Blue heaven a novel, p.24

Blue Heaven: A Novel, page 24

 

Blue Heaven: A Novel
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  As she spoke, she fished her phone out of her purse and looked at it. “No messages as of now,” she said.

  Jess was thinking about how she said the last person who saw the kids alive.

  “So you don’t think the Taylor kids will be found?” he asked. The woman ahead of him had finally located her checkbook but was arguing about the price of a head of lettuce.

  Fiona’s eyes got huge, and she shook her head in an exaggerated way. Then she shinnied around her cart so she could whisper into Jess’s ear.

  “I don’t want to say too much because, you know, I’m now considered sort of an expert in this case,” she said, peering around the store as if looking for spies, “but I think a sexual predator has them. Or had them. I think it’s just a matter of time before the bodies show up. And I wouldn’t be a bit surprised if they find out those kids have been … violated.”

  Jess leaned away from her as she talked, and squinted at her. “A sexual predator?”

  “Don’t talk so loudly,” she said, wiggling a stubby finger in his face. “Somebody will overhear us.”

  “Sir?”

  Jess turned. The checkout clerk was ready for him, and he gratefully pushed his cart forward.

  As he unloaded it onto the belt, he could feel Fiona Pritzle studying him.

  “String cheese? Juice boxes? What are you doing with those?”

  Jess felt his face flush. He couldn’t think of a way to explain it.

  He looked up at her. “Wanted to try some new things,” he said. “I’m in a rut.” He was also a poor liar.

  She stared back at him, her eyes narrow.

  “I had a bunch of coupons,” he said. That one crashed, too.

  He paid in cash and left her standing there. As he pushed his cart toward the door, blood rushing in his ears, his face hot, he heard her ask the checkout clerk if she had seen the newspaper today.

  As he drove out of Kootenai Bay, Jess surveyed the northwestern sky and saw the blunt shapes of thunderheads nosing over the mountains. It had been clear and warm all day, but rain was coming again. The barometric pressure would change, and it was likely at least two of the cows would calve tonight. He still had a fence line to check. These thoughts were hardwired into him, the result of routine and experience. The fence could wait, but there was nothing he could do to postpone the calves. He hoped he could get some sleep before they came, though.

  And he prayed the children would be at his house, where they should be, and that everything was okay. He pushed aside a mild panic at the thought of them being gone or harmed.

  He stopped at his gate as he always did before realizing that someone had left it open. He quickly got back in his truck, drove over the cattle guard, and shut the gate behind him. Who had come onto his ranch? His immediate thought was that the trespasser wasn’t local. Locals closed gates. When he topped the hill and cleared the trees, he could see his home below and he felt a rush of anxiety and ice-cold fear. A vehicle he didn’t recognize, a black pickup, was parked at a rakish angle on the circular drive. A dark man he had never seen before stood on his porch with his hand to his face—talking on a cell phone?—with his other arm gesturing in the air. Jess recognized him from the drawing Annie had made. It was the big one, with the mustache.

  The rancher accelerated, and his fear was replaced by anger. The house looked to be as he left it: locked up tight. The doors were closed and the curtains drawn. The children must still be inside, he thought, probably scared out of their minds. Who was this man, this trespasser, who strode along his porch with such contempt and familiarity?

  Jess slowed and parked behind the black pickup. The man on the porch had now seen him, and he was closing his phone and glowering. The man stopped, his arms folded across his massive chest, waiting for Jess.

  He spoke before Jess could. “Is this your place?”

  Jess shut his door, leaving the groceries inside. The man on the porch exuded menace. He outweighed Jess by at least forty pounds, and he was younger. The rancher stopped and leaned forward on the hood of his truck. The motor ticked as it cooled. Jess usually had his Winchester in his gun rack for coyotes, but he had taken it out to clean it several days before and had forgotten to put it back in.

  “This is my ranch,” Jess said. “The question is what you’re doing on it.”

  The man snorted. “I’m with the sheriff’s department. If you haven’t heard, there are a couple of local kids missing.”

  “I’ve never seen you before.”

  “Ah,” the man said. “I’m sure you haven’t. I’m helping out the department as a volunteer. Several of us are assisting Sheriff Carey with the investigation.”

  As he spoke, Jess looked at the man’s reflection in the living room window. He could see the butt of a pistol poking out from his belt behind his back.

  “You’re one of the cops, then,” Jess said. “Do you have a name?”

  “Dennis Gonzalez. Sergeant Dennis Gonzalez. LAPD.”

  “Not anymore.”

  Gonzalez smirked and rolled his eyes. He showed his teeth under his bushy mustache. “No, not anymore. But that don’t matter. We’re working with your sheriff.”

  “I heard. So what are you doing trespassing here?”

  “Trespassing?” he said, the smile growing wider. But his eyes remained black and hard. “You need to watch that language, mister. We’re going house to house looking for any sign of those kids. This place is on my list.”

  To Jess’s horror, he saw the curtain part behind Gonzalez, and William’s blue eyes in the window. William was looking at Gonzalez’s gun. To William, Jess wanted to shout, “Get away from there.” To Gonzalez, Jess wanted to plead, “Don’t turn around.”

  Jess sighed. “All right, then. I’m back. You can go now.”

  “Not so fast. I heard activity inside when I drove up. I’d like to have a look around.”

  “It’s just me here,” Jess said, hoping his face didn’t reflect his anxiety. “My foreman left a few days ago. I’m running the place by myself.”

  “No wife inside?”

  “Divorced.”

  “You and me both, brother,” Gonzalez said. “So if nobody is in there, why not invite me in for a cup of coffee or something?”

  “I’ve got work to do.”

  “On a Sunday?”

  Jess nodded. “Yup. Couple of cows about to calve.”

  Gonzalez studied his face. “I’d really like to take a look around this place so I can scratch it off my list. I’d like to take a look in your barn, and in that house across the lot there. I want to make sure I wasn’t hearing things when I drove up.”

  “You were,” Jess said.

  For a moment, a tense silence hung in the air. Jess shot a glance at the window. Gonzalez noticed it, and looked behind him. Thank God, William was gone.

  “Let me get this straight,” Gonzalez said, turning back around. “Are you denying me the opportunity to look around here? I’m here to clear you off my list as a kidnapper. Do you understand how suspicious this sounds?”

  The word kidnapper hit Jess hard, and he tried not to flinch. Could he let Gonzalez look around? The man would find nothing in the barn because he probably didn’t know what to look for—the missing hay hook and horse blanket, the arrangement of bales on the top of the stack—but how could he let him inside of his house? Even if the kids were hiding, there would be telltale signs: shoes in the mudroom, too many dishes in the sink, unmade beds.

  “That’s what I’m saying,” Jess said. “You’re trespassing on my ranch without a warrant. I didn’t even get a call from the sheriff saying you were coming out. This is my place, and my family’s had it for three generations. Nobody has the right to trespass on my ranch.”

  Gonzalez laughed harshly. “You’re a fucking piece of work, old man. If we were in L.A….”

  “We aren’t,” Jess interrupted. “We’re on my ranch. Now get off, and don’t come back without the sheriff and a piece of paper that says you can search here.”

  The wide, insincere smile faded. “You could make your life a lot easier if you let me look around, compadre.”

  “I’m used to a hard life,” Jess said. “Now get off.”

  Something flashed in Gonzalez’s eyes, and for a second Jess expected the man to bolt off the porch and jam the gun into his face. He wished he was armed himself. But the moment passed, and Gonzalez looked up at the rain clouds forming over the rancher’s head.

  “I’ll be back here,” Gonzalez said, stepping off the porch and walking slowly to his pickup. “You and me are going to tangle. You could have avoided it, but you had to go get all fucking cowboy on me.”

  Jess said nothing. He kept his palms firmly on the hood of the truck so they wouldn’t shake.

  Gonzalez opened his truck door and looked back. “You people. You’re too stupid to know what you’ve just done, old man,” he said, and the smile came back, which chilled Jess to his boot soles. “I’ll be seeing you.”

  “Don’t threaten me,” Jess said, his voice firm and low.

  “I don’t threaten. I advise.”

  “Close the gate on the way out this time,” Jess said. “I’ve got cattle. If they get out, I’ll press charges.”

  “You’ll press …” Gonzalez said, but didn’t finish the sentence because he was chuckling.

  Jess watched the pickup drive up the road and into the trees. Slowly, he withdrew his hands from the hood, leaving long wet streaks.

  “He was one of them, wasn’t he?” Jess asked, unpacking the groceries in the kitchen.

  Annie and William stood in the doorway to the living room, their faces pale white. They had obviously heard the exchange.

  “Yes,” Annie said. “We thought he was going to come in and find us.”

  Jess swung around and pointed a trembling finger at William. “You nearly got yourself hurt and your sister hurt along with you by looking out that window like that. When I tell you to stay inside and not look out, I mean it!”

  William stood still, but mist filled his eyes.

  “I’m sorry,” he said, his mouth curling down, even though he was fighting it.

  “Ah, man,” Jess said, walking across the kitchen and pulling Annie and William into his legs. “I’m just glad you’re all right. It’s okay, Willie. It’s okay.”

  “William,” the boy said, his voice muffled by the hug.

  “Is he coming back?” Annie asked.

  Jess released them and squatted so he could look at both children in the eye. “I think so, yes.”

  “What are we going to do?”

  “I don’t know yet,” he said. “I’m thinking it over.”

  “You could show me how to shoot one of those guns in there,” William said. “You could show me and Annie.”

  Jess looked at him, about to argue. Then he didn’t.

  “For right now, let’s get you two something to eat,” he said instead.

  SUNDAY, 4:03 P.M.

  Jim Hearne sat in a recliner with the newspaper opened on his lap and a Seattle Mariners game droning on in front of him. He didn’t know the inning, the score, or who they were playing. Instead, he stared at something between where he sat and the television set, a wall he could not see through, a wall he had invented, a wall that seemed to get thicker and harder to ignore since that morning, when it came to be.

  The wall—he started to think of it as a barrier to everything else—began to grow while he and Laura were in church. It wasn’t the minister’s sermon that triggered it, and it wasn’t the surroundings. It was the fact that for the first time in two and a half days, his mind was empty, partially due to the massive hangover from which he was suffering. The void was filled with thoughts of his meeting with Eduardo Villatoro and what he had read in the newspaper about the effort to find the missing Taylor children. About the ex-cops from L.A. who were heading up the task force. About his own role in everything, his responsibility.

  As if seeing things for the first time, Hearne looked around the room he was in. It was a magnificent living room, with high ceilings, slate tile floors covered with expensive rugs, an entertainment center so advanced that he had no idea what it was capable of. Through the huge picture window was a long, sloping lawn that led down to a small tree-bordered lake, his wooden fishing boat turned upside down on the bank. He could hear Laura in the kitchen, cooking and talking to her mother, who was in a controlled-living complex in Spokane. The aroma of Sunday dinner filled his home. She was frying chicken, his favorite, doing it the old-fashioned Southern way by soaking the pieces in buttermilk first, then coating them, then chilling them in the buttermilk again. It took all afternoon. He wished he could get excited about it, but eating was the last thing on his mind.

  Hearne felt like an imposter in his own home. A real businessman should live there, he thought, not him. Someone who would not feel the conflict he felt about what was happening in the valley, someone who could justify his participation in it. Hearne, despite the home, the lake, the property, and his status, felt like a piss-poor rodeo cowboy who had made a pact with the Devil. He needed to stop fretting, and do something about it.

  He stood up and stretched, heard his back pop like a string of muffled firecrackers. The old injuries set in when he remained still for too long, as he had today, and it took a moment of painful stretching to loosen up. There were three telephones in the house: one in the kitchen where Laura was, one in the bedroom, and one in his home office. Tucking the folded newspaper under his arm, he leaned into the kitchen and breathed in the full brunt of the meal in progress until Laura turned from the stove and saw him. She had the telephone clamped between her shoulder and jaw so that her hands were free. She raised her eyebrows as if to say, “Yes?”

  “Will you be much longer?”

  “My mother,” she mouthed.

  “Tell her hello from me,” he said. “Will you be on the line much longer?”

  Laura shot an impatient look at him and covered the receiver.

  “She’s on a roll about a dance they had at the center last night,” she said. “We talk every Sunday afternoon, as you know. What’s the crisis?”

  “No crisis,” he said, lying. “Don’t worry about it.”

  He heard her call after him as he walked back through the living room, grabbed his cell from where he’d left it on the bookcase, and went outside.

  Afternoon rain clouds were moving across the sky, blocking out the sun, and he could sense the moisture coming. The pine trees smelled especially sharp, as if their bite was being held close to the ground by the low pressure.

  The article in the newspaper listed a telephone number to reach the task force to report any information regarding the Taylor children. Hearne had nothing to report, but he assumed it would be the best way to reach who he needed to talk with. He punched the numbers into his cell phone, and the call was answered after three rings by a female receptionist.

  “I’d like to speak to Lieutenant Singer, please.”

  “Please hold while I put you through.”

  Hearne was placed on hold for a moment, listened to a scratchy rendition of “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down,” then: “This is Singer.” The man’s voice was flat and businesslike.

  “Lieutenant Singer, this is Jim Hearne,” he said.

  No response.

  “Your banker,” he reminded, after a beat.

  “I know who you are.” Deadpan, slightly annoyed.

  “I was hoping we could have a few minutes to talk.”

  “Why? I’m busy right now, as you can imagine.”

  “It’s about a retired detective from California. From Arcadia, wherever that is. He was in my office asking about cash deposits and certain bills that have surfaced that apparently were marked. The bills were traced back to my bank.”

  The cold silence on the other end of the call unnerved Hearne. “Lieutenant Singer?”

  “I’m here.”

  “I think we should get together and talk about this situation.”

  “Why?” Singer said quickly, his voice dropping. “Well …” Hearne wasn’t sure what to say.

  “Well what?”

  “I’m sure he’ll be back. It won’t take him long to identify certain accounts, and he’ll want to know about them.” Hearne didn’t like how he sounded, like a weak co-conspirator. He wanted Singer to say something to assure him there was nothing to worry about.

  Finally: “Listen to me carefully, Mr. Banker,” Singer said, almost whispering. Hearne found himself clicking the volume button on his cell phone so he could hear. “Do not say a thing to that man right now. Not a thing.”

  “But …”

  “But nothing, Mr. Banker. As far as you’re concerned, you don’t have any idea what he’s talking about. Or better yet, you’re simply unavailable for a meeting. He can’t hang around here forever. He’ll go away.”

  Hearne couldn’t get past the words, He’ll go away.

  “We’ll talk when this is over,” Singer said. “We’ll get everything straightened out. Is that a deal?”

  Hearne looked at his cell phone as if it had switched sides and turned against him. Then he closed it, ending the call.

  When he turned back to the house, Laura was standing in the doorway.

  “Since when do you make calls out on the lawn?” she asked.

  He shrugged and tried to shoulder past her, but she stepped in his way. “Jim?”

  Enough, he thought. Enough holding things in. He reached up and grasped her gently by the shoulders, looked straight into her eyes. He could see that she was prepared for anything but scared at the same time.

 

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