“No, but at this point I don’t think it makes any difference.”
“It might. I don’t see why he’d kill his wife over a girl he sleeps with one day a week, and who sleeps with someone else the other six.”
“He ran, L.C. He ran, and innocent men don’t take off.”
“Did the autopsy report say anything important?”
“That she died when we figured, near 8:00 from the neck wound. She also had contusions and two broken fingers.”
“Fingers?”
“Crushed, like someone had stepped on them.”
“And that’s all?”
“The usual other stuff. Nothing important except that she’d had recent sexual relations.”
“That doesn’t make sense if she and Raleigh were fighting. Have you considered that the whole thing might be a rape-murder?”
“I’m chasing one maniac already. About tonight …”
“I know. After you catch the bastard.”
“We’ve got a bunch of state troopers out here, and if we don’t find him by this afternoon they’re sending in a company from the National Guard.”
“I wish you luck, Will. And I mean that.”
“I know you do, L.C.”
She replaced the phone on the call director and sat staring at it. Her feelings were mixed. On the one hand she wanted Will to succeed in his job, and that presently meant running Raleigh Bridger down. And yet, she instinctively felt that Raleigh was incapable of performing the brutal murder. During the past five years she had fought to avoid that type of intuitive sensibility, and had immersed herself in pragmatic things: tools, precision machines, bookkeeping entries and monthly sales charts.
She shrugged off the thought and retreated into the repair shop. The storm had limited the number of repairs on the line, and she noticed that Eddie was working on the Sunbeam. He looked up from under the hood, wiped his hands on a cotton rag, and fell into step as they walked the length of the garage.
“You never told me how you got the limp.”
She reddened. “I hadn’t realized it was that obvious.”
“Not too bad. Gives your bottom a kinda cute wiggle.”
“You’re out of line.”
“Piece of gum?”
She shook her head as they stopped before the blackboard and quickly scanned the remaining repair jobs listed. The pool column on the far right of the board still puzzled her. “I don’t understand about the pool. Are you betting for or against yourself?”
“For. Sorry you can’t get in, but you’re not a disinterested party. Hurt your leg in a racing wreck?”
“Yes.”
“What happened?”
“It was a year ago at Daytona. The car ahead of me hit an oil slick. My car would have hit him broadside, so I swerved off the track.”
“Flipped over.”
“Couple of times.”
“You were damn lucky.”
“I know.”
“Miss it?”
“Racing?”
“Yes.”
“Yes.”
“I’ve often thought I should get myself a rich girl friend to finance my racing.” He looked at her and arched an eyebrow. “You know, you’d fill the bill nicely. You’ve got the money and could manage the pit crew on the side.”
“You had better see if you make your first month here before planning our future.”
“I’ve got five hundred riding on it.”
“Don’t double your wager. I’ll be back in an hour or two,” she said and hurried from the shop.
Raleigh was in the woods. He’d be tired, cold, consumed by the desire for sleep, a sleep that would ultimately kill him. She pulled a sheepskin jacket over her coveralls and went out to her car and drove toward Murphysville.
She pulled into a diner on the outskirts of town and fumbled for the thermos bottle behind the seat, and had it filled with steaming hot coffee. A thermometer on the outside of the building registered 10 degrees. Streaks of snow whipped across the near empty parking lot and she estimated wind velocity at nearly 30 knots. She wondered what that made the wind-chill factor. And Raleigh’d been out there for twelve hours.
The road to Murphysville ran along the ridge line above the river. Occasionally she could see through the trees to the wetlands along the shore. The car passed the Lantern City Yacht Club with its yard of phantom boats resting for the winter on large wooden cradles.
At the junction of Route 99 and the Turnpike, four troopers were flagging down cars in the opposite lane. The occupants of all cars leaving the search area would be checked against photographs of Raleigh. She knew that Will was thorough, there would be a similar checkpoint on the highway to Murphysville and also on Route 77 to the south. The northern border of the search area was blocked by the sluggishly moving river.
The summer they were seventeen a small child had been lost in the same area. Out-of-state campers, pitching their tent for the night, had failed to notice the disappearance of their small daughter until she’d been gone over an hour. L.C.’s father had supervised the operation, while she, Frank and Will, carrying heavy duty flashlights, had spent the night in fruitless search.
She recalled walking hand in hand, with Frank back to the highway at dawn to find her father bent over the hood of his car with a geodetic map mounted on a large piece of plywood. He sadly marked off grid after grid as the various search groups reported in.
At full first light Will had found the child. She had fallen asleep on a small ledge fifty feet above the swollen river. Will had yelled, limped back toward the highway, and carried the little girl on his back with her hands wrapped around his neck.
He would remember that and use the same methods her father had devised. Grids would be drawn on the map, assignments made, the individual groups would divide and search until Raleigh or his body was found.
She braked to a stop behind a line of Lantern City and state police cruisers pulled off on the shoulder. Will was in the back seat of his car conferring with a National Guard captain. She tapped on the window. He looked up and frowned until she waved the thermos jug.
“It’s cold out here,” she said.
He waved her to the front seat.
“I hope that’s got a couple of shots in it,” the captain said as Will took the thermos.
She snapped her fingers. “That I didn’t think of. Any luck?”
“Not yet, but he’s out there somewhere and we’ll find him.”
“How do you know he didn’t slip through before you set up the road blocks?”
“We were able to follow his footprints for half a mile before the wind obliterated them, and by that time we had the roads sealed.”
Will held the mounted map on his knees, and she wondered if it was the same one her father had used. “O.K.,” she said as she left the car. “Just wanted to see how you were making out.”
She drove back towards Lantern City, was stopped briefly by the troopers who checked the car, and was then waved through.
There was something about maps that nibbled at the corner of her mind. The map on Will’s lap, her father’s spread over the hood of the car, the large tourist information map mounted in front of her service station … the course she’d taken last year at Power Squadron.
Raleigh Bridger had given the course on basic navigation. He had obviously loved his subject and had therefore been able to present it in an interesting and exciting manner. Raleigh had once told her that he had accepted Wadsworth Strickland’s offer to come to Lantern City because of its proximity to the water. She knew his house was furnished in a nautical motif, and that he was a member of the Yacht Club. At this very moment his cabin cruiser would be one of those mounted on the stark cradles in the yard of the marina.
If he had somehow managed to slip through the cordon of police, his winterized boat would make an excellent hiding place. There was no way to get through. Roads were blocked, the river’s current kept it from freezing over … unless he stole a small boat from
one of the houses along the river.
Her hands trembled on the wheel and she slowed the car. A stolen boat. Paddles, oars and motors would be locked up, but many of the home owner’s kept dinghys and rowboats upturned on their docks or yards. It wouldn’t be difficult to get one into the water, and even without oars, the current would move it downstream toward the marina. It could be done.
She pulled to a stop in the yacht club parking lot. There were half a dozen cars in front of the club’s dining room which was open all winter, and the occupants were probably in the game room for the continuing card games. The marina piers were vacant, the area unplowed, as boats loomed in neat rows on their cradles along the water.
Smaller boats, her own day sailer included, were kept in a long tiered warehouse. In order to use your stored boat, it was necessary to call an hour ahead of time to the harbormaster. A large fork lift placed the boat in the water. Cabin cruisers and motor sailers too large for the warehouse were winterized on cradles with large tarps covering their flying bridges and across their sterns.
She tried to recall the name of Raleigh’s boat as she walked in knee-high show past the long line of crafts.
She recognized the Mauvoway when she passed it. A ladder hung near the stern, and two cleats had been removed from the protecting tarp near the ladder. The canvas flapped open in an aperture large enough for someone to squeeze through. She began to climb the ladder.
As she peered down the companionway the ports let in enough dim light to illuminate the main saloon. She took off a glove and stooped down to feel damp places on the decking.
“Raleigh. Raleigh Bridger, it’s L.C. Converse.”
She went slowly down the companionway into the saloon. An arm circled her neck and she felt a knife blade pressed against the flesh.
“Who’s with you?” the guttural rasping voice asked.
“I can’t talk,” she gasped and felt the pressure immediately released.
“Don’t turn around. Now what in hell are you doing here?”
“I had a hunch.”
“Where’s your boy friend?”
“They’re searching the woods above the intersection.”
“Good. I thought that’s what they’d do.”
“You stole a boat.”
“A damn rotten rowboat. It’s a wonder I didn’t drown.”
“You shouldn’t have run away, Raleigh.”
“My own lawyer tells me I should plead guilty to murder two. He says I’d be out in six years.”
“It’s better than being dead.”
“I wonder. You want a drink?”
“Whatever you have,” she replied and then realized the incongruity of the remark under the present situation and laughed.
“What’s so funny?”
“I don’t expect you to have a fully stocked bar.”
“Tequila?” He hobbled across the saloon and held up a half-filled bottle. “Don’t ever try drinking tequila when you’re cold as hell.”
“If it’s all you have.”
He filled a soggy paper cup. “Sorry, I don’t have a glass.” He laughed.
“Now what’s funny?”
“The whole thing is ridiculous. Here I am, the victim of a manhunt, a moment ago I almost slit your throat and we’re making excuses for the lack of social amenities.”
“What’s the matter with your feet?”
“I think they’re frost bitten.”
“Let me see.” She gently pushed him back on the divan and bent over his shoes. The laces were encrusted with a layer of ice, and she gave up trying to untie them. She pried the shoes off and peeled down the socks. “You’re in trouble.”
“That’s what my lawyer tells me.”
“The feet are bad, Raleigh. They need immediate care.”
“I didn’t kill her, L.C., and I’m not going to waste the next six years because some nut did.”
“Did you make love to Mauve that day?”
“What kind of question is that?”
“The medical examiner said someone had.” She began to massage his frost bitten foot.
“I think she’d been playing around.”
“With who?”
“I don’t know. Jesus, the foot is beginning to really hurt.”
“I’ve got to get you to the hospital, Raleigh. If we don’t do something you could lose your foot. Is there anyway to get heat in here?”
“No, not once it’s winterized. Take me to your place for a couple of hours. Long enough to get my foot taken care of and do some thinking. Maybe talk to my lawyer.”
She stood in the dim light and looked down at the frost bitten foot that was now turning a most unpleasant color. She knew she could run from him. He was in no condition to chase her more than a few feet, and once out of the cabin and off the boat she could reach the car and go for Will. But she was afraid that if she left him he would make another hazardous escape attempt. Considering his present condition, it might be fatal this time. Once in her apartment there’d be opportunity to get word to Will.
“All right,” she said. “Can you wrap something around the foot and hobble to the car?”
“You’re damn right.”
Raleigh had dropped off into a moaning, fitful sleep. She had warmed his foot, packed hot water bottles around it, fed him a sandwich and a big glass of whisky. When his eyes flickered shut she tiptoed from the room.
She slipped the kitchen extension phone off the hook and dialed police emergency.
“Police emergency, Officer Hawkins.”
“L.C. Converse, tell Chief Barnes that …”
A hand reached past her cheek and clicked down the extension. The phone was taken from her hand and placed back on the hook.
“You shouldn’t have done that, L.C.,” he said in a low voice.
Chapter Six
The last time she had been tied to a chair was during a game of cowboys and Indians when she was eight years old, and she hadn’t liked it then either.
“I don’t suppose you’d take my word?”
“Nope.”
“You act like your foot still hurts.”
“I’ll get by. I hope you don’t mind if I borrow a few things?”
“I do.”
“I’ll return them when everything is straightened out.” He looped a belt around her feet and then ran the loose end of rope from her hands through the loop and pulled until she gave a short grunt. He limped through the apartment gathering items as he opened and closed drawers. He counted the money from her wallet. “Fourteen dollars.”
“I never carry much cash.”
He stuffed the bills in his pocket along with a gasoline credit card and car keys. He found her father’s service revolver in the bureau drawer and tucked it in the waistband of his pants.
“Raleigh, please calm down and look at things rationally. To begin with, my car is about as obvious as a Sherman tank. The fourteen dollars won’t go far, and if you use the credit card you’ll leave a trail anyone could follow. And there aren’t any bullets for the gun.”
“I didn’t kill her. I don’t know if it was one of her admirers, or someone who broke in the house and attacked her, but I’m going to find out.”
“What happened to the missing hour? Will says he definitely places you in the house shortly after eight, but you never called for help until nine.”
He paused thoughtfully in the center of the living room. “When I first saw her lying there I wanted her to be dead. It solved so many problems. We had already discussed divorce, it was only a question of time. I wanted her dead, and that filled me with guilt, as if I really had killed her. I was confused and walked through the house trying to put things together, as if by overcoming my desire for her death I could bring her back to life. Can you understand that?”
“I think so. I promise you that Will will continue the investigation.”
“His mind is made up. After my running away, and the other lies, he’ll never believe a word I say.”
&nbs
p; “What about me?”
“I’ll leave a note on the superintendent’s door to open the apartment at six.”
“I still think you’re making a mistake.”
He stopped at the door to turn and smile. “Thanks, L.C.”
“Sure.”
She sat staring at the blank wall after he shut the door. It was going to be a long day. The wall was really quite bleak. She had never put any time or thought into decorating the apartment, and now had a full six or seven hours to consider the problem in depth. She’d paint the wall in a bright primary color to provide contrast, and then buy some good Wyeth prints. The long windows overlooking the water were the most spectacular aspect of the room and could be more effectively utilized.
The voices from outside, below the window, were dim distant sounds that almost merged into the ordinary background noise of the apartment complex. If it were spring she would have automatically assumed they were the grounds crew cleaning and preparing the pool for warm weather.
There was two feet of snow behind the building.
She slid the light chair across the room toward the large window to see three men standing in the snow three floors below. Raleigh was almost directly below the window by the edge of the ice-covered swimming pool. He glanced from side to side like a furtive animal.
Will had come around the right corner of the building and was walking slowly toward Raleigh. He held his arms up and away from his body and was obviously saying something in low tones that were unintelligible from this distance.
Officer Dave August, holding a pump shotgun across his body, had come from the left, and was crouching forward as he brought the gun up to aiming position.
“Leave me the hell alone,” Raleigh’s voice carried through the wind.
Will stopped and waved Dave August back. Once again he began to move slowly toward the cornered man.
Raleigh reached under his jacket and pulled out the service revolver. He held it by the barrel a moment and then threw it toward the frozen pool.
The blast of the shotgun spun Raleigh in a complete circle and crumpled him into the snow against the side of the building.
L.C. moaned and pressed her forehead against the cold window glass.
The Killing Edge Page 7