Easy Death

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Easy Death Page 5

by Daniel Boyd


  “Get inside,” the policeman said, “and get your partner there with you.”

  Logan dragged his brother through the snow, in the grooves left by the money bags, and tried to lift him by the shoulders into the back of the truck, but he was too heavy. The man in uniform watched him struggle with the weight for a few seconds, then pointed his revolver at Logan.

  “See this?”

  Logan nodded.

  “Well remember I got it.”

  He tucked the revolver into a pocket of his long blue coat, in easy reach, then grabbed Chuck’s legs at the knees and helped get him into the truck.

  The man in the police uniform stood by the door while, inside the cargo bay, Logan towed Chuck to the back wall, propped him half-up, crouched beside him and looked at the handkerchief-bandages. The bleeding seemed slower now. He felt the truck shift as the man in the police clothes climbed in and drew his gun.

  “How’s he doing?”

  “He’ll be okay, I guess,” Logan said.

  “Well, prop his head up.”

  Logan took off his coat, shivering a little, and used it as a pillow to elevate his brother’s head.

  “And make damn sure he don’t die, ’cause then I got to come back and kill you over it.” The man sat down on the bench at the front of the small money-cab. “Now take out your wallet and his too and slide them over to me.”

  “The hell you say—robbing the truck ain’t enough, you gonna rob us, too?”

  “I didn’t say we should discuss it.” The man in uniform said it like a lecture he had delivered many times. “I said get those wallets out and slide them over to me. And do it slow. Then turn your back to me.”

  Logan did. A minute later, the man in the police uniform said, “This guy, he’s your brother?”

  “That’s right.”

  “He still lives on Gate Street there in Willisburg?”

  “Yeah. How you know?”

  “It’s on his driver’s license. And you still live on Plovis? In the new part there?”

  “Yeah.”

  “Get you a place on the on the G.I. Bill, did you?”

  “Yeah.”

  “Nice place is it?”

  “I like it.”

  “Any kids?”

  “What the hell is it to you?”

  “Nothing at all.” The man in the police uniform tossed the wallets back. They landed in front of Logan, next to the unconscious Chuck.

  “But I’m going to give you this,” the man in the police uniform said, “I know where you live now. And I know where your brother lives. So when they come and find you, you tell the cops what you saw made you stop was an ambulance. Got that? You stopped for an ambulance. It was white with a big red cross and it was an ambulance you stopped for. And a man got out, he was dressed in white like a doctor or something and he was short and you think he was blonde and that’s as much as you saw of him. Hear me?”

  “Yeah.”

  “Then you say it back like I said it to you.”

  “We was driving and Chuck he stops when he sees an ambulance ahead in the snow. And—”

  “What’s the ambulance look like?”

  “It’s white and there’s a big red cross.”

  “Go ahead.”

  “And a guy got out dressed like a doctor and he waved us down.”

  “And what else did you see?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “What else did you see?”

  “Nothing. The guy he was dressed like a doctor, kind of short and I think he was blonde, he pulls a gun on us and then he-he shoots….” Logan felt himself choking up. With surprise, he realized he was close to tears, holding his unconscious brother.

  “That’s enough. That’s fine. You did real good,” the man said behind him. “So when your brother wakes up you coach him real good to say it just like you said it. And that’s the story you give come the time they find you. We got a police radio in the car there, and do I hear any descriptions get out that sound like us, well…” He paused.

  Crouched with his back to him, Logan felt a shiver of fear.

  “…we know where you live,” the man finished.

  Logan didn’t trust himself to answer. He was too close to tears he couldn’t understand.

  The man in the police uniform kicked the last bag of money gently with his foot. “Just a damn shame, having to give that up,” he said, “but I guess there’s no sense being greedy.”

  Logan felt the truck shift as the man in the uniform got out, slammed the door and locked it from the outside.

  Then there was just the darkness and Chuck breathing heavily as Logan held his brother’s bloody head. And cried.

  Chapter 11

  Thirty Minutes After the Robbery

  December 20, 1951

  9:30 AM

  Mort

  About the time Slimmy reached his rendezvous point on the far side of Boothe National Park and found a spot to pull off where he could begin his drunken vigil, Mort was standing in front of the big oaken desk inside Bud Sweeney’s Used Cars, feeling the warmth of the office-and-garage seep through his thin coat and dirty shoes. He held the long cross-cut saw awkwardly half-under one arm, while Sweeney rooted around in the cash register, pulled out a single five-dollar bill and laid it into his outstretched palm.

  “A fin?” Mort blinked.

  “The way I count, it makes fifty,” Sweeney said, “and that’s how you count it too.”

  “C’mon, Mr. Sweeney,” Mort juggled the saw comically as he looked down at the battered bill and then up at the big man, “you said fifty! You said it just this morning and it was hard work….”

  “And that’s what you’re getting,” Sweeney said. “But not now and not from me. You go flashing a whole lot of bills around and folks’ll think Christ hit town. Or Santy Claus come early to your place. Or maybe they’ll think something else funny come up about this time.”

  “Guess you don’t want that, huh?” Mort sniffed and wished he had a spare hand to wipe his nose with.

  “I don’t,” Sweeney agreed. “And you don’t, either. Understand it?”

  “I guess.”

  “So you take this fin and you go find Boxer Healey. He ought to be back of Lola’s today.”

  “Healey?” Mort managed to shove the bill in his coat pocket, pull out a dirty handkerchief and blow his nose, all without dropping the saw. “What do I want with Boxer Healey?”

  “He got a card game going, don’t he?”

  “Healey’s always got him a game going,” Mort said. “Hell, he makes his living—”

  “Well today ain’t his lucky day.” Sweeney said it like God passing judgment. “Because you’re going to take that five and put it in his card game and you’re gonna run it up to fifty.”

  “Yeah?”

  “Yeah, and then Healey’s gonna get mad and throw you out of the game. He just ain’t gonna play with you anymore. Not today, anyway. And if you got any brains, you’re gonna quit and walk out of there, and if anybody asks how a bum like you got his hands around all that money, you can say you got on a lucky streak back of Lola’s. And likely there’ll be witnesses.”

  “Damn.” Mort almost gasped in awe. “Mr. Sweeney, you sure think things way ahead!”

  “So now you know how to collect your fifty bucks, do you?”

  “Sure do.” Mort smiled. “Hell, I already spent it!”

  “How’s that happen?”

  “I need ten bucks to square the rent, ten for the heat, I want to give Helen ten for groceries… We put some stuff on layaway, you know, stuff for the kids on Christmas, that’s seven-fifty more. And I plan on getting me some new shoes. Work boots, I mean. A good five-dollar pair. And a couple pair of those heavy work gloves: the dollar kind. Then I’m gonna ask Magruder to get me back on the tree-trimming crew.”

  He looked outside as another white gust dumped more snow on a street that already had plenty of it. Magruder’s gonna need men, he thought. And need ’em fast. He’l
l put me back on, sure. I do this right, he’ll hire me on steady. Then I’ll be drawing a paycheck regular and we can feed the kids a little more and dress ’em up good so they don’t have to feel ashamed around the other kids at school, and…

  He looked at Sweeney, but Sweeney had already lost interest. …and I won’t have to work for no miserable sunuvabitch anymore!

  He started out the door.

  “Mort.” Sweeney used his I’m-being-real-patient voice, and it stopped Mort short in his tracks.

  “Yessir?”

  “Leave the damn saw here.”

  Chapter 12

  Two Hours and Fifty Minutes After the Robbery

  December 20, 1951

  11:50 AM

  Officer Drapp

  The Jeep outside the ranger station was a Willys Overland, the kind I spent two years taking apart and trying to put back together again for the U.S. Army, first in Italy, then France, then in Germany. Right after the war Henry Kaiser took a bunch of these and screwed metal boxes with windows to the top and tried to sell them like they were cars, but he didn’t fool anybody much; an Army Jeep is about as close to a real car as a three-legged Missouri mule is to Seabiscuit. Anyhow, the sight of this one, as we shoveled two feet of snow off the flat steel top, was kind of reassuring. It didn’t exactly bring back fond memories—I didn’t have any from those days, none at all—but it was good to know I’d have wheels I could handle in a job like this.

  “Have you run it any today?” I had to shout over wind that bit the words out of my mouth and flung them across the park like a mean dog, but Callie nodded she’d heard me just fine.

  “I opened the main gate about five this morning, before all this snow started,” she said, pitching her voice to reach me through the blowing white slop, “and I went out again about two hours ago to check the cabins.”

  It shouldn’t take too much coaxing to start up then. I nodded and jerked the ice-frozen door open, pushed my way inside and behind the wheel as Callie shoveled out a track behind the rear wheels. I sat down, and sonuvagun if I didn’t get that old familiar feeling I used to get back in the war. When your butt hits down on the cold plastic seat of a Jeep like that, you can feel the devil bite your ass and tear him off a big hunk.

  Okay, so it wasn’t warm in there, but it felt better just being out of the wind, and I took a few seconds to get my face thawed out while Callie stayed out there and dug up more snow. I looked around inside, and it was the stuff you’d expect in a park ranger’s Jeep: first-aid kit, a coil of rope under the front seat, army blanket, that kind of stuff. I checked the gearshift to see was it in neutral, jerked the parking brake from force of habit, set the choke and flipped the switch.

  There was a short, tired growl from under the hood. Then a cough. Then a sputter. Then another growl, longer this time. Two more coughs, and all at once the engine was running, with that deep-throated whine that belongs to a Jeep, and underneath that the sound of a radio going,

  …on the feast of Steee-phen,

  All the snow lay round about,

  Deep and crisp and eeeven,

  Brightly shone the moon that night…

  I turned it way down while I let the Jeep get used to the idea of running for a minute. And while it was doing that, I got an idea myself about just driving away while Callie was putting the shovel back up against the ranger cabin. I didn’t do it, though. For one thing, she was packing a sidearm, and for all I knew she might just be able to get it out and object to the notion of me leaving like that. For another, this damn snow was getting awful deep, and could be I’d get stuck someplace and need something big and brutal to push me out. Like her.

  So I waited till she got in on her side, then let out the clutch and next thing we were barreling forward, to the end of the track she’d shoveled out for me.

  Didn’t work. Not at all. We hit the end of the track and just stopped, all four wheels spinning in the snow.

  “My.” She shot me a level stare, like I’d done something stupid, which I guess I had, kind of. But all she said was, “Aren’t we in a hurry!”

  “Yeah, I guess we are,” I said.

  She didn’t answer, and that was a smart move on her part. I slammed in the clutch, put it in reverse and backed to the other end of our track, waited till we hung up there, then shifted gear back into forward and we shot off again. This time we made it beyond her dug-out track a ways before we stopped. I lurched the wheels backwards into the snow, then forward, then back, then seriously forward and got us moving. Jeep-moving, I mean: bounce twice for every bump you hit. “Do you know the way to the watchtower?” she asked.

  “No, but I’m young and willing to learn. Do I start to turn wrong just grab the wheel and jerk it.”

  She laughed, and it made a dainty little sound, like she might have learned how to laugh like that in finishing school.

  “You know my father did that to me once,” she said, “while he was teaching me how to drive.”

  “Wha’d you do?”

  “I simply let go of the wheel, crossed my arms and put my foot down on the accelerator.” She said it like it was a cherished memory. “Poor father,” she sighed, “I guess I put him through rather a lot.”

  So she was a gal that liked to talk. Which was good, because there was something I wanted to get at: like maybe the look on her face when she started to say about this Captain Scranton, and how she didn’t answer when I tried to ask what the hell he was doing up in a watchtower on a day like this. But they didn’t seem like the kind of questions I could just ask head-on; I figured to get there slow and sideways.

  “So what are you doing for Christmas?” I asked.

  She looked surprised. Maybe she didn’t figure cops asked questions like that. “I have a cousin in California.” That soft, cultured voice of hers still sounded funny coming from someone her size and shape, but I was getting used to it. “He’s doing rather well for himself, and the family’s meeting at his place for Christmas. I’ll take the train the day after tomorrow. Or rather, that was my plan….”

  “You worried about your Captain?”

  She didn’t answer right away. And I could see now she didn’t give a hoot in hell about the man. Something else was eating at her about him, though. I told myself to take this slow.

  “I got a cousin myself.” I squeezed the gas pedal just a touch as we went into a rise, trying to get just that extra push without making the wheels slip. It worked. The road straightened out and we rolled along in the almost-covered-up track of the car I’d followed all this way. And I kept talking:

  “My cousin Handy, he’s got a diner in Presque Isle, and every Christmas he closes up and invites just the family in and that’s where do we have Christmas, in the diner there. Makes it nice, kind of different with the whole family there and the Christmas decorations up and everything.”

  We came up on a curve, but I didn’t have to let the clutch in; just eased up on the gas and felt the four-wheel pull us gently around it till I could straighten out. The wipers couldn’t do much about all the snow hitting the windshield, but the heater was starting to help some and we couldn’t see our breath in the air anymore. The insides of those GI Jeeps can get hotter than the hinges of Hell, which would be pretty much what we’d need on a day like this one.

  “Your cousin in California,” I went on, “he’s got a nice place?”

  “He’s a senator.” She said senahhtahhh like she was yawning or something, “And people like to give him nice things. His wife even got a new coat last year.” She managed to put two syllables into year. “So I suppose it’s rather nice for them, but I’m afraid the holidays…well, an awful lot of persons in business seem to drop by.”

  “He have kids?” I figured to keep at her till she really got to talking. “You bringing presents?”

  “Two girls,” she said. “And I asked myself, well what can I possibly get little children with rich parents? And then it struck me: I bought a dog, a black-and-white spaniel, and I know what
a terrible chore a dog can be, but I’ve got Checkers trained and house-broken, and I think she’ll be a wonderful companion for the girls, don’t you?”

  “I guess I know what you mean.” I tried to steer her like I was steering the car: nothing real sudden, just gently now. “How about your Captain Scranton? He talking about any holiday plans?”

  She turned up the radio. “Don’t you just love the Christmas music they play this time of yee-ahhh?”

  Hark the herald angels si-ing

  Glory toooo the new-born king,

  Peace on Earth,

  And mercy mi-ild…

  I some way kept myself from choking the steering wheel, un-clenched my teeth, took a deep breath and tried to get her talking again.

  Chapter 13

  Callie Nixon

  Callie turned up the music and tried not to let her mind go back there. Tried to listen to the inane prattle of that pasty-faced city cop.

  It didn’t work.

  She kept seeing it again, her first meeting with Captain Scranton, driving into Boothe National Park, into the glare of a clear sunrise, feeling the cool morning summer air on her face as she got out of her shiny black Studebaker station wagon and looked around. Her surprise at not finding her new boss in the ranger station.

  Then hearing that awful noise.

  Even now, riding in that cold jeep, just thinking of that sound still set her teeth on edge. The keening high-pitched drawn-out “Ho-oo-nk! Hoo-ooo-onk!” coming from behind the building. She found the back door and ran out to see the bloody feather-crushed Canada Goose trying to move with its legs and wings broken.

  And the man smiling down at it.

  Holding an axe.

  He had a square, stocky football-player’s body and sandy blonde hair cut in a flat-top slicked back with Vitalis. His olive-drab ranger uniform had drops of blood on the trouser cuffs that hadn’t soaked in yet, shining bright red above his brown combat boots.

 

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