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Authors: Michael Koryta

Tags: #Mystery, #Thriller, #Suspense

Envy the Night (10 page)

BOOK: Envy the Night
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“You’re lucky to have a place right on the water,” she said. “That’s tough to find at the Willow, with all the development restrictions.”

“Yeah.” Frank’s interest in conversation had vanished when she made the turn, taking all the moisture in his mouth with it. This felt stranger than he’d expected, and he’d expected it to be damn strange.

They rumbled past the three-way fork that divided the gravel road into separate drives, and Frank told Nora to stay left. Then they were past it and facing the cabin.

“Home sweet home?” Nora said.

“Yeah. This is it.”

He sat there silently until he felt her curious eyes on him, and then he shook his head and opened the door and stepped out into a cool breeze that came at him like a kiss. In front of him the dark lawn ran out to a hand-laid log wall that stood above the beach. Since it was still spring, the water would be high enough to bang against the logs when the wind blew. By midsummer, it would be down, fed out of the dam regularly to replenish the Wisconsin River and its valley. Stars
and a half moon hung above the lake, everything pristine until Frank turned his head a touch to the right and saw the blinking red lights of a cellular tower miles away. He remembered when the cell tower went up. His father hated the tower. Loathed it. One night, sitting with the Coleman lantern crackling beside them, he’d taken out a gun and emptied a clip in the direction of the tower, the bullets dropping harmlessly into the water. They’d had a hell of a laugh over that.

“Beautiful,” Nora said softly, and only then was Frank aware of her standing beside him.

“Yeah,” he said. “It’s all right.”

He turned back to the truck, and she went with him, grabbed one of his bags out of the bed, and started for the cabin.

“Just set it down outside the door,” he said. “Thanks. I’ll get the rest.”

“I’ll help you get everything inside. It’s not a problem.”


No.
Thank you, but no. Just set it outside the door and I’ll take care of it.”

She stood with the bag in her hand and cocked her head, puzzled. Then she raised her eyebrows and made a slow nod—
whatever you say, psycho
—and dropped the bag to the ground in front of the door. Frank felt a surge of irritation and embarrassment at his snapped words, but he couldn’t help wanting her gone. He didn’t want anybody walking into that cabin with him when he stepped inside for the first time in seven years.

“Okay,” she said. “Well, then, I guess I’ll take off.”

“Thanks for the ride.” He pulled a few more bags out of the truck. “Really, this was a huge help. I didn’t want to spend the night in a hotel.”

“Hey, least I could do.”

They stood there awkwardly for a few seconds, facing each other in the dark. Then she moved toward the truck, and he lifted two bags to his shoulders.

“I’ll give you a call soon, let you know what sort of time frame to expect on your car,” she said, pulling the driver’s door open. “Should get it done a lot faster now that the cops are taking the other one.”

“Thanks. Let me know what you hear from the police, too, okay?”

“Sure.”

She got in the truck then and started the engine, and Frank turned away so as not to be blinded by the headlights, reached in his pocket and closed his fingers around an old and well-remembered key chain, and went to the door.

10

__________

L
ooking back, Grady figured at least one reason he’d grown so attached to the Temple boy didn’t involve guilt. He understood something about family legacies. About becoming something you didn’t want to become simply because it was what you knew. What you’d seen, what you’d been taught, what ran through your veins.

Grady lived alone now, in an apartment that was about the same size of the kitchen in the house he’d shared with Adrian, and though it still felt relatively new and certainly nothing like home, it had been nine years since he moved in.
Nine years
.

His father had been a good-natured drunk who never lifted a hand to his son, not once in all those twelve-beer nights. Instead, he’d come through the door unsteady and mumbling, walk into Grady’s room, and apologize. Sometimes they were short speeches; sometimes they went on for an hour or more. Tearful, choked-voice monologues in which the old man would take blame for all the wrongs of the world, acknowledge they were all his fault. He was sorry for being a bad father, sorry for being a bad husband, sorry they didn’t have more money, sorry they never took a vacation, sorry Grady was an only child, sorry their landlord wouldn’t allow pets because every boy should have a dog.

There were nights when Grady would lie there and wish his dad would just
come in swinging, the way drunks were supposed to.
Hit me, damn it,
he’d think,
slap me around, do anything but this crying and apologizing, you pussy.

He never hit him, though. Just kept right on apologizing until the day he had a heart attack on the corner of Addison and Clark, walking into Wrigley for a baseball game. Grady, who’d been home from college and waiting at their seats inside the park, was sure his father would have apologized for that, too, if only he could.

He’d made up his mind, though, that he would not become his father. No chance in this world. He’d make some mistakes, sure, but he would not let remorse over them haunt his days, not spend his life apologizing for faults that he never attempted to correct. He’d be assertive, he’d be strong, and any character flaws acquaintances might whisper about during parties would be borne forth from those qualities.
Too cocky,
they’d say,
too stubborn, too sure of himself. Never admits when he’s wrong.

He’d been wrong with Frank Temple. Hadn’t admitted it. Made his mistake, moved on. Except for those computer checks. Except for those. One of the reasons he kept monitoring the kid was that Grady knew a few things about legacies. But his had only been, well, pathetic. Not dangerous, not in the way Frank Temple’s could be. The kid wanted to beat it, wanted to leave that bloody coat of arms behind, but it wasn’t going to be an easy task. And Grady surely hadn’t helped him. If anything, he’d given him a firm push in the wrong direction. What he’d done in his time with seventeen-year-old Frank Temple III was his greatest professional and personal shame. With the exception of Jim Saul, an agent down in Miami, it was also a private shame. Nobody else knew the way Grady had manipulated that kid. Frank surely did not, and that, more than anything else, was what kept Grady checking the computers, always monitoring the young man he hadn’t seen in years and wondering what it meant that he’d show more devotion out of guilt than he ever had out of love.

The case against Frank’s father had been a huge story—nothing attracted attention like the story of a federal agent turned contract killer—and when it broke the accolades and praise were rolling in and the media was loving the Bureau, loving Grady. What they didn’t understand was that when Frank’s father killed himself he had effectively aborted the future of the investigation. He’d known so much, could have provided information that would have taken Manuel DeCaster down, destroyed one of the deadliest and most powerful crime entities in Florida, hell, in the country. It had been shaping up to be one of the most significant organized crime prosecutions in years, and then Frank
Temple II lifted his gun to his lips, squeezed the trigger, and killed the case along with himself.

So even as the story was arriving it was dying, and while the media didn’t understand that at first, Grady and Jim Saul sure as hell did. All they had left was Frank Temple III. The boy was supposedly closer to his father than anyone else had been, and the stories of his unusual education, the molding process that had been going on, were legion. He’d even made a trip down to Miami with his father, and there had been at least a short visit with Devin Matteson.

It was for Devin that Jim Saul most hungered. Devin was a phantom, involved in every level of DeCaster’s operation, investigated by the DEA and FBI and Miami PD for years without a single conviction. Temple was supposed to be the first domino, Matteson the second, but Temple had managed to go down without touching any of the others. They could start the chain over with Matteson, Saul was sure. And there was a chance, maybe even a strong one, that Temple’s son knew far more than they dared imagine. It would take a little bit of a sales pitch, that was all. A few talks about betrayed legacies, a few reminders of just how much Devin deserved his share of the punishment, what a shame, no, what a
crime
it would be to see Frank’s father alone bear that load.

He’d walked into that kid’s house knowing the truth, but with a promise—a professional oath—not to share it. Nothing evil in that, right? Except he’d shared another story and passed it off as the truth, a story that filled a grieving child with white-hot hate and a vendetta.

Grady had spent some time on it. He and the boy had a good many conversations about those things before Frank’s mother grew concerned and a newspaper reporter learned of the unusual bond and began to ask for interviews and the whole thing fell apart, leaving Frank with his hate and Grady and Saul with nothing to show for the ploy.

It had been worth the effort, though. That’s what they’d told each other early on, that if it had paid off and the kid actually knew something and shared it, well, then it absolutely would have been worth it. You had to prioritize, after all. Without the boy, they had no case, and they needed a case.

Except they already had one. While Grady was down in the basement of that house in Kenilworth, showing Frank pictures of his father with Devin Matteson and talking of loyalty and betrayal, trying to build enough hatred to coax a reaction, a group of rookie agents in Miami were working the streets and chasing bank records, and a few years and two ugly trials later DeCaster was in prison. No help needed from Frank Temple III, no lies to a grieving son, a
child,
required.

It was the sort of thing that was hard to put out of your mind.

Grady kept his eye on the kid, though, and found a measure of relief in each year that passed without incident. Frank was making his own place in the world, and it looked like a peaceful one.

Had looked that way, at least, until the day after his arrest for public intoxication down in Indiana, when Jim Saul called Grady at home on a Friday night and asked if he’d heard about Devin Matteson.

Grady took his feet down off the ottoman and set his beer aside and leaned forward, his grip tight on the phone.

“Heard what about him, Jimmy?”

“He’s in the hospital down in Miami, with three gunshot wounds. Looked like he was going to die when they brought him in, but he’s been making a furious recovery ever since. You know the kind of shape that prick was in. Ironman, right? He’s conscious again, and it’s almost a sure bet he’ll make it.”

“They have the shooter?”

“Nope. And if Matteson knows, he’s not saying. But somebody plugged him three in the back, and you know how he will want to handle that.”

“Personally,” Grady said, and he felt cold. “What do you hear on suspects?”

“Could be anybody. If they’ve got good leads, I’m not aware of them.”

“Temple’s son was arrested in Indiana night before last. Public intoxication. When was Matteson shot?”

“The day before that,” Saul said slowly. “And how do you know the Temple kid was arrested for a PI?”

“Word travels,” Grady said.

“Right,” Saul said. “Well, I thought you’d like to hear about it. And if I hear something new, you’ll be the first to know.”

They hung up, and Grady dropped the phone onto the cushion beside him and stared at the wall.

Devin Matteson shot in the back, Frank Temple III arrested for drinking in Indiana a day later. Celebration, maybe? A few champagne toasts to the dead?

No. No, that couldn’t be it. The kid was doing fine, and Matteson had any number of enemies. The list probably grew by the day.

Frank had wanted him, though. Frank had wanted Matteson
badly,
and by the end, when Grady was trying to make amends, he’d urged the boy to put that away. Told him that he’d
have
to ignore it if he wanted to stay away from his father’s sort of end. Frank had accepted it, too, at least verbally, but Grady remembered going back to the range with him a few weeks after the lies had started, remembered the look on Frank’s face and the perfect cluster of bullets
in the target. He’d known damn well the kid was seeing Devin Matteson down there.

And whose fault was that, Grady? Whose fault?

He picked up the beer again, drank what was left, and stood up to go after another one.

“I should have asked about the wounds,” he said aloud, talking to his empty apartment. That would have settled it. Because if there’d been more than an inch or two between those bullet holes, then Frank Temple III hadn’t been pulling the trigger.

 

Ezra Ballard ran an electric fillet knife down the perch’s side in a smooth, quick stroke. Turned the fish over and repeated the motion. Moved the filets to the side and then lobbed the fish head over the fence and into the dog kennel. Two of his hounds hit the fish carcass together. There was a soft growl, the sound of snapping teeth, and then the winner retreated with his prize.

Last summer, an architect from Madison had given Ezra a nice lecture after watching him feed the leftover fish to his dogs. Fish in that condition wasn’t suitable for dogs. Could do serious harm. Ezra had tried to stay polite, listening to him. Finally Ezra asked him if he had any experience with bear hounds. No, not with bear hounds, the guy said. Plenty of experience with dogs, though. What kind of dogs, Ezra asked. Pugs, the guy said. Took all Ezra had to smile and nod, wait till the guy wrote out the check and went on his way. Pugs.

Ezra had selected all four of his hounds when they were just weeks-old puppies, watched them in their litters and picked up on traits of personality that set them apart. Trained them himself, spent long summer hours in the woods and brush with them, teaching them to work as a team. Though the hunting season wasn’t till October, you could run bear in the summers in Wisconsin for dog-training purposes. On days when he didn’t have to guide, he generally loaded the hounds into their crates and into the back of the truck and set off to take advantage of the free time in the way he loved best: out in the woods, alone except for the dogs. Of course, it wasn’t like being alone at all. The dogs were Ezra’s family. More than pets, more than friends. And when the air turned chill as fall began to lose its early skirmishes with winter, and the dogs bayed long and loud in the dark woods, Ezra with gun in hand as they chased their prey? Then, the dogs were something altogether nearer to his heart: comrades.

BOOK: Envy the Night
9.76Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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