Read Praying for Sleep Online

Authors: Jeffery Deaver

Tags: #Mystery, #Fiction, #Suspense, #Thriller, #General, #Thrillers, #Mystery & Detective, #Suspense Fiction, #Mystery Fiction, #Psychological, #Mentally ill offenders, #Murderers

Praying for Sleep (15 page)

BOOK: Praying for Sleep
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10

"Freeze!"

"All right, don't you move!"

For the love of Mary, Trenton Heck thought, his legs weakening in shock, what's happening here?

The madman, lying on the ground in front of the three lawmen, was shrieking like a bluejay. He suddenly split clean in two, half of him leaping into the air, white as death.

What is going on here? Heck trained the flashlight on the part of the madman that remained on the ground — the part that was now grasping about for something to pull over her ample breasts.

"Shit, son of a bitch!" the man's upper half shouted in an edgy tenor. "What the hell you think you're doing?"

The Boy started laughing first then Fennel joined in and, if Heck hadn't been so upset at losing his reward money, he'd have laughed too. The sight of the skinny man, searching desperately for his shorts, the long condom whipping back and forth as it dangled from his quickly shrunk member... Well, it was the funniest thing Heck had seen for a month of Sundays.

"Don't hurt me," the woman wailed.

"Son of a bitch," the skinny man growled once more. Heck's humor returned and he whistled the "Dueling Banjos" tune from Deliverance.

In a Kentucky-mountain voice Charlie Fennel said, "Naw, I want him. He's a purty one."

"Sooo-eee," Heck called. "Here, piggy, piggy, piggy!"

The woman wailed again.

"Oh, shit..." The young man fumbled with his pants.

"Calm down now." Fennel shone the light on his badge. "We're state troopers."

"That wasn't funny, I don't care who y'all are. She wanted to do it. She picked me up at that diner up the road. It was her idea."

The woman had calmed in proportion to the amount of clothing she'd pulled on. "My idea? I'll thank you not to make me sound cheap."

"I didn't want —"

"That's your all's business," Fennel said, "but it's our business you've had a hitchhiker on the back of your rig for the past ten miles. An escapee."

Heck too understood that this is what had happened and he was angry at himself for not thinking of it sooner. Hrubek had clung to the back bumper guard or loading platform of the truck. That was why the scent had been so weak, and why it had never wavered from the road.

"Jesus, that fellow at the truck stop in Watertown? The big guy? Oh, my everloving Lord!"

"You're that truck driver?" Heck asked. "He asked you about going to Boston?"

"Shitabrick, maybe he's still on the rig!"

But the Boy had already circled around and checked out the truck's roof and undercarriage. "He's not here, nope. And the back's padlocked. He must've took off into the fields when the truck stopped."

"Oh, Jesus," the driver whispered reverently, "he's a killer, ain't he? Oh, Jesus, Jesus..."

The woman had started crying again. "This is the last time, I swear. Never again."

Fennel asked how long the driver had been there.

"Fifteen minutes, I'd guess."

"You love bunnies hear anything?"

"Nothing, not a single thing," the driver said, eager to please.

"I didn't hear anything either," the woman replied, sniffling, "and I don't like your, you know, attitude."

"Uhn," Fennel responded, then said to the young man, who was buttoning up his shirt, "Now I suggest you get back in that rig and take this lady home and get on your way."

"Take her home? Forget about it."

"You prick," she snapped. "You damn well better."

"I think you ought to do that, son," Heck said.

"Okay. If she don't live too far from here. I've got a load of auto parts I got to get to Bangor by —"

"You prick."

Fennel had checked the bushes around the semi. "No sign of him," he called.

"Well, with the sound these two were making," Heck said, chuckling, "I'd run too. Well, let's get on with it. He can't be more than a half mile from here. We should —"

The Boy said, "Uh, Trenton, I think there's a problem."

Heck looked up to see the young trooper pointing at a small sign that in their silent approach they'd passed but not noticed. Its back was to Heck and Fennel. They strode to it, turned and read.

Welcome to Massachusetts

Heck looked at the scripty green letters and wondered why anybody'd waste a nicely painted sign here on this dim country road, home of madmen, horny truck drivers and loose waitresses. He sighed and looked at Fennel.

"Sorry, Trenton."

"Come on, Charlie."

"We got no jurisdiction here."

"Why, he isn't but a half mile away! He could be two hundred yards from us right now. Hell, he could be watching us from one of those trees over there."

"The law's the law, Trenton. We need to get the Mass troopers in."

"I say let's just go get him."

"We can't cross the state line."

"Hot pursuit," Heck said.

"Won't work. He ain't a felon. Adler said that Hrubek didn't kill that fellow was in the body bag. It was suicide."

"Come on, Charlie."

"If he ain't so crazy — and it looks like maybe he ain't — and we nab him in Massachusetts, he might sue us for assault or kidnapping. And he could damn well win."

"Not if we get our stories straight."

"Lie, you're saying."

Heck didn't speak for a moment. "All we do is we find him and bring him back. That'd be that."

" Trenton, did you ever falsify a case report?"

"No."

"You ever perjure yourself on the stand?"

"You know I never did."

"Well, you're not wearing a badge now and I know you feel different about those of us who are. But the fact is, we just can't stroll over state lines."

Rising through Heck's prominent anger now was a sudden understanding — that the interest Charlie Fennel and the young trooper had in the search was this: to do their job. Oh, they'd give the pursuit of Michael Hrubek 110 percent and they'd bust their balls and put in all sorts of god-awful overtime and even risk their life. But for that one purpose only: to do their job.

Leaving the jurisdiction wasn't their job.

"I'm sorry, Trenton."

"Didn't any of us notify the Mass troopers before," Heck said. "It'll take 'em a half hour to get the first cars here. Maybe more. If he hops another ride he'll be long, long gone by then."

"Then that's what'll happen," Fennel said. "That's the way it is... I know what the money means to you."

Heck stood with his hands on his narrow hips, looking at the sign for a few moments. Then he nodded slowly. "Let's don't have words over it. You gotta do what you think's right, Charlie."

"I'm pretty sorry about this, Trenton."

"Okay. No hard feelings." He walked back to Emil. "If you two'll excuse us."

"No, Trenton," Fennel said in a firm monotone.

Heck ignored Fennel and continued walking to where Emil was loose-tied to a forsythia whip.

"Trenton..."

"What?" Heck's voice bristled as he turned.

"I can't let you go by yourself either."

"Don't ride me, Charlie. Just don't do it."

"By yourself? You're a civilian. You couldn't argue hot pursuit even if he was a felon. You cross that line, it's kidnapping for sure. You could get yourself into a real fix."

"And what if he kills somebody else? You're happy just to let him go."

"There are rules for how this works and I'm going to stick to 'em. And I'm going to see that you do too."

"You're saying you'd stop me?" Heck spat out. "Use that gun? Use that fancy departmental Glock of yours?"

Fennel was clearly stung by this but he received no apology from Heck, whose fists were balled at his side, as if spoiling for a schoolyard fight.

"Don't be stupid, Trenton," Fennel said kindly. "Think about it. That Dr. Adler's a peckerhead to start with. You think he's going to pay you a penny of reward, you snag his boy out of state? You know he'll cheat you if he can. And what if some pansy civil-liberties lawyer gets a hold of you for kidnapping some poor retard. Bang, your ass is hung out to dry."

It wouldn't have hurt so bad, Heck knew, if they hadn't been so close — if he'd gotten a notice that Hrubek was, say, in Florida or Toronto. But they were so damn close... Trenton Heck glanced at Fennel then gazed across the empty fields, which seemed white, as if dusted with snow or lime. He saw in the vague, indiscernible distance the shape of a man's back, crouching low as he ran. But as Heck's eyes squinted the back became a shrub and he understood that he was seeing only what his imagination had created.

Without a word to the two men Heck untied his hound and slipped off the harness, replacing it with the jangling ID collar. He said, "Come," and returned to the squad to wait for the others, Emil trotting along beside.

They didn't notice him for a full minute so he spent that time looking around the shabby office — the cheap desk, vibrating fluorescent light, the carpet of shocking green, books with torn jackets or no jackets at all, stacks of recycled manilla folders, the shoddy walls.

Owen Atcheson was himself a homeowner and handy with tools. He recognized that the paneling came from cheap store and was mounted by cheaper labor. The carpet was stained and the windows were streaked with grease though Owen also observed that the glass in the frames holding the doctor's diplomas was shiny as diamond.

"Excuse me."

The men turned. The one in uniform — this would be Haversham, the captain, the
good man
— pivoted on the heels of his short boots. The other one — whose office this was, a sandy-haired man of about fifty — seemed to have had only two hours of a much-needed sleep. Still, he had keen eyes, which now tersely examined his visitor.

Owen introduced himself then asked, "You're Dr. Adler?"

"I am," said the hospital director, neither polite nor contrary. "What can I do for you?"

The trooper, whose eyes suggested that he remembered the name, surveyed Owen's clothing.

"I live in Ridgeton. It's west of here about —"

"Yes. Ridgeton. I know where it is."

"I'm here about Michael Hrubek."

Adler's eyes flashed with brief alarm. "How'd you find out that he's wandered away?"

"Wandered away?" Owen asked wryly.

"Who exactly are you?"

The trooper spoke up. "It's your wife... ?"

"That's right."

Adler nodded. "The woman at the trial? That sheriff called about her a while ago. Some letter Hrubek sent." The doctor squinted, wondering, it seemed, where Owen might fit in the zodiac of the evening.

"You haven't caught him yet?"

"Not quite. You really don't have anything to worry about."

"No? That was a pretty frightening letter your patient sent my wife."

"Well, as I think we explained" — his gaze incorporated Haversham — "to your sheriff, Hrubek is a paranoid schizophrenic. What they write is usually meaningless. There's nothing for you to wor —"

"Usually meaningless? Then not always. I see. Don't you think there's something to it if he threatened my wife at the trial, then wrote this letter a few months back and here he goes and escapes?"

Adler said, "It's not really your concern, Mr. Atcheson. And we're really quite busy —"

"My wife's safety is my concern." Owen glanced at the doctor's left hand. "It's a man's job to look after his wife. Don't you look after yours?" He noticed with some pleasure that Adler had in this short time grown to dislike him. "Tell me why there are only four men in the search party."

The hospital director's front teeth danced together briefly with several short taps. "The men after him're experienced dog-trackers. More efficient than a dozen troopers just wandering around in the dark."

"He's in Watertown?"

"He was. He seems to be going north. He is going north, I should say."

From outside, the sound of hammering boomed. Owen recalled that entering the hospital grounds he'd seen workmen carrying sheets of plywood toward large plate-glass windows in what seemed to be a cafeteria.

"Have they actually spotted him?" Owen asked curtly, and watched the doctor's dislike become active hatred. But Owen was a lawyer; he was used to this.

"I don't think so," Adler said. "But they're very close."

Owen believed posture was a man's most important attribute. He could have hair or no hair, be shaven or stubbled, tall or short, but if he stood up straight he was! respected. Now, at attention, he stared down this doctor, who may have believed that Hrubek was harmless but on the other hand was here late on Sunday, looking like death itself, with an officer of the state police at his side.

He asked, "He escaped in Stinson?"

Dr. Adler glanced at the far ceiling. He nodded impatiently toward Haversham, who strode to the desk and with a capped Bic pen touched a location on the map. "Here's why your wife's got nothing to worry about. We're tracking him here." He touched a spot near the intersection of Routes 236 and 118. "He escaped..." The doctor's eyes bored into Haversham at this choice of word. The captain paused then continued. "He wandered off here, just over the Stinson line."

"And how did he get to Stinson?"

Adler plucked a sentence from inventory and responded quickly, "There was a mix-up. He took another patient's place in a transport van."

Haversham took a moment to detach his gaze from the hospital director's serene face and continued, "Then he eluded two orderlies here. In Watertown, here, he asked a driver for a ride to Boston. Oh, and he dropped a map of: Boston while he was running. He's on Route 118 now."

"Boston? What kind of lead does he have?"

"Just a half hour. And our people are gaining fast. We should have him within twenty minutes."

"Now, if you'll excuse us," Adler said, "we've got some work to do."

Owen had the pleasure of staring the troubled man down once more and said to the state trooper, "I hope you'll do my wife and me the courtesy of keeping the Ridgeton sheriff informed about what's happening here."

"I'll do that, sure."

Nodding to the trooper and ignoring Adler, Owen left the office. He was walking down the dank, murky corridor when the captain stepped into the hall and caught up with him.

BOOK: Praying for Sleep
4.19Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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