The Kill Riff

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The Kill Riff Page 26

by David J. Schow


  Cass sat grinding her teeth, eyes focused on the floor. "I would not enjoy dealing with a whole platoon of nosy cops," she said at last. "Or laying out everything that happened, in detail, over and over. Or blowing more of my life than I already have on Reese. All it would gain me is more grief. No, not for him." She wrung her hands. "As far as I'm concerned, Reese went into the forest and never came out. Besides, I get the feeling that the police are the last people you want poking around up here."

  "Why?" Lucas was aware that he was playing games, that he should just be straight with her. But what harm could paying out a little more rope do now? Let's see what she says.

  "The stuff in that room over there. The stuff I've heard on the radio about the members of an old rock band called Whip Hand. A room full of weapons and a poster of the lead singer with his gut torn out. Two plus two. I hate to be chill, Lucas, and I hate to rope you in regarding Reese… but what I saw in that room looks awfully incriminating to me."

  He sat, evaluating her. His unblinking assessment was too much like Reese's flat lizard gaze.

  "Lucas, listen to me: I don't care one way or the other! It all has something to do with Kristen; it's what you wouldn't talk about before." She moved closer, trying to touch his injured hands gently. "I'd be willing to bet that what you're doing-what you seem to be doing-is no more murder than what I did today. Sometimes things don't fall neatly and cleanly into the boundaries of the law! Can't you understand that I saw the stuff in that room, and that none of it matters to me? What I care about is the fact that you saved my ass, and that you're a good man, and if you're involved in this Whip Hand stuff, then you must have a damned good reason-a reason at least as good as mine. Nothing else matters." She waited a beat, through more of his stoic silence. "Would you like some more coffee?"

  The moment was poised between them, like some dark predator deciding whether to kill or let live. Finally his eyes came up to concentrate on the crackling fire.

  "I love dealing with intelligent people, I really do. I think I've just had ten seconds of the most significant eye contact I've ever experienced… and yes, I could use some more coffee, Cass."

  She rinsed out their mugs. There was dry blood staining the ring of the drain. It looked like a coffee stain. She did not want to flash back on what she'd fished out of the sink earlier. "Another thing," she said. "Your ex-wife? I think I met her and her lawyer right before Reese showed up."

  "You said nobody else was up here." The hint of accusation in his voice was level and reasoned, but damning just the same.

  "No-I said nobody else saw Reese. He showed up after they left. He'd been camping out in the trees, watching the cabin, biding time. He made sure nobody was around when he made his move. A half hour earlier, who knows? A half hour later, I might be dead." Yet unspoken was a flat verification of murder on Lucas' part: I did it, Cass. Part of her was frantic to know. Part of her needed to know how she fit into, or disrupted, Lucas' plans. One possible answer was ugly and total. Lucas' words had suddenly taken on a defensive tinge. What he said seemed to hold deadly dual meanings and unvoiced threats. She had started babbling to fill the hole left by his scary silence, while Sara's odd protest echoed in her mind: I don't know how long you've known Lucas, honey, but I'm willing to bet it hasn't been more than two weeks, and you obviously don't have any idea of who or what you're involved with!

  Who was Lucas? What was Lucas?

  A realization jolted her as she mechanically did her bit with the coffee. It was one of those unsettling puzzle pieces that had been sitting all along, only it had taken her till now to think of it. Sara had been angry and reactionary. Maybe the reason was because she thought Lucas was up here fucking a girl half his age. But why should that make his ex-wife so steamed?

  And she hadn't said she was his ex-wife, but his doctor. And that meant Lucas hadn't been entirely straight with her.

  "You don't look so disheveled now," Lucas said, intruding on her accelerating thoughts. "Despite Reese."

  "I'm a fast healer." She was going to start mumbling and circumventing if she didn't dive in and hope for the best. Detouring Sara had committed her. She had lied for Lucas before she had any real idea of what he might be doing out in the real world, beyond the mountains.

  Cass dove.

  "Sara said you were being sought in connection with three murders. Her words. I think she was seeking you. I think if there was a real dragnet out for you, neither of us would be here right now. There'd be cops dropping out of the trees. She looked to me a lot like a lady who has put a whole bunch of facts into a stack -enough stuff to come after you. But she doesn't want to nail you. She just wants to find you." She found the Bronco's first-aid kit, still in the kitchen, and brought it over. In a curious, role-reversed replay of their first meeting, she began to unwrap the stiff dressings on his hands. "So who is Sara, Lucas? Really. Maybe it's an unfair question. But I don't want to keep up with the evasions and meaningful silences."

  He decided to play proper croquet. "It's over, Cass. It ended yesterday. And no matter what Sara does, there's no real evidence. All the evasions have been mine-you've been perfectly honest with me. I'm not used to that. But since I found you-or vice-versa -things have changed. The whole… what I was doing… doesn't seem as important now." His palms felt the air. "Careful…"

  "Holy shit." Cass' mouth pulled back.

  "Skinned them on a climbing rope. Damned stupid."

  "In Arizona." There it was-a direct accusation in one color, sizzling crimson.

  "Right."

  She refused to let it rock her. She busied herself with cleaning and rebandaging the ravaged hands of the man who had just admitted to killing off the members of Whip Hand. But then, hadn't she just killed someone herself, less than ten hours ago? "I think Sara and that guy will probably come back. They didn't have that give-up look in their eyes. I told them you'd cleared out for a month, but I don't think they bought it enough to keep them from checking one more time, maybe tomorrow. Hold your hand like this. Better."

  He winced as medication stung him, sterilizing, cleansing away what his hands had done. "They had to have driven up from L.A. It must be Burt who's with her, which means he's gotten curious by now. They're probably in a hotel somewhere between here and the city. Maybe one of those mom-and-pop beachfront stopovers you can get for twenty-six bucks a night. They'll be back all right."

  She unfurled a roll of sterile gauze. "So what do we do? Both of us, I mean?"

  "Nothing will happen till the storm goes away, and no one is coming up that hill in the storm unless they have a tank. We've got to get rid of Reese's body and the stuff in that room. Maybe Reese can serve a purpose after all. Everything-including evidence-could be dumped with him. Once that's done, we could wait for Sara and Burt and just face them off. Or you and I could just move on, and I can deal with them in my own time." The new bandages were brilliantly white in the firelight. He pushed himself up and stumped over to the back door. With the baton flashlight from the kitchen, he scanned until he located the soggy mass of tarpaulin.

  "That's Reese," Cass said from behind him, grateful that the lump was still there, had not crawled off into the night to stalk her another day. "The firewood's wet, but I brought a stack inside before it started pouring. Don't know why I thought of that, considering the mental state I was in."

  "The mind does weird things to keep itself on track during stress," he said. Behind them the fire had calmed down to glowing embers, pulsing good heat.

  She moved past him to close the back door and slide her arms around him. "I'm just glad you finally showed up," she told him, and this time he knew she meant it.

  Cass was a woman who would not lie to him.

  She had been broken and now was healed before him, like the void left by Kristen had been healed by his masterful plan. He was still a bit stunned by the knowledge that his careful vendetta was over. Gabriel Stannard would be crushed by paranoia, without being touched by a single glove. Lucas' own skill
as an assassin had been (in the parlance of Kroeger Concepts) "trending steadily downward." It was time to finish it.

  Cass took his face in her hands to aim, and kissed him. His arms crooked under hers and pulled her closer, drawing her up onto her toe tips as their kiss waxed into a healing charge of energy. Her fingers dallied in his hair. As she stretched up to meet him, she squeezed his uninjured leg, oh so gently, between her own.

  Their talking was done for the evening.

  22

  THAT NIGHT THE COASTLINE FLOODED from Santa Cruz to Santa Monica, where most of the pier submerged at an estimated cost of two million dollars. The PCH buckled, and expensive Malibu homes glissaded muddily down to meet the riptide. Movie stars bitched on the late news, helicopter flybys were bollixed by the downpour, and the Red Cross came out to sandbag. Phone communications went completely to hell.

  At the very moment Lucas and Cass were slowly and carefully undressing each other in the warm yellow radiance of the fireplace, Sara slammed the hotel room phone into its rack. Its red bubble pager light winked once on impact, as if in pain.

  "Damn it-I had them, I was on hold, then I lost them. Or they lost me. It must be a sign that I'm not supposed to do this.'' She plopped into a weary lotus position on the left-hand bed, her jeans stretching taut as she crossed her legs in order to knead her bare feet.

  Three feet away, Burt Kroeger rubbed his face until it was ruddy, then rose from his recliner fortress of pillows to pour more coffee from the room service tray. His gray cloud of hair was frazzled enough for Sara to perceive that his hairline had retreated, but the arrangement of his hair was artfully designed to conceal this.

  "If you don't get through soon, I'm going to start spiking this coffee. And we'll both start drinking it. And by morning neither one of us will be capable of interfering anymore." He looked back at her. "That's a joke. Sara-don't second-guess yourself. You're not turning Lucas in, you're merely seeking assistance in Los Angeles to try and locate him-if he's down there at all. You're a professional; they'll take an educated guess from you seriously. And if they will, why won't you?"

  "It's still a betrayal," she said. "I hate that feeling." She seemed small and lost, there at the edge of the large and hardly rumpled bed.

  Burt lit up another filterless Marlboro from the hard pack he'd pulled out of a vending machine that morning, and coughed on his first puff. "Filthy habit. I started up again almost as soon as Lucas came home from Olive Grove." He paused to smoke a bit. "If you and I were going to sit and do nothing, we would be much more rested now, and our credit cards less abused. So let's not play this game of woulda-coulda-shoulda. We're in it. It's too late to go back and pretend we're not involved."

  "I know, I know…'' She squeezed his hand. Daddy image. Father figure. "It's just that-"

  "You care about the guy." It was obvious to Burt, perhaps just as obvious to the world at large. "Me, too. That's why we're out here in alien territory while the whole state drowns, acting like jerks-because we both love the son of a bitch. End of story."

  "Maybe they will turn up Lucas in L.A… hitchhiking, or wasting time at the movies, or… something." It sounded lame. It was lame.

  "We've called in the marines just in case. Look at it that way. We have a better chance of finding him this way even if he has to endure a nasty little search and seizure. At least then we'll know. Calling the cops was a good idea, Sara. I sure as hell don't know where else to look for him."

  She bunched pillows into the small of her back, and her spine popped when she eased back. "I'm beginning to think that at Olive Grove we treated him exactly the opposite of the way we should have treated him."

  Burt crushed out his smoke. "How's that?"

  "Suicidal depression usually involves a load of guilt. The therapist must help the patient alleviate the guilt and eliminate the impetus for the urge toward suicide. But if you're dealing with a psychotic personality, sometimes you have to do the reverse-instill guilt, because he doesn't have any built in. They don't care about things the way you or I might. They don't worry about good or bad in the sense we were brought up to understand."

  "Lucas a psychotic? That's news to me."

  "My age is showing, sorry. We supposedly stopped calling them psychotics in the 1950s. The APA's buzzword became 'sociopathic.' By 1970 that had expanded conveniently to include 'antisocial.' The psychopathy I'm talking about is the textbook form, not the splatter movie form. I was thinking, what if you reinterpret Lucas from this slant? A lot of items suddenly link up."

  Burt sneezed. "Stuffy in here." She saw his eyes automatically seek his vial of blood pressure medication on the desk. "I don't know anything about psychopaths except the Hollywood brand."

  "There's a certain kind of psychopath whose behavior turns toward pure problem solving. His urges are translated into instantaneous action. He wants to do something, anything to correct whatever wrong he sees in his situation. It's the same kind of frustration that makes teenagers break windows."

  "Or saints make what the history books call bold steps?"

  "Anything but inertia. Oh, the classic psychopath has many qualities we groundlings often envy. They are very driven individuals. Obsessed, almost. They can be utterly pragmatic, or charming to get what they need, or aggressive and unrestrained. A fellow named Cleckley noted this more than forty years ago; he wrote a seminal book on the subject called The Mask of Sanity. He acknowledged the existence of what he called 'the successful psychopath.' A restless, gallant, daring type who generally gets what he wants, is bored spitless by most of life, and who finds most pleasures transient and most disappointments recurring.''

  "You're describing most of the uptight three-piece-suiters on Broker's Row," said Burt.

  "No doubt." She sought her Salem 100s, slid out a slim ciggie, and occupied her hands with it. It was comforting to sit and speak pseudoacademically, as though she were still a student, arguing theory in some campus cafeteria. "Some doctors speculate that this sort of 'psychopathy' is the survival mechanism we've evolved for coping with the 21st century. There are studies revealing that the children who had well-rounded upbringings and responsive, loving parents grow up to be dominated by the psychopaths-the kids who were rejected, or treated with cruelty or indifference. So the question arises: Do we mistreat our children on purpose, so they'll grow up to be survivors, or do we raise meek 'good citizens' who will ultimately be pushed around by the psychopaths?"

  "Sounds like something essentially very seductive," he said, turning on to the idea. "You're talking about dressing your mind for success-programming for a competitive society. Part of me likes the idea already. Part of me is frightened by it-the lure of altering yourself to win. Put a price tag on it, and a lot of people would line up to pay cash money." Even now, the promotional aspect of Burt's consciousness was at work: How can this be sold? Who would want it?

  Only every person who wasn't as successful as he or she thought they should be.

  "It is seductive. This kind of psychopath has the gift of being able to maneuver people, but at the cost of his own innocence. He can hug someone mechanically because the hug is what is required to gain some objective… but he has no concept of what other people feel when they embrace. To him there is no such thing as the emotional rights of another person. No idea of 'good' or 'bad.' When he's caught in what you or I would consider a sin, he's repentant only because he's pissed off at being caught, because for him there is no such thing as guilt. If you accuse him, he'll act the outraged innocent-I didn't do it! It wasn't my fault! Or he'll vigorously protest that he's been framed. But as soon as you let him go, or forgive him, that repentance evaporates. His goal has been achieved; he was never really at fault. He'll steal from his friends, and say he loves those he uses. The only thing he'll ever feel is a sense of accomplishment. For such a person, the only beauty is domination, the wielding of power, attracting attention. To be outwardly seamless, never stumbling, never unsure of himself, never admitting it if he is, never look
ing awkward or stupid. The only grace is in speed, in performance. The psychopath is 'on' all the time, or tries to be, and has nothing but contempt for those who cannot match his level of performance, or who lack the proper skill or defenses. Harrington called them 'Zen sadists.' ''

  Sara seemed wearied, as though her explanation had brought things she did not wish to see floating to the surface.

  "Suppose the Whip Hand plan was in Lucas' mind from the very first?" said Burt. "I mean, assuming he's guilty."

  "Then I was misdirected by an expert." She thumped her skull against the padded headboard. "If, if, if! Not knowing is…" She petered out in frustration.

  "Driving you nuts, I know." He ruffled his own hair again. "I think it's hot shower time. Bang on the door if you reach anybody on the phone."

  She smiled wanly at his shambling exit. The door thunked shut, and the sound of hot water gushing made her think of warmth, and how that warmth could pound the weariness right out of your bones.

  Calling the cops had ultimately been her decision; Burt had deferred to her all along. He, too, took her professional credentials seriously. But it was also a way of abrogating responsibility for what happened. In turn, the burden of guilt would fall to Sara, since her treatment of Lucas had been so wrong. She wasn't sure she was ready to acquiesce, to accept that horrible feeling without protest.

  The police would ask why she hadn't proffered her theories earlier. She would say she'd only just put the chain together herself. They might ask how possible it was for Lucas to seek out his doctor. She wasn't so sure of the answer to that one. There had been no messages for her at Olive Grove and no taped news on her answering machine at home. Lucas knew where she lived, had her address and number and vital stats. The police would check her records as a matter of course. They would discover that Sara held a carry permit for a.38-caliber Colt Diamondback revolver. It had been a gift from her father, who'd taught her to shoot. She had fired it maybe twice since 1976, and it was hidden at the bottom of her overnight bag. Burt had not seen it.

 

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