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The Complete Bragg Thriller Box Set

Page 173

by Jack Lynch


  “Welch, look. No matter what your reasons, no matter your justifications, you’ve made mistakes in this thing. You’ve killed innocent people. You’ve killed people who weren’t connected in any way with that fire.”

  “Don’t you listen to me, Mr. Bragg? I realize the people I’ve killed weren’t up there at the ranch.”

  “I don’t mean them. There was a woman named Karen Ellis registered at the ranch. Remember her, Welch?”

  “Yes, I do. The modeling lady.”

  “She was registered, but she wasn’t at the ranch the night of the fire. She hadn’t been using any water. She had dinner over in Occidental that night and ran into an old friend. She spent the night with him.”

  Welch didn’t say anything immediately. “Is that the truth?”

  “It is. But you still killed her business partner, Nancy Dobbs. Nancy Dobbs and Karen Ellis were both innocent of what you’re accusing these people of, Welch. How does that make you feel?”

  He hesitated. “Regretful. I am sorry about that, but when you’re dealing with so many people, mistakes will happen.”

  “That’s a mistake you can make up for. Let the girl go.”

  “No. It doesn’t add up that way, Mr. Bragg. Your friend the psychic has to be made to pay, I’m sorry. She wrote a newspaper story about that fire. Jim’s widow sent a copy of it to my wife. Teresa must have read that story, oh, a dozen times. I think that contributed greatly to my wife going off into Golden Gate Park and doing what she did. No, Mr. Bragg. Your psychic friend has to pay. She has to pay hard. But I am truly sorry about the Dobbs woman. You can tell Miss Ellis that for me if you would.”

  It was then that I heard a very light drumbeat of fingers on wood. I turned. Rachel was standing at the top of the stairway. She made a questioning gesture. I pointed to where Welch was concealed. She made the same hurried survey of the ruins I had, then shook her head, her mouth in a tight, thin line. She stepped to the wire fencing and stared at Bobbie’s predicament. She moved quietly past me down the length of the platform. I followed. Rachel was staring first at Bobbie then down toward the bottom of the stairway at that end of the platform. I raised my revolver and trained it toward Welch’s niche.

  “Will you do that for me, Mr. Bragg? Will you tell the Ellis woman I apologize?”

  “Yes, I’ll tell her, Welch.”

  “You’ve moved along the platform, Mr. Bragg. Don’t try anything tricky.”

  “I’m not trying anything tricky. I want to be closer to Bobbie.”

  “Sure. Get a good look at her, Mr. Bragg. You can tell her aunt how she looked when her face starts turning blue. The way I imagine my wife’s did. If she wants to see more, your psychic friend, tell her to be sure and watch the TV tape I’m shooting.”

  Rachel turned to me and made a circular motion with one finger pointing at her head before she started down the platform stairs. At the bottom she glanced up again at Bobbie, who now was almost dangling free, then stepped out to where the low split-rail fence resumed at the outer wall. She climbed over it and disappeared around the corner.

  “Another thing I’d like to know, Welch,” I called. “Why did you choose a state park as your burial ground?”

  “I guess it was part of the statement I wanted to make. It adds to the drama, I think. Adds to the grief for those I wanted to get to. Get them focused on the magnitude of the killing, don’t you see, then whap! One of their own loved ones is dug up and becomes a part of it.”

  Rachel now was scrambling through the four-foot-high stone window opening into the basement area just beneath Bobbie.

  “But how did you get into the park?”

  “I have a knowledge of padlocks, Mr. Bragg. And the tools to open most kinds of them.”

  Where Rachel now stood was a roomy area with another tall concrete wall a dozen feet or so in from the outer wall. It served as a natural shield from where Welch was. Rachel had her long barreled revolver out and was staring up at Bobbie. She moved across to sit down with her back against the interior wall and raised her pistol, but then stood almost immediately to look around for a better position to do whatever she had in mind. I hoped it wasn’t to put Bobbie out of her misery. I had to stall some more.

  “Something else,” I called to Welch. “Where did you get the names of the people you killed? The people close to those at the ranch when the fire started?”

  “By talking to neighbors, people they worked with. But I found out about little Bobbie here from you, remember? The Robbins woman was the last one on my list. I never would have known about Bobbie, maybe, if you hadn’t happened along.”

  I glanced back down at Rachel. She had left the inner wall and settled against the outside wall some distance away from Bobbie. She had a two-handed grip on the revolver and braced the right arm against the wall.

  Bobbie made a quarter turn at the end of the rope. She stretched one toe desperately to regain purchase atop the ice.

  “For God’s sake, Welch, let me stop it,” I yelled. “You’ve made your point. You don’t need another death. Maybe you can still get out of here before the deputies arrive. Get away, but let me help Bobbie.”

  “Deputies be damned. Do you have any idea how much work I put in on setting this thing up?”

  But by now I was making my way down the platform stairs as quietly as I could manage. It was one of those times my body told me that’s enough talk; get on with it.

  “Mr. Bragg?” Welch called. “Mr. Bragg?”

  I hit bottom, went over the low rail fence and bellied my way through the same window opening Rachel had.

  That was when Rachel opened fire.

  She made it sound like a burp gun. It was the most rapid fire I had ever heard from a revolver, and her shooting parted the rope above Bobbie’s neck. I scrambled over to get below her just as Bobbie slipped from the ice to the hearth then lost her balance and tumbled off the narrow ledge.

  Nobody had taught me how to break the fall of someone, not even of a slightly built girl. The momentum knocked both of us to the concrete. Bobbie rolled over, hands still bound, gasping for breath.

  Smith had been right about Rachel. She was a shooter. She’d emptied her gun but she’d kept her eyes up, in the direction Welch might come from, and by touch alone she’d removed the used cartridge cases then used a speedloader to simultaneously ram six more rounds into the revolver cylinder.

  But it wasn’t quite fast enough.

  Welch had come out of his recess and scrambled across the concrete supports to the wall just above us before Rachel could slap shut the cylinder.

  He had his rifle and took dead aim at the crouching detective, but by then I’d grabbed for my own .38 and now fired twice at the man looming overhead. One round missed, the other hit him in the shoulder.

  Welch faltered, eyes wide in surprise, then Rachel shot him twice in the stomach. He buckled and fell and his rifle clattered to the concrete floor beside him.

  TWENTY-FOUR

  One of the ambulance attendants wanted to transport Bobbie to a hospital in Santa Rosa for a checkup and treatment of rope burns around her neck, but she said no in words that brought color to the attendant’s face.

  Another ambulance had already departed with the critically wounded Clifford Welch. A general alarm had brought other emergency and official vehicles to the parking lot by the House of Happy Walls and down to the Wolf House itself.

  Rachel wasn’t just a shooter, she’d proven to be a good, intuitive cop. She had felt the same apprehension to do with Welch that I had. When the people at the Press Democrat in Santa Rosa told her it would take a while to have somebody look up the ranch fire story she had left word for them to relay the information to Sergeant Barry Smith, then she had climbed into a patrol car and started out for Jack London State Park with lights flashing. On her way to the park Smith radioed her the information from the newspaper. One of the fire victims had been a Clifford Welch Jr. That’s when Rachel had hit the siren.

  Ranger Davenpor
t, after galloping back up the road, had radioed the woman ranger at the gate about what was taking place at the Wolf House, and when Rachel arrived, the gate ranger relayed the information. Rachel had left her vehicle at the top of the rise just north of the Wolf House and made her way quietly on foot down to where she had put on the most spectacular display of pistol shooting I had ever seen.

  “I sincerely apologize for any bitchiness I might have shown you in the past,” Bobbie had croaked to Rachel, immediately after it was over.

  Bobbie told us that Welch had done a smooth job of gaining her confidence with the wine and cheese picnic in Sonoma and a friendly line of patter. So she was willing to go along with his eccentricity of wanting to do the interview inside the Wolf House ruins. Once inside, Bobbie said, Welch had pinioned and tied her wrists behind her back and used a ladder from his van to set up the elaborate hanging arrangement with the rope and block of ice he had also carried in the van.

  “I started to scream my head off,” she told us, “but he hit me alongside the head so hard I actually did, for the first time in my life, see stars in front of me.”

  Bobbie’s voice still had a croak to it, but she was up and moving around now and talking to people and laughing some. She might be hit later by aftershock, I thought, and I suggested that when she got back to Maribeth’s she try to get a doctor to come by to check her out and give her something to help her sleep that night.

  “Are you kidding?” she said. “I’ll be going to Maribeth’s, but just long enough to pack my things and then I’m on my way back to Carmel, brother. People down there might be a little neurotic, but they’re not out and out crazy!”

  And then I noticed the time. Allison might already be waiting for me in the United boarding area. I borrowed a cell phone from one of the other deputies and clambered back up onto the Wolf House viewing platform, praying I could get a message out of that area.

  I tried phoning Max Bolero at the Sausalito seaplane base. With luck, I thought, Max could pick me up with one of the amphibians at Shellville Airport, a field a few miles south of Glen Ellen, and fly me down to San Francisco International. The phone worked but the man who answered it at the seaplane base told me that Max and “some of the boys” had flown up to Clear Lake for the day. They didn’t have a number where he could be reached.

  I didn’t remember walking back down off the viewing platform. I knew there was no way I could drive to the airport in time.

  “Bragg? What is it?”

  I looked up. Rachel was watching me closely. I must have looked like a real pip from the expression on her face. But I managed to tell her about Allison and the message Sharon had given me. It took Rachel about two seconds to make up her mind.

  “Come on.”

  “Where to?”

  “My car up there. I’ll get you to the airport before your girlfriend takes off. Now come on!”

  I yelled at Bobbie and tossed her my car keys. I hustled up the rise behind Rachel and we got into the patrol car. We took off, back up the dirt road to the lot near the House of Happy Walls then out to the main road. I turned to look at Rachel as we rocketed down off the hill. She could get into a lot of trouble driving off like that. We both had shot a man back there. It didn’t matter how justified it might have been. There was a lot of debriefing to be done; reports to be written. The expression on her face told me she realized all that.

  “Why are you doing this?” I asked.

  “Because I’m your backup. Same as you’ve been mine. I don’t mean physical presence, gun in hand. I mean bone-deep support. What you and Bobbie gave Maribeth. What Smitty and you again gave me. Now shut up and let me drive.”

  She slowed when we got down off the hill, driving through the village of Glen Ellen, but after that she really opened it up. On flat stretches with good visibility and little traffic she pushed the car up close to 90 miles an hour. When she got us down onto Highway 37, a four-lane divided highway that cut west over to U.S. 101, she increased her speed even more and got onto the radio to somebody. I couldn’t hear much of what was said. The roaring car engine and rush of air outside made too much noise. But we were moving. Boy, we were moving.

  The radio message, I learned, had been to request that a Highway Patrol car join us when we got over onto 101. The CHP ran interference for us all the way down through Marin County to the Golden Gate Bridge. It left us there, but Rachel used the lights and siren to good advantage, getting us over the bridge and along Park Presideo Boulevard, across the waist of Golden Gate Park then down 19th Avenue and out the south end of the city onto another freeway leading to the airport.

  I didn’t know if we’d get there in time or not. It was after 5:30 when Rachel swung off the freeway with squealing tires and roared up to the entrance of the terminal Allison would leave from.

  Rachel braked to a stop. “CHP said they’d have somebody from airport security inside to usher you through the checkpoints. Now go!”

  I went, throwing open the door and lunging across the pavement, jostling people as I went through the doors and then running across the terminal floor, dodging people, eyes searching for an overhead TV monitor listing arrivals and departures. I spotted one, read the boarding gate number and made for it. It was out at the end of the long passenger pier. It seemed the gate I wanted always was out at the end of a long pier.

  As promised an airport security official in gray slacks and blue jacket met me at the checkpoint and waved me on through.

  When I reached the boarding gate area, it was nearly empty, with the last passengers just moving past the gate attendant and stepping into the portable tunnel leading to the plane. And then I saw Allison, showing her boarding pass, but I couldn’t bring myself to call out to her.

  I felt as if somebody had pulled the plug on me. The set of her shoulders and lift of her chin told me she already had made up her mind, about something at least. And the slight man with the glasses and little paunch who followed her into the boarding tunnel told me even more.

  I sank into a chair as they closed the door to the boarding tunnel. I felt dead. No thought; no emotion. I heard the whine of jet engines outside. In what seemed like no time at all the sound moved away from the terminal. Then somebody else came into the waiting area. Rachel.

  “Did you catch her?”

  “I saw her. She was just going through the door over there.”

  “Didn’t you yell?”

  I shook my head. “Things caught in my throat. She wasn’t alone. Gene Cooney was with her. Gene Cooney’s going to Hawaii with Allison.”

  Rachel gaped at me. “Little Bob?”

  “Yeah. Little Bob.”

  I stared off in the distance, not really looking at anything. Rachel settled in the seat beside me, gathering her thoughts.

  “You know, Bragg, we haven’t known each other for very long, but I’ve got a couple of things I’d like to say to you.”

  I shook my head. “I appreciate what you’ve done, Rachel. What you tried to do. But there’s nothing right now I want to talk about.”

  “You’re not going to talk, you’re going to listen. The thing is, there are a couple of little secrets women have that we generally keep to ourselves. Men seldom ever hear us talk about them. No husband. No son. No lover.”

  I looked up at her.

  “One of the secrets is that a woman—any woman—is capable of making astonishingly wrong judgments. I’m talking about really big mistakes here, Bragg. Whoppers. Maybe only once in a lifetime, but we make them. And I think your girlfriend just made one of those. Of that magnitude.”

  I shook my head. “I don’t know that you’re right about that, Rachel. Nice try, but no cigar. It is finally beginning to penetrate that maybe Allison has had the right instincts after all. Maybe we are just not meant for each other. Maybe she really needs a man who leads the sort of life Cooney leads, instead of the kind I do. Maybe it’s the only way she can bring that talent she has to a piece of canvas and make it work.”

 
Rachel gestured impatiently. “You don’t believe that.”

  “I’m beginning to.”

  “Bragg, you’re just plain wrong. And Allison is wrong if she believes that. How could she or anybody else bring any great talent to a piece of canvas if there weren’t people to keep the animals at bay while they’re doing it? I mean people like me and people like you. And in this most recent bit of awfulness, it was mostly you. You saved a life or two today, Bragg. Have you thought about that?”

  “You shot the rope apart.”

  “Only by following your tracks, I did. You’re the one who figured this thing out when the rest of us couldn’t. And by saving Bobbie’s life, maybe you made it possible for Maribeth to keep on using the talent she has, which I’m beginning to think is formidable, to help out still other people. Who knows what would have become of Maribeth if her niece had strangled to death at the end of that rope? The point is you’re good at what you do, Bragg. You’re important.”

  It was about then I realized what this lady cop was doing. It was as if she were bringing full circle a significant part of my own life. She was talking to me the way I had talked to Maribeth that day long ago when she had telephoned the City Room to tell me she was going to commit suicide. Rachel was pumping me up. Trying to keep me going.

  “You’re important to people like Maribeth and people like Allison as well, whether she can see that or not,” Rachel continued. “And let me say something else right here. I would judge there’s a little flaw in this great talent you say your girlfriend has if she can’t accept an underbelly to life that exists right alongside the beauty. And it’s this woman cop’s strongly held opinion that she’ll only be able to really show people the beauty she wants to show them after she acknowledges the ugly and quits running from it. That’s really what she’s doing, you know.”

  “How do I explain that to Allison?”

 

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