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Indigo Slam: An Elvis Cole Novel

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by Robert Crais




  Indigo Slam

  An Elvis Cole Novel

  Robert Crais

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  In accordance with the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, the scanning, uploading, and electronic sharing of any part of this book without the permission of the publisher constitute unlawful piracy and theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), prior written permission must be obtained by contacting the publisher at permissions@hbgusa.com. Thank you for your support of the author’s rights.

  Dedicated with love and admiration to Wayne Warga and Collin Wilcox, two worthy men, always overhead.

  Seattle

  At two-fourteen in the morning on the night they left one life to begin their next, the rain thundered down in a raging curtain that thrummed against the house and the porch and the plain white Econoline van that the United States Marshals had brought to whisk them away.

  Charles said, “C’mere, Teri, and lookit this.”

  Her younger brother, Charles, was framed in the front window of their darkened house. The house was dark because the marshals wanted it that way. No interior lights, they said. Candles and flashlights would be better, they said.

  Teresa, whom everyone called Teri, joined her brother at the window, and together they looked at the van parked at the curb. Lightning snapped like a giant flashbulb, illuminating the van and the narrow lane of clapboard houses there in Highland Park on the west side of Seattle, seven and one-half miles south of the Space Needle. The van’s side and rear doors were open, and a man was squatting inside, arranging boxes. Two other men finished talking to the van’s driver, then came up the walk toward the house. All four men were dressed identically in long black slickers and black hats that they held against the rain. It beat at them as if it wanted to punch right through the coats and the hats and hammer them into the earth. Teri thought that in a few minutes it would be beating at her. Charles said, “Lookit the size of that truck. That truck’s big enough to bring my bike, isn’t it? Why can’t I bring my bike?”

  Teri said, “That’s not a truck, it’s a van, and the men said we could only take the boxes.” Charles was nine years old, three years younger than Teri, and didn’t want to leave his bike. Teri didn’t want to leave her things either, but the men had said they could only take eight boxes. Four people at two boxes a person equals eight boxes. Simple math.

  “They got plenty of room.”

  “We’ll get you another bike. Daddy said.”

  Charles scowled. “I don’t want another bike.”

  The first man to step in from the rain seemed ten feet tall, and the second seemed even taller. Water dripped from their coats onto the wooden floor, and Teri’s first thought was to get a towel before the drips made spots, but, of course, the towels were packed and it wouldn’t matter anyway. She would never see this house again. The first man smiled at her and said, “I’m Peterson. This is Jasper.” They held out little leather wallets with gold and silver badges. The badges sparkled in the candlelight. “We’re just about done. Where’s your dad?”

  Teri had been helping Winona say good-bye to the room they shared when the men arrived fifteen minutes ago. Winona was six, and the youngest of the three Hewitt children. Teri had had to be with her as Winona went around their room, saying, “Good-bye, bed. Good-bye, closet. Good-bye, dresser.” Beds and closets and dressers weren’t things that you could put in eight boxes. Teri said, “He’s in the bathroom. Would you like me to get him?” Teri’s dad, Clark Hewitt, had what he called “a weak constitution.” That meant he went to the bathroom whenever he was nervous, and tonight he was very nervous.

  The tall man who was Jasper called, “Hey, Clark, whip it and flip it, bud! We’re ready!”

  Peterson smiled at Teri. “You kids ready?”

  Teri thought, of course they were ready, couldn’t he see that? She’d had Charles and Winona packed and dressed an hour ago. She said, “Winona!”

  Winona came running into the living room with a pink plastic Beverly Hills 90210 raincoat and a purple toy suitcase. Winona’s straw-colored hair was held back with a bright green scrunchie. Teri knew that there were dolls in the suitcase, because Teri had helped Winona pack. Charles had his blue school backpack and his yellow slicker together on the couch.

  Jasper called again, “C’mon, Clark, let’s go! We’re drowning out there, buddy!”

  The toilet off the kitchen flushed and Teri’s dad came into the living room. Clark Hewitt was a thin, nervous man whose eyes never seemed to stay in one place. “I’m ready.”

  “We won’t be coming back, Clark. You’re not forgetting anything, are you?”

  Clark shook his head. “I don’t think so.”

  “You got the place locked up?”

  Clark frowned as if he couldn’t quite remember, and looked at Teri, who told him, “I locked the back door and the windows and the garage. They’re going to turn off the gas and the phones and the electricity tomorrow.” Someone with the marshals had given her father a list of things to do, and Teri had gone down the list. The list had a title: Steps to an Orderly Evacuation. “I just have to blow out the candles and we can go.”

  Teri knew that Peterson was staring at her, but she wasn’t sure why. Peterson shook his head, then made a little gesture at Jasper. “I’ll take care of the candles, little miss. Jasper, get ’em loaded.”

  Clark started to the front door, but Reed Jasper stopped him. “Your raincoat.”

  “Hunh?”

  “Earth to Clark. It’s raining like a bitch out there.”

  Clark said, “Raincoat? I just had it.” He looked at Teri again.

  Teri said, “I’ll get it.”

  Teri hurried down the hall past the room that she used to share with Winona and into her father’s bedroom. She blew out the candle there, then stood in the darkness and listened to the rain. Her father’s raincoat was on the bed where she’d placed it. He’d been standing at the foot of the bed when she’d put it there, but that’s the way he was—forgetful, always thinking about something else. Teri picked up the raincoat and held it close, smelling the cheap fabric and the man-smell she knew to be her father’s. Maybe he’d been thinking about Salt Lake City, which is where they were going. Teri knew that her father was in trouble with some very bad men who wanted to hurt them. The federal marshals were here to take them to Salt Lake City, where they would change their names. Once they had a Fresh Start, her father had said, he would start a new business and they would all live happily ever after. She didn’t know who the bad men were or why they were so mad at her father, but it had something to do with testifying in front of a jury. Her father had tried explaining it to her, but it had come out jumbled and confused, the way most things her father tried to explain came out. Like when her mother died. Teri had been Winona’s age, and her father had told her that her momma had gone home to see Jesus and then he’d started blubbering and nothing he’d said after that made sense. It was another four days before she’d learned that her mother, an assistant night manager for the Great Northwest Food Store chain, had died in an auto accident, hit by a drunk driver.

  Teri looked around the room. This had been her mother’s room, just as this house had been her mother’s house, as it had been Teri’s for as long as she could remember. There was one closet and two windows looking toward the alley at the back of the house and a queen-size bed and a dresser and a chest. Her mother had slept in this bed and kept her clothes in this chest and looked at herself in that dresser mirror. Her mother had breathed the air in this room, and her warmth had spr
ead through the sheets and made them toasty and perfect for snuggling when Teri was little. Her mother would read to her. Her mother would sing “Edelweiss.” Teri closed her eyes and tried to feel the warmth, but couldn’t. Teri had a hard time remembering her mother as a living being; she remembered a face in pictures, and now they were leaving. Good-bye, Momma.

  Teri hugged her father’s raincoat tight; just as she turned to leave the room she heard the thump in the backyard. It was a dull, heavy sound against the back wall of the house, distinct against the rain. She looked through the rear window and saw a black shadow move through the rain, and that’s when Peterson stepped silently into the door. “Teri, I want you to go to the front door, now, please.” His voice was low and urgent.

  Teri said, “I saw something in the yard.”

  Peterson pulled her past a third man in a still-dripping raincoat. The man who’d been loading the boxes. He held his right hand straight down along his leg and Teri saw that he had a gun.

  Her father and Charles and Winona were standing with Jasper. Her father’s eyes looked wild, as if at any moment they might pop out right onto the floor. Jasper said, “C’mon, Dan, it’s probably nothing.”

  Her father clutched Jasper’s arm. “I thought you said they didn’t know. You said we were safe.”

  Jasper pried Clark Hewitt’s hand away as Peterson said, “I’ll check it out while you get ’em in the van.” He looked worried. “Jerry! Let’s move!”

  The third man, Jerry, reappeared and picked up Winona. “C’mon, honey. You’re with me.”

  Jasper said, “I’ll check it with you.” Jasper was breathing fast.

  Peterson pushed Jasper toward the door. “Get ’em in the van. Now!”

  Jasper said, “It’s probably nothing.”

  Charles said, “What’s happening?”

  A loud cracking came from the kitchen, as if the back door was being pried open, and then Peterson was pushing them hard through the door, yelling, “Do it, Jasper! Take ’em!” and her father moaned, a kind of faraway wail that made Winona start crying. Jerry bolted toward the street, carrying Winona in one arm and pulling Teri’s father with the other, shouting something that Teri could not understand. Jasper said, “Oh, holy shit!” and tossed Charles across his shoulder like a laundry bag. He grabbed Teri hard by the arm, so hard that she had never felt such pain, and she thought her flesh and bone would surely be crushed into a mealy red pulp like you see in those Freddie Krueger movies, and then Jasper was pulling her out into the rain as, somewhere in the back of the house, she heard Peterson shout, very clearly, “Federal Marshals!” and then there were three sharp BOOMS that didn’t sound anything like thunder, not anything at all.

  The rain fell like a heavy cloak across Teri’s shoulders and splattered up from the sidewalk to wet her legs as they ran for the van. Charles was kicking his legs, screaming, “I don’t have my raincoat! I left it inside!”

  The driver had the window down, oblivious to the rain, eyes darting as Jerry pushed first Winona and then Clark through the side door. The van’s engine screamed to life.

  Jasper ran to the rear of the van and shoved Teri inside. Clark was holding Winona, huddled together between the boxes and the driver’s seat. Winona was still crying, her father bug-eyed and panting. Two more BOOMS came from the house, loud and distinct even with the rain hammering in through the open doors and windows. The driver twisted toward them, shouting, “What the fuck’s happening?!”

  Jerry yanked a short black shotgun from behind the seat. “I’m with Peterson! Get ’em outta here!”

  Jasper clawed out his gun, trying to scramble back out into the rain, saying, “I’m coming with you!”

  Jerry pushed Jasper back into the van. “You get these people outta here, goddamnit! You get ’em out now!” Jerry slammed the door in Jasper’s face and the driver was screaming, “What happened?! Where’s Peterson?”

  Jasper seemed torn, but then he screamed back, “Drive! Get the hell outta here!” He crushed past the cardboard boxes to the van’s rear window, cursing over and over, “Always some shit! Always goddamn bullshit!”

  The van slid sideways from the curb as it crabbed for traction. The driver shouted into some kind of radio and Jasper cursed and Teri’s father started crying like Winona, and Charles was crying, too. Teri thought that maybe even Federal Marshal Jasper was crying, but she couldn’t be sure because he was watching out the van’s square rear window.

  Teri felt her eyes well with tears, but then, very clearly, she told herself: You will not cry. And she didn’t. The tears went away, and Teri felt calm. She was soaked under her raincoat, and she realized that the floor was wet from rain that had blown in when the doors were open. The eight cardboard boxes that held the sum total of their lives were wet, too.

  Her father said, “What happened back there? You said we were safe! You said they wouldn’t know!”

  Jasper glanced back at her father. Jasper looked scared, too. “I don’t know. Somehow they found out.”

  Teri’s father shouted, “Well, that’s just great! That’s wonderful!” His voice was very high. “Now they’re gonna kill us!”

  Jasper went back to staring out the window. “They’re not going to kill you.”

  “That’s what you people said before!” Her father’s voice was a shriek.

  Jasper turned again and stared at Teri’s father for the longest time before he said, “Peterson is still back there, Mr. Hewitt.”

  Teri watched her brother and sister and father, huddled together and crying, and then she knew what she had to do. She crawled across the wet, tumbled boxes and along the van’s gritty bed and went to her family. She found a place for herself between Winona and her father, and looked up into her father’s frightened eyes. His face was pale and drawn, and the thin wet hair matted across his forehead made him look lost. She said, “Don’t be scared, Daddy.”

  Clark Hewitt whimpered, and Teri could feel him shivering. It was July, and the rain was warm, but he wasn’t shivering because he was cold. Teri said, “I won’t let anyone hurt us, and I won’t let anything happen to you. I promise.”

  Clark Hewitt nodded without looking at her. She held him tightly, and felt his shaking ease.

  The van careened through the night, hidden by the darkness and rain.

  Three Years Later

  Los Angeles

  1

  It was plant day in the City of Angels. On plant day I gather the plants that I keep in my office and take them out onto the little balcony I have overlooking West Los Angeles, where I clean and water and feed them, and then spend the remainder of the afternoon wondering why my plants are more yellow than green. A friend who knows plants once told me that I was giving them too much water, so I cut their rations in half. When the plants turned soft as well as yellow, another friend said that I was still drowning them, so I cut their water in half again. The plants died. I bought new plants and stopped asking other people’s advice. Yellow plants are my curse.

  I was sneering at all the yellow when Lucy Chenier said, “I don’t think I’ll be able to get away until much later, Elvis. I’m afraid we’ve lost the afternoon.”

  “Oh?” I was using a new cordless phone to talk to Lucille Chenier from the balcony as I worked on the plants. It was in the low eighties, the air quality was good, and a cool breeze rolled up Santa Monica Boulevard to swirl through the open French doors into my office. Cindy, the woman in the office next to mine, saw me on the balcony and made a little finger wave. Cindy was wearing a bright white dress shirt tied at the belly and a full-length sarong skirt. I was wearing Gap jeans, a silk Tommy Bahama shirt, and a Bianchi shoulder holster replete with Dan Wesson .38-caliber revolver. The shoulder holster was new, so I was wearing it around the office to break in the leather.

  Lucy said, “Tracy wants me to meet the vice president of business affairs, but he’s tied up with the sales department until five.” Tracy was Tracy Mannos, the station manager of KROK television. Lucy Chen
ier was an attorney in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, but she had been offered a job by KROK here in Los Angeles. She had come out for three days to discuss job possibilities and contract particulars, and tonight was her last night. We had planned to spend the afternoon at the Mexican marketplace on Olvera Street in downtown LA. Los Angeles was founded there, and the marketplace is ideal for strolling and holding hands.

  “Don’t worry about it, Luce. Take all the time you need.” She hadn’t yet decided if she would take the job, but I very much wanted it to happen.

  “Are you sure?”

  “Sure, I’m sure. How about I pick you up at six? We can go for an early dinner at Border Grill, then back to the house to pack.” Border Grill was Lucy’s favorite.

  “You’re a dream, kiddo. Thanks.”

  “Or, I could drive over and pull the veep out of his meeting at gunpoint. That might work.”

  “True, but he might hold it against me in the negotiation.”

  “You lawyers. All you think about is money.”

  I was telling Lucy how rotten my plants looked when the outer door opened and three children stepped into my office. I cupped the receiver and called, “Out here.”

  The oldest was a girl with long dark hair and pale skin and little oval glasses. I made her for fifteen, but she might have been older. A younger boy trailed in behind her, pulling a much smaller girl. The boy was wearing oversized baggy shorts and Air Nike sneakers. He looked sullen. The younger girl was wearing an X-Files T-shirt. I said, “I’m being invaded.”

  Lucy said, “Tracy just looked in. I have to go.”

  The older girl came to the French doors. “Are you Mr. Cole?”

  I held up a finger, and the girl nodded. “Luce, don’t worry about how long it takes. If you run late, it’s okay.”

  “You’re such a doll.”

  “I know.”

  “Meetcha outside the building at six.”

 

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