Authors: Mark Dawson
“What are you going to do?”
“Just go.”
Milton waited until he heard the squeak of the front door as Trip opened it.
He went across the room and offered a hand to Brady. The man took it and Milton helped him back to his feet.
Brady went to the galley kitchen, picked up a tea cloth and mopped the blood from his face. “If you think that’s the end of this you’re out of your mind.”
“It is the end of it,” Milton said.
“You saw––he sucker punched me!”
“I know and he’s sorry he did that. So am I. I know you’ve got nothing to do with what happened to Madison.”
“Damn straight I don’t.”
“But I also know that it’s better for you to forget that just happened and move on.”
“You reckon? I don’t think so.”
“I do. A friend of mine works for St Francis. Legal department. You said you used to work down there so once I found out that you were lying about what happened to your leg I thought maybe it was worth getting her to have a look into your record, see if it stacked up like you said that it did. And it turns out you have a pretty thick personnel file there.”
“How dare you––”
“Here’s what I know: you didn’t choose to leave, you were asked to go. Two sexual harassment cases. The first one was a nurse, right?”
Brady scowled at him, but said nothing.
“And the second one was a technician. She had to be persuaded from going to the police. You had to pay her a lot of money, didn’t you?” Milton was next to the picture of Brady in the desert; he picked it up and made a show of examining it. “It was an interesting read, Dr. Brady. You want me to go on?”
“Get out,” Brady said.
TRIP WAS WAITING IN THE CAR. Milton leant across towards him and used his right hand to reach inside his coat. His fingers touched the butt of a small gun. He pulled it out. It was a small .25 calibre semi-auto, a Saturday Night Special. Milton slipped the gun into his own pocket.
“You’re an idiot,” Milton said. “What were you thinking?”
He stared out of the window. “I had to do something,” he said with a surly inflection that made Milton think how young he really was. “Someone had to do something.”
“And so you were going to threaten him with a gun?”
“You got a better plan?”
“You would’ve gone to prison.”
“I don’t care.”
“Yes, you do. And so do I. And, anyway, it would all have been for nothing: he didn’t do it.”
The boy frowned, confused. “How do you know that?”
“Brady is a talker. He likes to be the centre of attention. He has enemies in the neighbourhood, too, and maybe those enemies like other people to believe that he’s up to no good. Victor Leonard and Brady hate each other. If you ask me, Leonard put us onto Brady because he wants to see him in trouble. But he’s got nothing to do with this. If he’s guilty of anything, it’s being a fantasist and a braggart.”
“I don’t buy that,” he said, although Milton could see that he was getting through to him.
“So are you going to let me drive you back into town?”
“You said you had something”
“I do. I have a very good lead.”
“What do you mean?”
“I think I know what happened to Madison.”
35
ARLEN CRAWFORD drove around the block three times until he was sure that he was not being followed. It was an abundance of caution, perhaps, but Crawford was an operator, experienced enough to know all the tricks. He knew staffers who had been tailed before, heading to meet a friendly journalist to leak something explosive, only to find that their meeting was photographed and reported and, before they knew it, they were the story and not the leak. There was no way that he was going to let that happen to him. He was too good. And the consequences didn’t bear thinking about.
Not for this.
The guys operated out of a warehouse in Potrero Hill. It was a low-slung building in the centre of a wide compound surrounded by a perimeter of ten foot high wire. Floodlights stood on pylons and there were security cameras all over. The warehouse was owned by a company that distributed beer and the compound housed three trucks. Empty kegs had been stacked against the wall of the warehouse and, next to that, five big motorcycles had been parked. An old Cadillac Eldorado had been slotted alongside the bikes.
Crawford drew up against the compound gate and sounded his horn. The single black eye of the security camera gleamed down at him, regarding him, and then there was the buzz of a motor and a rusty scrape as the gate slid aside. Crawford put the car into gear and edged inside. He parked next to the Caddy and went into the warehouse. The main room had been fitted with comfortable chairs, a large television and a sound system that was playing stoner rock. The place smelt powerfully of stale beer; it was strong enough that Crawford felt like gagging.
The five men were arranged around the room. Their leader was a tall, skinny man with prison tattoos visible on every inch of exposed skin. There was a swastika etched onto the nape of his neck, just below the line of his scalp. His name was Jack Kerrigan but they all referred to him as Smokey. Crawford had been introduced to him by Scott Klein, their head of security. He had recommended him and his boys as a solution for problems that could only be solved with the radical measures that they could implement. Strongarm jobs, pressure that needed exerting to shut people up or to get them to do things they didn’t naturally want to do. The others were cut from the same cloth as Kerrigan: tattoos; lank hair worn long; a lot of greasy denim.
Kerrigan got up and stretched, leonine, before sauntering across to him.
“Mr. Crawford,” he said, a low Southern drawl.
“Jack.”
The air was heady with dope smoke; Crawford noticed a large glass bong on the table.
“How’s our boy doing?”
“He’s doing good.”
“Good enough to get it done?”
“He’ll win,” Crawford said. “Provided we keep him on the right track.”
“That’s all that matters.”
Crawford nodded at that, then scowled a little; he had forgotten the headache he had developed the last time they had dragged him out here. It was the dope, the droning music, the dull grind of necessity of making sure the dumbfuck rednecks stayed on the right path.
“Wanna beer?”
“No thanks.”
He nodded at the bong. “Smoke?”
“What do you think?”
“Nah, not your scene. All business today, then. I can work with that. What’s up?”
“We’ve got a problem.”
“If you mean the girls––I told you, you need to stop worrying.”
“That’s easy for you to say.”
“I have a little update on that, something that’ll make you feel better.” He stooped to a fridge and took out a bottle of beer. He offered it to Crawford. “You sure?”
“No,” he said impatiently. “What update?”
Jack popped the top with an opener fixed to his keychain and took a long swig.
“What is it, Jack?”
“Got someone who knows someone in the police. Friend of our persuasion, you know what I mean. Fellow soldier. This guy says that they have no clue. Those girls have been out there a long time––all that salty air, the animals, all that shit––there’s nothing left of them except bones.”
“Clothes?”
“Sure, but there’s nothing that would give them any idea who they were.”
“I wish I shared your confidence, Jack. What about the others?”
“You know, I can’t rightly recall how many there were and I ain’t kidding about that.”
“
Four
.”
“It’ll be the same. You might not believe it, but we were careful.”
“They’re all in the same place.”
“Give or take.”
“You think that’s careful?”
“The way I see it, the way we left them girls, all in that spot and all done up the same way, police are gonna put two and two together and say that there’s one of them serial killers around and about, doing his business.”
“I heard that on the TV already,” one of the other man, Jesse, chimed in. “They had experts on, pontificating types. They said they was sure. Serial killer. They was saying Zodiac’s come back.”
“Son of Zodiac,” Jack corrected.
Crawford sighed.
“They’re gonna say it’s some john from the city, someone the girls all knew.”
“The Headlands Lookout Killer. That’s what they’re saying.”
“Exactly,” Jack said with evident satisfaction. “And that’s what we want them to think.” He took a cigarette from a pack on the table and lit it. “It’s unfortunate about our boy’s habits, but if there’s one thing we got lucky on, it’s who they all were. What they did. In my experience, most hookers don’t have anyone waiting for them at home to report them missing. They’re in the shadows. Chances are, whoever those girls were, no-one’s even noticed that they’re gone. How are the police going to identify people that they don’t know is missing? They ain’t. No way on earth. And if they can’t identify them, how the hell they gonna tie ‘em all back to our boy?”
“I don’t know,” he said impatiently.
“I do––I do know. They ain’t.” Jack said it with a sly leer. “Make you feel any better?”
“Oh yes,” he said, making no effort to hide his sarcasm. “I can’t tell you how relieved I am. I would’ve felt even better if you’d done what I asked you to and made them all
disappear
.”
“What happened to them, Mr. Crawford, it’s the same thing. They are disappeared. You’ve got to relax, man. You’re gonna give yourself a coronary you keep worrying about stuff that don’t warrant no worrying about.”
“Someone has to.”
“Fine.” He took another long pull of his beer. “You worry about it as much as you want, but, I’m telling you, there ain’t no need for it.” He finished the beer and tossed it into an open bin. “Now then––you didn’t come here to bitch and moan at us. What can we do for you?”
“There’s another problem.”
“Same kind of problem as before?”
“The exact same kind.”
He shook his head. “Seriously? Number five? You want to get our boy to keep his little man in his trousers.”
“You think I haven’t tried? It’s not as easy as you think.”
“Who is it? Another hooker?”
“No, not this time. Worse. She’s on staff. He’s been schtupping her for a month and now she’s trying to shake us down. We either pay up or she goes public. One or the other. It couldn’t be any more damaging.”
“And paying her wouldn’t work?”
“What do you think?”
His greasy hair flicked as he shook his head. “Nah––that ain’t the best outcome. She might get a taste for it. You want her gone?”
There it was: the power of life and death in the palm of his hand. It still gave him chills. And what choice did he have? Joseph Jack Robinson II, for all his faults, was still the medicine that America needed. He was the best chance of correcting the god almighty mess that had become of the country and if that meant that they had to clean up his own messes to keep him aimed in the right direction, then that was what they would have to do. It was distasteful but it was for the greater good. The needs of the many against the needs of the few.
“Sort it,” he said.
“Same as before. No problem.”
“No, Jack.
Not
the same as before. Make it so she disappears. Properly disappears. This stuff on the news––”
“I’m telling you, that was just bad luck is what that was.”
“No, Jack, it’s fucking amateur hour,
that’s
what it was. I never want to hear about her again. Not next week. Not next month. Not when some mutt puts its snout into a bush on the beach next fucking year. You get me? Never.”
“Sure I do.” Jack fixed him with gimlet eyes and Crawford remembered what the man was capable of; the man was a snake––venomous, lethal––and, like a snake, he needed careful handling. “You got her details? We’ll get looking into it right away.”
36
“THANK YOU SO MUCH. Thank you all very, very much. Thank you all. I can’t tell you how wonderful that makes me feel. Now, I want to tell you who we all are in this room. We’ve not done a good enough job of just laying out who we are because we make the mistake of assuming people already know. But they don’t. What they know is based on the way we are portrayed in pop culture, in the media and by our opponents. And we need to do better than that. We are patriots, ladies and gentlemen, that’s what we are, and like good patriots, we love our country.” Applause. “We love all of it and everyone in it, from the mom and pop business on Main Street to the hard-working man trying to establish himself as a tradesman, to the mom who stays home to bring up the kids and the student who works a bar so that she can afford her college tuition. We see potential, ladies and gentlemen. Unlimited potential. In all of these people, and everyone else, we see the average American, the person who makes this great country tick. We know that these people can fulfil their dreams and be everything that they want to be if we just remove certain things from their path. You know the things I mean: excessive taxes that mean a business owner can’t afford to take on new staff and regulations that make it too difficult to break into new areas. Too much government. We look at some of the things that are happening today––like those poor girls who have been found up there on the Headlands––and we know that although our culture is sick, it can be healed. We love and revere our founding documents, the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence.” Applause. “We believe that the preamble to the Constitution contains an inarguable truth that we are all endowed by our creator with certain inalienable rights, among them life.” Applause. “Liberty, Freedom.” Applause. “And the pursuit of happiness.” Applause. “And I’m here to tell you, ladies and gentlemen, dear friends, that all three of these are under assault. And I promise to you, I guarantee with my hand on my heart, that if I am nominated for the office of President, then I will defend those great principles with my dying breath. Thank you for coming, thank you for your support, God bless you and God bless America!”
Robinson took the applause, raising his arm above his head and waving broadly, shining his high beam smile out over the adoring crowd. He walked across to the right hand side of the stage, paused to bask in the acclaim––occasionally pointing out people in the crowd who he recognised, or those who he wanted to give the impression that he recognised––and then came back to the left, repeating the trick.