Crane, R [ Southern Watch 03] Corrupted (27 page)

BOOK: Crane, R [ Southern Watch 03] Corrupted
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“Sure thing,” Arch answered, light on the enthusiasm. “Anywhere you want me to go in particular?”

Reeve just stared at him, bald head catching the reflection of the flashing red lights of his patrol car. “Why don’t you just head on home for now?” And then he got back into his car, not a word of explanation further.

***

Hendricks burst into the farmhouse barely supported by Alison, ignoring the room to his immediate left. Alison partially blocked his view, anyway, which was good, because he could smell the fetid scent of animal and human waste from the creatures in cages. He could almost taste it, like something had crawled up his nose before it lost the fight for life, leaving behind nothing more than a rotting corpse, with all the waste and shit that came out after.

He’d never really been in a place like this, but he knew what a deal with the devil looked like, and when you were ready to make one it was best to avoid looking right in the fucker’s eyes.

“Well, well,” said a man in a Han jacket with a full head of hair that was grey around the edges. He had a relaxed bearing, holding his fingers together in a sort of steeple configuration as he stared down the hallway at Hendricks and Alison. Dark floorboards shone with fresh wax, and the Pine-Sol scent almost—almost—covered up the smell from the room to their left. “If it isn’t Corporal Hendricks. And Alison Longholt Stan.” The man bowed. “Such a pleasure to have you both here in my humble shop.”

“This is a farmhouse,” Alison said with aplomb, but sounding to Hendricks’s ears like she really believed it.

“Well, the outside certainly is,” Spellman said with a little bow.

“I’m not a corporal anymore,” Hendricks said, unable to hold himself upright and not even fucking bothering. “Nice touch, though, knowing that.”

“Indeed,” Spellman said. “As you know, I’m in a customer service business, and the more you know about your customers, the better you can service them. I pride myself on being in tune with my clientele and knowing their needs.”

Hendricks looked at the empty bastard with one eye. He missed his hat; it was always more effective to survey someone from underneath it, because the brim did a great job framing the face. “What is your customer-centric focus telling you about what I need?”

A line of wrinkles folded on Spellman’s forehead. “I have just the thing for what ails you.” From out of the sleeve of his jacket came a vial. “What do you get for the man who has it all? Well, everything except ribs that are intact, and skin that’s not seeping blood from a vembra’nonn bite, anyway.” He pointed, keeping the vial safely in his other hand, in view but not in reach. “Those bites can cause some complications, by the way. I’d clean it out when you get a chance. In fact, if you’d like, I have a medical kit I’d be willing to throw in for—”

“Spare me,” Hendricks said. “How much for the drink?”

“Well, as you know, the first one was free,” Spellman said with a little twinkle. “But this one won’t cost you much.”

“Cost us much what?” Alison asked. “Gold? Silver?”

“I deal in the coin of the realm, whatever realm I’m in,” Spellman said. “That said, my IRA is not in tangible assets at present, so I’ll just take cash. U.S. Dollars,” he amended. “Say … two hundred.”

“Cheaper than a hospital stay,” Hendricks muttered and fumbled in his coat, causing Alison to sway with his motion and damned near lose him.

“Come, have a seat,” Spellman said, beckoning them forward. “I’ll have a look at that neck while you drink up.” He waited, and as Hendricks staggered his way forward, the man slipped the vial in his palm. “You’ll probably have an easier time reaching your wallet once you’ve had a sip or two.”

“No cow bladder this time?” Hendricks felt just a little bit of the burn of pride as he looked at the man—no, this wasn’t a man. He looked into the eyes, looked right into them, and he could see only a little something there. That didn’t stop him from pulling the stopper on the vial and chugging it back.

10.

Arch followed the wrecker back into town, providing an unasked-for police escort the whole way. He had his reasons, but Sam Allen didn’t need to know them, not straightaway. Darkness had fallen on Midian, maybe not just metaphorically, either. He tried to sift through things in his head, making the mental rounds on all the things that had happened and everything they’d learned. Erin was out of commission, Lerner was waylaid—he still wasn’t clear on how that had happened—Hendricks looked like he’d gotten put out of the fight for a while.

That left him, Duncan and maybe Alison on defense, all versus a whole mess of bicyclists for whom the Tour de France looked like an easy win. No blood doping needed, unless it involved drinking said blood. He put a vision of Hendricks’s neck, dripping scarlet, out of his mind. Vampires on bikes.

Unprompted thumps and clacks from the Explorer entered his consciousness every now and again. They were not normal sounds but something produced when the vehicle had run over those accursed bicyclists. He suspected he’d need to get it checked out at some point, but this was not the moment.

Sam guided the tow truck through the gate of his yard and Arch followed, the Explorer’s undercarriage protesting as he bumped up over the curb and left the paved road behind. Glowing yellow lights every hundred feet or so illuminated a corrugated metal building that looked like it was at least fifty percent rust. And that might have been optimistic. The yellow lights cast cone-shaped illumination on a few entry portals—garage doors and a standard one for people to walk through—shedding the kind of light that told Arch that Sam Allen hadn’t made way in his budget for those newfangled CFLs just yet.

Sam stopped the wrecker and backed it up. Mountains of flattened and beat-up cars littered the yard. It truly was a junkyard, and he had a maze of the wrecks out back, Arch knew. He’d come to Sam’s a few times to pull salvage off destroyed vehicles. It was cheaper getting a hubcap from Sam than ordering it through one of the auto shops in town, and everyone knew it. Alison might not have known it, come to think of it, but then he’d had to get the hubcap for her, so she was covered, he supposed.

Sam was winching the sheriff’s car down from the back of the truck when Arch caught up with him. The red tail lights of the big tow truck glowed, casting Sam’s unshaven, three-four day scruff in a light not unlike that which Reeve had been in when Arch had seen him. That caused a moment of disquiet, thinking about that particular landmine, still lying in his path undetonated.

“What can I do for you, Arch?” Sam asked, glancing up at him as he approached. “I don’t reckon you followed me back here just to make sure I got home safely.”

Arch didn’t bother splitting into a grin for him, but the man had figured that much out. “Police property in the trunk, Sam. I can’t just leave it to get smashed.”

Sam blinked at him, lines around his squinting, folding like the middle of an accordion. “Arch, this trunk is all beat to shit, if you’ll pardon my French. I don’t think you’re gonna be able to open it with a key.”

“I can’t leave it in there, Sam,” Arch said. “Sheriff stored his long guns in the back.”

Sam scratched his face, giving it a thought. “Got a pry bar. You might could work it loose if you were willing to put some elbow grease into it.”

Arch let out the hint of a smile. “That’d be mighty helpful, Sam.” He watched the man nod and make his way slowly back to the cab. It wouldn’t do to just let what was in the trunk of the car get lost, not when Arch had an idea of how they might make use of it. Waste not, want not.

***

“You look much better already,” Spellman opined, the sorry fucker.

Hendricks could hear the sounds from the room down the hall now, the rattle of cages. Deal with the devil nearly done, he was about ready to start looking someone in the face. He gave a moment’s thought to the absurdity of using the phrase metaphorically and moved on.

“Your color is much improved,” Spellman continued.

Hendricks tore his eyes away from the empty skin that was Spellman and looked Alison in the face. She was sitting next to him at a finely appointed dining room table that would have looked a few degrees out of place in an actual farmhouse. It was a little too swank, a little too polished, a little too unused. He doubted a fork or a knife had ever been set upon the surface of this smooth monstrosity. The whole room had that feel about it, all appearance, with no sense that anyone actually lived here.

“You do look almost alive now,” Alison told him in that flat, anti-depressant tone of hers.

“Thanks.” He swept his gaze back to Wren Spellman, trying not to look him in the eyes and taking in the salt and pepper sideburns instead. “I need another round before I go.”

Spellman was hovering, his—its?—hands a few inches from Hendricks’s head. He did have a medical kit, Hendricks noticed, wondering where the hell that had come from. It was open in one palm, and he had a nice piece of gauze pinched between his fingers. It reeked of rubbing alcohol, even though Hendricks hadn’t seen him open a bottle nor dip the gauze in it. “This is going to sting, so you might want to prepare yourself.”

“I’ve had wounds cleaned before, thanks,” Hendricks said through gritted teeth, already preparing himself for the pain.

“I wasn’t talking about the wound cleaning,” Spellman said, pressing the swab to Hendricks’s neck. It burned only a little, surprisingly. Probably the effects of the drug already working on him. “I was talking about the fact that I can’t sell you another round of the medicine you just took.”

Hendricks felt himself give a comically exaggerated blink. He could feel the cool, mentholated burn of the swab on the skin of his neck, dabbing away the crust of blood as Spellman’s hands worked with precision to clean whatever was left of the wound. “Beg pardon?” he asked. “What, are you out of the stuff?”

“No, I’m quite well stocked,” Spellman said coolly, and it took all Hendricks could manage not to jerk around and start battering the smug fucker with a fist. “I just can’t sell you another vial knowing what you plan to do with it.”

Hendricks lost his battle with restraint, and the chair flipped over behind him as he came to his feet. He had a few inches on Spellman, the empty bastard, and he drew himself up to his full height as he stared down at the Screen, looking for something behind the eyes. “Say that again.”

“I can’t sell you any more of the compound in question,” Spellman said with a shrug, like it was just a fact of life. “You see, you intend to use it on Deputy Harris, a noble—no, really,
laudable
goal.” His face fell, the tics of emotion following along with his speech. “The problem is, Deputy Harris is in the hospital at this very moment, fighting for her life. Doctors are working on her. X-rays are being taken, magnetic resonance imaging is being done—all the wonders of the human medical world are being applied to her.” Spellman’s hands were clean now, not a hint of bloody gauze anywhere in sight. “So if you were to walk into her room and administer some of my compound to her, you would produce a verifiable medical miracle. You’d practically bring her back from the dead.” Spellman’s face went dead. “I can’t have that, no matter intimidating you look, all puffed up like that.”

“I don’t really do much puffing,” Hendricks said, “or huffing. Pretty much skip straight to blowing your house down.”

“Ah, yes, my house,” Spellman said with a light shrug. “It’d be a shame if you did that. I wouldn’t be able to help you any more if you did. And I’d have to go through the trouble of pulling up stakes, of finding a new storefront. A very messy headache would entail. Of course there’d be the matter of revenge, too—”

“Are you threatening me?” Hendricks said, and it was only through sheer will he didn’t seize the man by his Han jacket and smear him all over his too-fancy table.

“No more than you’re threatening me,” Spellman said, face inscrutable. “No, I can’t sell you the compound you want. But … perhaps there is something I can do for you.”

Hendricks hadn’t reached for his sword yet, but damn if he hadn’t wanted to. “Go on,” he said, once he got his jaw to stop locking up from anger. It took a moment.

***

Lauren didn’t push the gurney because she didn’t really need to, but she was right there with the paramedics as they did, riding it right through into the Red Cedar ER. She saw Doctor Burnham as they came in, knew he’d been on duty tonight but decided to divert here anyway. Still sort of young, married, but fooled around with any woman he could sink his dick in. She’d heard from two of the nurses that every time he fucked he made a “The doctor is in!” proclamation when he got his tip wet. She hadn’t been interested in him before that, and afterward it had put him on the DNF list forever.

“Gimme the bullet,” Burnham said as she slid in alongside the gurney into the trauma room.

“MVA, possible skull fracture,” Lauren said, noting that Burnham didn’t even say a word about her being in the ambulance, like her picking up a shift and coming through the door in runner’s clothes was a perfectly normal occurrence. She ran through the rest of the vitals on memory, not really paying attention. She was eyeing Deputy Harris’s face again; the poor girl … she just …

“So, Lauren,” Burnham said as he got to work, “what the hell are you doing here?”

She ignored the twitch of a nerve at the corner of her mouth. “I’m not here, Chase,” she said, calling him by his first name. If he wanted to get familiar, it was a two-way street. “I’m a product of your overactive imagination.” She pulled the latex gloves from her hands one by one, letting them snap as they were removed. “You got this?”

Burnham only spared her a glance as he started to assess his patient. His patient. Not hers anymore. “I got it.” Dipshit he may be, but Burnham was a decent doc. If he said he had it, he had it.

“Great,” Lauren said, and looked down, remembering that faint pain in her knees probably meant she needed sutures. “Because this doctor is
out
.” She pushed through the swinging doors before Burnham could say anything to that. She paused in the white tile hallway, looking down the path straight ahead, staring off into the far distance of the corridor. “Good luck, Deputy,” she said, and started toward the locker room. After she cleaned up she’d have to find a ride back to Midian. And Molly.

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