Read Tainted Trail Online

Authors: Wen Spencer

Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #Action & Adventure, #General

Tainted Trail (13 page)

He tapped through menus and Alicia gazed out of the small screen. Despite her glad clothes and the spread of glitter on her cheeks, she seemed the portrait of bitter sorrow. “This is her at the Fourth of July. She's twenty-three. Kraynak was her legal guardian until her birthday two years ago, but she still lives with him and his family. She's his older brother's only child. Her folks were killed in a 737 crash just outside of Pittsburgh in . . . when was that, Ukiah?”

“September ninth, 1994,” Ukiah said.

“She survived the crash?” Sam asked.

Max shook his head, selecting another sad photo of Alicia from the Fourth. “She wasn't on the plane. Everyone was killed. The plane exploded on impact. They had to piece everyone back together in order to identify the bodies. Alicia's parents had gone to Chicago for the wedding of a distant relative on her mother's side and left her with Kraynak. The airplane crashed on their way home.”

Ukiah felt bad that he never found out why Alicia had been so sad at Max's picnic on the Fourth. In the picture, she looked ready to cry.

“That's rough,” Sam said of the Kraynaks' deaths.

“Speaking of insurance, Alicia was attending graduate school on the money from her parents' policy.” Max tapped his PDA and the photo changed to one of Ukiah and Alicia at Kraynak's Christmas party. In this photo, Alicia was her normal exuberant self. She leaned against Ukiah, arms looped around his shoulders, just noticeably taller than him, pale face pressed close to his dark cheek, smiling brightly to his quiet retreat in the face of the party confusion.

All traces of Sam's smile vanished from her face. “Oh,” she breathed, taking the PDA and gazing at it closely. “I didn't realize you two were friends of the family.”

“Kraynak and I served together in the Gulf. Military police. We were the only ones in our unit from Pittsburgh. We stayed friends after discharge. We've been through some rough times together.”

“When Alicia turned sixteen, she wanted a job other than flipping burgers. I hired her to do work at the agency. She
did gofer work, library searches, and such like that. She quit when she started grad school last year.”

“I'm sorry.” Sam handed back the PDA. “What was—is she like?”

Max sipped his beer before answering. “She's the kind of person they invented the phrase ‘full of life' for. I think her parents' death made her obsessed with being impulsive. Seize the moment. Party hardy. Dance naked in the streets.”

Sam made a sound like “gak.”

Max flashed a smile and then shrugged. “She's really a sweet, intelligent kid with lots of common sense—which she works hard to ignore. She gets herself into one mess after another, but she usually gets herself back out of trouble, and you only hear about it later. She only mildly drove me nuts when she worked for us.”

“Only mildly?” Sam made a face. “You've got more patience than I do, then.”

Max poured the rest of the beer from the bottle into his glass. “It was hard to listen to her complain about her newest mess when you knew she flung herself into it with her normal reckless abandon. There's always this part of you afraid that one day it might land her in a body bag.”

It was odd hearing Max's impression of Alicia. Max often dissected clients, laying bare to Ukiah what truly motivated them, patiently explaining human behavior to him, but he rarely turned his abilities on friends and family, letting Ukiah make up his own mind about them.

“Alicia liked people,” Ukiah said. The deep aches in his bones were vanishing as the food worked through his system. “I'm not sure if it was because she was fearless, or she just expected the best from people, but she'd talk to anyone. She was very patient and kind.”

“So she could have gotten herself hooked up with the wrong people?” Sam asked.

“To Alicia, being wild and crazy is like surfing—it's a game you play when you've got the time,” Max admitted. “Judging by Alicia's ex-boyfriends, she wants a guy to ride the waves with her. What she keeps finding are guys who make waves just to upset the world around them.”

Sam made another rude noise. “Those aren't hard to find.”

“When you're in the water, it's hard to tell the difference.” Max forgave Alicia. “She dumps the losers once her common sense kicks in, but she's made more than one phone call for help while locked in a strange bathroom.”

“Pendleton isn't Portland. She'll have limited access to a party crowd,” Sam said, and then cocked her head, frowning. “What was a girl like her doing as a geology grad student?”

“Process of elimination, I think,” Max said. “As an undergrad, she changed her major at least six times. Even taking summer classes, she graduated three months late, and that doesn't reflect the classes that she attended for a week and then dropped, switching to something else before the term got too far along for her to play catch-up.”

“She said she liked the permanence,” Ukiah told them. “A rock stays a rock despite almost anything you do to it.”

Sam shook her head as if it still didn't make sense to her. “I would have thought with her uncle a cop, and working with you two, she'd end up in law enforcement. It's exciting work.”

“At first, her major was criminology.” Max stalled by sipping his beer, then reluctantly explained. “Alicia's junior year in college, we ran into a serial killer by the name of Joseph Gary. He was kidnapping people, killing them, and eating them—a real wacko. He had grabbed the hiker we were tracking, and we ended up in a shootout with him. Alicia didn't like that.”

“I didn't like it,” Ukiah muttered around a mouthful of shrimp.

“Up to that point,” Max finished. “I think she glamorized the work. The shootout brought the danger too close to home. Afterwards, she started switching majors until she settled into geology.”

“This is the case that started the bulletproof-vest habit?” Sam asked.

The waiter appeared with a tray of dinners. He cleared off empty glasses and appetizer plates to make room. Ukiah's
dinner came on multiple plates, the twenty-ounce steak covering one entire plate. After the protein-loaded appetizers, Ukiah had the patience to attack it with knife and fork instead of picking it up and biting off large mouthfuls. As a sure sign of how badly hurt he had been, even after all the earlier food, the meat tasted sublime, a creation of heaven. He chewed with his eyes half-lidded with pleasure.

Max uttered affirmation to Sam's earlier question, and clarified with, “Joe Gary nearly killed Ukiah. He shot him in the chest with a rifle—luckily it just grazed him. I think that's what bothered Alicia the most; Ukiah was just eighteen.”

Actually, they knew now that Gary
had
killed Ukiah, only not permanently. Fired at extreme close range, Gary's bullet had not scratched Ukiah, but instead punched a hole through Ukiah's chest. His cells, recognizing that continuing to pump blood would merely geyser it out of his body, shut all heart functions down while they shuffled about to patch the wound. A relatively small wound with only soft flesh damage, it had taken only a short time before his collective self restarted.

Half unconscious from a blow to the head, Max had felt for Ukiah's pulse a few moments prior to this. For a few anguished filled minutes, Max thought he had gotten Ukiah killed. Then Ukiah woke up.

For three years, they thought they had gotten lucky that day, and Max merely failed to find Ukiah's heartbeat. In June, after all the insanity that came with Ukiah learning the truth about himself, they realized that there had been no pulse to feel. Early in July, they went back to the cabin to collect the blood mice accidentally left behind. The colony had merged together into a solitary rattlesnake. After years of not remembering the fight, Ukiah now had fuzzy, scattered recollections. Between the change to mice, then rattlesnake, and the years of surviving alone, however, parts of his genetic memories had been lost.

“So,” Sam said. “Tell me what you know about our kidnappers.”

“There were four kidnappers, as far as I can tell. Three
men. One woman. The first is a blond, male, slightly taller than Max, heavier than Max by forty or fifty pounds. He wore size ten Timberlands, blue jeans, and a blue flannel shirt. Early thirties. O-positive blood.”

Max had taken out his PDA and jotted notes as Ukiah talked. He winced slightly, reminding Ukiah too late that blood type wasn't something most trackers could determine.

Sam was also taking notes, in a small paper notebook of the type reporters used when they hadn't switched over to PDAs. “Kraynak's right. You're damn good.”

“The second was a female,” Ukiah continued between bites. “She drove the car. Size five shoes, cross-trainers or walking shoes. She's small, around five foot, maybe shorter, and around a hundred pounds. She kept back, away from the violence.” He chewed for a few minutes, searching his memory to see if there were any other clues he had picked up without realizing it. No. “The third seems to be a man, five ten or eleven, around two hundred pounds, size nine cowboy boots, blue jeans. The fourth also seemed male, tall, maybe about six-two, but skinny, around a hundred and seventy. He wore size twelve tennis shoes.”

“How are you determining sex?”

“Size and weight, style of the shoe. They could be very tall women wearing men's shoes.”

Sam nodded, making notes.

Max explained about the ring, and then asked Ukiah about the car the kidnappers used.

“Four-door, front-wheel drive, all-weather treads, probably with a trunk instead of a hatchback. They put Alicia into the back and drove toward town during the daylight, so I'm guessing that it's not a station wagon either. Whatever it is, midsized. “

Max made a noise at the vagueness of the description.

Sam, however, seemed happy. “This is great!” When they looked at her in surprise, she added, “You found evidence that someone acted against Alicia. There are over thirty people dead in the last three months without a shred of evidence that someone killed them. Hell, there might be people
missing that we're not aware of. Hitchhikers. Seasonal workers. Drifters.”

Ukiah and Max traded glances, and Max told Sam how the kidnappers seemed well-practiced at herding a person to a waiting car.

“The bodies are probably well-hidden to keep the death count down,” Sam theorized.

“Why do you think Alicia's kidnapping has anything to do with your house fires?”

“Sheer gut instinct,” Sam admitted. “There's nothing that links all of this together except the skewed numbers.”

“Nothing at all?” Max asked.

“Nothing that I can see,” Sam amended. “I've been on this case for a month. I've listed out everything about the victims. Where they worked. Where they lived. Where the kids went to school, including teachers, classmates, and kids outside of their class that they played with at recess. Church. Relatives. Neighbors. God, the number of possible suspects could drive you nuts. If you draw it out, it looks like a massive spiderweb—everything's connected—and yet, when you look closely, there's nothing obvious linking all three families.”

Max gave her a sympathetic smile. “Sometimes doing all the legwork, you get too close and you can't see the obvious.”

“Actually, I'd love for you to go over my notes with me,” Sam said. “See if you can spot something I've missed. I haven't talked to anyone in town about it, because anyone might be involved.”

Max grinned at the mildly paranoid comment, which was very similar to what he'd say. “Good thinking.”

Sam flashed a look at him and then returned her attention to her meal. “It might be a glut of information is masking the true connection. That's why I think Alicia's going to be the key to the case. Everyone else has a billion connections above and beyond the ones I've recorded. Maybe their link with the killers happened ten years ago, or is somehow related to what their parents did together as children, or maybe it was their grandparents. Who can tell?”

“Alicia had only been in the state for a month,” Max said. “There's going to be a finite number of people she met.”

“Bingo,” Sam said. “We can take the thirty or forty people she's talked to and see if they connect back to the arson victims.”

“If her kidnapping is related.”

Sam conceded with a shrug that Alicia's kidnapping might be unrelated. “I'm willing to run the risk. Can I have a copy of that first picture?”

Ukiah stifled a yawn as he shoved the gnawed bone of his steak aside and upended his baked potato into the bloody juices on his plate. “Kraynak has Alicia's daily planner. You know what a compulsive note maker she is. We can probably chart out who she talked to in town from it.”

Max flagged the waiter and pulled out his wallet. “I need to get Ukiah back to the hotel. He'll be dead asleep in a few minutes.”

“The night's still young,” Sam said. “We can drop him at your room and do some legwork.”

Max sighed, almost wistfully. “Let me check with Kraynak.” He accepted the check from the waiter, glanced at the total, and handed it back with his American Express card. “I don't want to leave Ukiah alone. Someone's taken a crack at him once already, and the stakes went up today.”

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