Raga displayed a self-satisfied smirk. He shook his head as if to say, I’ll never tell you.
“Did you find his body?” Tonk asked, forgetting his own injury for a moment.
“All we found were his shoes,” Joe said. “There wasn’t a body to find.”
“I fucking knew it,” Tonk said, stepping forward to stand abreast of Raga. He spoke with the loopy intensity patented by generations of the drugged and dispossessed: “I fucking knew it, Raga!”
Joe stared back at Britney, who was performing surgery on him with her eyes.
“You found her body, but you didn’t find his, right?” she asked.
“The state investigator’s report concluded that he had an accident with explosives,” Joe said. “The sheriff agreed with that. Accident, not suicide. And definitely not murder.”
Raga laughed derisively. “Yeah, like President Kennedy’s little ‘accident.’ ” Tonk agreed by nodding his head vigorously.
“Stewie Woods is not dead,” Britney Earthshare stated. Joe felt a chill crawl up his spine. Then: “Stewie will never be dead. They can’t kill a man like Stewie.”
Oh, Joe thought. That’s what she meant.
“Just like they couldn’t kill Kurt Cobain, or Martin Luther King, man,” Tonk chimed in.
“I understand,” Joe mumbled, not understanding. These three campers were not much younger than he was, but were so entirely different.
They asked for directions to the crater. Joe saw no reason not to give them. He pointed back toward the Hazelton Road, told them it was about six miles up, and where there was a turnout where they could park.
“I knew we were close,” Britney said to Raga, “I could just feel it, how close we were.”
“That’s why you’re here?” Joe asked.
“Partly,” Raga said. “We’re on our way to Toronto to an antiglobalism rally. Britney’s speaking.”
She nodded.
Joe turned to go.
“The people who did this will be back,” Britney said quite clearly as he walked away. He stopped, and looked over his shoulder.
“They can’t kill Stewie Woods that easily,” she sang.
Joe was back up on his perch before he realized he had forgotten to ask Tonk to show him his fishing license. But he stayed in his truck.
Things were certainly more interesting since Stewie Woods had died in his mountains. Although the official investigation was already all but closed, and obituatries and tributes to Stewie had faded from the news, unofficial speculation continued unabated. That there was a strange, disconnected underground made up of people like Raga, Tonk, and Britney who now came to see the crater was disconcerting. They seemed to know something—or thought they knew something—that the public did not.
He hoped this had been an isolated incident. But he doubted it.
7
Bremerton, Washington
June 14
Outside a huge tree-shrouded home in a driving rain, the Old Man waited. Next to him, in the cab of the black Ford pickup, in the dark, was Charlie Tibbs.
The Old Man stole glances at Charlie, careful not to turn his head and stare directly at him. Charlie’s face was barely discernible in the dark of the cab, lit only by the light from a distant fluorescent streetlight that threw a weak shaft through the waving branches of an evergreen tree. The rivulets of rainwater that ran down the windshield cast wormlike shadows on Charlie, making his face look splotched and mottled.
They were here to kill someone named Hayden Powell, the owner of the house. But Powell had not yet come home.
The Old Man and Charlie Tibbs had driven up the fern-shrouded driveway two hours before, just as the storm clouds had closed the lid on the sky above Puget Sound. They had backed their black pickup into a tangled thicket so that it couldn’t be seen from the road unless someone was really looking for it. Then the rain had started. It was relentless. The rain came down so hard and the vegetation was so thick that the wide leaves, outstretched toward the sky like cartoon hands, jerked and undulated all around them as if the forest floor was dancing. The liquid drumbeat of the storm intimidated the Old Man into complete silence and made the atmosphere otherworldly. Not that Charlie was the kind of guy to have a long—or short—discussion with anyway.
The Old Man was in awe of Charlie Tibbs. Charlie’s stillness and quiet resolve was something from another era. Charlie had never raised his voice since they had been together, and the Old Man often had to strain to even hear him. Despite his age (the Old Man guessed sixty-five, like him) and bone-white hair, Charlie was a powerful presence. Men who didn’t know Charlie Tibbs, and who had never heard of his reputation, still seemed to tense up in Charlie’s presence. The Old Man had seen that happen just this morning, as they neared Bremerton, Washington, from the east. When they entered a small café and Charlie walked down the aisle toward an empty booth, the Old Man had noticed how the rough crowd of construction workers and salmon fishermen paused over their chicken-fried steak and eggs and sat up straight as Charlie passed by them. There was just something about the man. And none of those workers or fishermen had any idea that this was Charlie Tibbs, the legendary stock detective, a man known for his skill at manhunting for over forty years throughout the Rocky Mountains, the Southwest, South America, and Western Canada.
Since the days of the open range in the 1870s, stock detectives had played a unique role in cattle country. Hired by individual ranchers or landowner consortiums, stock detectives hunted down rustlers, nesters, and vandals in an effort to bring those offenders to justice. Or, in some cases, to remove them from the earth. Few stock detectives still existed. Of those who did, Charlie Tibbs was considered the best. All these locals knew was that this tall man with white hair and a Stetson was someone out of the ordinary, somebody special. Someone who made them sit up straight as he passed by.
“I don’t like this rain,” the Old Man said, raising his voice over the drumming on the top of the cab. “And I don’t think I like this part of the country. I’m not used to this. If you died out there tonight you’d be covered by weeds before morning.”
The Old Man waited for a response or a reaction but all there was from Charlie was the twitch of a smile.
“I just don’t think you can trust a place where they have leaves bigger than a man’s head,” the Old Man offered.
The Old Man watched as Charlie raised his hands—he had huge, powerful hands—and rested them on top of the steering wheel. Charlie’s index finger flicked out, pointing through the windshield. The Old Man’s eyes followed the gesture.
“There he is,” Charlie said flatly. “He’s home and it looks like he’s by himself.”
“Did he see us?” the Old Man asked.
“He didn’t even look. He drove up without his headlights. He must be drunk.”
The Old Man raised a heavy pair of night vision binoculars. Through the rain-streaked windshield, he could clearly see Hayden Powell’s car cruise up the drive slowly, as if anticipating that the garage door would open, which it didn’t. Powell applied the brake inches from the door and his taillights flashed a burst of light that temporarily blinded the Old Man through the binoculars—and he cursed.
All the Old Man could see was a green and white orb similar to the aftereffect of a flashbulb. While the Old Man waited for his eyes to readjust, Charlie gently took the binoculars from him to look.
“He’s drunk,” Charlie declared. “Just as we thought he would be. He couldn’t figure out how to open his garage and now he’s trying to figure out which key to use to open the door. He dropped his keys in the grass. Now he’s on his hands and knees looking for them. We could get him now.”
The Old Man looked to Charlie for guidance. What weapons would they use? What was the plan here? The Old Man fought back panic.
The Old Man didn’t know a lot about Hayden Powell but he knew enough. He knew that Powell was a well-known environmental writer who had originally come to fame by writing many articles about and
later the biography of his boyhood friend, Stewie Woods. Powell had struck it rich, not in publishing but through an early investment in a Seattle-based software company. As the company took off, professional management was brought in to run it and Powell was eased out. With his huge home, bulging stock portfolio, and free time, he had returned to the two things he loved most: drinking tequila and writing provocative pieces on the environment.
The rumor was that his next book would be titled Screwing Up the West and was a vicious indictment of corporations, landowners, and politicians. Excerpts had been published in magazines and journals. Powell was in big trouble, though. The SEC was investigating the software company and investors who Powell had recruited—many of whom had sunk millions into the company—were furious. There had been death threats made against Powell, which he duly reported to the SEC and the FBI. Powell had even been quoted as saying that he looked forward to going to jail, where he would feel safer.
And now the Old Man and Charlie were here to kill him—but not because of the failing software company. Charlie had said it needed to look as if an angry investor had done it or had it done. There should be absolutely no link to the upcoming book.
The Old Man had not been told what the details of the plan would be. He was uncomfortable, and scared. He wasn’t like Charlie—these things didn’t come naturally to him. He did not want to disappoint either Charlie or his employers, but this thing was getting bigger and more complicated than he had thought it would be. What was he supposed to do, run across the grass and hit Powell in the back of the head with a hammer? Shoot the guy in the dark? What?
“He’s up and he’s in,” Charlie said, lowering the binoculars.
The Old Man watched as the porch light went on. They followed Powell’s drunken progress through his house as he switched on lights. First the kitchen, then the bathroom, then the living room. They waited.
“He’s probably passed out on his couch,” Charlie whispered after nearly an hour.
“What is the plan?” the Old Man asked, trying to suppress the panic he felt rising up in him.
Oddly, Charlie Tibbs smiled, showing his perfect teeth, and turned in his seat. The smile made the Old Man feel better, but it also disturbed him in a way he couldn’t put his finger on.
“Later . . . ,” Charlie began, the word drowned out by the rain. “I’ll tell you later when you need to know.”
Wearing a rain suit with a hood that slipped over his clothes and covered his face, the Old Man waited in the soaking undergrowth until Charlie Tibbs reached the front door. When Charlie signaled him, the Old Man raised his scoped and silenced .22 rifle and shot out the back porch light with a sound no louder than a cough. The Old Man had shot from an angle so the bullet would pass cleanly through the lamp and lightbulb and off into the night. It would not be wise to leave a bullet lodged in the siding that might be found by investigators. Now the outside of the expensive home of Hayden Powell was once again dark. With a tiny flashlight in his mouth, the Old Man located the spent brass casing that had been ejected from the rifle into the mud. He pocketed it while he walked across the lawn toward the darkened back door. While the tire tracks and footprints would be washed away in the driving rain, bullet casings could be recovered.
Careful to not lose his footing on the rain-slick steps, the Old Man entered the house. Charlie had been right about Powell not locking the back door after him.
Inside it was warm and dry. The Old Man stood in the kitchen by the back door and concentrated on regulating his breathing. He did not want to be heard. The pounding of the rain was muffled inside the house. As he stood, a puddle formed near his boots from the wet rain suit.
The Old Man surveyed the room and then positioned himself behind the kitchen island with his back to the door he had entered. The kitchen island was built so that the end of it pointed to the living room. His job was to block the back door while Charlie entered the front. From where the Old Man stood he could see down a hallway into a sunken living room sparsely filled with leather furniture. A television set was on and the channel tuned to what looked like the local news. He could see half of the front doorway, and clearly heard Charlie knock on it.
The Old Man swallowed and readied his rifle. He was instructed not to use it unless absolutely necessary. According to Charlie, Powell would never even make it out of the living room, much less into the kitchen.
Charlie knocked again, this time louder. The Old Man heard a couch squeak and the back of Hayden Powell came into view. Powell was younger and more powerfully built than the Old Man had guessed. Powell’s hair was awry and he shuffled to the front door in his socks. He had been sleeping on the couch. Once again, Charlie had been exactly right.
Powell asked who was at the door. The Old Man couldn’t hear what Charlie shouted back. Powell squinted into the peephole and the Old Man could only imagine what Powell was thinking: There is an old cowboy standing on my front porch.
The front door was not open three inches before Charlie’s fist, wrapped in thick brass knuckles beaded with rain, smashed through the opening, flush into Hayden Powell’s face. The power of the blow threw Powell straight back and he slid along the hardwood floor. The Old Man tensed and raised his rifle, keeping the barrel pointed at the hallway. Charlie entered the house and closed the front door behind him; his frighteningly intense eyes fixed on the crumpled form of Hayden Powell.
The Old Man let out a deep breath. It was already over.
But suddenly it wasn’t, as Powell scrambled to his hands and knees with sudden sobriety and shot away from Charlie, straight toward the kitchen. The Old Man caught a glimpse of Powell’s wide, bloodied face and frightened eyes and he raised his rifle just as Powell ducked below the kitchen island out of sight. Charlie yelled, “Get him!” and the Old Man kicked the back door shut a second before Powell slammed into it.
Powell was thrown backward again and was writhing on the kitchen floor between the island and a huge walk-in freezer. What the Old Man saw next reminded him much more of a hunter dispatching a wounded animal than a man killing another man. Charlie Tibbs mounted the three steps from the living room and pinned Powell to the floor with his knees. Powell struggled and tried to throw Charlie off, but after taking a half-dozen powerful and methodic blows with the brass knuckles, Powell was still.
Charlie Tibbs slowly got to his feet. The Old Man could hear Charlie’s knees creak and his back pop. Charlie’s face was flushed from the exertion and his right arm, from the elbow down, was soaked in blood.
“You almost let him go,” Charlie barked, glaring at the Old Man.
“You did, too,” the Old Man countered, instantly regretting that he said it. For the first time, the Old Man saw the chilling, ice-blue stare directed at him. But like a storm cloud passing, Charlie’s eyes softened and the Old Man found that he could breathe again.
“It’s done now,” Charlie said softly. “Grab a foot and help me drag him back out into the living room.”
The Old Man put the rifle down on the counter and rounded the island. He turned his head so he wouldn’t see the mess that Charlie had made of Powell’s face and head. He caught Charlie looking at him, sizing him up, as they dragged the body through the kitchen and down the stairs.
They took the microcassette tape from Powell’s answering machine because Charlie had called the house earlier in the afternoon to hear Hayden Powell’s recorded voice and confirm they had the right address. Although no message was left, the ambient traffic sounds in the background might provide a clue for investigators that someone had called to check an occupancy. The old man pocketed the microcassette. They found Powell’s Macintosh computer in the home office and ripped it from the wall. The computer, files, and a box of disks and zip drives were all thrown into the back of the pickup. Charlie placed incendiary bombs in all four corners of the first floor of the house and splashed five gallons of gasoline through the kitchen and living room. As they left, the Old Man lit a traffic flare and tossed it through the
back door. The mighty whoosh of the fire sucked the air out of the Old Man’s lungs and left him gasping for the cold, moist air.
As they drove through Bremerton toward the highway, Charlie dutifully pulled over as each fire truck passed them, their sirens whooping and flashing lights reflecting back from rain-slicked streets and buildings.
At the scene the firefighters would find a $1.7 million home burned to the ground. Later, tomorrow, a charred body would be found. An autopsy would show that the skull was crushed, probably by huge vaulted beams that crashed down from the second floor during the fire. The autopsy would also show that Powell’s blood-alcohol level was far past the legal limit. Why and how the fire got started would be subject to debate. Speculation about whether one of his declared investor enemies had something to do with it or whether Hayden Powell lit the fire himself in a drunken fit of rage and depression would probably go on for months.
“I’m not sure I like this close-in work,” the Old Man said as they approached the egress to the highway. “And I sure as hell don’t like all this rain and jungle out here.”
Charlie ignored the Old Man and asked him if he had picked up his shell casing. The Old Man sighed and showed it to him. Charlie was nothing if not thorough. And, in the Old Man’s opinion, thoroughly efficient and coolly heartless.
“Where is the next project?” the Old Man asked.
“Montana.”
“I was kind of hoping we’d get some time off. We’ve been going nonstop. I’ve seen the Rocky Mountains and the Pacific Ocean in the last four days. That’s more miles than I want to think about.”
This was the first time the Old Man had complained about their work. The result of his complaint was a pained squint from Charlie Tibbs as he drove.
“We took a job and we’re going to finish it,” Charlie said with finality. His voice was so low that it could barely be heard over the rain-sizzle of the tires.
The Old Man let it drop. He watched walls of dark wet trees strobe by in the headlights. The rain never stopped. The sky was close, seemingly at treetop level. It was as if they were going through a tunnel. He briefly closed his eyes to rest them.