Finding nothing in the house but an overwhelming sadness, Jeffrey had shut the window in the kitchen and gone around the rest of the house to make sure everything was pretty much as he’d found it. He grabbed a roll of duct tape he’d seen in the kitchen and taped the bathroom door shut, sealing the edges as best he could. The window inside was wide open, but he doubted even the most desperate thief would brave the disgusting bathroom to get into the house.
For the next half hour, he wrestled with the front door. No matter how many different ways he tried, the metal flashing sticking out from the jamb kept the door from closing. Jeffrey tried to hold it down with his fingers, but all that did was end up giving him the equivalent of a metal paper cut on the tips of his fingers. Finally, he found a screwdriver in the kitchen and used the flat end to hold the metal strip flush to the door so he could close it.
His plan had been to leave the house through the kitchen door, but Jeffrey had a strange feeling as he started to pull the back door shut. He had the feeling he had missed something. Once more, he walked through the house, turning on all the lights, checking each room to see if anything jumped out at him. All that hit him was the odor. Hank must have moved from room to room, trying to outrun the decay, and finally ended up in the kitchen. Jeffrey went back to the living room. He was breathing through his mouth, trying not to gag again from the smell, when he saw the painting over the couch.
This had to be Lena ‘s mother. She had the same olive skin and piercing eyes. She wore her hair a little shorter, but it looked almost the same as Lena ‘s did now. Her neck had that same swan-like curve and Jeffrey could tell from looking at her that she had that same attitude that some women took as threatening and most men took as sexy. Jeffrey imagined she’d been quite the draw to the locals. It would have taken a cop’s arrogance to look past that haughty tilt to the woman’s chin and the wry amusement in her eyes.
Jeffrey finally left the house, turning the thumb latch on the knob to lock the kitchen door. He’d left all the lights on in hopes of discouraging burglars, or maybe it was the thought of going back into the depressing house that made him not bother.
He was finished fucking around with this. A woman had been burned alive. Jeffrey had been shot at. A man had been stabbed to death and thrown through their window. Hank Norton was on his deathbed at the hospital.
It was time to find Lena.
Jeffrey sat on the front steps and studied the map until he found the route he was looking for. Sara had been right about the town being laid out in a large rectangle with a forest in the middle. There would be trails through the forest, shortcuts that had been used for years. Maybe even a fort or some kind of hastily built shelter where kids went to smoke pot and get laid. When Jeffrey was a teenager, he’d had a similar hideout. It wasn’t a big stretch to think there was one in Reece, too.
Jeffrey had given Sara his cell phone because the battery on hers was dead. He went to the BMW and took her phone off the charger, slipping it into his pocket and locking the car before heading toward the end of the street. Given Hank’s current condition, there was no way the old man had helped Lena in her escape from police custody. This left Lena on her own, which meant she had left the hospital by foot. Looking at the map, Jeffrey could see the path she might have taken from the hospital to Hank’s house. He assumed she had come here first to search for money. The house had been turned upside down by somebody. That somebody could very well have been Lena.
Jeffrey doubted very seriously that the cruiser Jake Valentine had sent to the house the night of Lena ‘s escape acted as a deterrent. Hank’s backyard connected to his neighbors’. Lena could have easily gone in through the back door without anyone on the street noticing. If Deputy Don Cook was in that cruiser, he was probably doing the crossword and eating some crackers while she ransacked the house.
He was losing what little daylight was left standing there thinking about all this. Jeffrey took off his jacket and rolled up his sleeves as he walked up the street. He passed the high school, and wondered where Lena was going to sleep now that the classroom wasn’t an option. Hank’s bar had burned down, but he remembered Valentine telling him that the police tape on the door had been cut. Jeffrey shook his head, thinking if Lena had been staying at the bar all this time while Jeffrey and Sara were next door at the motel, he was going to kill her.
There was only one certainty in all of this, and that was that Lena would have to go somewhere for shelter. She would need food, clothes, water. Jeffrey looked up at the sun, wishing he had brought some water with him. Of course, given the state of the house, it was probably wise he hadn’t ingested anything there.
At the top of the hill, he took out the map again, checking to make sure he was still on the right route. He saw skid marks on the road where two cars had almost collided and figured a couple of kids had narrowly missed getting their cars totaled.
Jeffrey could hear traffic from the highway as he took the next left. A large field on his right led into a dense forest, and he wondered if this was the same forest that backed onto the motel. Jeffrey consulted the map again and saw that it was. Lena could have walked from Hank’s to the bar. The hospital was just a few streets over.
As expected, there were all kinds of trails crisscrossing the field. It was colder inside the forest and he put his jacket back on. There were no signs of secret hiding places, no trash other than some cigarette butts and more empty beer bottles than he
could count. Jeffrey could still see the sun peeking through the limbs and he made sure to keep it on his right as he walked a straight line toward the motel. He kept checking his watch as he walked so that he wouldn’t lose his sense of time, which always moved more slowly when you thought you were lost.
Jeffrey was starting to get a little nervous when he heard the stream that he’d seen behind Hank’s bar the other night. Briefly, he had the entertaining idea that he might find whatever Boyd Gibson had dropped, but by the time he reached the bank of the stream, he’d pretty much given up on that miracle happening.
Jeffrey saw the room he and Sara had shared. Someone who wasn’t exactly handy had nailed a large sheet of plywood over the broken window. The door was ajar, and Jeffrey poked his head in and checked to make sure they had gotten all of their things. The room looked exactly as they’d left it, but for some reason, Jeffrey didn’t find the place as disgusting. Maybe it was because he’d spent a couple of hours in Hank’s house. He didn’t know how Lena had stood it.
‘Shit,’ Jeffrey whispered. Lena
hadn’t
stood it. There was no way she’d stayed in that house. She wasn’t exactly a neat freak, but no sane human being would sleep in that pigsty.
Jeffrey jogged to the front office. The night clerk was gone, but an orange-haired teenager was sitting behind the counter playing video games on the computer.
The kid didn’t look up from the screen as he jabbed his thumbs at the buttons. ‘What’s up?’
‘Was somebody, a woman, staying here last week about this tall.’ Jeffrey held up his hand to indicate Lena ‘s height. ‘Brown hair, brown eyes-‘
‘You mean Lena?’ The kid kept his eyes glued to the screen.
Jeffrey reached over the counter and ripped the controller out of his hand. ‘Give me the key to her room.’
‘The sheriff’s already checked-‘ The kid seemed to understand this didn’t matter. He quickly handed Jeffrey the passkey, saying, ‘Room fourteen. It’s on the second floor.’
Jeffrey bolted up the stairs. He jammed the key in the lock and threw open Lena ‘s door as if he expected to find her standing there with a full explanation.
She wasn’t.
He closed the door behind him and dropped the key on the plastic table. Lena ‘s toiletries were neatly lined by the sink, her clothes still folded in her suitcase. Jeffrey couldn’t begin to know what, if anything, was missing because he didn’t know what she had packed. Still, he opened all the drawers, checked the nightstand, even looked under the sink.
There was nothing except a rusted flathead screwdriver that had rolled under the air conditioner by the window.
Jeffrey sat on the bed, trying to think. He had never seen Lena carry a purse, but then carrying a bag wasn’t conducive to the job. He would have to ask Sara about that. Or maybe Valentine would be the person to question since the sheriff had already checked the room. On second thought, there was no need to let the sheriff know he’d gotten one up on Jeffrey.
Jeffrey stood from the bed and lifted up the mattress, finding the remnants of what he guessed had been a couple of Cheetos but nothing else. He dropped the mattress, a rush of air blowing back on him. Jeffrey’s olfactory system was understandably out of whack since his time at Hank Norton’s, but he could have sworn he’d gotten a whiff of gun oil. He flipped the mattress off the bed and knelt down to examine the bedskirt that covered the boxspring. Glad that no one could see him, he sniffed around the thin cotton, stopping when he heard a key sliding into the lock on the door.
Jeffrey stood up just as the door opened. The maid did a double take when she saw him, a scowl on her face.
She demanded, ‘What the fuck are you doing?’
‘Can you come back in ten minutes?’
‘Can you put that mattress back where it belongs?’ Jeffrey didn’t snap to, and she tucked her hands onto her hips. ‘I ain’t got all day, mister.’
He took out his badge and showed it to her.
She squinted at the tiny letters, unimpressed. ‘ Grant County. Sounds like a real shithole. You with the mattress division, checking to see if people pulled off the tags?’
Jeffrey put the mattress back in place, hoping he could keep her talking. ‘Did you ever meet the woman who was staying here?’
‘The one what gave Jake the slip?’ She chuckled, walking into the room. ‘And to think I voted for that dipshit.’
‘ Lena ‘s a friend of mine,’ he told the woman. ‘I’m trying to help her out.’
‘Ain’t you the gallant knight.’ She took a rag out of her pocket and started wiping down the phone on the bedside table, mumbling, ‘Must’ve used the phone a lot. Damn greasy fingerprints are all over it,’ Her head was bent, but she looked up at Jeffrey as if she was wondering why he was still here.
‘Thanks for your help,’ he told the woman, though the opposite was the case.
Jeffrey was halfway toward the stairs when he realized the maid may have been more helpful than she’d intended. He hadn’t seen Lena ‘s cell phone in the hotel room, so it must have been in her car. Frank Wallace, his second in command, could run a records check to see who she had been talking to before the night the Escalade was torched, or maybe even after. He would also put out his own APB on Hank’s Mercedes and maybe have Frank call in a few favors with the Highway Patrol to see if they could keep an eye out for Lena. As with Jeffrey’s phone, Sara’s couldn’t get a cell signal at the hotel, so he would have to call Frank on the walk back.
Jeffrey stopped on the bottom stair. Christ, what an idiot. If he couldn’t get a cell signal at the hotel, neither could Lena.
He jogged toward the front office again. This time, the kid was waiting at the counter, ready to serve. He asked, ‘Find anything?’
Jeffrey shot back his own question. ‘Did Detective Adams make any phone calls while she was here?’
‘She made a long-distance one before she left.’
Jeffrey knew from his own bill that the motel charged fifty cents a minute for local calls and two dollars a minute for long distance. The calls were big money and the motel would keep exact records. ‘Let me see all of her calls.’
The teenager pulled a stack of papers off the printer. ‘There was only one,’ he explained. ‘Got a nine-one-two area code.’
The number looked familiar. ‘That’s Savannah.’
‘Yeah, I think so.’
Jeffrey grabbed the phone off the counter and dialed the number.
TWENTY
Charlotte ‘s face was obscured by the duct tape covering her mouth, so that all Lena could see was a pair of bright, terrified eyes. The woman trembled with fear, her sobs muffled by the tape. Lena glanced in the rearview mirror as she drove the SUV down a dark road, trying to silently communicate to Charlotte to just hold on, that Lena would find a way out of this. Though, how she would manage their escape, Lena did not know.
The tattooed man who had hit Lena was behind them, driving her Celica. She had no idea where they were going or why. She just kept driving because even though she could not see the masked face of the man in the backseat, she knew that he was not fucking around. The way he held the gun told her all that she needed to know. The weapon was like an extension of his hand. He was not afraid to use it.
Lena thought about Evelyn Johnson, Ethan driving her in his truck to that clearing in the woods where she was murdered. Had Ethan looked in his rearview mirror and seen the fear in Evelyn’s eyes, knowing there was nothing that he could do? Had he been just as afraid himself? Or had he been squirming in his seat, fighting the excitement building between his legs as he thought about what was to come?
‘Turn here,’ the man in the mask said, and Lena followed orders, turning onto Laskey Street, which ran behind the school. There was no urgency in his voice and he seemed to have no particular plan in mind. As far as she could tell, he was making her drive in a circle around the periphery of the high school.
‘Next right,’ he said.
Lena looked at Charlotte again. She asked the man, ‘Why are you doing this?’
‘Why do you think?’
‘Did Ethan send you?’
‘Who’s Ethan?’
‘If Ethan sent you, then this is between me and him. Charlotte doesn’t have anything to do with this. I haven’t even seen her since high school.’
‘Honey, I don’t know what you’re talking about.’
She didn’t know if he was telling the truth or playing with her. Had they followed her to Coastal State Prison or just waited for her to show back up in town? There was nothing in her motel room that would tell them where she had been. Ethan’s arrest jacket was tucked back in its hiding place behind the CD changer in the trunk of her Celica. The only thing of value in the room was her Glock, and they obviously didn’t need that.