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Authors: Tom Piccirilli

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BOOK: The Midnight Road
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Danny had outfoxed everyone. He knew these roads well all right. He’d probably made love to Patricia or other girls out on the beach in the setting sun, the moonlight. With the silhouettes of the mansions rising up to scratch against the silver sky.

He hit the gas and swung the car out wide to the left, easing against a spear-rail fence. He knew that driving was more than just speed or power; it had to do with knowing the angles, understanding the vectors, describing the arcs. The police didn’t know the area as well as Danny. They were close to the end of the street but not quite there. Danny sort of tapped the huge gates in the middle of the fence with the front grille, doing maybe 20 mph, just hard enough for the lock to spring. He ramped up the tremendous semicircular driveway and sprang out the other side right past the police, skidding past the sign that read: PRIVATE BEACH. NO ENTRY EXCEPT FOR RESIDENTS.

Like he could get away anywhere. Like he might actually be trying to escape.

That’s what ratcheted the cops up and got them even more crazed for blood. The idea that this ballsy kid wasn’t only making a run but really thought he might be gaining ground. Someone fired a shot. A gray puncture appeared in the trunk of the Charger. Flynn would fill and buff and repaint it himself six years later.

So close.

Danny would’ve made it to the water except the rear tires got hung up in some storm fencing set out in the nearest dunes. He tried to spin the wire off by yanking hard on the wheel, but the Charger bounced down the sandy slope fast and hit a deep wide hole dug by some kid. The tide had started to rise as if trying to reach the car. The left-front tire plunged and the shock absorber buckled. The Charger rocked hideously forward once, then jolted to an immediate stop and slowly angled to one side on the beach.

If he had gotten to the water, it might’ve been enough. The cops would’ve leaped onto him and busted his ribs against the hood of the car, and Danny would’ve laughed hard and long and it might’ve been enough for him to feel like he’d done one solid, outrageous act of defiance in his life. He could’ve married Patricia and had the kid, and no matter how many beers he drank in front of the television, or how fat he got or how hard he coughed, it might’ve been enough to keep him going.

Cops kept trying to grab Flynn. He dodged, and outran every one of them. He made it to the beach and an officer tackled him. Flynn let out a grunt of pain and it wasn’t until three days later that his mother discovered his left femur had been fractured. He struggled, but the cop lifted him easily and carried him back to the street.

It didn’t matter, he’d seen enough.

He’d seen Danny with his forehead resting propped against the steering wheel, lifelike but utterly lifeless. No charm, no hipness, no cool, no breath. There wasn’t a mark on him except for one small blemish on his chin. All because of the goddamn busted shock. His neck had been broken.

Patricia’s head had gone through the passenger window. Jagged glass had sheared her right ear off. A small splash of blood trickled down the door in a thin line that thickly dripped into the sand.

The tide crept up the beach, inch by inch, but Flynn never got a chance to see it reach the Charger.

The cops offered soothing empty words like the crooning of pedophiles. They offered candy bars and juice and comic books. They threw a blanket over Emma’s shoulders and led her away. She glanced back at Flynn once and they never saw each other again.

 

 

NINE

 

The icy morning wind blew angel-wing patterns of frost against his windshield. Flynn saw Sierra walk the kids to the bus stop at the corner, then stomp back and get into her red ’91 Civic and drive to work. He watched Kelly interact with the other foster kids, talking animatedly as her breath bloomed around her face. She had a tendency to smile brightly, then close up her face as if embarrassed to have found something worth smiling about. It would be a while before her own grin didn’t shame her.

He found himself wishing that Shepard would get the hell out of his coma already. He had a daughter who still needed him, no matter what his troubles. Flynn had the urge to rush to the hospital and smack the shit out of the guy until he woke up. Flynn needed answers.

“Turn on the heater,” Zero said.

“You’re dead,” Flynn told the dog. “How can you feel cold?”

“You tell me,” the dog answered. “You’re dead too. Don’t you know that?”

Flynn thought maybe he did, but he started the car and popped on the heater. He sat back and hit an oldies station while the school bus passed by. It slowed at the corner and the kids proceeded on. Kelly took a seat toward the back on the side closest to him and Flynn watched her hair gleam beneath the sheeted ice on the window. Emma Waltz got right the fuck up in his face again, so close he fell back in his seat.

Zero said, “Who is she?”

“Who’s who?”

“The girl in your head.”

“If you know about her, you know who she is.”

“I don’t know about her, I know about you.”

Flynn was starting to feel a little insulted. “Don’t you think it’s time to go on to doggie heaven?”

“Whenever you’re ready to go, I will be too.”

When the bus pulled away from the curb and disappeared down the road, Flynn shifted and glanced back at Sierra’s house.

“The cops are going to pick you up, sitting around here all the time, acting suspicious,” Zero said, digging at the passenger seat, turning in circles, trying to get comfortable. “What are you looking for?”

“I want to see Nuddin.”

Flynn got out and slammed the door. He walked across the street, up onto Sierra’s front lawn, and peered into the living room window. The wind trilled through the trees and icicles rang above him. He moved around the yard until he got to the kitchen window. He saw the teenaged Trevor clearing away breakfast dishes, cereal boxes and a container of milk. Flynn got a good vibe from the kid. He seemed responsible, always cleaning up after his foster brothers and sisters. Nuddin sat staring off happily at nothing, humming. He was dressed in workman’s overalls and thick boots. He looked like he was getting ready to go work the docks. Sierra must’ve had some leftover clothing laid away by the exes.

Nuddin’s misshapen, scarred head appeared much more normal now that Sierra had allowed Nuddin’s hair to grow out a little. He had a handkerchief that he used to wipe the drool from his chin. Trevor was saying something Flynn couldn’t hear, but Nuddin seemed to ignore the kid. His gentle brown eyes found Flynn in the window and filled with joy. He appeared healthy and happy. He smiled and started out of his seat, but Flynn was worried about Sierra hearing he’d visited. She might give him hell.

He retreated fast over the lawn, got in the car and punched it to the Expressway. Zero was still sleeping in the passenger seat. He yawned once and rubbed his booted front paws across his nose.

Flynn went to the office and discovered his desk piled with case folders. Every one of them a threat to a child. Seeing them stacked like that got his bad mood cooking. Sierra was out on a call. He read through files most of the morning, then went out and visited four families. He picked up a bad vibe on only one of them and faced down the rude roughhouse without throwing fists. Barely noon and the guy stunk of gin and cheap weed. The stereo was on loud, and so was the television. Flynn figured the complaint had more to do with noise pollution than anything. A seven-year-old girl with a broken leg was in bed laced up in traction. He asked her questions while her father glowered from the bedroom door. Her room was the cleanest in the house. She said she slipped in the kitchen on a slippery floor. Flynn found no suspicious bruises. He checked out the kitchen. The floor was wet with melting ice cubes. The father had been drinking gin and tonics. The daddy was stoned and had that look of strain, but he hadn’t hurt his kid. He just couldn’t keep his kitchen floor dry.

Flynn got back to the office right after lunch. Sierra was at her desk on the phone reaming out a high-school nurse for sending a girl to the shower after she’d claimed she was raped in a stairwell. Failure to immediately garner a rape kit could ruin a criminal case. Who knew how much evidence had been washed away. Sierra’s naturally tight grin was notched a little higher than usual.

He turned on his computer and stared at the screen for a minute. He was surprised that after three decades he’d never tried to find Emma Waltz. Despite her haunting him in her own way, he’d never given her much thought. But suddenly the urge to see her again was growing inside him.

It was the kind of thing that would consume him if he couldn’t get it locked down. His hand drifted over the keyboard. He started to hunt for Emma through the agency’s database and affiliate intergov networks.

Women were tougher to find. They got married, changed names, used hyphens that weren’t picked up by some directories. He grabbed the phone book and started checking under
W.
He stopped before he got to
Waltz
and tried to run it out. What he would say to her, and exactly why he would be saying it.

He could see how the meeting between them might go. Each with the same immobile memory fixed in their childhoods, emanating outward to touch them every day since. His imagination fritzed when he tried to hear her voice. He’d never heard her speak. He ran through possible opening statements, comments, questions, but nothing held enough weight. It all sounded empty and silly. He saw himself trying to take her hand and Emma pulling away in anger or fear, overcome with emotion.

His thoughts started getting dumber. She comes flying into his arms, presses her lips to his, because it was always meant for them to be together. Because no one else could understand. Because blood pulls kids together and keeps them bound through the years. Because you need to think things like this about someone you only knew for a couple of hours on the worst day of your life.

Before the day you died, of course.

A shadow crossed Flynn’s desk. He eased shut the telephone book.

He’d really lost his edge. Sierra had on her three-inch heels and he hadn’t even heard her. Her new wig was a bright blonde with pageboy bangs. It hung a little too far to the left. He got the feeling she did it on purpose, just daring somebody to say something.

She checked around the room and said, “You didn’t bring the cactus to brighten this place up.”

“It’s at home.”

“I’ll get you another.”

“I’m not responsible enough to take care of two cacti.”

“You could’ve said ‘cactuses,’ you know, it’s also considered proper English.”

“Really? I had no idea.”

He looked at her and thought, are we really talking about fuckin’ cactuses?

Sierra’s left eye really hung low today, a sure sign that she was exhausted. He hadn’t been pulling his weight lately. She’d been working a lot of his load. A spear of guilt hit him low and he resolved to get on the ball. The commitment wavered an instant later when his gaze crossed the computer screen and he saw the search for Emma Waltz still in motion.

“Glad you decided to come in today. We’ve been shorthanded thanks to the flu. You work any of these cases so far?”

“Four this morning.”

“That’s a good jump. You break anybody’s head?”

He hadn’t told her about Grace Brooks and decided not to get into it right now. “Thought about it, but no.”

“Good, you need to control yourself. The cops are still watching.”

“They’ll have to pack it in shortly unless someone makes another move soon.”

She reared over him. “Knock on some goddamn wood, would you? Don’t go calling down the whirlwind.”

He said, “No, not me.”

But maybe that was the only way to get from here to there, to shake loose the figure hiding out in the snow. No move he made seemed to be the right one. For all he knew, he was endangering Sierra just by showing up to the office. He thought about running. He thought about staying put. Nothing hit him as the smart thing to do.

“You’re edgy,” she said.

“Yeah. It’s the cactus. I feel bad about it.”

There he went again. No cool, man. Danny would be ashamed.

“You can’t bring a gun in here, Flynn,” Sierra said. “I can tell you’re packing by the way you’re sitting.”

He unclipped the .38 from his belt and stuck it in his bottom drawer. It didn’t appease her, but he knew she wouldn’t push it. He wanted to ask her about Kelly. He didn’t think the house was safe with just a teenager looking after Nuddin. He imagined somebody breaking in and killing the boy and torturing Nuddin with a branding iron right in the middle of her living room.

“I think you should see Dale,” she said.

“Oh hell, Sierra, come on now.” Dale Mooney, head CPS shrink, and a total bore. Flynn had been semiexpecting her to suggest it for a while, but still it hurt. Sierra was losing her confidence in him. “A basic component of the patient-doctor relationship is trust. Mooney’s slippery and soft and I don’t like him.”

“He’s better than you give him credit for. It’s nearly time for the second psych review of the year anyway. You might as well go and get it done.”

“That’s a cakewalk. But now, you’ve prepped him for me, haven’t you?”

“I mentioned you might need some help shouldering your recent freight.”

BOOK: The Midnight Road
4.16Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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