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"Sorry, miss," said the trooper. "You can't go through there."
"Why not?"
"Family's having some trouble. We've been asked to protect their privacy. There's a wide place just ahead where you can turn around."
"I know about the trouble. We came all the way from New York."
"And you are . . . ?"
"Lucy Karp. I'm Dan Heeney's, um, fiancee."
The trooper looked the car over, saw the boys, the dog slavering in the window. He said, "Why don't you follow me in."
He got in the cruiser and turned down the drive, Lucy following. She watched him knock on the front door, saw Dan come out and talk to the trooper, saw the smile break out on his face, his vigorous nod. Lucy got out of the Toyota. Dan came running down the steps, threw his arms around her, and planted a kiss on her mouth.
"Darling," he sighed. "I've longed for this moment."
The trooper was observing them from his cruiser. Satisfied, he drove off.
"He's gone," she said. "You can let go of me now."
"What if I don't want to?"
"Oh, stop it! I had to say that or he wouldn't let me in. The road is full of reporters. Will you just tell me what is going on?"
The boys and the dog jumped out. Dan, releasing Lucy, made much of them and Magog, after which he said, "We better go in unless you want to be on TV. I think they've got a crew up on the mountain there."
Dan played host, to Lucy's great impatience. He poured drinks, showed them the house, settled the boys in front of his computer with Quake II. When he and Lucy were alone on the living room sofa, he said, "Relax, it's a scam."
"What do you mean, a scam?"
He explained. She listened, her face still, not interrupting. When he had finished, she asked, "This was whose idea? My mother's?"
"I don't know. Your dad was pitching it pretty hard. Why?"
"I don't know. It just sounds like something she would think up. So I seem to be the prize schmuck of the Western Hemisphere. Why didn't he just tell me on the phone?"
"I think because they're keeping it really close. The desk clerk at Four Oaks likes to listen in, it's well-known. In fact, your dad made a big point about not discussing the deal on the phone at all." He met her eyes. "You're sorry you came, right?"
"Of course I am!" she cried, and then seeing his face, she said, "No, of course, I didn't mean that. Oh, I don't know. When I heard the news, all I could think about was how awful it must be for both of you, and I dumped what little logical process I have and just tossed the twins into the car and drove. My mother will go crazy. She's the only one allowed spontaneous excesses in the family."
"It was a nice kiss, though," he said. "You have to admit that. Maybe not worth an eight-hundred-and-sixty-mile drive, but . . ."
"Oh, stop it!" Then a grin broke out on her face. "Yes, it was. My feet sweated."
"That's supposed to be an infallible sign." He moved closer on the sofa and dropped an arm around her. "We could try it again. Then it would only be a four-hundred-and-thirty-mile kiss."
She found herself on her feet. "Maybe later. I have to get in touch with my folks before they find out from someone else and go nuts." This was not the real reason, though.
"What's the situation now?" asked Karp. "Is it as bad as it looks on the TV?"
They were in the Karps' cabin at Four Oaks: Karp, Marlene, Hendricks, and Oggert, all of them looking grim and flicking eyes toward the live coverage on the room's television.
"Well, it's a mess," said Hendricks. "The local troop is trying to straighten out the traffic tangle, rerouting and all, but what I'm worried about is the mob down at the courthouse. That's Willie Pogue up on a D8 in front of the courthouse demanding they release Emmett right now or he's going to take the jailhouse down and pull him out."
"Who's Willie Pogue?" Karp looked at the screen. A fiftyish man with a mane of white hair and a florid face was haranguing the crowd through a bullhorn from the nose of an immense yellow earthmover.
"One of Red Heeney's pals. I guess he's the head of the dissident faction now. There's about eight hundred miners out, with wives and kids. Some of them're armed. The sheriff's in full combat mode, and there's a bunch of security guys from the company standing around, also armed. Deputizing mine security is kind of a tradition in Robbens County. That happens, all bets are off."
"Can't you do anything?" asked Marlene.
Hendricks shook his head. "I don't believe I have a horse in this race unless the governor tells me different. The local troopers are pretty much tied up, and I don't have enough men to get between that mob and a bunch of scared cops."
"And we have no idea where the Cades are right now?" asked Karp.
"No. I pulled my cars back so it'd look like we weren't interested in them anymore." He stared briefly at the TV. "We didn't count on this."
"No," said Oggert. "And if this keeps up, someone's going to get hurt, and if that happens, we will get absolutely no support from the governor. He'll repudiate the bunch of us. Maybe it's time to pull the plug."
"Pull the plug?" said Karp.
"Yeah. Release the kid, say we have new evidence that exonerates him. Take a breather and then play it straight against the Cades."
"That gets us back to the siege business, Cheryl. I thought we all agreed that was the worst case."
"Yeah, but that was before this happened. Even if it comes to a siege, at least we'll be the good guys. I'll tell you right now, no one is going to take responsibility for cops or miners killed pursuant to a fraudulent arrest. The lead will be 'Cops Too Chicken to Go after Cades, Four Dead in Phony Arrest Riot.' Uh-uh."
"No. We're hanging tough," said Karp. "And you can tell the governor I said so."
Oggert glared at him and seemed about to say something when Hendricks cleared his throat. "Uh, also, Butch? You ought to know this, too. We had a call from Murchison, the trooper who's watching the Heeney place? Do you know a Lucy Karp?"
Karp felt a hammer descend on his diaphragm. "Yes, she's my daughter. What about her?"
"Well, she showed up at the Heeney place a little while ago, in a car with two little kids and a big dog. She said she was Dan's fiancee, so Murchison let them through. He said they looked like they knew each other pretty good."
"The mom is always the last to know," said Marlene. "Oh, s.h.i.t! That stupid girl!"
"Calm down, Marlene," said Karp. "She was worried, she came, we'll deal with it. Why don't you call the Heeney place and talk to her?"
"Oh, I'll talk to her all right," said Marlene, and departed for the suite's bedroom, slamming the door behind her.
"Look, something's happening!" said Oggert.
The others turned their attention to the television. Karp cranked up the volume.
Marlene came out of the bedroom. "I can't get through on the phone. What's going on?"
The screen showed Pogue in the cab of the D8. A plume of black smoke shot from its stack as he revved the engine. The voice of the TV reporter was strained and barely intelligible over the roaring of the giant earthmover. Pogue was heading toward the line of helmeted, flakjacketed deputies standing behind sawhorses placed around the jail entranceway. The scene rolled and jumped as the cameraman ran alongside the great treads.
"That's a h.e.l.l of a machine," said Karp.
"Yes, sir, it is," said Hendricks. "It weighs forty tons. It'd go through that jailhouse like a knife through pie." The ten-foot-high blade of the Cat edged ever closer to the sawhorses, moving slowly but inexorably. The deputies had gas masks on now. Their shotguns now pointed at the Cat and the crowd around it. Karp could make Swett out, unmasked, talking into a radio. A sawhorse crashed over. The deputies sighted their weapons. Swett was handed a bullhorn by a deputy and started to talk into it, but the soundman from the TV station was not in position to pick up what he said. Karp and the others could imagine it though. Pogue had his bullhorn, too, and said something back about release Emmett Heeney and we'll talk.
Then the door to the jail opened, and a gray-haired man in a dark suit walked out, carrying a briefcase. He shouldered through the line of deputies, stepped over the toppled sawhorse, and climbed up onto the yellow snout of the D8. The soundman was already poking his furry sausage out on its pole, so they were able to hear: ". . . it, Willie, turn this d.a.m.n thing off and give me that bullhorn. They are letting him go. Now give me that d.a.m.n thing before someone gets hurt." The engine sound cut off.
"Who the h.e.l.l's that?" asked Hendricks.
"It's Poole!" cried Marlene.
The camera got its range and zoomed in a little. It was indeed Ernie Poole, who now raised the bullhorn to his mouth and gave a speech. He said who he was, and that he was representing Emmett Heeney. He said that the cops had tried to frame Mose Welch and he had got Mose Welch off free, and now they were trying to frame Emmett, and he would get Emmett off, too. There was no evidence worth looking at against him. He said that he guaranteed that the charges against Emmett would be dropped, unless they wanted to kill him, too, in which case you were at liberty to push the courthouse over. Laughter. But you had to go home now and move this equipment away, too, because what they want is a riot with gunfire, so that they can claim that a stray shot killed Emmett Heeney. Are you going to let them do that? Noooo! the crowd moaned. Poole said he'd applied for bail, and that Judge Bledsoe was inclined to grant it, but he'd said that no one would be released until order was restored, because old Judge Bledsoe did not want anyone to think he was acting out of fear of a mob. Poole said that the judge was an honest man, not like some of the judges we've had around here, and that he would see justice done, and now he was going to go back into the jail and sit with Emmett until they were both released. Vast cheering from the crowd, and in the room grins and applause.
Poole got down from the Cat, and the producer shifted to the on-scene guy, who started to tell everyone what they had just seen. Karp muted the sound. He looked at Marlene. "Way to go," he said softly, so that no one else heard.
14.
L UCY DROVE THE L AND C RUISER DOWN THE H EENEYS' LONG DRIVE, smiled and waved at the state trooper, rolled slowly through the gauntlet of newsies, who pointed cameras and microphones at her and yelled questions. Does he think his brother did it? How does he feel? That's what they always asked. How do you feel now that your kid's been eaten by the bear, your mother hacked to pieces by a maniac? She thought it was because everyone felt dead inside and thought they could jumpstart their own withered hearts by some transfusion of pain from the victims of a catastrophe. Surely they felt something. It was a kind of vampirism; maybe that's why tales and movies about vampires were so popular just now.
Past the media encampment she gave it the gas, and once the vans and cars had vanished in the rearview, she called, "You can come out now." The boys were clapping and giggling as Dan climbed out from the rear compartment, where he had been concealed by a beach blanket and Magog the dog. He sat in the rear, next to Giancarlo.
"How far to the border?" Dan asked.
Lucy met his eyes in her mirror. "Not far but the n.a.z.is are everywhere."
Giancarlo said, "You have dog slime in your hair."
Dan touched his head, examined his wet finger, and touched it to the boy's nose, provoking a giggling battle.
Lucy said, "If you two can't behave back there, there's going to be no ice cream."
"He started," whined Dan.
"Are we there yet?" whined Giancarlo.
"Where are we going anyway," Zak asked.
"To see Mom and Dad," said Lucy, to a chorus of boos.
"We want to go to Six Flags," said Dan.
"She never takes us anywhere fun," said Giancarlo. "She's terrifically mean, too. She scratches us with her nails."
"Do you like her?" asked Zak.
"Yeah," said his brother, "you kissed her on the mouth."
"I did," said Dan, "but it was yucky. I'm never going to do that again."
"If you get married, you have to," Giancarlo said knowledgeably. "Girls love it."
"Well, if that's so, I'm never getting married," said Dan.
This nonsense continued during the entire drive to Four Oaks, which lay west of McCullensburg. The traffic leading into town was still heavy, although it seemed to be flowing smoothly again. News vans were still in evidence around the courthouse.
Outside of town, the countryside was rolling hills, and more of what Lucy thought of as country. They pa.s.sed fields with black-and-white cows in them, cud-chewing and stupid in the shade of big trees, and once a roan horse running across a green meadow.
"Pretty area," Lucy remarked. "I didn't expect this."
"South county," Dan said. "The seam gets thin here and it's still mostly agricultural. It's where the richer folks live."
He leaned forward and placed a hand on her shoulder, near her neck. "You're looking for a big sign on the right."
This was nice, she thought, a tiny sliver of normality: driving along a country road, a man with a warm hand on your shoulder, a couple of kids, going to visit Mom and Dad in the country. An exotic treat, like smoking opium would be to regular people. She wished he would keep his hand there, she wished she had the nerve to raise her own hand and cover his.
Which then removed itself and pointed. "There it is."
A certain chaos then ensued: greetings, fond looks, stern looks, arrangements made for sleeping quarters for the new arrivals. Gog came bounding out to sniff Lucy and the boys, and especially Magog, who curled her lip at him. He was twice her size, but the strange politics of dogland made her dominant, except when in heat. Lucy found that Four Oaks had more or less been taken over by the murder investigation, and it was agreed that Dan should stay there until things settled down, and Emmett, too, after he was released on bail. Marlene was cool to Lucy, while doting on the boys, which Lucy did not much mind. She saw the eye play that transpired when Marlene saw Dan and her together, and Lucy could see the wheels spin. Her mother did not like plots, except when she was in charge of them. Beneath the surface jollity the atmosphere was tense at the lodge because, Lucy suspected, of the difficulty of guarding the secret that now lay at the heart of the investigation. Her father greeted her distractedly and soon went off to confer with the cop, Hendricks.
There was a pool with a slide and a couple of diving boards there, and they all went swimming. Lucy discovered the delights of horsing around in the water with a young man, with its many opportunities for little touches on naked or nearly naked skin. Marlene was stretched on a lounger, supposedly reading, with her sungla.s.ses on. Lucy could not therefore tell where her mother's eyes were and so felt them upon her constantly.
"Let's go somewhere else," she said into Dan's ear as they drifted together.
Hendricks came into the room with an expression on his face that Karp a.s.sumed was what pa.s.sed for excited, which meant that Hendricks had for the moment stopped looking like Lincoln contemplating the slavery question.
"They been spotted," he declared.
"Where?"
"Someone called it in from a gas station on 712. That's north of Burnt Peak."
"All three of them?"
"They didn't say. But they were driving that monster truck Earl Cade's got, and there was someone sitting in the bed of it. So figure one in the shotgun and the driver. That's three, and it's likely it's them."
"What're we doing?"
"I've got cars moving to plug the main roads back up there and a couple cruising on 130 north of town. That's the best I can do. I'll move the car I've got at the Heeney place now that the boys're going to stay here, but we're still short. I'd hate to ask a single trooper to take on all three of them. Anyway, it looks like your plan worked all right." A twist of the mouth that might have been a smile appeared on the captain's face.
"Where are we going?" Lucy asked. They had slipped away in the Land Cruiser, Lucy with a pair of shorts over her Speedo suit, Dan in a T-shirt and his cutoffs. Dan was driving north out of town. He drove the clumsy vehicle accurately and at speed, without a belt. No one in this part of the state wore seat belts, and the highway code apparently demanded that the dotted centerline on the blacktop be aligned with the hood ornament, especially on hills. She admired this sort of driving, as she admired the golden curls flapping around his face. The mastiff was curled up asleep in the back.
"First Forge," he said. "It's a kind of park near Ponowon. There's a carousel and rides, and a lake, and a reproduction of a colonial ironworks. I thought you were the kind of girl who would enjoy seeing a guy in a wig bending red-hot bars."
"It's something I've always dreamed of. What I really hope, though, is that they'll have a dim room full of gla.s.s cases and wall boards with yellowing labels, and a lot of old, dusty machinery."