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Authors: John Sandford

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BOOK: Shock Wave
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She said, “Yes, I do.”
He held up a finger again and wrote:
You have temporarily lost your hearing because of the blast
. Another page:
You have many little cuts from glass fragments.
Turned the page:
Your other eyelid is badly cut, but not the eye itself.
Another page:
Your vision should be fine.
Another:
You also suffered a minor concussion and perhaps other impact injuries.
Finally:
Your vital signs are excellent.
“What time is it?” she asked. The light in the room looked odd.
5 o'clock. You've been coming and going for almost 8 hours. That's the concussion.
There was some more back-and-forth, and finally she asked, “Was it a gas leak?”
The doctor wrote:
The police believe it was a bomb. They want to talk to you as soon as you are able.
“What about Jelly? She was in the room with me.”
The doctor, his expression grim, wrote:
I'm sorry. She wasn't as lucky as you.
 
 
MORE OR LESS
the same thing happened all over again, three weeks later and four hundred and fifty miles to the west, in Butternut Falls, Minnesota. Gilbert Kingsley, the construction superintendent, and Mike Sullivan, a civil engineer, arrived early Monday morning at the construction trailer at a new PyeMart site just inside the Butternut Falls city limits.
Kingsley, unfortunately for him, had the key, and walked up the metal steps to the trailer door, while Sullivan yawned into the back of his hand three steps below. Kingsley turned and said, “If we can get the grade—”
He was rudely interrupted by the bomb. Parts of the top half of Kingsley's body were blown right back over Sullivan's head, while the lower half, and what was left of the top, plastered itself to Sullivan and knocked him flat.
Sullivan sat up, then rolled onto his hands and knees, and then pushed up to his knees and scraped blood and flesh from his eyes. He saw a man running toward him from the crew's parking area, and off to his left, a round thing that he realized had Kingsley's face on it, and he started retching, and turned and saw more people running....
He couldn't hear a thing, and never again could hear very well.
But like Sally Humboldt, he was alive to tell the tale.
 
 
THE ATF—ITS FULL NAME,
seldom used, was the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives—instantly got involved. An ATF supervisor in Washington called the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension and asked for a local liaison in Butternut Falls.
The request got booted around, and at an afternoon meeting at BCA headquarters in St. Paul, Lucas Davenport, a senior agent, said, “Let's send that fuckin' Flowers up there. He hasn't done anything for us lately.”
“He's off today,” somebody said.
Davenport said, “So what?”
2
V
IRGIL FLOWERS WAS SITTING
on a bale of hay on a jacked-up snowmobile trailer behind Bob's Bad Boy Barbeque & Bar in North Mankato, Minnesota, watching four Minnesota farm girls duke it out in the semifinals of the 5B's Third International Beach Volleyball Tournament.
The contestants were not the skinny, sun-blasted beach-blanketbingo chicks who played in places like Venice Beach, or down below the bluffs at Laguna and La Jolla. Not at all. These women were white as paper in January, six-three and six-four, and ran close to two hundred pounds each, in their plus-sized bikinis. They'd spent the early parts of their lives carrying heifers around barnyards, and jumping up and down from haylofts; they could get up in the
air
.
Well, somewhat.
And when they spiked the ball, the ball didn't just amble across the net like a balloon; the ball
shrieked
. And the guys watching, with their beers, didn't call out sissy stuff like,
Good one!
or
No way!
They moaned:
Whoa, doggy!
and “Let that ball
live
. Have
mercy
!”
Of course, they were mostly dead drunk.
 
 
SITTING THERE IN THE MIXED ODORS
of sawdust and wet sand, sweaty female flesh and beer, Virgil thought the world felt perfect. If it needed anything at all, nose-wise, it'd be a whiff of two-stroke oil-and-gas mixture from a twenty-five-horse outboard. That'd be heaven.
Johnson Johnson, sitting on the next bale over, leaned toward Virgil, his forehead damp with beer sweat, and said, “I'm going for it. She wants me.”
“She
does
want you,” Virgil agreed. They both looked at one of the bigger women on the sand; she'd been sneaking glances at Johnson. “But you're gonna be helpless putty in her hands, man. Whatever she wants to do, you're gonna have to do, or she'll pull your arms off.”
“I'll take the chance of that,” Johnson said. “I can handle it.” He was a dark-complected man, heavily muscled, like a guy who moved timber around—which he did. Johnson ran a custom sawmill in the hardwood hills of southeast Minnesota. He'd taken his T-shirt off so the girls could see his tattoos: a screaming eagle on one arm, its mouth open, carrying a ribbon that said not
E Pluribus Unum
, but
Bite Me
; and on the other arm, an outboard motor schematic, with the name “Johnson Johnson” proudly scrawled on its cowling.
“Personally, I'd say your chances of handling it are slim and none, and slim is outa town,” Virgil said. “She's gonna eat you alive. But you got no choice. The honor of the Johnsons is at stake. The
honor
of the Johnsons.”
Virgil was thinner, taller, and fairer, with blond surfer-boy hair curling down over his ears and falling onto the back of his neck. He was wearing aviator sunglasses, a pink Freelance Whales T-shirt, faded jeans, and sandals.
They were just coming up to game point when his cell phone rang, playing the opening bars of Nouvelle Vague's “Ever Fallen in Love.” He took the phone out of his pocket, looked at it, and carefully slipped it back in his pocket. It stopped after four bars, then started again a minute later.
“Work?” Johnson asked.
“Looks like,” Virgil said.
“But you're off.”
“That's true,” Virgil said. “Hang on here, while I go lock the thing in the truck.”
Johnson tipped the beer bottle toward him: “Good thinkin',” he said. And “Man, that's a lotta woman, right there.”
The woman hit the volleyball with a smack that sounded like a short-track race-car collision, and Virgil flinched. “Be right back,” he said.
As he walked down the side road to his truck, carefully stepping around the patches of sandburs, he was tempted to call Davenport. That would have been the right thing to do, he thought. But the day was hot, and the women, too, and the beer was cold and the world smelled so damn good on a great summer day. . . . And he was off.
The fact was, the only reason that Davenport would call was that somebody had gotten his or her ass murdered somewhere. Virgil was already late getting there—he was always the last to know—so another few hours wouldn't make any difference. The powers that be in St. Paul would want him to go anyway, because it'd look good.
He popped the door on the truck, dropped the phone on the front seat, locked the door, and went back to the 5B.
 
 
VIRGIL WAS BASED IN MANKATO,
Minnesota, two hours southwest of St. Paul, depending on road conditions and the thickness of the highway patrol. He routinely covered the southern part of the state. On non-routine cases, he'd be picked up by Davenport's team and moved to wherever Davenport thought he should go.
A couple of hours after Davenport first called, Virgil left Johnson at the 5B, romancing the volleyball player. Their attachment was such that Virgil would not be required to drive Johnson back to his truck, so he headed home, across the river into Mankato.
Once on the road, he picked up his phone and pushed the “call” button, and two seconds later, was talking to Davenport.
“We got a bomb early this morning,” Davenport said. “One killed, one injured, in Butternut Falls. We need you to get up there.”
“What's the deal?”
Davenport told him about the explosion and the casualties, and said that the ATF would be on the scene now, or shortly.
“I'll be on my way in an hour,” Virgil said. “Wasn't there another PyeMart bomb, killed somebody in Michigan a couple weeks back?”
“Yeah. Killed one, injured one. If it'd gone off twenty minutes later, it would have taken out the board of directors along with Pye himself,” Davenport said. “This guy is serious, whoever he is.”
“But if he started in Michigan, he could be a traveler. Unless we've got fingerprints or DNA.”
“We've got two things on that,” Davenport said. “The first thing is, the explosives are tagged by the manufacturer. The ATF has already identified the tags in the Michigan bomb as Pelex, which is TNT mixed with some other stuff, and is mostly used in quarries. In April, somebody cracked a quarry shed up by Cold Spring—that's about an hour northeast of Butternut Falls—and two boxes of Pelex were taken. Other than the theft in Cold Spring, the ATF doesn't have any other reports of Pelex theft in the last couple of years. So, the bomber's probably local.”
“Okay,” Virgil said. “What's the other thing?”
“Butternut is having a civil war over the PyeMart. People are saying the mayor and city council were bought, and the Department of Natural Resources is being sued by a trout-fishing group that says some trout stream is going to be hurt by the runoff. Lot of angry stuff going on. Over-the-top stuff. Threats.”
“There's runoff going into the Butternut? Man, that's not just a crime, that's a mortal sin,” Virgil said.
“Whatever,” Davenport said. “In any case, the DNR okayed their environmental impact statement. I guess they're already building the store.”
“What else?”
“That's all I got,” Davenport said. “Interesting case, though. I didn't want to take you away from your sheriff. . . .”
“Ah, she's out in LA, being a consultant,” Virgil said. “Having dinner with producers. Guys with suits like yours.”
“Sounds like the bloom has gone off the rose,” Davenport said.
“Maybe,” Virgil conceded.
“I can hear your heart breaking from here,” Davenport said. “Have a good time in Butternut.”
 
 
VIRGIL LIVED IN A SMALL
white house in Mankato, two bedrooms, one and a half baths, not far from the state university. He traveled a lot, and so was almost always ready to go. He told the old lady who lived next door that he'd be leaving again, asked her to keep an eye on the place, and gave her a six-pack of Leinie's for her trouble. He packed a week's clothes into his travel bag, mostly T-shirts and jeans, put a cased shotgun on the floor of his 4Runner, along with a couple boxes of 00 shells, and stuck his pistol in a custom gun safe under the passenger seat, along with two spare magazines and a box of 9-millimeter.
A quick Google check said that Butternut Falls would be two hours away. He printed out a map of the town, and while it was printing, turned the air-conditioning off, checked the doors to make sure they were locked, and turned on the alarm system. On the way out, he thought, with his last look, that the house looked lonely; too quiet, with dust motes floating in the sunlight over the kitchen sink. Nothing to disturb them. He needed . . . what? A wife? Kids? More insurance policies? Maybe a dog?
When the truck was loaded and the house secure, Virgil pulled out of the driveway into the street, reversed, and backed up in front of his boat, which had been parked on the other side of the driveway. His fishing gear was already aboard. But then, it was always aboard. After a quick look at the tires, he hitched up the trailer, folded up the trailer jack, and took off.
He got fifty feet, pulled over, jogged back to the garage, opened a locker, took out a pile of fly-fishing gear, including a vest, chest waders, rod case, and tackle box, and carried them back to the truck.
Better to have a fly rod and not need it, than to need a fly rod and not have it. He climbed back in the truck and took off again.
 
 
PACKING UP AND GETTING OUT
of town took an hour, just as he had told Davenport it would. The sun was still high in the sky, and he'd be in Butternut well before sundown, he thought. The longest day of the year was just around the corner, and those days, in Minnesota, were long.
And he thought a little about the sheriff out in LA, Lee Coakley. She was still warm enough on the telephone, but she'd been infected by show business. She'd gone out as a consultant on a made-for-TV movie, based on one of her cases, and had been asked to consult on another. And then another. Women cops were hot in the movies and on TV, and there was work to be had. Her kids liked it out there, the whole surfer thing. Just yesterday, she'd had lunch in Malibu . . .
Once you'd seen Malibu, would you come back to Minnesota? To the Butternut Falls of the world? To Butternut cops?
“Ah, poop,” Virgil said out loud, his heart cracked, if not yet broken.
 
 
VIRGIL TOOK U.S. 14
out of town, back through North Mankato and past the 5B, resisting the temptation to stop and see if Johnson Johnson was still alive. He went through the town of New Ulm, which once was—and maybe still was—the most ethnically homogeneous town in the nation, being 99 percent German; then took State 15 north to U.S. 212, and 212 west past Buffalo Lake, Hector, Bird Island, and Olivia, then U.S. 71 north into Butternut Falls.
BOOK: Shock Wave
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