A Host of Furious Fancies
Page 41
Good. The bitch wouldn’t have had time to run far.
He picked up clothes, a razor, and some basic medical supplies. He changed clothes in the men’s room and slipped out the back, leaving the stained sweats in the dumpster. While he was in the parking lot he took the opportunity to swap the Navigator’s plates for a set on another car. The unsuspecting donor probably wouldn’t even notice. The trouble with people these days was that they just weren’t detail oriented. God was in the details. His pappy’d always told him that.
He still didn’t have a driver’s license, or any kind of ID, but he didn’t think it would matter. From the shopping mall he headed east, not questioning why he chose that direction. From the interstate he switched to the local roads, where he stopped and picked up a couple of bags of groceries, then hit the back roads, driving several hours before finding the place he wanted, an old beat-up no-tell motel, the kind of place that came with hot and cold running roaches, and where the sheets were changed once a month if you were lucky.
It would suit him just fine. He parked the Navigator out of sight of the office and walked back. A few minutes later he had a room for the week under the name Valentine Michael Smith, and he hadn’t had to provide either a driver’s license or a vehicle registration number.
He went in the room, locked the door, moved the dresser over to block the door, stretched out on the bed, and slept for two days.
When he awoke on the evening of the second day, his body was stiff from disuse, and he was lightheaded as though he’d just broken a high fever. But he was still here, and the room was still here, and his sleep had been without dreams.
Find the bitch. That was Job Number One. But before he did that, he should scope out the lay of the land a little. Find out how things stood with Threshold. Pick up one of his spare identities from one of his drops and find out if it was safe to come out. Housekeeping chores, really.
On the other hand, maybe they could wait. If he went straight for the bitch, he’d have a bargaining chip. He knew right where she’d be. He thought she’d told him about it once, this little bolt-hole she had squirreled away somewhere in Godlost, West Virginia. A good place to hide, she’d said, if anything happened she didn’t like. She’d probably run straight to it when the balloon went up and been hiding under the bed ever since.
Morton’s Fork, that was it. She’d said it just like he wouldn’t know where it was, but he’d grown up in Pharoah, about twenty miles from Morton’s Fork, West Virginia.
He shook his head and frowned, a headache starting to build behind his eyes. Hadn’t he . . . ? His daddy had been a New York City cop. He’d never been anywhere near West Virginia. What was wrong with him? He found the bottle of aspirin he’d bought and shook half a dozen into his mouth, washing them down with a bottle of warm beer. The headache faded, and with it the sense of confusion and unease. Of course he’d grown up in West Virginia. He’d been a lot of strange places since, but you didn’t forget the place where you were born. He’d go to Morton’s Fork and find the bitch. That was Job Number One.
And wouldn’t she be surprised when her worst nightmare came calling?
The gigging on Sunday had been great. They’d hit up half a dozen of Eric’s favorite spots, and even without workday crowds to play for, the take had been more than ample. Hosea had insisted they split it right down the middle, and wouldn’t take “no” for an answer.
“You’re giving me a roof over my head, Eric, and I’m not one to take charity. If you’re worrying about me getting together a stake for a place of my own, I’ll be keeping what I make playing in the Park while you’re hitting the books, and I guess I’ll do all right.”
There was no budging Hosea once he’d made up his mind, Eric had already realized—and in the same situation, he too would have been reluctant to take a handout. So he’d agreed to the split—but he’d stipulated that he’d be the one buying the groceries. And with the way he packs it away, I think we’ll manage to make this a more reasonable split on the take.
He’d meant to call Ria before he left for Juilliard on Monday, but then he and Hosea had stayed up late talking, and a couple of friends had dropped over, so by the time he remembered Ria, he was nowhere near a phone. But Hosea had been out when he got back—Monday was a half day—and he’d been able to call Ria then. Hosea was good companionship, and fastidiously neat—the couch had been folded up, the sheets neatly folded and tucked away, and as far as Eric could tell, the duffle still hadn’t been unpacked—but he’d been just as glad Hosea wasn’t around to hear that conversation, as it would bring up things Eric wasn’t really ready to discuss with him.
Elves, for one thing. Hosea had been pretty cool about Greystone, but there was something about elves that seemed to trip people’s circuits. Half the time they started babbling about Disney and Elfquest and the Smurfs until you never could get them to settle down again. He didn’t want to go there with Hosea.
But at the back of his mind, even when he’d been talking to Ria, was his Saturday night conversation with Hosea. Hosea was looking for someone to teach him the music-magic, and Eric knew some pretty good teachers. Magic was a peculiar force, and Talents were stubborn things. Once the magic had made up its mind to manifest one way, it was almost impossible to train it into a new path. If Hosea said he needed to be taught by a music-mage, he was probably right. Eric wondered how Master Dharniel would take to another human student. At any rate, he’d be seeing Dharniel at the Naming, and Eric could bring the matter up to him there.
It got dark early here in the hills. Jeanette sat at her worktable, measuring white powder into gelatin capsules by the light of a kerosene lamp. A cup of cold instant coffee sat by her elbow.
It was sweltering in the little shack, but she’d closed all the doors and windows and tacked up sheets over them to keep out any breath of air. There was a storm on the way, and all she needed was for a gust of wind to give her a face full of T-Stroke. That’d kill her for sure.
All drugs were poisons. In small doses they cured, but enough of anything, even aspirin, was toxic. Only T-Stroke was different. With T-Stroke, the more you took, the better chance you had of surviving.
Maybe. If she’d guessed right. There was no way to tell without a test.
And the only person around to test it on was her.
Russian roulette, with five bullets in the chamber instead of one.
She kept filling capsules—a thousand empty gel-caps bought from the health-food store in Pharoah when she made her weekly run for supplies. She wasn’t sure what she was going to do with them, but they were a lot more portable than a bottle and a needle. Easier to move, easier to take.
If she decided to take them.
She sighed. It kept coming back to that.
She stopped what she was doing and listened intently. She thought she’d heard an engine. Watchman’s Gap Trace ran past the cabin, and people did still use the old road—moonshiners, mostly—but there shouldn’t be anybody out at this time of night. She checked her watch. Two-thirty in the morning.
Maybe it’d just been the wind.
Or maybe the Feds’ve gotten lucky, you spineless git.
She hesitated, and then got to her feet. Her .45 was lying on the bed—Road Hog had always said there wasn’t any point to a little gun, when you wanted to show you were serious—and she picked it up. The oiled weight of it in her hand was reassuring.
She picked up the lantern and moved it to the far corner of the room. She lifted the edge of the sheet spread over her worktable and draped it over the mound of white powder. Then, swallowing hard, she catfooted it over to the door, pushed aside the blanket, and lifted the latch.
The air outside seemed stiflingly cold after the stuffy heat of the cabin. Wet wind dashed droplets of rain against her skin, mingling with the sweat. She could hear the Little Heller creek running hard, and hear the wind tossing the trees.
Nothing else. She stepped outside, letting the door close behind her. There was no li
ght. Even after her eyes adjusted, and she could see the faint shapes of trees against the sky, there was nothing. No lights, no engines.
You’ve come too far to screw yourself over with an attack of nerves, girl. She waited a moment longer—of all the things I’ve lost, I miss my air conditioning the most—then backed inside and closed the door again.
It was a relief to put the gun down. Jeanette actually hated guns. If you were waving one around, that meant things were already out of control and heading from bad to worse.
She took a deep breath, rolling her shoulders to get the tension out. There was still some ice from this morning. She’d crack a Coke and relax for a few minutes before getting back to work. She didn’t like leaving all that powder out loose. It was too dangerous—this shack was a far cry from Threshold’s pristine sterile laboratory conditions.
She opened the ice chest and stood for a moment, rubbing a handful of cubes across her face and throat. She’d thought a thousand times about dumping all the T-Stroke in the creek, but she’d given up so much to get it that she couldn’t bear to, and sometimes now it was hard to remember why she’d wanted it so much.
There was a knock at the door.
Jeanette froze, the ice cubes dripping down her arm. Her mind was scrubbed white with shock and sudden terror—they were hunting for her, and now they’d found her, whoever they were. The knocking came again, hard and slow, as if Death himself were outside.
She dropped the ice cubes and lunged for the gun that lay on the cot. There was a thud at the door, and a creak as the wood gave. Cold air filled the room.
The gun was slippery and heavy in her hands. She scrabbled to get her finger on the trigger, falling to her knees.
Something landed on her. The gun went off and was torn from her hand. It was all over so fast. She lay on the floor, half under her cot, staring down at the soft splintery white pine floorboards of the cabin. She would not look. Whoever it was could kill her, but they could not make her look.
“Is that any way to greet an old friend, Ms. Campbell?”
The voice was familiar. Jeanette bit down hard on her lower lip to keep from bursting into tears. She was furious and terrified, and the game was over, but she would not let him see her cry. After a moment she got her breathing under control and sat up.
Elkanah—she’d never known if he had another name—stood in the doorway, her gun in his hand. He was wearing black jeans and a black T-shirt. She’d never seen him in anything but his Threshold Security uniform. She’d thought he looked scary then. He looked terrifying now. The door hung inward, and she could see the white splinters where the bolt had broken in half. The blanket she’d nailed over the door billowed in the wind.
“Elkanah.” Her voice came out in a hoarse croak, but steady. She knew her hands were shaking. With an effort of will she got to her feet, hating the fact that he was seeing her barefoot, in a grubby sweat-soaked T-shirt and cut-off jeans. Hating the fact that she was helpless. “What are you doing here?”
“A lot has happened since you left us, Ms. Campbell,” Elkanah answered in that maddeningly slow soft drawl of his. He glanced at her chopped-off hair. “Black isn’t a good color on you. Maybe you ought to sit down. You don’t look well.”
“Neither do you,” Jeanette shot back. Even in the dim light of the cabin she could see that. He’d lost weight. His skin was stretched tight over his bones, and there was a look in his eyes—a glittery, crazy kind of look—that told her he was capable of anything.
Of all the people she’d expected to come looking for her, he was the last on the list. Her legs trembled. She sat down slowly on the edge of the cot, feeling it creak under her.
“Okay. Now what?” she asked.
“Why don’t you just sit there while I have a look around?” It wasn’t a suggestion. She sat, careful to give him no reason to shoot her.
He closed the door, kicking it into place with his heel and letting the blanket drop. She watched as he looked carefully around the room before he moved. First he tucked her gun in the waistband of his pants, then went over to pick up the lantern. He set it back on the table and peeled back the sheet.
“My, my, my. What have we here?”
Jeanette didn’t answer.
“You can tell me, or you can eat them.” Elkanah’s voice was mild, as disinterested as if he were commenting upon the weather.
“It’s T-Stroke. All I have left,” she added, for no other reason than that anything she knew and he didn’t gave her a little power.
“That got us all into a lot of trouble,” Elkanah said. “Mr. Lintel dead, the company gone. A lot of trouble. And that leaves me at loose ends, you might say.”
Jeanette stared at him. She’d thought Elkanah was dead. If he wasn’t, the Feds were looking for him as much as they were looking for her. But that didn’t do her a lot of good while he was standing here with a gun. She had no idea what he wanted, and that worried her. If he’d meant to turn her in to plea-bargain his way out of things, why weren’t the Feds right behind him?
And how had he found her?
“Lintel’s dead?” she asked, just to keep the conversation going. “How did that happen?”
“You know the answer to that.” Elkanah moved away from the table and the glistening pile of white powder. He rubbed his forehead as if it hurt. “It’s your fault.”
“I worked for him the same way you did.” It was suicidal to argue with him, but she couldn’t help herself. “What he did with what I gave him was his business.” But you didn’t have to give it to him, did you, Jeanette? You didn’t have to go to work for him. If Robert killed people, he did it with the weapon you made for him.
“Business. That’s what it all comes down to, doesn’t it, Ms. Campbell? We’re all just doing business. And that’s why I’m here.”
He’d moved back in front of the door again, just as if there were any real possibility she would try to run. Jeanette braced herself to hear bad news.
“That T-Stroke. You can make more of it, can’t you?”
“Yes.” There was no point in lying about that. It was the only thing that might keep her alive, the only thing of value she still possessed. “I’d need a setup and some supplies. But I can make more.”
“That’s good. In that case, I think we can do business. Get your things. We’re leaving.”
Jeanette got to her feet. “Where are we going?”
Elkanah smiled. It wasn’t a nice smile. “I think that’s on a need-to-know basis, don’t you?”
I think I’m about to take a bullet, Jeanette thought, but oddly, she wasn’t afraid. The worst thing she could imagine happening had just happened. She didn’t have to be afraid of it any more, and that freedom brought clarity in its wake. Boy, I really made a mess of my life, didn’t I? She moved over to her worktable.
If she were an action-movie heroine, she could blow the loose powder into Elkanah’s face, blind him, and escape. But she wasn’t. She was just another loser with very sharp teeth—she’d spent her whole life being taught that particular lesson. Life wasn’t a movie, and even if it was, Elkanah wasn’t working off the same script she was. He was at the other side of the room, out of reach.
She scooped the loose powder carefully back into its plastic jar and screwed the lid on tight. All the filled capsules were already in their jar. She put the lid on that one, too.
The Harley’s saddlebags with her clothes were in the corner, and for a panicked moment Jeanette thought Elkanah might ask what had happened to her bike. She pulled jeans and a clean T-shirt out and turned her back to him to put them on.
“Afraid I’m going to lust after your lily-white body, Ms. Campbell?”
Jeanette set her jaw. She knew she wasn’t any man’s idea of arm candy, but she was glad Elkanah had spoken. It made it so much easier to hate him. If at all possible, I’ll see to it you die screaming, you Neolithic slab of rent-muscle. She buckled the jeans and slid her feet into her engineer boots. Her leather jacket was w
ay too warm for the weather, but she picked it up anyway. She’d need it later, if there was a later.
Carrying the saddlebags and her jacket, she turned back to the table and picked up the two jars of T-Stroke, glancing at Elkanah to see if that was okay. He didn’t seem to object, so she stuffed the jars into one of the bags and buckled it shut, then slung them over her shoulder. Her guitar, her Walkman, and her tapes she left where they were. Music had always been her vulnerable spot, and she didn’t have any time for vulnerability now.
“Okay,” she said. “I’ve got my things. Now?”
“Now we go, Ms. Campbell.” He stepped away from the door. “After you.”
She went to the door and pulled it open. The top hinge had torn loose when he broke in and she had to drag it. She walked out into the night. It had started raining in earnest, and the rain plastered her short dyed hair to her scalp. She set down the saddlebags and pulled on her jacket.
Elkanah came out behind her. He was holding a flashlight in his hand. There was a red gel over the lens. A faint red beam illuminated the trees and turned the rain into a shower of blood.
“This way,” he said, gesturing with the beam. “You first.”
She stumbled through the rain, hearing him move more gracefully behind her. They were heading in the direction of Watchman’s Gap Trace. His ride was probably parked there. If only she’d bolted the first time she’d heard an engine . . .
Too late for regrets, Campbell. By about a lifetime, I’d say.
She slid on last year’s leaves and stumbled over rocks and branches. He did nothing to help her, but she didn’t expect it. Occasionally he corrected her path, herding her uphill. About the time she thought they’d managed to miss the road entirely, Elkanah’s light shone on the side of a panel van. It was painted primer gray—a totally nondescript vehicle. The Sinner Saints had used something like it to make bulk deliveries. It was the kind of ride you could park anywhere and have it go unnoticed.
“Stand still.” She stopped. Elkanah walked up close and pulled the saddlebags off her shoulder. He walked past her to the van and opened the passenger side door. He threw the saddlebags in the back. Jeanette winced at the sound of the impact. Lucky everything comes in plastic these days.