Jack was winging this. He glanced at Oz for a little backup.
"Yes," Oz said, barely missing a beat. "Dr. Monnet was blackmailing me, so I couldn't go to the police. I didn't know what to do. But now that he's dead—"
"Dead?" Nadia said. She looked at Jack.
"Milos Dragovic killed him."
"With him gone," Oz said, "it's safe for me to release you."
Jack said, "But there's one matter we have to settle first: This never happened. Mr. Prather needs your word on that."
Gleason needed about a second before nodding. "I can handle that."
But Nadia hesitated, frowning, not onboard yet.
"Come on, Nadj," Gleason said, putting his arm around her. "We weren't harmed. They even fed us."
"I've never been so frightened in all my life!"
"Yeah, but it's better than being dead. He could've killed us—he was supposed to kill us, and it would have been easier, but he didn't. We owe him something, don't you think?"
Come on, Nadia, Jack thought, trying a little telepathy. Say yes and we're out of here.
Finally she shrugged. "I don't know about owing him," she said, glaring at Oz. "But I guess we can keep it to ourselves."
Jack repressed a sigh of relief. He fished his car keys out of his pocket and tossed them to Gleason.
"My Buick's in front of the Burger King sign. Wait for me there. I've got one more matter to settle with Mr. Prather."
After Nadia and her beau had hurried from the scene, Jack turned to Oz.
"Where'd the rakosh break out?"
"About a mile back. Right near mile marker fifty-one-point-three, to be exact. We stopped but could not stay parked on the shoulder—we'd have the police asking what happened—so we pulled in here."
"We've got to find it."
"Nothing I'd like better," said the boss, "although I have a feeling you'd prefer to see it dead."
"You've got that right."
"An interesting area here," Oz said. "Right on the edge of the Pine Barrens."
Jack cursed under his breath. The Barrens. Shit. How was he going to locate Scar-lip in there—if that was where it was? This whole area was like a time warp. Near the coast you had a nuclear power plant and determinedly quaint but unquestionably twentieth-century towns like Smithville and Leeds Point. West of the parkway was wilderness. The Barrens—a million or so unsettled acres of pine, scrub brush, vanished towns, hills, bogs, creeks, all pretty much unchanged in population and level of civilization from the time the Indians had the Americas to themselves. From the Revolutionary days on, it had served as a haven for people who didn't want to be found. Hessians, Tories, smugglers, Lenape Indians, heretical Amish, escaped cons—at one time or another, they'd all sought shelter in the Pine Barrens.
And now add a rakosh to its long list of fugitives.
"We're not too far from Leeds Point, you know," Prather said, an amused expression flitting across his sallow face. "The birthplace of the Jersey Devil."
"Save the history lesson for later," Jack said. "Are you sending out a search party?"
"No. No one wants to go, and I can't say I blame them. But even if some were willing, we've got to be set up in Cape May for our show tonight. And frankly, without Dr. Monnet buying its blood, I can't justify the risk of going after it."
"That leaves me."
If Scar-lip got too much of a head start, he'd never find it which he could live with… unless the drive to kill Vicky was still fixed in its dim brain. Seemed unlikely, but Jack couldn't take the chance.
"You're not seriously thinking of going after it."
Jack shrugged. "Know somebody who'll do it for me?"
"May I ask why?" Oz said.
"Take too long to tell. Let's just leave it that Scar-lip and I go back a ways and we've got some unfinished business."
Oz stared at him a moment, then turned and began walking back toward his trailer.
"Come with me. Perhaps I can help."
Jack doubted that but followed and waited outside as Oz rummaged around within his trailer. Finally he emerged holding something that looked like a Game-boy. He tapped a series of buttons, eliciting a beep, then handed it to Jack.
"This will lead you to the rakosh."
Jack checked out the thing: it had a small screen with a blip of green light blinking slowly in one corner. He rotated his body and the blip moved.
"This is the rakosh?" Then he remembered the collar it had been wearing. "What'd you do—rig it with a LoJack?"
"In a way. I have electronic telltales on our animals. Occasionally one gets loose and I've found this to be an excellent way to track them. Most of them are irreplaceable."
"Yeah. Not too many two-headed goats wandering around."
"Correct. The range is only two miles, however. As you can see, the creature is still within range, but it may not be for long. Operation is simple: Your position is center screen; if the blip is left of center, the creature is to the left of you; below center, it's behind you; and so on. You track it by proceeding in whatever direction moves the blip closer to the center of the screen. When it reaches dead center, you'll have found your rakosh. Or rather, it will have found you."
Jack swiveled back and forth until the locator blip was at the top of the faintly glowing screen. He looked up and found himself facing the shadowy mass of trees west of the Parkway. Just as he'd feared. Scar-lip was in the pines.
But this'll help me find it, he thought.
And then something occurred to him.
"You're being awfully helpful."
"Not at all. My sole concern is for the rakosh."
"But you know I'm going to kill it if I find it."
"Try to kill it. The pines are full of deer and other game, but the rakosh can't use them for food. As you know, it eats only one thing."
Now Jack understood. He grinned. "And you think by giving me this locator, you're sending it a CARE package, so to speak."
Oz inclined his head. "So to speak."
"We shall see, Mr. Prather. We shall see."
"On the contrary, I doubt anyone will ever see you again."
"I'm not suicidal; trust me on that."
"But you can't believe you can take on a rakosh single-handed and survive."
"Wouldn't be the first time."
Jack headed for his car, relishing the look of concern on Oz's face before he'd turned away. Had he sounded confident enough? Good act. Because he was feeling anything but.
2
"Here he comes," Doug said.
Nadia lifted her head from his shoulder and glanced through the car window. Jack was about a hundred feet away, striding toward them. The sight of him elicited a warm glow against the deep chill that pervaded her. She couldn't remember ever being so glad to see someone as when she'd looked through the open door of that awful trailer and found Jack standing outside. She couldn't imagine how he'd tracked her down or why, but when she'd most needed someone he'd shown up.
"Good," she said. "Now we can get out of here."
She'd been huddled against Doug in the rear seat, feeling cold and tired, totally wrung out, but mostly sad.
Dr. Monnet wanted me dead.
She'd been forced to accept the truth of that, and yet… how could it be? Horrifying enough to learn that anyone wanted you dead, but Dr. Monnet… and after she'd been so worried about his well-being. It was too cruel.
To her surprise, Jack walked past the car and into the food court. Minutes later he emerged with a canvas shoulder bag emblazoned with Atlantic city in Day-Glo green letters.
"How's everybody doing?" he said as he slipped into the front seat.
"Better now," Doug said. "Thanks to you." He extended his hand over the seat. "I'm Doug Gleason."
They shook hands.
"Jack." He gave Doug's wrist a quarter-turn. "Is that a Quisp watch? Neat."
"You want it? It's yours."
Jack waved him off. "No, that's OK."
"I'm serious," Doug
said. "I don't know how to thank you."
"You will in a minute."
Jack backed the car out of its spot but didn't drive far. To Nadia's dismay he parked in another spot in a far corner of the rest area by the rideshare info sign. She wanted to go home.
"Aren't we going back?"
"Not yet." Jack pulled a couple of bottles of Snapple from the canvas bag and handed them back. "If you're thirsty, drink up; otherwise, dump it out on the pavement."
Nadia drank half of her lemon-flavored iced tea quickly. She hadn't realized how thirsty she was. Jack had opened his door and was emptying bottle after bottle into the parking lot.
"Shame to waste the stuff, I know," he said, "but it seems Snapple's about the only thing that comes in glass bottles these days."
Then he took out a glass cutter and began scoring the flanks of the bottles.
Baffled, Nadia said, "What are you doing?"
"Trick I learned from an old revolutionary. Ups the chances these'll shatter on contact."
Then he pulled an Atlantic City souvenir T-shirt and a newspaper from the bag. He began tearing up the shirt.
Nadia studied his face, his deft, sure movements. Where was the easy going fellow she'd seen off and on over the past few days? He'd been replaced somehow by this fiercely focused man whose sense of purpose radiated through the car. His expression was grim and the brown eyes she'd once thought mild now gleamed with intensity.
"What's going on?" Nadia said.
"One of Oz's attractions escaped. I have to go after it."
"He hired you?"
"No. This is my own thing."
"Why on earth—?"
"It may harm someone who matters to me."
"Can't you call the police?"
"They'll think I'm nuts, or trying to scam them with a Jersey Devil story."
Doug said, "This 'attraction' wouldn't happen to be a big, strange-looking creature with yellow eyes and dark skin."
Jack looked up. "You saw it?"
"Yeah. I think so. The night I was kidnapped they brought me into one of the tents and pushed me up against the bars of a cage with this huge guy in a stinking rubber monster suit inside."
"That wasn't a suit."
"Bullshit."
Jack focused those eyes on him. "Do I look like I'm bullshitting?"
"No." Doug swallowed. "And to tell the truth, afterward I got to thinking either that's the most convincing rubber suit on earth or I was face-to-face with a real live demon. So I kept telling myself that nothing like that ever existed in real life, so it had to be a suit."
"What happened when they put you up against the bars? Did it take a swipe at you, try to grab you?"
"No. It pretty much ignored me. It seemed more interested in getting out of its cage."
Jack simply stared at Doug.
"What?" Doug asked.
Jack shook his head. "When you get back home, do yourself a favor and buy a lottery ticket. If your luck's still holding, you'll wake up a multimillionaire."
He stepped out of the car, opened the trunk, and returned with a metal can and a flashlight.
Nadia remembered something. "Jack, is this the creature you told me about this morning—the source of the drug?"
"One and the same."
"I think I saw it when I was peeking through a crack between the boards over our windows. I saw them loading a big blue-black creature in a steel cage onto one of the trucks." And she remembered thinking at the time it had to be some sort of gimmick attraction because nothing that looked like that should be living and breathing on this earth. "That… that was real?"
Jack nodded. He squatted outside the car and began refilling the empty Snapple bottles from the big metal can.
Oh, no, Nadia thought, fighting a surge of panic as she watched him. He's not really—
But he was. Oh, yes, he was. The smell of gasoline was unmistakable.
Dizzy, she closed her eyes and hung on, wondering what had happened to her world in the past few days. She felt as if she'd tumbled down a rabbit hole into a nastily surreal Wonderland. The molecule she'd been assigned to stabilize had turned out to be an illegal drug, her fiance had been abducted, a man she'd known for years and deeply respected, had even made love to, had ordered her death, and then he himself had been murdered. And now she was parked in a rest stop helping a man she barely knew make Molotov cocktails to go after some awful creature from a nightmare.
Nightmare… that's where she was right now.
She wished she'd never heard of Jack. If she hadn't hired him, maybe none of this would have happened.
She opened her eyes again and looked at him. "You're really going to chase after that thing? Alone? In the dark?"
He nodded. "Not exactly my idea of a fun time, but…"
"I'll go with you," Doug said.
Nadia wanted to punch him and scream, How can you be such an idiot? but held her tongue when she saw Jack immediately shake his head.
"This doesn't involve you."
"I could watch your back," Doug said, pressing. "I feel I owe you something."
Nadia wanted to kill him. The only hunting Doug had ever done was on a computer screen.
Jack finished tightening the cap on the last bottle.
"I appreciate the offer, but this is a one-man operation." He glanced at her and winked. "Good man."
"I know," she said, clutching Doug's arm. And I want to keep him good and alive.
Jack gently placed the six gasoline-filled bottles back into the canvas shoulder bag and worked sections of newspaper between them to keep them from clinking, then threw the pieces of T-shirt on top.
"What you can do for me is drive," he said, moving into the passenger seat.
Doug scrambled around, leaving Nadia alone in the back. They drove north through the New Gretna toll, then turned around and came back south through the toll again.
"We'll be stopping soon," Jack said. He seemed to be eyeing the mile markers closely. "After you drop me off, head back to the rest area and wait inside where you can hear the public phones. I've got the number of one of them. When I'm done I'll call you on my cell phone and tell you where to pick me up."
"How long do you think you'll be?" Nadia said.
"Can't say." He tapped the dashboard clock. "Just about two A.M. now. If you don't hear from me by six… go home."
"Without you?"
He cleared his throat as he scribbled on a scrap of paper. "If you don't hear from me by then it means things have gotten complicated. Go back to the city and call this number. A guy named Abe will answer. Tell him what you know. He'll take it from there."
Doug said, "But what—?"
"Whoa! Here's my stop."
Doug pulled over and Jack jumped out. He slipped the straps of the bag onto a shoulder and pulled the flashlight from a pocket.
"See you later," he said.
Nadia noticed how he limped as he hurried down the slope toward the trees.
I hope so, she thought as they pulled away. She felt a cold weight growing in her stomach. When she looked back, Jack had disappeared into the tall shadows.
3
Jack trained his flashlight beam on the scrub at the base of the slope, looking for broken branches. He found them. Lots of them. Something big had torn through here not long ago.
He stepped through and followed the path of destruction. He was glad he'd kept the boonie cap; without it the branches would be tearing at the sutures in his scalp. Already had a throbbing headache and a banged-up hip. Didn't need to start bleeding.
When he was sure he was out of sight of the highway, he stopped and pulled out the electronic locator. He was facing west and the blip was at the top edge of the screen. Had to move. Scar-lip was almost out of range.
He pressed forward until he came to a narrow path. A deer trail, most likely. Flashed his beam down and saw what looked like deer tracks in the damp sand, but they weren't alone: deep imprints of big, alien, three-toed feet, and work-boot prints
coming after. Scar-lip, with Hank following—obviously behind because the boot prints occasionally stepped on the rakosh tracks.
What's Hank thinking? Jack wondered. That he's got a gun and maybe he learned how to hunt when he was a kid, so that makes him a match for the Sharkman? Maybe he's not thinking. Maybe a belly full of Mad Dog has convinced him he can handle the equivalent of taking on a great white with a penknife in a sea of ink.
Jack began following the deer trail, keeping one eye on the locator and turning his flashlight beam on and off every so often to check the ground. Scrub pines closed in, forming a twenty-to thirty-foot wall around him, arching their branches over the trail, allowing only an occasional glimpse of the starlit sky.
Quiet. Just the sound of insects and the branches brushing against his clothes. Jack hated the great outdoors. Give him a city with cars and buses and honking cabs, with pavements and right angles and subways rumbling beneath his feet and—best of all—streetlights. It wasn't just dark out here, it was dark.
His adrenaline was up but despite the alien surroundings, he felt curiously relaxed. The locator gave him a buffer zone of safety. He knew where Scar-lip was and didn't have to worry about it jumping out of the bushes and tearing into him at any second. But he did have to worry about Hank. An armed drunk in the woods could be a danger to anything that moved. Didn't want to be mistaken for Scar-lip.
The trail wound this way and that, briefly meandering north and south, but taking him generally westward. Jack moved as fast as the circumstances allowed, making his best time along the occasional brief straightaway, but his left hip felt like someone had lit a blowtorch in the socket.
The green blip that was Scar-lip gradually moved nearer and nearer the center of the locator screen, which meant he was gaining steadily on the rakosh. Looked like the creature had stopped moving. Why? Resting? Or waiting?
He guesstimated he was about a quarter-mile from the rakosh when a gun report somewhere ahead brought him up short. Sounded like a shotgun. There it was again. And again.
Repairman Jack 04 - All the Rage Page 36