No Footprints (26 page)

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Authors: Susan Dunlap

Tags: #Suspense

BOOK: No Footprints
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He took my arm. ‟Time passes. Come on.”
I shook free. ‟Not so fast! Biggest danger in the woods could be you.”
He laughed.
‟I'm not joking. You know about the idiot in the attic?”
‟I'm not even going to guess.”
‟Girl, alone, no weapon but a candle. There's a crazed killer in the neighborhood. She hears a strange sound in the attic. Does she call the police?”
‟No?”
‟Does she even flee out the front door into the safety of the street? Nope. She lights the candle, climbs the stairs, and opens the attic door. So convince me you're not in the attic.”
‟I'm going to be straight with you.”
‟As opposed to?”
He took a deep breath. I couldn't tell if he was merely organizing his thoughts or forming them. ‟Okay, just between us, right?”
‟Lips zipped.”
‟I don't have a car.”
‟Excuse me?”
‟If I'm on a case, the department handles everything.”
I rolled my eyes. ‟You're going to have to do a lot better than that.”
‟No, really—”
‟Don't even bother.”
‟I could give you a list of reasons, some of them true. I could get a car but it'd be a hassle.”
‟And you'd have to do it in your own name.”
‟Look, Tessa Jurovik's in the woods with a killer. I don't have time to deal with her. You want to be sure she lives, then come.”
Bingo!
‟How can I be sure it's her?”
‟It's her,” he said resignedly. ‟She knew what she was getting into. Not when I first hired her, but the instant she saw a picture of Varine Adamé she put it together. Remind me never to hire a woman who reads the society pages.”
‟She knew you could get her killed?”
‟You pulled her back over the railing of the Golden Gate Bridge! She wasn't afraid to live on the edge. She knew I was looking for an angle with Adamé and that she might be it. She was aware of my reputation. I don't sugarcoat that, not with anyone.”
‟Not called the cockroach for nothing, huh?”
Serrano ignored that. ‟Okay, here's your deal. Call your brother. Tell him the plan. Let him do whatever he wants. Fair enough?”
Whoa!
There had to be a catch, but I couldn't spot it. Except for a small hole which I could circumvent. ‟Fair enough.” I pulled out my phone and called my brother. But I wasn't about to give the cockroach the pleasure of listening to Detective John Lott sputter and threaten over the phone. ‟Mike, just listen. I'm here with Serrano, at Raleigh-Durham. I've rented a car. The two of us are heading out now, him to collect Adamé, me to do my best to protect Tessa. Tell John. Also tell him that not a single law enforcement employee was visible anywhere when I got off the plane.”
‟Darce—”
‟I'll call you.” I clicked off, leaving him hanging.
Again.
I turned to Serrano. ‟So, what's your plan?”
40
I was driving. And happy about it. I followed the signs to 40 heading southeast. It's a major highway, but it could've been a two-laner for all the traffic it carried. Maybe Tar Heels didn't do their traveling after midnight.
I glanced over at Serrano. He was shifting restlessly, wedging his feet against the dash. He hesitated, then dropped them back to the floor. ‟I'll scope the scene and call the locals.”
‟Yeah, right! If you were going to call in help you'd've done it. So, what's your real plan?”
‟Scope the scene, grab Adamé, let
you
call the locals.”
‟As you sail into the sunset waving good-bye?”
‟Sunrise. But you don't have to wait that long.” He laughed. ‟He's a San Francisco felon. I don't want the asshole vacationing in the Raleigh lock-up while his expensive lawyers—paid with money he laundered through my district—throw up every roadblock to extradition.”
‟Why don't you just shoot him?”
I'd meant it sarcastically. Sort of. ‟No can do. I already don't have the best reputation. Now if you'd take him out . . . ”
‟What about Tessa?”
‟Tessa?”
‟Tessa Jurovik! The woman you dragged into this?” I was trying—failing—to keep calm. ‟It's the old cockroach problem. You haven't given her a thought, have you?”
‟Did you ever stop to think I might be doing her a favor?”
Okay, I thought a minute and got it. Why would Tessa be here if she didn't have some relationship with Adamé? Why hadn't she just headed for the San Francisco city limits and kept on going? Meeting up with him across the country, that showed her in a whole different light. Why—
‟If he has some hold over her now, she's free,” he said. ‟If she's not as innocent as you want to believe, well, once he's in the lock-up, she can say whatever she wants. If there's evidence against her, she'll have time to disappear. All good. And, best of all for her, she'll have you there to protect her.”
Oh, please!
I looked over at Serrano. He was nodding off. Just as well. I was glad to be ‟alone.” There was only the occasional flash of white to remind me that beyond the dark clumps to my left were westbound lanes. A vehicle passed and then it was darkness again. Our Bay Area freeways are never like that. There are always lights from the cities beside them or at least headlights coming and taillights ahead. There's always the sense of moving toward. But here, I felt like I was alone in a black box.
What is life?
If I were alone in a black box would I still be alive?
Or was the question itself the black box?
As I drove, I felt the resistance of the pedals, tested the give of the steering wheel, felt the tires grab—grab was too strong a word for these tires. I shifted in the seat, noted the push button windows—I don't trust electric releases in emergency. I felt myself in this car the way I did in a stunt car.
What is life? Having come so close to throwing it away, how would Tessa Jurovik answer that now?
I rolled down the window. The air was cold, but the aroma of pine was strong and fresh. I felt my body releasing as I breathed.
In the silence time passed without clocking in. It might have been an hour, or a goodly range on either side when Serrano jerked awake. ‟How long before the turnoff?” I asked, hardly expecting him to know.
‟Twenty minutes.”
‟Wow. I'm impressed.”
‟A detective always sleeps with one eye open. That eye's on the road.”
I had plenty of questions. Now, with no distractions, it'd be easy for him to sidestep or fabricate entirely. I asked the one he'd be least likely to shirk. ‟Where's Varine in all this?”
‟Varine?” he said so blankly, I wondered if he had slipped back into dreamland. ‟Ah, the too-bright-to-be-bothered Mrs. Adamé. One of those pain-in-the-ass free spirits. With a husband to float her, she can make a career of having no responsibilities.”
‟Did she care about Tessa?”
‟Doesn't appear so.”
‟You don't know?” One thing I understood about Serrano was he hated not knowing, or, at least admitting it. But now he just grunted.
I wasn't giving up on this. ‟You jumped at the chance to hire her double.”
‟Look, you gotta be open. I wasn't expecting much, but one slip would've made the whole arrangement pop.” He shifted to face me. ‟Adamé said—convinced himself. I believe this, that he convinced himself—that he did his crimes for her. But, see, not really for her, for the
idea
of her.”
Someone else'd said that about Adamé. Oh yeah, Warren Llekko, my old classmate, and not the most perceptive of guys. He'd been skeptical. But from Serrano I was getting a different take.
‟He made her into an icon—
his
icon—because a guy needs that, he needs someone to trust. Someone who binds it all together. Someone for whom he's number one. It makes all the difference.”
‟How come you know that?”
‟'Cause I never let myself do it.”
‟How come?” I repeated. The darkness and the car let me ask that dreadfully personal question: How could you get through life without this most basic of comforts? I let the question hang, not expecting an answer.
‟Here's the irony,” Serrano said after a few moments. ‟Varine's sharp, sharper than Adamé.”
‟Not sharp enough to avoid him killing her. How do you see that?”
‟Could've been anything from a double cross to a lovers' spat. No difference in the end, though.” He peered through the windshield. ‟Or maybe he was just tired of living with someone who could see through him. He's slick and he hates to lose.”
Him or yourself?
Something about Adamé'd sure gotten under his skin. Maybe it was just what Serrano'd told me—Adamé invading his turf—or maybe—
I had to swallow hard not to laugh. Dale! ‟You know what Mac told me? He said the Adamés paid him to hassle you. Could that be—”
‟Turnoff's coming up. Third one.”
‟Mac caused you a ton of problems—woke up the neighbors around our set, called the mayor's office, and that's just what I know about. He pissed you off, distracted you—And, he bought Adamé some time.”
And he was laughing at you!
I didn't expect Serrano to comment on that, either, but his silence said it all.
Suddenly, the exits were beside us—all three virtually together—and our ramp was a dark chute into nothingness. The width of the highway
had given some illusion of options, but now, as we slowed onto a two lane with trees marching in from both sides, we might as well have been in a tunnel. In a hundred feet the road had narrowed even more to two skinny lanes banked by shrubs that could pass as landmarks only to a local, a cold sober local. I wanted to speed up, but forced myself to slow. Something shot across the road. I just about stood on the brake pedal, but whatever it was was gone. Leaving me ridiculously shaken and aware of how vulnerable I was.
At the first sign of life, a two-pump gas station with a snack shop, I pulled in and hopped out, leaving Serrano in the car.
‟We're looking for the Adamés on Hopkins Island and I think we're lost.”
The woman, about my age but with a harder history, nodded. Despite the night's chill she was wearing cut-offs and a T-shirt that said Carlene's a Gas! ‟Adamé? That name's not familiar, and I know everyone who owns here. You got an address?”
I handed her the reverse Serrano'd gotten.
She eyed it a moment. ‟Out on the county road. Those places there, lot of them are abandoned.”
‟Really? Coastal property? I'd've thought—”
‟Too marshy. Not worth the cost. Someday, sure. But now, things as they are, no one goes down that road for anything but to dump trash they're too cheap to run to the incinerator or too lazy to burn.”
‟I'm amazed. I've been to this area in the spring. When the dogwood's in bloom, there's no prettier place on earth.”
She'd been wary but now she gave me a big, knowing smile. ‟You can say that again, girl.”
I liked this woman. I wanted to settle in here and chat behind the safety of the counter. But I bought a couple bottles of water, stuck the change in
my coat pocket, along with my phone, just in case, and asked how to get where I was headed.
‟This time of night, the quickest way's not the smartest if you don't know our roads. You got to be careful, real careful for a—where you from, girl?”
I considered a lie. Not everyone in the nation thinks of our city as highly as we do. But I'm a third generation San Franciscan. ‟San Francisco.”
‟Oh my. My cousin went out there on his honeymoon. He rode one of them cable cars . . . ”
I just hoped that was before the fare was six bucks a pop, but if he'd left his fortune in San Francisco he must have kept that to himself. Carleen was smiling.
I repeated her directions. ‟Straight along this road till it forks in three miles. Right fork. That makes a slow curve. Take it for four miles till I see a road that comes into it at a back angle. That's Sandy Flat Road. I go on that for a mile and a half till I come to their mailbox.” And hope it's got a name or number on it that's big enough to see in the middle of the night.
I pictured the slow loop to the right she described, leading us to one of those little shingle cottages like there were in the Russian River area under the redwoods. Not likely. ‟
Right
fork? Isn't that the wrong direction?”
‟Guess it does seem that way. Left fork peters out in a mile.”
‟Okay.”
‟Good luck, honey. You drive careful, you hear.”
‟Thanks.”
‟Directions?” Serrano demanded as I neared the car. He was behind the wheel.
‟What're you doing?”
‟Time for me to drive.”
‟Not in my car.”
He jiggled the keys. ‟Possession! You're wasting time. Adamé's not going to wait for sunrise.”
I considered arguing for form's sake, but I wanted the chance to observe him.
Serrano lies. Guy lies all the time
, Mike had made a point of telling me. But even for liars the truth is convenient sometimes.
‟How far?” he asked, pulling out onto the empty road.
I took a drink of water—it was going to be a long night—and stuck both bottles in the cup holders. ‟Three miles.”
He lies all the time.
I knew it, had known it in Nashville, and back at SFO. Still, which things were lies, which not? He knew too much about Adamé, Varine, and Tessa for me to catch him up. I had to shift the game to my field.

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