Killer Weekend (24 page)

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Authors: Ridley Pearson

BOOK: Killer Weekend
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   Jerry was at the bar making love to a glass of Scotch. Walt had been summoned here. He told himself to maintain his cool. Seeing his father drunk didn't help matters. He persuaded Jerry onto a couch between two silk ficus trees, where he hoped there was less chance of being overheard.
   "You shouldn't have used the split tail, son." His father sounded quite sober, despite his looks. "When you want something done right, always do it yourself."
   "Split tail?"
   "This photographer of yours."
   "You're drunk."
   "Such a detective. You coulda been, you know? A detective. More's the pity."
   Walt stood. "I'm in the middle of a lot of things right now. If you're looking for a whipping boy—"
   "Sit down."
   Walt hesitated. The door was only a few feet away.
   "Sit . . . down!"
   Walt returned to the couch, regretting his cooperating.
   "The trouble with the truth is that some people just don't want to hear it."
   "You're drunk and I'm tired. Maybe another time."
   "Your girlie girl took the Salt Lake photos to Shaler."
   Walt felt himself swallow dryly. "Who? Fiona?"
   "Dryer caught her, and is, of course, convinced you were behind it."
   "Oh, boy."
   "Cutter's told Dryer not to let you anywhere near her before the talk."
   "You must be thrilled," Walt said.
   He glowered.
   "No worries. He can't roadblock me."
   "I wouldn't be so sure. Dryer can play the federal card. Couple phone calls and the local guy is out of it. That's you."
   Walt mulled over his options. "I don't have much of a role anyway. We secure transportation routes. That's about it. It's up to Dryer and Dick O'Brien after that. They're the ones that have to keep her safe once inside."
   "But if you're right about this shooter . . ."
   "I
am r
ight," Walt said. "The guy is here, Dad. No doubt about it. He's here and he means to fulfill that contract."
   "So how do I help?"
   "What?" He made no attempt to mask his astonishment.
   "Let's just say, hypothetically, I was going to help you . . . I have six men with me. That's not insubstantial. My men will be on the inside. You may not be."
   "Are you playing me?" Walt asked, bewildered. He glanced around the bar and up into the restaurant. "What's going on?"
   "Focus, son," his father said, motioning to his own bloodshot eyes. "What can my guys do on the inside tomorrow? What are we looking for?"
   "You
do
believe me," Walt nearly said aloud. Instead, he reached over and sucked down some of his father's Scotch. Jerry raised his hand and signaled a waitress for two drinks.
   "If she goes down on your watch, son, you not only won't be reelected, you'll lose any shot at corporate work, private work. Any kind of work. You'll be blackballed the rest of your life."
   "And it'll be a stain on the family name," Walt said bitterly. "Like Bobby."
   Jerry stiffened. "That's not what this is about."
   "You did such a good job with that one," Walt said.
   "Fuck you. I'm offering to help," Jerry said.
   Walt caught sight of the waitress heading back with the two Scotches. It all felt too cozy. He stood before the drinks arrived and threw a five-dollar bill down on the table. It landed in a ring of water left from the Scotch glass. Jerry went back to consulting his ice.
   Walt moved toward the door, reluctantly at first, wondering if he was making a terrible mistake.

SUNDAY

One

T
revalian had three hotel towels laid out on the floor. On the first he'd placed a pair of his own socks. On the second, Elizabeth Shaler's jog bra. And on the third, a pair of Nagler's shoes.
"Find it!" he commanded, releasing Callie's collar.
   The dog sprang excitedly into action. She jumped up and made two circles in the room, then came across the towels and, nose to the floor, moved one towel to the next. She sat down sharply in front of the jog bra.
   Trevalian stepped forward and rewarded her with a small piece of beef jerky, patted her affectionately, and praised her. He rearranged the towels, moving them far apart, and began the process anew. Again, Callie found the jog bra. Again, she won a piece of beef jerky.
   "Four out of four," he told her. "Good dog!"

Two

W
alt had awakened to an alarm clock at 6 a.m. Sunday morning, having had four hours' sleep. He went for a two-mile run to wake himself up, showered, and changed into a fresh uniform. By 8 a.m. he was overseeing Brandon's leadership in securing Sun Valley Road for the one-mile stretch from Ketchum to the resort, while monitoring the Sun Valley Police Department's attempts to contain the burgeoning number of First Rights protesters who twice had broken through a barricade trying to get closer to the inn and the C
3
gathering, only to be pushed back to the area allotted them.
   By 9 a.m. things seemed pretty much in control. They intended to briefly shut down traffic on Sun Valley Road, allowing for Shaler's motorcade. He had placed Deputy Tilly, his team's second best marksman, on top of Penny Hill, working with two spotters. Best of all, his two communications with Adam Dryer, whose agents occupied Walt's Mobile Command Center, had been workmanlike and professional.
   Liz Shaler came out her front door, amid camera flashes, surrounded by three of Dryer's men. She met eyes briefly with Walt through the gauntlet, and to his surprise she seemed to apologize to him. Or maybe he'd taken that wrong. They moved her into one of three black Escalades.
   Walt's Cherokee led the motorcade. Tommy Brandon, in the black Hummer, took up the rear. To the casual tourist, and to Walt as well, this looked like overkill, but something told Walt otherwise. Inside he was thinking:
This isn't enough.
   His cell phone rang, and his intention was to ignore it, but old habits die hard, and he checked the caller ID anyway. The number came as Mark Aker. Walt took the call.
   "Mark? Kinda busy at the moment," Walt said.
   "You want to hear this." Walt knew from the man's tone that it wasn't a social call.
   "Go ahead."
   "We've had thirty volunteers working to find our missing animals. As of this morning, we have eighty percent found and most of those returned to us."
   "That's great. But maybe we could do this later?"
   "Among those returned were several dogs, and among the dogs were a pair of shepherds—my Search and Rescue trainees. Or so I thought."
   Walt decided not to interrupt, but he tuned him out slightly to listen in to the running dialogue pouring over the radio. All seemed well with the motorcade—and for some unknown reason that made Walt all the more queasy.
   "We tag our dogs. Electronic chips placed beneath the skin in the shoulder. They both came back without collars, so we wanded them just to make sure. One had been picked up at the hospital. One, clear out Trail Creek. Some hikers found her."
   "That's a long way away."
   "But not so far from the lodge."
   "True enough. Better cut to the chase here, Mark. I'm in the middle of moving Shaler. We're about there."
   "The ID provided by the chip surprised me. It wasn't one of mine after all. But I
had
chipped this dog. It's Toey, Walt. The service dog we loaned the blind guy. He must have lost her and been too embarrassed to tell us. But what the hell am I supposed to do? Confront him? Return the dog to Maggie? Or what? What do you want me to do?" He added, "Meanwhile—news flash—I'm still missing my twentythousand-dollar tracker."
   "The one you planned to sell?" Walt asked. He'd tuned out the police band radio under the dash. He tuned out more than he should have, given that he was leading the motorcade. The Escalade behind him honked, just in time for Walt to cut the wheel sharply and turn into the entrance to the lodge, and avoid the total embarrassment of missing the turn. He felt badly that Nagler hadn't mentioned losing the dog. He wasn't sure how to approach this himself.
   In his mind's eye he saw the contents of the unclaimed backpack spread out on the table as Fiona photographed them; he saw the gruesome images of the Salt Lake airport killing: the severed fingers, the pulled teeth, the missing eyes . . .
   "
Laundry,
" he said, pulling the Cherokee through the lodge's portico. Shaler's Escalade pulled in front of the doors.
   "Laundry? Walt, it's Mark," Aker said, not understanding Walt's change of subject.
   "All the search and rescue we ever do," Walt said, "the dogs are given a piece of clothing, right? Or some personal item of the missing person's. A hairbrush. A shoe."
   "Of course they are. Walt . . . what are you talking about?"
   "S and R! The dogs. Your missing dog is a tracker, a sniffer."
   "Yeah? So what?"
   "He broke into the laundry," Walt said, seeing it clearly now. "He broke into the laundry," he repeated. "Holy shit."
   He was out of the car, the phone already back in his pocket. The phalanx of press, and tourists, agents, and his own deputies jammed the landing outside the hotel's doors as Liz Shaler was squeezed inside. His moment or two of delay had cost him—he was on the outside looking in.
   "Stand aside," he hollered, but it did no good. Liz Shaler's celebrity had taken over. Nothing was going to part the crowd. There were too many hotel guests and people from town—faces he recognized— waiting there to be coincidence. Patrick Cutter had arranged a big, splashy welcome for her, and for the sake of the cameras.
   He lifted up on his toes to see into the lobby. Liz Shaler and Patrick Cutter were at the center of a knot. A camera flashed. Walt followed its source to a pair of thin arms, and finally, Fiona's profile. Despite the clamor of Liz's admirers, despite the shouting of O'Brien and his men for people to get out of the way, despite the chaos and confusion, Fiona somehow turned and looked right at him.
   They met eyes and she immediately understood his problem as he pointed inside. Fiona was jostled to the side. She connected with him once again and waved Walt to his left. Walt backed away from the throng, looked left, and saw the door.
   A moment later, the exterior door leading to the hotel offices, locked on a Sunday morning, sprang open. Fiona's eyes sparkled. "What a zoo!"
   The door closed, eliminating much of the shouting from the protesters.
   "I know who it is," Walt announced. "He's here in the hotel."

Three

T
revalian stood in line in the inn's lobby awaiting his turn at the security checkpoint, just past which were the men's and women's bathrooms—a piece of the logistical planning that was already drawing complaint. At the end of the hall: the doors to the banquet hall.
   "That's a beautiful dog you have there," said a woman behind him.
   He thanked her, wondering if she or anyone else had spotted that, to a large degree, he was directing the dog, not the other way around. The line moved steadily forward, everyone accustomed to, and comfortable with, the routine: Women removed their heavy jewelry, the men dumped their phones into plastic bins. Only one woman he saw was also wanded after passing through the metal detector. Trevalian's turn came next.
   "Hello, Mr. Nagler," said the young, wide-shouldered man feeding the X-ray belt. "I'll take the dog through first."
   Trevalian turned his head in that direction, but also aimed his face toward the ceiling. He passed the handle of the guide harness in that general direction, making sure not to appear overly anxious or to put the harness squarely into this man's hands—reminding himself to play the blind man.
   The dog was held in check as Trevalian searched his pockets. He came up with a cell phone, some coins, and, in his coat's side pocket, a device about the size of a garage door opener. He made a good act of feeling for the plastic dish and catching its edge, deposited his belongings.
   "What's this?" the guard asked curiously.
   Trevalian could see the man was holding the other device. "My cell phone?"
   "A garage opener?" the man asked.
   The dog was led through a metal detector and sounded an alarm.
   "Don't push it, please!" Trevalian said a little too sharply. He reached out and found the man's hand and returned the device to the plastic tray. "Shock collar. She's still in training."
   "We'll have to X-ray that collar. The harness, too."
   "No problem. Of course," Trevalian said. "Just don't lose her, please."
   The guards removed both and ran them through the X-ray. Trevalian waited anxiously as the collar and harness were imaged by a third guard behind a TV monitor. Finally, he was waved through the metal detector and passed without incident.
   The bulky collar was reattached to the dog, as was the harness. Once through he returned his belongings to his pockets, grabbed hold of the guide handle, and moved forward.
   He was inside.

Four

T
 he crowd had thinned, the gawkers following Liz Shaler's procession toward a private reception held in her honor, prior to her talk. Walt spotted Chuck Webb, the hotel's house detective.
"Sheriff ?"
   "Chuck, I need a room number from you. And I need you to put any of your guys you have left over on radios by all the exits. I needed this to happen about five minutes ago."
   Webb didn't question any of this. The urgency in Walt's voice had convinced him. He reached for a handheld radio. "Guest's name?"

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