11
The escape didn't go so well.
Number one: the getaway car, a new rental Chevy, had an overheating problem, which put the three hoods that Rosamund had hired fifteen minutes late getting to the road parallel to the soybean field.
Number two: he himself had come down with a cold and sore throat that made him miserably ill the night before the planned escape. Even worse, he'd had an impossible time sleeping, waking up every fifteen minutes with an image of the guards shooting him dead. He was scared. So many things could go wrong with this kind of setup.
Number three: one of the guards was a new guy and a real cowboy to boot, all chewing tobacco and long, lazy drawl and mean bronc-buster soul, eager as hell to kill somebody so he'd have a good story when he played bumper pool down to one of the nearby taverns.
Given all these problems, the escape went about as you'd expect.
The Chevy appeared, driving slow.
He sees it, starts drifting toward the highway.
The cowboy's way the hell down the row, shouldn't be any trouble.
But as soon as he cuts and runs, heading for the highway, the cowboy sees him and comes running.
The cowboy starts shooting.
Sounds like WWIII.
All he can do, running toward the highway, is weave left and weave right as he runs, hoping he's eluding the bullets.
Reaches the highway and trips.
Trips.
Down on his hands and knees.
Three guys in ski masks are now standing in the middle of the highway, returning the cowboy' s fire.
He's a little outgunned, the cowboy, with his CAR 15. They've got semiautomatic weapons.
Not until he crawls halfway across the highway, the air exploding with gunfire and gunsmoke and cursing, does he realize he's been wounded.
That's why he tripped.
He's bleeding badly.
God, is he going to make it?
Has all this been in vain?
Goddamn cowboy, anyway. Why do they have to hire goons like that for prison guards?
And then he smiles: yeah, why don't they hire some real nice understanding liberal hand-wringers as prison guards?
Wouldn't that be nice?
He' s in the backseat now, thinking all these things, blood all over him now, consciousness waning quickly, laughing to himself about his notion of hiring liberal hand-wringers.
And then he's pissing his pants.
And then he's crying.
And then he's freezing his ass off.
Never actually heard his teeth chatter before, but that's exactly what they're doing now.
In prison one day, a would-be intellectual inmate said to him, "You know, we're nothing more than blood and bones and shit and piss and come. Not one thing more."
He never understood what the hell the guy was talking about.
Till now.
When he could feel various parts of his system shutting down, as if he were some vast complex engine that was ceasing to function.
Aw, hell. Please not now. Not after Rosamund worked so hard to put this together.
The three guys pile into the car, then.
Chevy hauls ass away, squealing rubber and two or three metal-bang shots into the trunk of the car.
"You goddamn idiot," one of the guys says, hysterical, he's hysterical, "you killed two guards. All we was supposed to do was cover him so he could make a break for it."
"We just gotta stay cool," one of the other three in the front seat said.
"Yeah," said a third voice, "stay cool. Use our heads and not panic."
"They're gonna fry us for killin' a guard like that," the hysterical one said. "You just wait and see."
But the talk fades as he plummets deeper into the darkness of pain and blood loss and the breakdown of his human engine.
Deeper . . .
12
"Are you sure you're up?"
"I'm sure."
"I can always call back."
"No, Sheila, really, this is fine."
"I found out some things about Tolliver."
"I'm listening."
Sunlight traced the edge of the motel-room curtains. I'd set my travel alarm, but dimly remember stomping it into silence with the heel of my hand and then going back to sleep.
But the intrepid Sheila Kelly was now going to make sure that I was awake for sure.
"You ready?"
"I'm ready."
"He nearly went broke in 1963. He had been CEO of his father's trucking business for three years, and the whole thing came tumbling down."
"But he made it?"
"He'd fired a man named Farraday, a man who'd always been his father's right-hand man. You know how it is with young CEOs, they don't want any reminder of the previous regime."
"You think Farraday's being fired hurt the company?"
"No doubt about it. Farraday went all the way back to the beginning of the trucking industry, back when the Teamsters were still blowing up trucks that weren't registered to union members. This Farraday knew all the routes and all the federal regulations, and how to make money on what they call short hauls. In other words, he was a very important guy."
"And Junior fired him?"
"Right. But then Junior must have had a religious conversion because he hired him back at three times the salary."
"Wow."
"He also gave him ten percent of the net profits per annum."
"Sounds like Farraday had really been mad about being canned."
"Very, very angry. But since he now had ten percent of the company, he made it work again. He stayed there until he died of lymphatic cancer in 1979. By then, Junior had figured out how to run things himself. He was making a lot of money again."
"How about personal life?"
"A widower. His wife died in a sanitarium, in 1983."
"A mental hospital?"
"No. Some kind of fancy drying-out place for the idle rich. You know, people like you."
"What was her name?"
"Kendra. She was a runway model in Chicago when Tolliver married her in 1958."
"Any children?"
"One. A boy named Craig."
"Tolliver said he's dead."
"He is. And guess how he died?"
"How?"
"In a prison escape."
"Tolliver had a son who was in prison?"
"Second-degree murder. Really cut up this sixteen-year-old girl. They found what was left of her in chunks and pieces buried next to a river. Tolliver had to use all his money and influence to get the charge reduced to second-degree."
"He didn't try insanity?"
"Oh, he tried, but the district attorney wouldn't go for it. Or did I mention this wasn't Tolliver's home state? He might be important in Iowa, but not in Illinois. Anyway, Tolliver tried to get Craig declared insane and put in a state mental hospital, but the DA wasn't buying, and neither was the judge or jury. Tolliver's people finally had to plead him guilty of second-degree."
"How long was he in before he escaped?"
"Three-and-a-half years. But there's something else."
"What?"
"You remember that word you asked me about, 'Conmarck'?"
"Right."
"That's the name of the town where the prison is located. It's in Illinois."
"Wow. Then Vic knew something about the escape."
"Vic?"
"This Nora I told you about?"
"The one who claimed to be Tolliver's daughter?"
"Right. She had this assistant named Vic. He's the one who used the word."
"Well, Conmarck was where Craig died, anyway. Three guys were supposed to cover him while he ran from a soybean field, but one of them killed a guard. Craig was shot in the crossfire. He died in the backseat of the getaway car. His three friends died a few miles later in a shootout with a highway patrol helicopter."
"So there's a connection between Nora and Vic and Tolliver after all."
"What?"
"Just thinking out loud, Sheila. Sorry. You've really earned your money."
"I just hope it helps."
"It helps a lot. Just send me the bill to my Charlesville address."
"If you need something else, let me know."
"I will, Sheila, and thanks again."
13
"And here's the old biplane that Curtis Lefler built," Herb Carson said an hour-and-a-half later, as he finished giving us the tour of his aviation museum.
Curtis Lefler was another Iowa flying legend, having built this and half-a-dozen pioneering airplanes in his father's garage.
So far this morning, we'd seen several planes, including a very rare Whitey Sport with its 55-horsepower LeBlond engine, but this was the one I fancied.
Seeing it there in the sparkling sunlight, with a cloudless blue sky like this one, recalled the days of the barnstormers, men and women (there were a lot more female barnstormers than is commonly believed) who bought used WWI planes from the U.S. Government then went all over the countryside putting on shows at carnivals and county fairs, or putting down in a field and taking people for a ride for $3.75 a head.
"She's a beauty, isn't she?" Herb said. He looked older than the last time I'd seen him, and that was a sad realization. I was at the age when most of my heroes were dying on me, Herb among them. In his blue turtleneck and jeans, his white hair burred military-style, his skinny frame bent now with age, he looked like the last of the barnstormers surveying a world that no longer knew what to do with him.
"She sure is a beauty," Jane Avery said, then turned back to me. "Is this the biplane we're going up in?"
"It sure is."
The plane before us was an old Travel Air, one of the first biplanes used by adventurous businessmen back in the 1920s. With a double cockpit and red paint, it still looked jaunty all these years later.
"Great," she said.
Herb grinned. "Always like to see somebody respond to a baby like this one. Does my old heart good. You get ready. I'll go prop her."
"Great," I said.
I looked at Jane. "You all right?"
She shrugged. "Just a little nervous."
"We'll be fine."
"I know. It's just—"
I smiled, leaned in and touched her hand. "Everybody gets nervous. That's part of the whole process."
She grinned, "You're really a damn nice guy, you know that? Most of the time, anyway."
We stood next to the plane. It smelled of sunlight and oil and the worn leather interior.
"Bet you wish you lived back then," Jane said. "With the barnstormers."
"I sure do."
"I can see you doing that, actually. There's something old-fashioned about you." She squinted at me in the sunlight. "That's why it's so hard to imagine you working for the FBI. All that cloak and dagger."
"Believe it or not, it's something I believe in. That's why I did it."
We walked around the plane, taking another close look, two people in a field in the middle of Iowa on a lovely spring day.
For the next twenty minutes, we gave her a complete mechanical checkup, Herb and I, and then the three of us pushed her out to the small patch of runway, and Jane and I climbed in.
"Wish I was going along," Herb shouted, just before he took the propeller and rotated it so that we could get the oil circulated through the engine.
While he was doing that, I was turning on the magneto, which is similar to popping the clutch in a car. Then Jane and I pulled down our goggles.
The plane roared into being, Jane and I waved good-bye, and then I proceeded to do all the subtle things an old craft like this demands.
Then we were airborne.
Only from the air can you appreciate how right Grant Wood was the way he painted Iowa, the rolling countryside, the checkerboard topography.
"This is great!" Jane shouted.
"Not scared?"
"Not at all!"
I gave her the grand tour, skimming low along a winding blue river, tracking between two looming clay cliffs, doing a modified roll and then following a forest of pine and hardwood that stretched for miles.
We were up high enough—but not too high—to enjoy the benefits of temperature inversions which, on a day like this one, kept the temp right at 60.
"Do another roll!" she shouted. "That was great!"
I'd made a convert, and to celebrate that fact, I did another roll. People always worry about falling out but between the strap you wear and centrifugal force, you're actually pretty safe.
I was just taking her down lower when I realized where we were, just above the Brindle farm where the bodies of Nora and Vic had been discovered.
I also noticed something else.
A blue four-door Toyota sedan just pulling out of the barn in back.
It moved quickly down the gravel drive and out to the gravel road and headed quickly back to town.
I recognized the car, of course. It had belonged to Sam Lodge.
I had a good idea who was driving it now.
"How about one more roll?" Jane shouted, seeming not to make anything special of the blue Toyota.
"You're crazy!" I laughed.
And then decided to put the plane into the kind of roll that both of us would remember for a long time.
This time, Jane even screamed a little bit, the way boys and girls do at county fairs their first time up on the Ferris wheel.
After saying good-bye to Herb and walking back to our respective cars, Jane said, "Did you see that blue Toyota at the Brindle farm?"
I smiled. "I was hoping you didn't."
"Are we competing on this case?" She sounded angry.
I wanted to tell her everything, especially about Melissa McNally's being kidnapped, but I knew better.
"No," I said. "We're not competing."
She stared at me for a long time. "This is kind of a confusing situation. And it's my fault. Because I'm the one who's let it become confusing."
"What's confusing about it?"
"I want to take you down to the station and make you tell me everything you know."
"That's natural enough. You're the chief of police."
"But I also want to invite you over for another meal tonight. Maybe some tacos or something. On me."
"Well, why don't I come over about eight and we'll talk about how confusing everything is?"
"I don't know, Robert. I just don't know."
We stood there and looked at each other for a time. There was nothing to say, and I knew better than to try and touch her in any way.
I gave her a little nod, got in my car, and drove away.