He pushed junk out of the way of the outside door and worked at getting the key in the lock. Out in the lab, Charley Tai was cranking up the vacuum now, providing cover noise. The janitor had yet to make the grisly discovery that awaited him.
Ray paused at the door. On impulse, he stepped to the Brenda’s terminal and typed a message to Agent Vasquez. With each keystroke he left a bloody fingerprint, but he figured it didn’t matter. He looked guilty as hell anyway.
Agent Vasquez - Shooter = Santa = Snowflake = Frosty = Ingles.
He hit the enter key and then unlocked the door. Behind him, he heard a shout of dismay and horror. He threw open the door and rushed out into the blinding sunlight.
. . . 35 Hours and Counting . . .
Spurlock awakened earlier than usual. He found himself sprawled across the front seats of the van. His back ached and he groaned when he tried to get up.
The Colt 45 malt liquor bottle slid from his grasp and rattled on the floor of the van. The sound shattered his glassed-over mind. He moaned and lay back, hurting in a hundred places. The big forty-ounce bottles had done their job well, all three of them. At two bucks each on special, they had to be one of the cheapest drunks in town. He was sick. Like the guns they were named after, the Colts had blown fist-sized chunks out of his brain. Last night, this had been a pleasant thing, the first real relief from the withdrawal symptoms that had begun ravaging his body in earnest.
Now, however, he regretted everything. He thought to himself that, ironically, he would have rather worked an honest month at an honest job for the money that he had yet to squeeze out of this mess. He chuckled and groaned again. He farted wetly, then heard the kid stir in his cage.
“You’ve got a surprise ride waiting for you today, punk,” he told the kid. “Just as soon as I’m able to move, that is.”
After dozing for perhaps another ten minutes, Spurlock managed to rouse himself again. He had to either get up or piss his pants. There had been mornings past when he had taken the latter option, but not today. Today, he needed to do slightly better than that. Resolved to facing the sun that he knew blazed just outside, he kicked open the van door and staggered out into the orchard.
He pissed on a black-trunked almond tree and then doubled over. His belly felt tight and sick. His gut gave him a wrenching pain that couldn’t be relieved by urination alone. Without hesitating, he shoved a filthy finger down his throat and gagged. The foamy contents of his stomach splattered the dirt.
“Oh shit,” he slurred and fell back against the van. He panted for a time, then felt better. It was time to get moving.
He struggled back into the driver’s seat and fired up the engine. At least the bitch still started properly. In fact, if it wasn’t for the billowing white smoke he might have tried to beat it to death all the way to San Francisco. But he knew a cop would have gotten him before he made it as far as Fairfield. So, the van had to go.
Seen from the edge the hole was incredibly deep. He had tried to dig a ramp down into it, but that had taken more time, and in the heat of the night and he had skimped. All he had wanted last night was to get to those three bottles of amber bliss. Now, as he drove the shaking machine to the brink, he was daunted.
“Holy shit, we’re in for a ride, kid,” he said aloud. On impulse, he threw open the curtains that divided the front seats from the cargo section. He looked over his shoulder and leered at the kid in the cage. He noted the kid’s big, hungry eyes and the fingers which gripped the bars. Those fingers should not be loose. The kid had untied himself.
“So, you little fuck, you got loose last night, eh?” shouted Spurlock. “Well, you won’t find it so easy to slip out of this one!”
With that, he eased the van into drive and they rumbled, shook and dipped over the edge.
“Next stop, Hell’s Kitchen!” roared Spurlock.
The black earth of the orchard swallowed the van whole. Only a foul cloud of exhaust was left behind. It lay in a spreading mass on the floor of the orchard like the devil’s own stinking breath.
Inside his tiny cage, Justin began to scream.
. . . 34 Hours and Counting . . .
“Damn,” said Agent Vasquez. That was all she could think to say.
“I know, I didn’t want to think it was all him, either,” said Johansen.
Vasquez glanced up at him then turned back to the murder scene. She frowned. She knew Johansen was lying for her sake, he had always counted Vance as the sole perpetrator. Still, she couldn’t find it in herself to be angry with him for patronizing her a bit. When faced with death, in all its ignominy, she always found it difficult to be angry with anyone who was on her side. Usually, she felt closer to them. Somehow, the working relationship with a partner helped to reassure her that she was still alive, that death wasn’t close at hand.
She felt, rather than saw, Johansen raise his big hand up. It hovered for perhaps two seconds over her shoulder. He wasn’t sure, she knew, if he should comfort her or not. She tensed up, but tried not to show that she knew the hand was there. She herself wasn’t even sure how she would react if he did touch her. It wasn’t something they normally did. But then, they didn’t normally work cases like this. The best thing about working the clean stuff, like electronic crimes, was that you didn’t have to face blood and death. Usually, the worst one saw of humanity was something like Nog’s apartment.
Johansen withdrew his hand. She breathed deeply, realizing only then that she had been holding her breath. The spell was broken.
“Vance has just put himself on the Most Wanted list,” said Vasquez. She stepped over the corpse and away from her partner. She moved about the scene, looking, but not disturbing things. “I’m putting him down as our number one suspect for the virus, his son’s disappearance and the murder of Brenda Hastings. What’s more, he’s now to be considered armed and dangerous. Do you agree?”
Johansen nodded. He flipped out his cell phone and made the call. Soon every squad car in Northern California would be getting the message.
Vasquez moved over to the terminal with the bloodstained keyboard. She checked the message on the screen. Santa?Frosty?She made sure her notes had every detail down, then shook her head. She would check it out, of course, but it seemed like the work of someone delusional, someone looking for clues that would erase the unthinkable truth.
“I guess Sarah Vance was right,” said Vasquez. “This case is all related.”
Johansen finished his call and nodded. “Just not the way she hoped it was.”
. . . 33 Hours and Counting . . .
It had taken Ray more than an hour to get from the campus to Brenda’s place. She lived on the outskirts of town, in one of the more recently developed areas of Davis. In Davis, that meant that the houses had been built in the sixties and seventies. Unlike most California towns, Davis carefully controlled and restricted its growth. The University and the kind of people who liked to live near it didn’t want the run-away strip-malls and cracker box land development that personified most of the Valley. Instead, the city council doled out building permits like scotsmen with rusty purses.
Under normal circumstances, Ray would have enjoyed the walk. The sky was clear, the delta breezes had returned, and it seemed like a perfect Spring day. As it was, his head rang and his legs felt like rubber crutches. Brenda’s dead eyes haunted his thoughts. The sights and sounds of Spring were lost on him.
Brenda’s car he had left in the parking lot. Driving her car around, he figured, wouldn’t be a very good idea anyway. It couldn’t but make his case harder if he was apprehended while driving the car of the woman he was accused of murdering. It was bad enough that he had the murder weapon shoved into the front pocket of his faded jeans. His only precaution had been to pull out his plaid shirt so that the tails hung down over the gun butt.
He reached Bovine and took a left turn onto Starling Lane. Overhead, the sun tried to hurt him. The morning sun had that blue glare to it, not the softer yellows and oranges of the late afternoon that he would have greatly preferred. Like a thousand hung-over people that day, he swore the sun was brighter and crueler first thing in the morning than any other time of the day. For him, of course, it wasn’t a hang-over but a concussion that tortured his skull. All in all, he thought he would have preferred the hang-over.
He had decided to go by Brenda’s on the way to Ingle’s place, which was out in the country beyond the city limits to the north. He wanted to go by Brenda’s on a hunch. Sure, the police might be there, but he doubted they would stay too long. At least, he hoped they wouldn’t. What he hoped to do was beat the police and run into Ingle’s. He was fairly sure that the bastard would try to plant something to further implicate him, the way he had planted disks related to the virus at his home. Maybe, just maybe, Ingle’s would be too smart for his own good this time. Maybe he would try a little too much finesse. Ray had always believed that the simplest plans were the best plans, and he was about to try and make the theory pay.
Besides his reasoning, he just didn’t know what else to do. He had identified the virus’ author and the man pulling the strings, but still had no clue as to Justin’s whereabouts. Except for one thing: Ingle’s knew the truth.
So, logically, Ingle’s knew he would come looking for him, and that Ray couldn’t afford to wait around. All he could hope was that Ingle’s expected him to drive straight to his quaint ranchette. He would be ready for that. But possibly, he wouldn’t be ready for a man on foot to visit Brenda’s. Ray’s only plan was to make fast, simple, unexpected moves from here on in.
He stopped at Raven Court. He looked down toward Brenda’s place. He saw no evidence of cops or Ingles. A few cars and people were about, mostly kids. It was Saturday, which meant that several children were out riding their bikes around in an endless circle at the end of the court. The rest were probably watching morning cartoons while their parents filled dishwashers and fired-up lawnmowers. It hurt him to see such a normal, painless neighborhood. It made him homesick.
Deciding not to stand there staring like a homeless drifter for too long, he walked across the court, but didn’t enter it. He went instead to the park at the end of Starling Lane. He crossed a line of chained cement posts and approached Brenda’s place from the park side. He had to count chimneys to make sure he had the right house.
Throwing caution to the wind, he vaulted the redwood fence. It hurt more than he thought it would. Ten years ago he would have sailed over it, but now, with his woozy head, it was all he could do to fall in a panting heap on the far side. His stomach went into the spin cycle on him, reminding him that he hadn’t eaten anything in more than twelve hours. He struggled up and checked the painful lump in his pocket. The gun was still there, and had yet to blow his nuts off by accident, a thought that now haunted him as he headed for the sliding glass door.
His mind felt as glassy as the door. Why was it that every California home built in the last century had at least one sliding glass door in the back? He wondered about it vaguely.
The slider was locked and had a broomstick in the track. Brenda had been security-conscious. A shitload of good it had done her last night, he thought.
He walked around the yard, checking the windows. He stopped when he got to the garage side door that led into the backyard. It was hanging open. Gouged wood showed where it had been forced open.
. . . 32 Hours and Counting . . .
There was someone inside the garage. Ray heard something go over, something big, like a box full of books, maybe. There was a whump, then a luffing, skittering sound. A muttered curse followed.
Taking a deep breath, Ray closed his eyes to the count of five, then pulled Ingles’ pistol out of his pocket. He half-hoped he would be forced to shoot the bastard, although he doubted that it would help his case any.
He stepped around the corner like a cop in any good crime movie. He stood with both hands on the gun, his legs spread apart. He had no more training with a gun than what he recalled from childhood, plinking endlessly at birds with his daisy. After the initial rush of victory, he had felt bad the few times he had actually hit one. He couldn’t help wondering at that moment how it would feel to kill a man.
The sight that greeted him was unexpected. Instead of cool, calm Ingles, his cigarette thrusting from his mouth, he saw Nog. Or rather, he saw Nog’s hindquarters. The man was doubled over, digging through boxes in the garage. There was an air of frantic energy about him that Ray had never seen before. He wore a striped tee-shirt, yellow rubber kitchen-gloves and a vast blue stretch of cloth that served him as shorts.
Brenda had always been something of a packrat. The garage, like much of her house, was stuffed with junk. Books, disks, dolls, paint cans, tools, broken furniture, garden implements and towering stacks of magazines were strewn about in wild profusion. Nog went through the disks more carefully, than the rest, but still, everything he touched was soon tossed aside as if in disgust.
Ray watched him dig for perhaps a minute. Every so often Nog lurched up and gazed about him, checking the window that gave a view of the front porch. He didn’t look directly behind him, however, and so missed Ray’s presence at the doorway. After a quick, furtive look around, he put his hand on his flabby back and moaned as if exhausted and strained. Then he doubled over again, rummaging through yet another box that he had pulled down from Brenda’s dusty shelves.