Blood Is the Sky: An Alex McKnight Mystery (19 page)

Read Blood Is the Sky: An Alex McKnight Mystery Online

Authors: Steve Hamilton

Tags: #Mystery, #Thriller, #Suspense, #Adult

BOOK: Blood Is the Sky: An Alex McKnight Mystery
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The last thing I wanted to do was get in that water again, but the raft was long gone, and we needed to get to that plane. “Take your coat off,” I said. “Hold it over your head.”
He took his coat off. He had that same blank expression on his face, the way he looked when I found him fighting off the bears. “We’ve come this far, Vinnie. You’ve got to hold it together just a little bit longer.”
“I’m together, damn it. Let’s go.”
I took my coat off and wrapped it around the rifle. When I waded out into the water, it didn’t even feel cold. I was past feeling it. But I had second thoughts about getting Vinnie out here. I was about to send him back to the shore, but he was already in the water up to his chest. He was gritting his teeth.
I had to fight my way through the muck again, working hard to keep my coat dry, along with Gannon’s rifle. When we were both deep enough, we swam sidestroke, moving slowly through the water.
“Vinnie, you all right?”
He didn’t answer, but he was still swimming. So I kept my eyes on the plane and made myself do it.
Kick, God damn it. Kick.
Fifty yards away, twenty. Finally, we were there. The plane had spun around now, so that the Gannon dummy was on the opposite side. I grabbed onto the float and hauled myself up to the ladder. The side door was ajar. I pulled it open and threw in my coat and the rifle. Vinnie was a few yards behind me. I waited there on the float, shivering like all goddamned hell in the cold wind, until he was close enough for me to grab his hand.
When we were both in the plane, we wrapped ourselves up in our coats. I sat down in the pilot’s seat, took the key chain out of my pocket, and started trying all the keys in the ignition switch.
Vinnie reached down into a paper bag and pulled out a couple of energy bars. He opened them up and gave me one. I sat there looking at it for a moment, not quite registering the fact that this was food in my hand. I finally bit into it and it was like eating chocolate-flavored cardboard. But at that moment it was the best-tasting cardboard I’d ever eaten.
When I had finished half of it, I went back to working
through the keys with shivering hands, finally finding the right one and turning the whole electric system on. Lights started to glow and when I flipped on the radio and put on the headset, I heard the beautiful sound of live static. I didn’t know what to say, so I just started yelling, “Mayday! Mayday!”
Vinnie looked out his window. Then he popped the passenger’s side door open. “What are you doing?” I said, and then I thought I heard something break in the static so I went back to my yelling.
For the first time, I started to think about what would happen when we got out of this. All those dead men, and now Gannon. And whatever had happened to Guy and Maskwa. I could only imagine how Constable DeMers would take all this. Three months from retirement and this is what he goes out on.
Vinnie called to me. He was out on the other float.
“Vinnie, what are you doing? Get back in here!”
“Come here,” he said.
“For God’s sake, I’m calling for help.”
“Just come here.”
I put the headset down and poked my head out the passenger’s side door. Vinnie was down at the front of the float, hanging over the water, right next to the dummy.
“What is it?” I said.
“Look.”
I saw the blue pants first. Then the rest of the uniform as Vinnie pulled away the poncho. When he took off the hat, I saw the man’s face.
I was staring right into the lifeless eyes of Senior Constable Claude DeMers.
I sat back down in the pilot’s seat, put the headset on, and yelled into the transmitter. “Mayday! Mayday! Come in! Mayday! Mayday!”
The radio crackled with static. Vinnie climbed back into the plane and sat beside me.
“Mayday, God damn it! Mayday!”
“We’re too far away,” he said quietly. “Sitting down on this lake, with these trees, we’ll never reach anybody.”
I took the headset off. “There’s got to be some other way,” I said. “Some kind of distress call. Some GPS thing.”
“I don’t know, Alex.”
“Someone has to know this plane is here,” I said. I tried hard to keep the desperation out of my voice. “You can’t just fly a plane into the woods and not have someone notice it’s gone.”
“They were all packing up,” Vinnie said. He kept looking out the window, his whole body slumped in the seat like somebody had pulled his plug. “The lodge could have been empty.”
“What about DeMers? Somebody will be looking for him.”
“Yeah. Eventually.”
“Are there any more of those energy bars down there? You should eat something.”
“I didn’t see any.”
I leaned my head back against the seat. As soon as I closed my eyes, I felt dizzy. Bad idea. When I opened them again, the plane had spun around so that we were facing the spot on the shore where we had left Gannon. I could just barely make out his body, lying in the dirt. The plane kept turning slowly, Gannon’s body and all the trees moving across our line of sight, the whole world spinning around us.
I picked up the headset again, yelled into the transmitter a few more times, then threw it back down.
“At least I got him,” Vinnie said. “At least he’ll go down with us.”
“Stop it, Vinnie. Stop talking like that.”
“I killed him, Alex. At least I did that.”
“We’ve got a rifle now. Hell, we can go shoot that moose.”
“You go ahead,” he said. “I don’t think I can move anymore.”
“You rest a while,” I said. “I’ll take care of it. Don’t worry.”
Vinnie closed his eyes. I tried to fight it, but my eyelids dropped. I felt dizzy again but then it passed and I was almost comfortable, except for the pain in my gut and the way my feet felt, like they weren’t even part of my body. My clothes were still dripping wet, but they didn’t feel cold anymore. In fact, I was starting to feel warm. Just a few minutes with my eyes closed, in this warm, comfortable seat—
I stood up and hit my head on the plane’s low ceiling. “Vinnie,” I said. I touched his face, the red and black stripes on his cheeks, now smeared by the water. “Vinnie, you gotta hang in there.”
He didn’t move.
I pulled his coat tighter around his neck. I climbed back over the rear seats, looking for something else to keep him warm. There was a metal box in the very back of the plane. Inside it were a polar fleece blanket and a first aid kit.
“This is great,” I said. “We could have used these two days ago.”
I took the blanket back up to Vinnie and wrapped it around him. I was about to break out some bandages, then thought better of it. Let him sleep for a little while. In the meantime, I’m gonna go get us some food.
I picked up Gannon’s rifle, opened the door, and climbed down the ladder to the float. I looked under the belly of the plane, across to the other float. DeMers’s body was still lying there. One boot was in the water, and the stain was rising up his pant leg.
“What the hell happened, DeMers? How did you get mixed up in this?”
I looked down at the cold water. Just the thought of jumping back in made me start shivering again.
“You’re not talking, eh? I don’t blame you.”
The shadow of a cloud passed over us.
“God damn it, DeMers. I think I know what happened. You got yourself killed trying to get us out of here.”
A wind picked up in the trees. I could hear it rattling the branches.
“Am I right?”
The wind moved out and rippled the water.
“I’m sorry, I can’t even think about that right now,” I said, “I’ve got a moose to kill.”
I wasn’t looking forward to that, either. All we had was Vinnie’s little pocket knife. We’d have to make a fire somewhere, and cook the meat. None of which would happen if I kept standing there talking to a dead man.
I was just about ready to jump in when I heard the noise. In the distance, it sounded like—
A plane.
The buzzing grew louder and louder. My first thought was, here’s more horror coming from the skies, another planeload of killers. My second thought was thank God, it’s Guy and Maskwa, coming to get us out of here at last.
It was neither.
A blue Cessna finally appeared over the tree line, heading north. I stood there on the float, watching it. I didn’t hide. I didn’t wave at it. I just stood there with Gannon’s rifle in my hand, watching it bank and circle around and begin its descent onto our lake. The pilot had spotted us. There was no way he could have missed us. When the plane was low enough, I saw the official markings and emblem of the Ontario Provincial Police. That’s when it occurred to me.
Constable DeMers was dead. His body is hanging off the other side of this plane.
And I’m holding the rifle that probably killed him.
By the time they hit the water, I had thrown the rifle back into the plane. Vinnie was still out cold. As the plane got closer, I saw somebody leaning out the window with a megaphone. I couldn’t hear a word over the engine noise.
Finally, when the plane was thirty yards away, I could make out what he was saying. “Did you hear me? I said, put your hands in the air! Right now!”
I put my hands up. As the plane drew close, it kicked up enough turbulence in the water to make me lose my balance. I grabbed on to the ladder, and spent the next minute or two listening to the man yell at me while he climbed out of his own plane and tried to jump onto ours. It’s a tough maneuver, and this man obviously didn’t have the knack for it. He ended up with one leg on the float
and one leg in the water, all the way up to his crotch. It was the constable with the boxer face, one of the men who had shown up when we had found the Suburban in the woods.
“Son of a bitch, that’s cold,” he said. I was about to tell him he didn’t know anything about how cold the water was, but I held my tongue. I knew the scene was about to go from bad to worse.
“That man on the other float,” I said. “That’s DeMers. He’s dead.”
That’s when I noticed Reynaud getting out of the plane. “McKnight, what did you just say?”
It all went to hell in the next few minutes. It didn’t matter whether we were in America or Canada—cops are cops, and they’re supposed to stay in control of everything around them, but this was something they’d never had to deal with before. I kept my mouth shut while they piled out of their plane and climbed aboard Gannon’s. The other constable we had met, the one with the suntan, was the pilot. Reynaud jumped out first, landing light on her feet. She climbed up the ladder and down the other side, making her way out on the far float to her partner’s body. I didn’t see her reaction. I was too busy cooperating with the other constables, putting my hands behind my back so they could cuff me.
Of course, once they cuffed me, they couldn’t get me into their plane. On another day it would have been funny.
“This other man in the passenger’s seat,” Boxer Face said to me, “is he dead, too?”
“That’s Vinnie LeBlanc. You met him before. We need to get him to a hospital right away.”
She came back through the plane, looked at Vinnie, put her hand on his neck, and then came down to me. She looked at me for exactly one second and then backhanded me right across the face.
“I’m sorry about DeMers,” I said. “But I didn’t do it. He was dead when we got here.”
“Who killed him?” Her face was red, and she was rubbing her hand.
“As far as I can tell, Hank Gannon. He’s over there on the shoreline.” I nodded my head in the general direction.
“Where?”
“Up in the trees. He’s dead, too.”
I felt one of the other constables squeezing my shoulder.
“We did kill Gannon. He was trying to shoot us.”
“We saw you with the rifle, McKnight. You threw it back in the plane when we landed.”
I took a deep breath. It was probably a good time to stop talking. That would have been the smart thing. But nobody’s ever accused me of being smart. “Look,” I said, “we’ve been up here for two days. Guy Berard and his grandfather flew us up here.”
“I know,” she said.
That stopped me. “Where are they now?” I said. “Are they—”
“They’re at home,” she said. “Why did they fly you out here?”
“It’s a long story, okay? We need to get Vinnie back to a doctor. I’ll tell you the rest on the way.”
She looked at the two men, then at me. “My partner is dead, McKnight. The best cop I’ve ever known. The best … human being. He’s dead.”
“So are the other men,” I said. “Okay? I should tell you that much right now. We found them.”
“What men?”
“Vinnie’s brother, Tom. And Albright, and the rest of the men who were missing.”
“What are you talking about? They flew back out on Saturday.”
“No,” I said. “We found them. A couple of miles north of the cabin.”
She didn’t know what to say to that. Not that I blamed her. A dead partner, that was more than enough. That’s one thing I knew all too well.
“I’ll tell you everything I know,” I said. “Please, we’ve got to get Vinnie out of here. He’s been shot in the face, for God’s sake.”
That woke her up a little bit. “Jim, you better get on the radio.”
“I don’t think we’ll get through,” he said. “Not sitting down here on this lake. We need to get up in the air.”
“All right, you better take these men back, then. I’ll stay here.”
“Natty, you can’t do that,” he said.
“I’m not leaving my partner,” she said. Her face was like stone now. “Get in the air and call for backup.”
They had to drag Vinnie out of his seat and carry him to the other plane. After all we had been through, he just about drowned right there. They took my handcuffs off, let me jump across, then put the handcuffs back on when I was in my seat. The pilot spun the plane around and gave it the gas.
“Smallest damned lake I’ve ever taken off from,” he said. He pulled back on the yoke and the plane fought its way up into the air.
As we climbed over the trees, I looked down at Gannon’s plane. Reynaud stood there on the float, holding on to the ladder, watching us fly away.

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