Authors: Campbell Armstrong
âThere's protection,' she said. âI wouldn't be alone.'
âFour cops. An army would make me a little less uneasy.'
She kissed him. He rested his hand against the curve of her hip. She drew the flat of his hand across her stomach, and for a second she thought it was possible to believe nothing had altered. And then the telephone rang, harsh and unexpected. She picked it up on the first ring.
Dansk said, âNice quiet countryside, Amanda. Nothing moving except a few old raccoons, unless you count me.'
She didn't respond. Her hand on the receiver was stiff and suddenly she was cold.
Dansk said, âThe woods are lovely dark and deep, et cetera.'
She still didn't reply. She realized she was holding her breath.
Dansk laughed. âYou figured it all out yet, lady?'
71
Dansk left his car hidden under shrubbery a quarter of a mile from the old bridge, and moved through the trees, ducking now and again to avoid low-hanging branches. You had to be careful what was underfoot: roots, rotted trunks, gopher holes. He went cautiously, but with a certain ease. He'd backpacked in rough places, he'd put in hard time on survival courses courtesy of the US Marshals Service, spent weeks alone in remote Appalachian hill country where all you got was a knife and a box of matches and a length of twine and a safety pin, and fend for yourself, buddy. And I did it, he thought. With flying colours. This was a walk on the beach by comparison. Easy-peasy, watch where you step,
concentrate
. Listen to the language of the pines, what the landscape is saying. He stopped moving, crouched low, studied the darkness.
In the right-hand pocket of his dark-blue jacket he had a Coke bottle into which he'd siphoned gasoline from the tank of his car. He'd stuffed the neck with wadded Kleenex. He had a second bottle in his left pocket, also filled with gas and similarly fused. In his right hand he carried the hefty wrench he'd bought at the filling-station, the Ruger was in his left. He'd tucked the flashlight in his belt and the mobile phone was in his back pocket with the ringer switched off. The last thing he needed in the stillness of the night was a call from McTell or Pasquale, the sound of buzzing in the pines.
If they phoned.
Earlier, he'd tried to make contact with them from his car, but neither had answered. He'd assumed at first that they'd made a rendezvous, and maybe they'd left their cars to take a leak at the side of the road, but ten minutes later he was still getting no answer from either. One possibility was that they'd stopped for pizza or to grab a hamburger. They were always chowing down unhealthy fast-food fodder. Another was that they'd crapped out, decided to quit, go their own way. But they'd never run from a situation before, so why start now? Afraid of the cop presence?
Or something else.
Such as what? He wondered if maybe Loeb had contacted them, ordered them out of the picture, part of his dismantling operation. We're shutting down. We're hanging a sign in the window: Out of Business.
They'd both been off-centre recently, McTell more than normally sullen, Pasquale remote. Fuck them. Dansk was only half interested anyway, inclined to dismiss them. It was a shabby world. You can't trust people, they disappoint. What it comes down to over and over is that there's only one person to rely on in the end: Anthony Dansk. Your good self.
He didn't need McTell and Pasquale. He was weary of dumb killers and their idiot resentments. They were like boulder-filled baggage he had to haul, directing them to do this, go here, go there. They couldn't think for themselves, they didn't have enough brains to boil a fucking egg. He was better on his own because he'd always preferred his own company. Maybe he should have worked alone from the beginning, doing the surgery by himself. God knows he was capable of it, and he was comfortable with it.
He kept moving. It was surprising how little sound you made if you concentrated, if you were aware. The darkness was a warm embrace. Come on in, Anthony, there's nothing to fear.
The forest filled his head like sweet music. McTell and Pasquale would've been noisy, crushing twigs and cones underfoot, disturbing birds and alarming skunks. They wouldn't have heard the music.
Come in, keep coming, Amanda isn't far away.
He thought of her in the darkness ahead. Her and Rhees. He pictured her when she'd plucked the eucalyptus leaf outside her house. He saw Rhees's hand dropping to her ass. Oh that intimacy. He remembered the way he'd grabbed her wrist in the hotel room and forced food to her lips, and the feeling of power that spiked through him and the warmth of her breast.
He also remembered calling his mother to tell her about a girl named Amanda. His mother seemed very far away from him at this moment, a distance greater than 2,000 and something miles. She seemed locked inside the prism of his memory like a butterfly pinned in a glass display case.
He stopped suddenly, alert to a slight alteration in the melody in his brain. A change of modality, major to minor. He stood very still under a tree that oozed a resinous odour. The sound was faint but he zoned in on it. He recognized it as the noise made by somebody's stomach, a churning of intestinal juices.
The source of the sound was somewhere to his right, 5 or 6 yards, maybe more. You had to make allowances for the way noise carried here. There was barely any light. The moon was shrouded by thick strands of cloud.
He stepped to his right. He had the sensation of floating just above the ground. He weighed the wrench in his hand, 12 inches of hard steel, something you could believe in. That's what you needed in life, something to believe in. Like this work Loeb had wanted to close down and walk away from. Close the book. Burn it. Leave the prosecutor alive and look after our own asses.
Right, rob me of my life, Loeb. No way.
The man in the trees was about 6 feet tall and wore a dark windcheater and black jeans. He had a holstered weapon on his hip and he was standing very still. Maybe he'd sensed something, aroused by a faint instinct to the fact that there was a change in the atmosphere, only he couldn't quite pinpoint it.
A guard, Dansk thought. He wondered if this was the cop who'd driven Amanda and Rhees up here from Phoenix, or if Amanda had managed to stock the woods with reinforcements. It was the kind of move she'd make. You see one cop in the Bronco, but what you don't see are the others in the pine forest. Just keep coming, Anthony. I have a few tricks left.
I'm ready for you, lady. Always have been.
He edged forwards. He felt a weird tingle in the tips of his fingers, as if the steel of the wrench had turned to ice and welded skin to metal, like the effect when you took something out of the deep-freeze.
The man turned his head a little, away from Dansk. Dansk stepped forward and swung the wrench with all his strength and felt it split the skin and sink into the base of the man's neck. The man went down at once and Dansk straddled him, noticing that one of the guy's eyelids quivered uncontrollably as if a circuit of nerve-links had been severed with the blow.
âHow fucking many of you?' Dansk whispered.
The guy rolled his face to the side. Blood was flowing from the place where neck and shoulder had been punctured, and the eyelid kept flickering open and shut. Dansk brought the wrench down a second time into the side of the guy's neck.
Pine needles adhered to the guy's lips and teeth. âGo fuck yourself,' he said.
Dansk was centred, he'd found a balance in himself. He hammered the wrench into the guy's head with controlled force. âHow many, fella?'
The guy moaned and said, âThree â¦'
âThree where?'
âTwo ⦠a mile up the path.'
âAnd the third?'
âThe cabin.'
âThanks,' and Dansk smacked the wrench down again and again, three times, four, he lost count, it didn't matter. And then it was no longer what you'd call a face, it was bloody and broken and ugly, hard steel had splintered bone and demolished the skull and mouth and blinded the eyes.
Dansk stopped, listening for the sound of breathing. He heard none. This one was gone. Like that. Life battered out of him. Face, skull, blood pouring from shattered veins. Life is a skinny thread, snip.
He reached down and touched the guy's groin, wondering if there was a discharge of piss, but the guy was dry.
Dansk stood up and his eye followed the overgrown path as far as he could see in the diminished light. He was conscious of the scent of gasoline from one of his pockets, where a bottle had tilted a little and fuel soaked the wadded tissue.
Two other guards a mile along the path, and one at the cabin. Amanda and Rhees inside.
I'm coming, I'm on my way. There's no stopping me.
He went between the trees with the blood-wet wrench in his right hand, and he walked as close to the path as he could. It was choked with fern and stunted bushes and scrub. Here and there stray pine saplings had taken root but, overshadowed by the density of older trees, they grew stilted and starved. Survival depended on how much territory you could claim for yourself.
I claim this forest. This whole goddam thing and everything in it, especially the former prosecutor. This is my dominion. McTell and Pasquale could never have understood this.
The only thing they knew was thuggery. They didn't understand the true nature of killing, they thought of it as simple disposal. But you weren't just ending the life of somebody, no way, you were changing history. A man beaten to death was no simple brutal act, it had consequences you couldn't begin to foresee â bereaved wife, orphaned children, an empty chair at dinner, a coffin, lawyers checking last wills and testaments, insurance agents scanning policies. Killing was a form of rearranging the patterns of reality, breaking a sheet of stained glass into a sudden amazing kaleidoscope in which you could watch all the coloured flecks revolve in an infinity of configurations. Even on a simple level, the dead guy's clothes would need to be stacked inside boxes and donated to Goodwill, and somebody else would go round wearing them, unaware of the fact that they'd once belonged to a guy battered to death in a pine forest by a wrench.
You don't touch just one life in killing. It was a stone dropped in water: the rings spread and all kinds of people were changed, some in big ways, others in small. Some were heartbroken, others got used Levis from a charity store.
On your own you can change the world.
He kept going, his body hunched a little, shoulders down. He wasn't thinking now. He was all motion and hard focus and silence. He'd stepped up a gear. He was cruising through the trees, sensing treacherous dips in the earth before he reached them. His night vision was acute, vulpine.
He stopped.
There were two of them just ahead. There was also a vehicle of the jeep variety. One of the men was moving slowly round the vehicle, the other, smaller and younger, leaned against the door panel. They had rifles and wore uniforms.
Dansk calculated the distance to the vehicle: 50 yards, maybe less. He lowered himself to the ground and watched. To see without being seen. Invisibility was a kick. The cop leaning against the door sighed quietly. He didn't know somebody was out among the trees watching him.
Dansk moved closer.
The older guy stopped beside the younger and whispered something Dansk couldn't catch. The young cop shook his head.
Dansk got a little closer still.
The moment.
Showtime
.
He removed the Coke bottle from his right pocket. The stench of gas was strong, but there was no breeze to carry it in the direction of the cops. The night was like a deflated lung. He hunkered down behind a bush and took out the cheap cigarette lighter he'd bought.
He adjusted the little lever to low before he applied his thumb to the lighter. He pressed down, got a tiny eye of flame from the plastic cylinder â and now this had to be quick. Lighter-flame to tissue, just a touch, then he stood up and tossed the bottle through the air and heard the musculature in his arm ripple. He watched the bottle rise and fall in a lit arc, spinning and turning as it fell, then exploding against the windshield of the vehicle, and instantly the air was luminous with flame and the younger cop, seared by an outburst of fire, screamed. The older guy had dropped to the ground, his flesh pierced with spears and shards of glass, and he was moaning about his eyes, how he couldn't see
a fucking thing
, and the young cop just kept screaming, rolling over and over in an attempt to douse the fire that melted his clothes to his skin.
Polyester shirt and pants, Dansk thought. Man-made fibre. Never trust it. He lit and threw the second bottle. It struck the jeep, which exploded. The force of the blast made Dansk step back into the trees. The jeep combusted in blue and yellow flags of fire and the air was bitter with the smell of rubber and gasoline.
A thing of great beauty, this conflagration. Your own private war zone. Dry pines began to crackle, flame created sudden bridges through space, the forest was lit and the darkness dissolved. Birds shaken out of branches were turned gold and red by reflected fire, transmuted from ordinary bluejays and ravens into creatures with exotic plumage. The night burned and burned and burned.
And Dansk was already moving again, and thinking.
Of the cabin. Of Amanda.
72
Barefoot, she hurried out to the porch, where Gannon stood with his shotgun against his side, the barrel directed downwards. She'd heard somebody scream and then the explosions rocked the night and she'd seen unidentifiable debris rise and fall through the air. Now she stared at the fire half a mile away and watched it spread like an apocalyptic false dawn. Then Rhees was standing just behind her in the doorway, breathing hard and leaning against the frame for support. The heart of the fire was the place where the two cops had been parked.
Rhees said, âThe Bronco's parked out back. We could try to drive out of here.'