Dead of Winter lk-2

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Dead of Winter lk-2 Page 25

by P J Parrish

“The chief. He’s not what you think.”

  “Right.”

  “He’s an Aries.”

  “What?”

  “That’s the chief’s sun sign. Aries.”

  Louis rolled his eyes. Not that shit.

  “Aries have an inbred desire to be in charge. To be number one. All the great leaders were Aries.” Ollie reached down to snuff his cigarette out in the ashtray. “What are you?”

  Don’t even answer this, Kincaid.

  “I bet you’re a Scorpio.”

  “How did you know that?”

  “I do charts. You ever had your chart done?”

  “No. It’s bullshit.”

  Ollie was quiet for several miles. They passed the road to the lake and Ollie made a left turn. The headlights illuminated a sign that said: U.S. 33 4 MILES.

  “Where and what time were you born?” Ollie asked.

  Louis stared out the window. “Five-thirty a.m. Mississippi.”

  “Ah.”

  “What does that mean?”

  “It means you have Libra rising. Of course, I would have to calculate the exact hour to be sure but it’s a fair guess. Libra is the sign — ”

  “I don’t care.”

  “Of beauty and fairness. Its symbol is the balanced scales. You must get very confused sometimes.”

  Louis didn’t reply. He watched Ollie use his free hand to open his Ziploc bag and pull out a carrot.

  “Scorpios are very moody and often immerse themselves in the morbid and sometimes violent aspects of life,” Ollie said, between bites of the carrot. “You probably have a Mars or Mercury in Aries, which would account for your love of police work. Aries is the god of war and rules police and the military.”

  “So why am I confused?” Louis asked. He couldn’t believe he was asking this nut anything.

  “Because Libra is your secondary ruler and Libras are very peaceful by nature. Totally nonviolent. So, you see, you have this urge to subject yourself to violence yet your gentler nature abhors it. Thus, the confusion.”

  Louis stared at him.

  “Want a carrot?” Ollie asked.

  Louis nodded and took one.

  “Should I go on?” Ollie asked.

  Louis nodded slowly, munching on the carrot.

  “I bet you like very passionate women.”

  “Doesn’t everyone?” Louis laughed. The laugh trailed off quickly. He didn’t need to be thinking of Zoe right now.

  “No, not really. But you like women who drive you crazy, physically and mentally. The woman you will marry is elusive by nature, mysterious and probably loves the water.”

  “The water?”

  “As do you.”

  “I never thought about it one way or the other.”

  “You should,” Ollie said, looking at him. The dashboard lights caught Ollie’s benign eyes. “The water is where you need to settle.”

  “Well, I get the feeling the chief is not going to let me do that. I don’t think he wants me here.”

  “It doesn’t have to be here. There’s lots of water in the world.” Ollie held out the Ziploc. “Another carrot?”

  Louis shook his head. They drove on without speaking for several miles while Louis stared out at the swirling snow. The radio belched a burst of static. Ollie reached over to turn down the volume.

  “Hey, Ollie,” Louis said finally.

  “Yeah?”

  “I’m sorry.”

  “For what?”

  “For that crack I made about smoking.”

  Ollie’s veiny temples twitched. “Forget it. I should quit anyway. Would make my wife happy. But it’s my only vice left.” He suddenly slowed the car and did a U-turn.

  “What are you doing?” Louis asked.

  “The Castle might be open. I mean, if you’re desperate.”

  “Thanks, man.”

  They were heading back toward town now. After several miles, Louis spotted the neon halo of the White Castle hamburger joint arching above the dark trees. Ollie swung the cruiser up to the curb and shoved it into park. Louis moved to open the door.

  “Jess is a Virgo,” Ollie said. “Virgo rules your twelfth house.”

  “What’s that?” Louis asked. “The house of partners?”

  “Your house of secrets,” Ollie said.

  Louis stared at him for a moment then closed the door. He went inside and ordered six burgers, fries and a coffee. He watched his burgers sizzle then glanced back at Ollie through the sweaty glass. House of secrets. What crap.

  He paid for the burgers, grabbed the white bag and walked out, checking his watch. Only three hours to go. He started across the damp parking lot, thinking of Jesse. And then Zoe’s face flitted across his mind, hovering there for a moment like a phantom. He paused, popped off the coffee lid and took a sip. His eyes were burning from fatigue and he looked across the parking lot, trying to focus on the black stand of pines. A ground fog had left the lower trunks shrouded, making the huge trees look as though they were floating in the night. House of secrets. His house, but whose secrets?

  Louis climbed back in the warm car and opened the bag.

  “Don’t suppose you want one?” Louis said, offering the bag of fries.

  Ollie shook his head with a smile and pulled the cruiser out of the lot. They rode on in silence as Louis downed the burgers. He found himself watching a small medallion that hung from the rearview mirror. It took a moment before he realized it was an arrowhead.

  “What’s with that?” he asked, pointing.

  Ollie gave him a half-smile. “You sure you want to know?”

  Louis finished the last fry and stuffed the trash in a bag. “Yeah, I’ll bite.”

  “It’s a jasper quartz arrowhead,” Ollie said. “The Indians believed it had special powers to keep them safe against their enemies.”

  “Didn’t work too well against the white man, did it?”

  Ollie let the remark go. Keeping a tight grip on the wheel, he headed the car through the center of town. Louis stifled a yawn and leaned back in the seat, watching the arrowhead sway back and forth. The dispatcher’s voice ignited the silent radio to life. Ollie turned up the volume.

  “Loon-8 and Loon-11, we have a report of a trash fire at mile marker 7, County Road 329, two miles off Highway 33. Do you copy?”

  “Great,” Louis said under his breath. He keyed the mike. “Ten-four, Central. We’re en route.”

  County Road 329 was a dark two-lane road that stretched east toward Lake Huron. It was bordered by acres of open, snow-covered meadows that loomed out to the ridges of the Huron National Forest. It was a stark, almost alien-looking landscape, white open patches of emptiness set down in the dark canyon walls of the ancient pine trees.

  The brush fire was clearly visible as the cruiser rounded a final curve. Ollie pulled over to the shoulder, leaving the rear of the cruiser on the asphalt.

  Louis got out first, standing near the door of the unit. There wasn’t a house or an electric light of any kind. Just the rotating red and blue lights of the cruiser and, far off in the meadow near the trees, the eerie orange glow of the fire.

  He reached for his flashlight and shined it into the open field. The fire was burning high in an old oil drum. He trained the light on the distant pines, casting feeble arcs into the shadows there. Nothing.

  Kids, probably just kids. He drew in a deep breath of cold air. But why were the hairs on his neck standing up?

  Everything he knew about Lacey told him that the man wouldn’t strike in a place like this. He had shot both his victims when they were in places where they felt safe, places and situations where a cop was least likely to be acting like a cop. This was too…set. It wasn’t Lacey’s style.

  The trunk of the cruiser popped open and Louis jumped.

  “What are you doing?” Louis hissed.

  “Getting your vest,” Ollie said.

  Louis set the flashlight on the hood of the car and stripped off his jacket. Ollie held the heavy vest out to Lou
is. The wind whipped against his back as Louis slid on the vest. Shivering, he hustled back into his jacket.

  “Where’s yours?” Louis asked.

  “I’m wearing it.”

  Louis picked up the flashlight and swept it again over the meadow, looking for some sign of a vehicle. There was nothing, not even a track in the pristine snow.

  “Could be kids,” Ollie said.

  Louis shook his head. “Only reason to set a fire way out here is to burn something you don’t want anyone to find.” He didn’t add what he was thinking, that maybe they had stumbled upon evidence Lacey was trying to hide, that maybe there was another dead cop out there somewhere.

  “Well, whatever it is we’ve got to check it out,” Ollie said.

  “I’ll go,” Louis said, looking at the fire.

  “I think I should.”

  “Why? Did your horoscope tell you that?”

  “Actually, it said I should avoid confrontations on the job today.”

  Louis put on his gloves. “Well, that settles it. I’m going.”

  Ollie nodded and reached in the car to get the radio. “Central, I’m staying with the unit. L-11 is on foot.”

  Louis climbed the snowbank and started out into the field. Away from the cruiser, the darkness engulfed him and he felt his heart begin to beat faster. He stepped carefully, the powdery snow growing deeper with each move. The fire was an orange blur against the black wall of trees.

  He squinted, knowing his lack of sleep had affected his eyesight and probably his thinking. He felt as if every nerve in his body was trembling with adrenaline.

  Suddenly, he sank to his knees in the snow and he fell forward, catching himself on his hands. He got up, yanked off his gloves and shook out the snow. He wiped down the flashlight and turned to look back at the cruiser. It looked small and far away. Ollie, standing by the driver door, looked even smaller.

  As he neared the drum, he could smell gasoline and hear the faint crackle of the fire. He aimed the flashlight at the drum. The snow at its base was packed down, but he still could see no prints leading anywhere.

  The voice pierced the quiet and he jumped. Edna…Christ, it was just Edna, her voice coming from the portable radio on his belt. She was asking Ollie for a code-4 to make sure they were all right. He heard Ollie respond.

  Louis stopped a few feet short of the drum and scanned the snow. Now he could see prints, sloppy and distorted in the snow, as if someone had moved around the drum at length. The prints led off toward the pines.

  He picked up a stick and stepped forward, poking the stick into the drum. It hit something solid, sending a blizzard of orange embers up into the sky and the fire blazing to new life. He lifted a burning rag out of the fire and tossed it into the snow. Damn it. He couldn't tell what was in there. It could be a body for all he knew. He had to put it out.

  “L-8,” he said, calling Ollie from his portable, “I’m going to throw some snow on it to see if I can determine what’s burning.”

  “Ten-four.”

  Louis threw the stick aside and stuck the radio back on his belt. He bent down to scoop up some snow.

  Something snapped in the distance. What was it? A branch? An animal?

  Louis looked back toward the cruiser. A chill prickled his spine and his hand jerked to his radio.

  A loud crack fractured the silence and at the same time, something hit him hard from behind, slamming him to the ground. He couldn’t breathe. Frantically, he tried to raise his face from the snow and immediately felt a sharp pain somewhere near his spine. He coughed, fighting for breath, trying to wipe the snow away.

  God, God…he was hit.

  Another crack pierced the quiet. Struggling up on his elbows, he wrenched his radio from his belt and keyed it with trembling fingers.

  “Central! Central! Shots fired! Shots fired! I’m hit!”

  Edna immediately hailed Ollie. There was no response from him. Louis lay still, trying to think. Head back to the cruiser? Wait for backup? The radio trembled in his hand.

  “L-11, where are you hit?” Edna demanded.

  “In the back!” he gasped. He keyed his radio again. “L-8! L-8! Do you copy me?”

  There was no answer and he lowered his head, his fingers tightening around the radio. He had to get back.

  He forced himself to his knees and ripped his gun from his holster. Move! Move!

  He crept behind the oil drum, facing the pines. He peered into the dark wall trying to slow his racing heart. Slowly, he realized the pain in his back was not getting worse. Christ, the vest! The bullet had hit the vest. But Ollie had a vest, too. Why hadn’t he answered?

  Edna’s voice crackled over the radio, still trying to raise Ollie. Another rifle shot zinged overhead and snapped branches far to his right.

  “Central,” he said. “Sniper fire. Repeat, sniper fire, no visual, no visual.”

  “L-11, what is your location?”

  “Road 329…in a field. We’re separated!” His voice sounded hollow, almost feeble. The sound of it sent a spasm of terror through him. He was scared. Jesus, he was so scared.

  Edna called to Ollie. “Advise code-4, Loon-8.”

  Louis stared at the radio. “C’mon, man, answer,” he whispered.

  Edna came back to Louis. “Loon-11, what is your condition?”

  “I’m okay! I’m okay!”

  “What is your proximity to Loon-8?”

  “I…about eighty feet.”

  Louis took a deep breath, his heart pounding. He wiped his face, keeping his eyes trained on the trees.

  “Loon-11, advise. How many shots fired?”

  “Three…no, four!”

  “Do you have a direction of fire?”

  Louis looked at the trees to his left. “Shots fired from the east, Central. It’s quiet now.”

  “Can you determine shooter’s location?”

  Louis wet his lips. “Negative. Negative.”

  Edna came back, her voice steady but underscored with fear. “Loon-11, be advised Loon-5 and 6 are 10-8. ETA seven minutes.”

  Visions of the shooter ambushing the units raged in his head. He wanted to scream into the radio but he forced his words out slowly. “Central, repeat, no location on shooter. Advise all units to proceed with caution.”

  The oil drum at his back was hot, but he shivered as the wind swirled the snow around him. He rubbed his hands on his thighs, his fingers tingling. He had to get back to the cruiser.

  The fire in the oil drum was slowly dying out, but he needed the cover of darkness. He scooped up two handfuls of snow and tossed it in the drum. The fire sizzled and died.

  He began to creep on his knees, his eyes probing the darkness, his ears pricked for anything that moved. His bare hands grew numb as he inched through the snow toward the cruiser. He kept waiting for more shots. He knew that even in the darkness he had to be visible, his uniform dark against the snow.

  A rustle of brittle branches drifted to him from his left. He froze. The sound came again, farther away this time. Then he saw him, just a flash of movement near the road. He was coming from the eastern trees, visible only for a second as the red and blue lights of the cruiser swept over him. Then he was gone.

  Louis struggled to his feet and started running.

  The lights caught the figure again as he emerged from the brush and crossed the road. He was only twenty yards away, angling away from Louis. He carried a long, dark object. A rifle.

  The man moved quickly, expertly, through the white beams of the cruiser’s headlights, then disappeared behind it.

  Louis froze, thrusting his arms rigid in front of him, his gun aimed. “Stop! Stop!” he shouted. “Stop, you motherfucker!”

  Two shots, that was all he was going to get. He held his breath and squeezed the trigger. A flash exploded in front of him and he had to blink the runner back into focus. He fired again.

  He couldn’t see where he was shooting. Then he saw him again. He was almost to the trees on the opposite s
ide of the road.

  “Loon-11. Loon-11. Are you code-4?” Edna called.

  Damn it! Damn it!

  Louis ran, stumbling in the deep drifts. He fell and struggled to his feet, raised his gun and fired again as the man leapt into the trees. Branches splintered as the darkness swallowed him up.

  “Son of a bitch!” Louis yelled.

  “Eleven! Advise code-4!”

  He gripped his weapon and emptied it at the trees, the gun buckling in his hands, the explosions reverberating in the night.

  Click, click, click. Hammer against empty chamber.

  Louis lowered the gun, panting. With trembling hands, he jammed the speed-loader into the cylinder and slapped it shut. “You fucking bastard!” he shouted to the darkness. “Motherfucking bastard!”

  “Loon-11, advise your status!”

  He started to run toward the cruiser but his legs bogged down in the heavy drifts. In the distance, he heard an engine roar to life and ran toward it. He stumbled up onto the asphalt in time to see two red taillights disappear into the night, heading east on County Road 329.

  “Loon-11! Advise your status!” Edna called.

  Louis ran back to the cruiser and froze.

  Ollie was slumped in the seat, his leg dangling out the door. His eyes were open, his gun still in his hand. He was shot in the throat. Blood was gushing from the wound, covering the dark blue fur of the nylon parka.

  “Loon-11. Please advise your status!”

  Ollie’s lips were moving. His eyes were locked on Louis, frightened, birdlike. He was alive. Jesus, he was alive.

  Louis seized the radio off the dash. “I need an ambulance out here now!” he shouted. “Now!”

  Ollie lifted his trembling hand. Louis took it, gripping Ollie’s fingers in his. They felt damp and cool as clay.

  “Central, where is my backup!” Louis yelled into the mike, bracing his elbow on the hood.

  Ollie’s fingers wiggled limply in his. “Help me,” he said, his voice thick with blood.

  Jesus, everything was red. Ollie’s throat, his shirt, the car, the lights. Oh, Jesus…He had to stop it, he had to stop it.

  Louis tossed the radio on the dash and leaned in the car, placing his hand on the wound. Warm blood oozed over his skin and he could feel Ollie’s weak pulse under his fingertips.

  “Hang on, man,” Louis whispered. “Hang on.”

 

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