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Authors: Wen Spencer

Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #Action & Adventure, #General

Tainted Trail (28 page)

BOOK: Tainted Trail
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CHAPTER SIXTEEN

Pendleton, Oregon
Wednesday, September 1, 2004

If one thought about it, the Boy Scouts, with their “be prepared” motto, worked well with Max's paranoia. Every morning Ukiah and Max had stripped the hotel room of all their costly, high-tech equipment, loading it into the two cars in Max's belief that the cars were far more secure. They had left only suitcases, clothing, and toiletries behind.

Max decided that they would abandon everything at the hotel; while the police still searched for the Brodys and their known accomplices, unidentified Ontongard would be looking for Ukiah. If Ukiah and Max were lucky, they could slip out of Oregon unnoticed. If they were unlucky, the entire world might suffer.

After they woke at dawn, ate, and Ukiah absorbed back all his blood mice, Max made arrangements over the Internet, using his cover identity of John Schmid, buying five tickets instead of a telltale three in order to confuse anyone checking passenger lists at the Pendleton airport. Disconnecting his laptop from the Taurus's power, Max packed it away and scanned the campsite to make sure they were leaving nothing behind.

“I'm going to need at least a shirt,” Ukiah said, fingering the holes in his shirt, crusted with dead blood cells, reluctant to put it back on.

“We'll see if Sam has something.” Max handed his multi-pocketed vest to Ukiah.

Ukiah put on the vest and zipped it up against the morning chill. “We're going to see her?”

Max fished out the Blazer's keys and tossed them to Ukiah. “I'll get us down to the main road, and you can lead us to her place.”

Ukiah caught the keyring. They had discussed Ukiah saying good-bye to his newfound family and decided it would be too dangerous. It had become common knowledge that Ukiah was somehow related to the Kicking Deers and the Ontongard could be watching them. “Isn't it risky to see her? Everyone knows we've been working together.”

“You said that her place is fairly secure.”

“She said.”

Max allowed that difference with a lift of his shoulder. “I need to talk to her one last time. I'm trusting that she can shake anyone watching her.”

Although his voice was low, he said it with an intensity that surprised Ukiah, as if his need equaled something much greater than simple talk. Ukiah considered the times he had seen Max and Sam together, and realized, between the moments of desperation, Max had been happier than he had been for a long time. It was possible, while Ukiah wasn't paying attention, Max had fallen in love.

If that were the case, then there was no way Max would leave Pendleton without Sam. Perhaps the five tickets weren't all a ruse.

“Are you going to ask her to come back to Pittsburgh with us?”

“I think I want to marry her.”

“Really?”

Max laughed at his reaction and cuffed him. “Maybe. I don't know. Hell, I've known her for, what, a week? And I'm nearly ten years older than her. Indigo has nothing on me for cradle robbing.”

Ukiah wasn't sure what to say. He and Max worked well as partners. During the last few days, there had been moments where he felt he was the one that was intruding, not Sam. Ukiah hadn't dwelled on it, because in the back of his
mind he knew that he and Max would go home, and things would go back to normal.

But if Sam moved to Pittsburgh, then he and Max might never be the same again. “She would be a full partner?”

Max shook his head. “I'll offer her a job and moving expenses. I can't expect her to come to Pittsburgh without at least a job. No strings attached. No expectations. If she and I don't work out—well, we need another investigator anyhow.” Max paused, and then looked anxiously to Ukiah. “That is, if you agree to it. You're full partner, you have an equal say in her working at the agency.”

For years, he'd seen Max quietly grieve for his wife. Kraynak spoke honestly of a time, before Ukiah knew Max, when Max walked a suicidal edge. Ukiah couldn't say no, not to Max. “We need someone. There won't be any surprises with Sam.”

“It might mean a lot of changes for you, kid.”

“I plan on getting married to Indigo; I'm slated for changes already.” Ukiah squinted as he considered additional ramifications. “Do you think Sam and Indigo will like each other?”

“Indigo and Sam?” Max shuddered. “God, one hopes that they can at least stand one another! Life could be hell if they can't.”

 

“What are we are doing here?”
Rennie's thoughts touched Ukiah's mind as they climbed the driveway to Sam's small, A-frame cabin. The Blazer's dashboard clock showed it was ten to five, and no lights were on.

Rennie trailed Max and Ukiah at a discreet distance on his motorcycle, watching to see if they were followed. When they turned off the main road, however, he closed in on them. Ukiah could sense Rennie's faint concern.

“This is Sam's place,”
he told Rennie, parking next to Sam's Jeep. Her Harley was tucked into a small half-filled woodshed.
“Max needs to talk to her.”

“All this madness, and still we have proclamations of love. Ah, humans are amazing.”

Under the sarcasm, Ukiah felt Rennie's fondness for his birth race.

Max scowled at Rennie as he stopped his motorcycle beside the Taurus. “Could you give us a little privacy?” Rennie's eyes slid over to Ukiah and asked a silent question. “He's my partner. He's part of the deal.”

Rennie grinned but swallowed down any snide remark that flitted through his mind, just out of Ukiah's reach. “Go pitch your woo. I'll check the main road.”

He walked his bike backward until he could pull in a tight circle and head back down the steep driveway.

 

Max knocked on the door. “Sam?” He knocked again and glanced to Ukiah, who was on the other side of the doorway.

Ukiah listened carefully. “Someone's coming. Sounds like Sam.”

It was an armed Sam that cracked the door and eyed Max warily. “Bennett?”

“I needed to talk to you before I went back to Pittsburgh.”

“How did you find this place?”

Max tilted his head to indicate Ukiah, just outside her range of vision. “The Kodak kid led.”

Sam flung the door completely open. “Ukiah! Oh, thank God!” She stepped out into the cold morning air and crushed him in a hard embrace, ignoring the fact she wore only a T-shirt, panties, and a nine millimeter in a shoulder holster. Her hands moved up and down Ukiah's back, as if measuring the whole of him, confirming he was all there and not a scarecrow dressed in his clothes. “I was sure you were dying. I kept kicking myself for leaving you with that lunatic.”

“Thanks,” Max said.

“I meant Shaw.” Sam ran her hands over Ukiah's back again, slower this time, as if looking for something. Finally she pulled away from him, frowning, to zip open the vest.

“Sam,” Max murmured. Ukiah couldn't tell if it was a protest, warning, or plea for understanding.

Sam ignored Max, silently examining the healed-over
entrance wound, and then, pushing Ukiah through a half-turn, the exit wound. “Quinn put that steel bar through you.”

“I heal quickly.”

She framed Ukiah's face with her hands. “You were dying.”

“No,” Ukiah said, not sure what to admit to her. “It takes a lot more than that to kill me.”

“Good.” She scrubbed her hands through his hair, and then released him. Turning, she swatted Max on the shoulder. “You shit, why didn't you tell me?”

“I tried.”

“Not in a way that I'd believe.”

“What would have you believed?”

“How about the truth? Why are people I've known for years suddenly turning into serial killers? Why did all-life-is-sacred, tree-hugging, vegetarian Dennis Quinn chase Ukiah clear across town and nail him to a wall? Quinn never laid eyes on the kid before, and yet he stomps all over Jared and Cassidy, trying to kill Ukiah. Hate like that does not come out of nowhere. How does Mr. Most Wanted, Rennie Shaw, figure into this? Normally you don't need someone of his caliber for protection in Pendleton. And if the kid can get nailed that bad, and still be up and around the next day, why the hell are you giving up on Alicia Kraynak? Just level with me, Bennett.”

“I-I don't even know where to start,” Max said.

Sam crossed her arms over her chest. “Start by telling me what your partner is.”

“My partner,” Max said, quietly but firmly, his eyes like cold steel, “is a good, moral, decent person. He has exceptional abilities. He uses those abilities to help people. I can't count the number of times he's put his life on the line to save another person. Normally I wouldn't give a shit what people thought of his abilities. Now is not a good time, though, to be known as more than human.”

“With everyone UFO-crazy since that thing with the Mars Rover?”

“Exactly. With the exception of serial murderers trying to kill him, Ukiah's never hurt anyone in his life. I'm not going
let some nutcase, who has seen
Invasion of the Body Snatchers
one too many times, hurt him.”

“Do you know what he is?”

“He's a good kid.”

Sam laughed softly, a ghost of a chuckle. “
Your
kid, Rennie Shaw be damned?”

Max nodded slightly, and then clarified with, “My partner.”

“And the rest of it? Come on, Bennett, you can't run out and leave me in the middle of this without a clue of what's going on.”

“Come to Pittsburgh, then,” Max said. “We still need someone to drive Kraynak's van to Pennsylvania. And there will be full-time position waiting for you, if you're interested. Health insurance. Retirement plan. Two weeks vacation. Paid sick days.”

“You're offering me a job?”

“Yes.”

“Is this an attempt to keep my mouth shut about the kid? Under your thumb, dependent on you for money?”

“No!” Max snapped. “Look, I just want you out of harm's way. Pendleton isn't safe any more. I don't want you hurt, and I certainly don't want what happened to Alicia to happen to you.”

“Sounds like you care what happens to me.”

“I care a hell of a lot.”

They stood staring at each other.

Max broke the silence first. “Say you'll drive the van to Pittsburgh. See what we have to offer. We'll pay for you to stay at a hotel, or you can crash at the office if you want, there's a bed there you can use.”

“All business?”

“If that's the way you want it, yes.”

Sam glanced behind her at the small, lonely cabin with the overstock flooring and mismatched furniture, then out into the thick pinewoods, with the double strand of electricity and telephone wires as the only mark of civilization. “Oh, hell. I pitched everything to come to Pendleton with
my ex. I've tried hard not to hate this town because of him, but I haven't really succeeded.”

“Come to Pittsburgh.”

Sam looked at Max, then slanted a look at Ukiah where he'd stood silently this whole time. “What about you, kid? Do you have any say in this, or is it all his plan? Is he just saying anything to get into my pants?”

“It's his plan,” Ukiah admitted. “But it sounds like a good one. We work well together. I don't think he wants your pants—they wouldn't fit.”

Sam crowed in surprised laughter.

“She wants to know if I want to have sex with her, Ukiah, and please, don't answer her.”

“Why shouldn't he?” Sam asked.

“His honesty cuts both ways. I haven't asked embarrassing questions about you, please don't ask embarrassing questions of me.”

She sighed. “Okay, I'll drive the van to Pittsburgh. I'll check out the job, and if I like the offer—well, we'll deal with it then.”

 

Sam found a T-shirt for Ukiah, then showered and dressed. The Volkswagen's keys were in Kraynak's personal effects at the hospital. By riding with them to Pendleton, Sam could get the keys and pick up the van without abandoning one of her own vehicles in town.

Rennie waited for them at the bottom of the driveway, tucked behind a large boulder that screened him from the main road. Max stopped beside Rennie to discuss plans for the addition of Sam to their group.

“Ah, tall, dark, and scary,” Sam greeted Rennie. “I wondered where you were.”

“They said I couldn't come up and kibitz.”

“I see. You're out here, supposedly, to protect Ukiah. If I come to Pittsburgh, am I going to see you as much?”

“No, not likely.” In Pittsburgh it was harder to spot the Pack as they kept watch over him.

“Good.”

Rennie laughed, and said mentally to Ukiah.
“It will be interesting to see how this plays out.”

 

BOOK: Tainted Trail
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ads

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