with the words that were least polite, then moving to the ones that were most polite. If there was such a cunt motherfucking sonofabitch ass hell damn thing.
“Maybe you should let me go in and talk to this Spellman,” Alison said as he sat there, eyes rolling back in his head from the feeling oh sonofafuck the feeling.
“Just help me up,” Hendricks said, but he was not sure he meant it wholeheartedly.
***
“Arch, why don’t you get on out of here?” Reeve said. Said, not asked. It had sounded like asking, but Arch knew it wasn’t, could tell it from fifty paces. They’d finished winching up the sheriff’s car now, the tow truck driver—Sam Allen, Arch could see from here—about to take it down the mountain and to his body shop. Arch had his doubts there’d be much they could do to fix it, but if anyone could, Sam could.
“Sure thing,” Arch answered, light on the enthusiasm. “Anywhere you want me to go in particular?”
Reeve just stared at him, bald head catching the reflection of the flashing red lights of his patrol car. “Why don’t you just head on home for now?” And then he got back into his car, not a word of explanation further.
***
Hendricks burst into the farmhouse barely supported by Alison, ignoring the room to his immediate left. Alison partially blocked his view, anyway, which was good, because he could smell the fetid scent of animal and human waste from the creatures in cages. He could almost taste it, like something had crawled up his nose before it lost the fight for life, leaving behind nothing more than a rotting corpse, with all the waste and shit that came out after.
The Southern Watch Series, Books 1-3: Called, Depths and Corrupted Page 67