Also by JAMES PATRICK HUNT
The Assailant
Goodbye Sister Disco
The Betrayers
Before They Make You Run
Maitland Under Siege
Maitland
Maitland’s Reply
THE
SILENT PLACES
JAMES PATRICK HUNT
MINOTAUR BOOKS NEW YORK
This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
the silent places. Copyright © 2010 by James Patrick Hunt. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. For information, address St. Martin’s Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.
www.minotaurbooks.com
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Hunt, James Patrick, 1964–
The silent places / James Patrick Hunt.—1st ed.
p. cm.
ISBN 978-0-312-54579-6
1. Police—Missouri—Saint Louis—Fiction. 2. Fugitives from justice—Missouri—Saint Louis—Fiction. 3. Legislators—United States—Fiction. 4. Saint Louis (Mo.)—Fiction. 5. Stalking—Fiction. I. Title.
PS3608.U577S55 2010
813′.6—dc22
2009047492
First Edition: June 2010
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
For my parents
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The author wishes to extend his gratitude to his editor, Matt Martz. Also to Lieutenant Darrell Hatfield, Oklahoma City PD (Ret.), and Lieutenant Mike Denton, Owasso PD.
There is delight in the hardy
life of the open, in long rides
rifle in hand, in the thrill of
the fight with dangerous game.
Apart from this, yet mingled
with it, is the strong attraction
of the silent places.…
—THEODORE ROOSEVELT
One enemy is never enough.
Two is far too many.
—COL. DAVID HACK WORTH
PROLOGUE
On the third day of his hunting trip, Hastings found the scrape of the whitetail buck. It was in a field near a patch of hardwood forest in the Ozark Mountains. Three hours’ drive from St. Louis and about an hour to Branson, if Branson was to your liking.
The scrape on the ground was the buck’s mark, an attempt to draw out the does during the mating season, the rut. The whitetail buck would paw the ground or thrash saplings or overhanging branches with his antlers, leaving his scent from the glands on the top of his head. Letting the does know he was in town. Hastings had hunted most of his life and he knew that the buck would return and check his scrapes regularly for females attracted by the scent and the possibility of a match.
But the whitetails are smart. They possess an amazing ability to elude the hunter. They can smell the hunter hundreds of yards away, if the hunter’s dumb enough or inexperienced enough to be upwind. They know how to hide and they know their range better than any man. Contrary to popular belief, they do not run blindly in panic when sensing the hunter. They may travel just a few steps and stand perfectly still in grassy or bushy cover, their coats blending in, while the hunter walks right by, unaware. They’re sneaky, the whitetails, especially the bucks.
Hastings knew the odds of bagging one were slim. It usually took fifty hours to spot a buck, and that was for an experienced hunter. Hastings had seen plenty of signs of deer: tracks and droppings, the day and night trails, et cetera. But the scrape told him there was a buck around.
He moved away from the scrape. He walked slowly and quietly and avoided unnecessary motion, such as swinging his arms or turning his head—movements animals associate with humans.
He sort of smelled like an animal, too. For a deer can detect a freshly soaped man a mile away. Hastings had not gone so far as to use a masking scent like fox urine, but he had not bathed since arriving at the cabin three days earlier.
It was a good day to hunt. Overnight, there had been a light rain, which softened the ground, decreasing the possibility of crackling twigs or leaves underfoot. It was late November, and Hastings had feared that there would be a frost overnight and that would make the ground crusty and loud and the deer would hear him coming. The wind can carry sound as well as scent. But there had been no frost and the ground was soft.
Early morning now and the sky was gray and cloudy.
Hastings walked and scanned and soon he came to a field of tall crops stretching out for a hundred or so yards before coming to an end at a forest. The crops were brown and gray, similar to the color of a whitetail buck at this time of year. Hastings surveyed the field with his binoculars. Panned left to right, saw something near the left periphery, and stopped.
And there it was.
Oh, he was a handsome fella. Probably around 180 pounds, his antlers having maybe five points a side, which made him an older buck. His white tail was not erect, which meant he did not feel threatened. And that meant he probably was not aware of the hunter nearby.
Hastings estimated the distance between them to be about eighty yards. A humane shot would be one that killed the deer very quickly, if not instantly. The bullet would have to hit the deer’s heart or lungs or central nervous system.
Hastings was armed with a bolt-action rifle. He believed that nothing quite matched the accuracy of a bolt-action rifle. His was a Winchester model 52. It had been built in 1977, the line having then been discontinued in 1979. He had found it at an estate sale twelve years earlier and paid seven hundred dollars for it, which was a bargain. He could sell it for three times that now, but he wouldn’t.
Now he stood and watched the animal. He wanted to see if the buck would remain where he was long enough for Hastings to stalk him. He could probably shoot him now, but at this distance and with the crops in the way, the odds of a clean kill shot were slim. Besides, almost anyone could point a gun and shoot it. The expert could creep within a few feet without being detected. Hastings remained still and tried to determine if the animal was nervous or about to move.
The animal seemed unaware and not apprehensive. Hastings looked around to plot a course. He would need to remain downwind of the animal and out of sight. The crops in the field were about shoulder-high. If he crouched or went to the ground, he could get closer.
Hastings started forward, and that was when the clouds parted, just, and the sun came through and reflected off the scope of his rifle.
A glint of light. That was all it took.
The buck lifted his head and turned and saw him. A moment passed between them, Hastings remaining dead still, in the hope that he would not be noticed, but it didn’t work and the buck took off.
Hastings ran after him, going at an angle as the deer cut right across, not going for the cover of the woods, but elsewhere, and Hastings thought it was dumb, running like this after an animal that could move at thirty to forty miles an hour, but he ran anyway, keeping his rifle at his side, and then the buck went down an incline and disappeared from sight, and Hastings almost laughed at his own foolishness, but he kept going, as much out of curiosity as anything.
Hastings ran and jogged and then he reached the edge of the field and looked down the hill.
The buck was in a small lake, swimming across.
The whitetail deer is a strong swimmer. Some have been observed crossing lakes a mile wide. This buck was strong, moving through the water steadily. Hastings had no doubt he would make it to the other side. Walk out, shake the water off, and trot off to find himself a seasoning doe. After the loving, maybe tell her about the dumbass hunter who’d given himself away.
Hastings looked about. There was no tree to
lean against. He could sit down, steady the rifle on his knee. Or he could lie on his stomach, shift his leg forward to steady himself, and get the shot that way. Either position would work. The deer’s movement was restrained and the kill shot would be assured.
But Hastings sighed and lowered the weapon. He knew he couldn’t do it. Not with the animal in the water, moving through it strong and sure. Not like this.
Hastings took another look at the brownish gray beast swimming away. Three days of cold and loneliness, work and rank smell for nothing.
“Maybe next year,” Hastings said. As if the buck could hear him.
ONE
They pulled Reese out of his cell at 2:12 A.M. Three prison guards, one of them holding a riot gun on him, another gripping a nightstick, the third one with his hands on his hips, showing the others he wasn’t afraid of the prisoner.
John Reese was fifty years old. He had been in prison for twelve years now and he had never taken a swing at a guard. He was a slim man, almost of slight build, and not overly tall. But there was a coiled-up air to him. His eyes were alert and penetrating. He had kept his body strong, his wind up. Once, in the yard, an inmate had made the mistake of presuming Reese could be dominated. Reese casually snapped the man’s pinkie like a twig, kicked his leg out, then drove the palm of his hand into the man’s nose, smashing it to pulp. Reese was left alone after that.
In prison, time is an enemy—a thing to be feared and respected. You do the time, but you cannot let the time do you, even when you’re facing a life sentence.
Reese allowed himself to look at the lead guard’s watch.
Two-twelve, coming up on 2:13. The middle of the night. The time when Soviets liked to grab enemies of the state. The dreaded knock on the door in the middle of the night. Take them when they’re cold and tired and their defenses are down.
Reese thought, What more can they do to me?
He said, “What do you want?”
The lead guard said, “Warden wants to see you.”
Bullshit, Reese thought.
But he kept it to himself. Odds were, the guards themselves had not been told the whole story. He could ask them how much they knew, but he didn’t want to give them the satisfaction of looking vulnerable, yet alone scared.
Soon he was out of his orange jumpsuit and back in civilian clothes they had brought him. Loose-fitting dungarees and a gray sweatshirt and a cheap windbreaker. Kmart clothes. Maybe wanting him to feel comfortable, maybe wanting him not to look like he’d broken out of prison. Looking like shit, but what the hell. He was out.
He was in the cell twenty-three hours a day as it was, behind a double steel door and with no window. Put in solitary so he couldn’t tell anyone what he was doing there. Sealed in a coffin, only breathing. If it were an hour or so less of coffin time, he would not complain. Again, he thought, What more can they do to me?
About two hours later, he began to have an idea.
He sat between two very large men in the backseat of a Chevy Suburban. The windows were tinted. Reese had looked in the backseat to see if there was anyone there. There wasn’t. If they had put him in the front seat, it would have made him nervous. A setup, possibly, for an old gangland-style execution. Get the speed up to about seventy, the tired man relaxes and leans back in his seat. Then someone behind would put the barrel of a .22 to the back of his head and put two bullets in it. The Israeli commando way, though they usually didn’t put their victims in cars.
The prison guards had turned him over to these guys. There were two men in front, one of them with a shaved head. None of the men were wearing a suit. They weren’t feds. These were mercenaries, probably ex-military. Special Forces. Reese knew the type.
Reese’s hands were bound in front of him. They had used plastic twists rather than handcuffs. That was at least something.
The guy in the passenger seat in front was tall and well muscled and had cheekbones that suggested Cherokee ancestry. His name was Clu Rogers. At one point during the drive, he turned and gave Reese a long look, snorted, and smiled, as if to say Reese didn’t impress him much.
Reese gave him nothing back then. He looked out the window at the darkness and stars. They were in wide open country, and he wished he could enjoy being out of prison.
Still looking out there, Reese said, “Who you fellas working for?”
The man on his right turned and looked him over, surprised that Reese was finally saying something. But he didn’t say anything, and neither did anyone else.
Reese said, “CIA?”
Silence.
Reese said, “I would say Company. But nobody really says that anymore. It was going out of style when I was in the spook business. And that was a long time ago.”
More silence.
“I guess things have changed since I’ve been in,” Reese said. He looked at the man on his left and then at the man on his right. “Sure looks like they’ve lowered their standards.”
One of the men sighed, and then the man on Reese’s left lifted his arm to give Reese a sharp elbow in the ribs. Reese doubled over, gasping. It hurt plenty, but he had tensed himself, halfway expecting it. They weren’t as professional as he had feared.
The one in the front seat turned again to look at him.
Clu said, “Why make it hard on yourself?”
Reese managed to say, “Bored, I guess.” He took a couple of breaths. Then said, “Are you the one in charge of this mission?”
“Yeah.”
The Suburban slowed to take a turn off the small highway onto a dirt road. Soon they were in a wooded area, trees walling them in on both sides.
Reese said, “What’s the nature of this mission, soldier?”
“Old man,” Clu said, “I’m going to give you some advice, and you don’t even have to pay me for it. Just sit there and keep your mouth shut. Cause if you don’t, the next words out of your mouth are going to be ‘Ow, ow, ow.’”
“I told you,” Reese said, “I’m bored. Where you from?”
Another elbow from the man on his left. This one was harder.
Clu stared at him, shaking his head. Some people don’t listen.
Reese exhaled and said, “Texas? No, you don’t sound like a Texan. Oklahoma, I’ll bet. Somewhere around Muskogee.”
“Very good,” Clu said.
“I’m good with voices, dialects. It’s something you pick up when you travel around a lot. You know how you can tell if a guy’s from Pittsburgh? He calls his mother ‘Mum.’ Like the English. It’s true, really. Now an Okie from Muskogee, he’s got his own special twang. But when you get down to, say, Durant, they start sounding more like Texans. Though they’re both Okies. Both from the same state. Funny, isn’t it?”
Reese saw the man’s cold smile in the darkness.
“You’re funny,” Clu said.
“I have moments,” Reese said.
Reese looked out the windows again. The headlights illuminated the dirt path in front of them, pushing through, leaving darkness behind.
Reese said, “Where do you think you’ll do it?”
After a moment, Clu said, “Do what?”
“Oh, come on,” Reese said. “You know.”
Clu said, “I know you’re a traitor to your country and a smart-mouthed piece a shit to boot. In my opinion, they should have done it along time ago.” Clu shrugged, showing he could be philosophical about someone else’s death. He said, “What difference does it make anyway? They had you in solitary. This won’t be much worse.”
“Maybe not for you.”
“You were condemned already, old man. We’re just carrying out the proper sentence, that’s all.”
Reese smiled. He said, “Boy, you’re really looking forward to this, aren’t you?”
“I am now.”
For a while nobody said anything. The forest passed by.
Reese made a point of sighing. Then he said, “Well, a man should enjoy his work. You going to tell me who you’re working for?”
“On the point of death,” Clu said. “Yours.”
“At least I’ll have that,” Reese said. “So, do you miss Muskogee?”
“Not a bit.”
“Can’t say I blame you,” Reese said, “You ever hear that song ‘You’re the Reason God Made Oklahoma’?”
“No.”
“It’s a country song.”
Clu turned around and looked out the windshield. He was sick of this man’s silly bullshit. The man had probably lost his marbles in the joint. It happened to guys in solitary. Clu said, “I don’t listen to country music.”
“You don’t know what you’re missing,” Reese said, and threw his elbow into the man’s face on his left. The sharp force of it burst the man’s nose, making a distinct crunching noise. Before the man could scream out in pain, Reese had reached past him to the door handle. He heard someone yell as the door popped open and he saw a blur as the man in the front started to pull a weapon, but Reese grabbed the lapels of the jacket of the man next to him and pulled him with him, using him as a shield. Gravity took them out of the opening and Reese flipped the big man over so that he landed on top of him when they hit the ground. Then they rolled together for a few turns and Reese broke free of him. The Suburban skidded to a halt and Reese got to his feet and ran, slipping into the darkness of the woods. Moments passed before shots were fired into the trees.
Approximately forty miles away, two men waited at an abandoned train depot.
The train depot was small and old and wooden, its clapboard sides faded and worn by more than a century of sun and elements. There were a couple of wrinkled chamber of commerce posters on the walls, a halfhearted attempt at boosting local tourism. Wooden benches and stone floor and not much else. There was another bench outside on a wooden platform bordering the tracks.
The younger of the two men sat on the bench outside. He pulled his coat around him because it was cold. He did not understand the other man’s attraction to this old dump. It was as good a rendezvous as any other because it was isolated and private, but goddamn, couldn’t they have picked a place that had some heat?
The Silent Places Page 1