the Viking Funeral (2001) (41 page)

Read the Viking Funeral (2001) Online

Authors: Stephen - Scully 02 Cannell

She saw his pale expression. "What is it?" she asked. "What's in there?"

"He..
. H
e..." Shane stopped, took a deep breath. "It's a mess in there. You don't wanna see it. He butchered a guy--Sandro Mantoor. He's in pieces all over the place. Head's in the fucking sink."

"God, no..."

Shane was shaking now; his wounded leg felt weak and was beginning to go numb.

"When you're on backup you're supposed to cover the exit line, not come inside," he said, anger replacing shock.

"I think I saw somebody coming out of the house a minute ago. He went into the barn carrying a valise."

"Was it Jody?"

"I don't know. I couldn't tell. Too far away."

"I'm gonna get closer. This time, back me up, okay? Don't move in unless something goes down."

He took off toward the house, his heart pounding. It took him almost five minutes to reach the west wall because he was favoring his left leg and because he had to stay wide to keep out of the light coming from the two poles by the corral. He hugged the perimeter of the yard before finally reaching the side of the house. He stood and peeked through the living-room window.

Papa Joe Mondragon was sitting in a chair, facing a wall. His head was slumped over, and he looked as though he was sleeping. Other than Jose, the room appeared empty. Shane made a slow circuit around the house to get to the east-side window, which would allow him a better view.

When he got there, he wished he hadn't. Jose's face had been beaten to a red pulp. He looked as if he was still breathing, but blood was running down his chin, dripping and staining his collar and crotch.

Shane wondered how Jody could have gone so far out of control.

Suddenly, cars were coming down the road. He turned around in time to see two Sheriff Department black-and-whites barreling into the yard. They weren't using sirens, but drove in with their gumballs flashing, throwing colored light all over the place.

Before Shane could plan his next move, two shots rang out--flat, barking sounds that came from the direction of the barn. One of the sheriffs who had just gotten out of his car went down immediately and started screaming in pain.

The sheriffs cars' bar lights strobed red and blue patterns across the front of the barn. Then Shane saw Alexa moving toward them, holding up her badge.

"Stop, throw down your weapon!" th
e s
econd sheriffs deputy yelled at her, leveling a riot gun at her over his door.

"LAPD,
"
she shouted, but kept coming.

"Throw down your gun. Get facedown on the ground!
"
the sheriff yelled back.

Now Shane heard a horse galloping. He turned and faced the sound but couldn't see anything, so he made his way around the side of the barn just in time to see a fleeing dark shape. The rider's head was low on the horse's neck, behind the mane. He spurred the animal on, galloping fast down the narrow trail, into a riverbed that was framed by narrow canyon walls.

Shane made a limping run across the open space toward the barn door.

Two more shots rang out. Then he heard Alexa scream, "No! He's a police officer.
"
But the sheriff opened up on Shane anyway. Bullets whizzed all around, pinging and ricocheting off nearby farm equipment and thunking into the soft wood of the barn walls.

Shane dove inside the barn and slammed the door shut. The building was huge, with stalls on both sides. Shane had never been much of a horseback rider, limiting his saddle time to a couple of weekends at a dude ranch in Arizona, where he
'
d been more interested in his date than in any of the swayback nags stabled there. He grabbed a halter off a nearby hook, then opened the nearest stall containing a horse. It was a large chestnut bay with a black mane and tail. He wrapped the halter aroun
d t
he horse's neck and tied it to a corner post, found a bridle hanging in the stall, grabbed it, and tried to push it into the horse's mouth. The animal reared up and spit the bit back at him.

"Nice horsey," Shane said, sounding like a seven-year-old.

He finally wrestled the bridle on but decided he'd have to forgo the saddle. He'd wasted too much time already.

Shane pulled the stubborn bay out of the stall and led it out the back of the barn, where he tried to mount it. With his blown left leg, he was having no luck, so he pulled the horse over to a nearby stable rail and managed to get on by climbing up, then swinging aboard. He suddenly heard more sirens as additional sheriff's cars arrived.

He kicked the horse in the withers and it bolted out of the open corral with Shane barely aboard.

He was flying down the road behind the barn, desperately holding handfuls of the horse's coarse mane, almost dropping the reins and the Astra 9--all of them tangled in his white
-
knuckled grip.

The horse was galloping down the trail full tilt when Shane saw dark shapes coming at him fast. At the last second, he ducked and avoided being knocked senseless by a low branch. Soon he was away from the farm, galloping along the wet, sandy wash, the horse's metal shoes splashing water and ringing on stones. Shane's eyes were straining for any shap
e t
hat resembled a man on horseback up ahead.

He was bouncing painfully on the horse's bony back, his nuts slamming mercilessly up between his legs.

Fuck this> he thought, reining in the horse and slowing him. The horse's footing was unsure in the rocky wash. He didn't want the animal to stumble and go down.

The wash narrowed, and Shane was forced to ride slowly down the center of the rocky stream. He was leaning down close to the horse's neck to avoid another low limb when a shot rang out and clipped a branch not three feet from him.

Shane lost his grip, fell off the horse, and splashed loudly into the stream. He lay still, the icy water flowing over him. The eight-shot Astra 9-millimeter was still in his hand. He'd managed to hold it high, keeping it dry.

He wasn't sure how long he waited there, but it seemed an eternity. He was freezing now; his whole body feeling as numb as his left leg.

"Who you think you're kidding, Hot Sauce? How long you gonna try and play dead?" his old friend called out to him from somewhere in the dark. Shane didn't answer. He tried to pinpoint the direction the sound was coming from.

"You were always a better catcher than an Indian." Jody's voice came down to him from about forty or fifty yards away, up high and on the right. Shane didn't think Jody could see him, or he would have fired again. He was tryin
g t
o lure Shane into a conversation so he could find him and end it.

When another shot rang out, Shane's suspicions were confirmed. The bullet thunked into a rock forty or fifty feet to his right.

"So, Hot Sauce, who woulda ever figured it would come to this, huh?" Jody called out. "You an' me crawlin' around in the dirt. Cowboys and Indians."

Shane began to move slowly away from the voice, being careful to not splash any water. He thought he might have a slight advantage because he now had a rough fix on where Jody was, while Jody was obviously still trying to locate him. Jody had always won these games of hide-and-seek when they were kids. It was uncanny the way he could tell what Shane was thinking, where he would try to hide next.

Then, true to that memory, Jody echoed that very thought. "I could always find ya, Hot Sauce..
. A
nd this won't be any different. Course, it doesn't have to end that way. We could make a deal."

Shane slipped out of the water, up onto the bank on the east side of the wash. He managed to squirm up the slight incline in front of him, finally reaching a spot behind some scrub brush. Once he was there, he used the foliage for a screen and sat up slowly.

"So, Shane..
. T
hink it over. It doesn't have to end with you dead. Maybe we can still find some flex in the deal."

Shane thought he could see Jody abou
t t
wenty yards off to the left behind some rocks, lit by the faint quarter moon. His old friend was looking down and to his right, searching the stream. Shane started to travel in a counterclockwise circle, staying out of Jody's vision, being careful not to crack a twig or kick a pebble.

"Throw out your gun and stand up," Jody called out. "We'll work something out. There's plenty here for both of us."

Shane kept inching slowly up the hill and around to his right. He finally worked his way to the flat ground behind Jody. He could now see the back of Jody's head and a piece of his right shoulder as his childhood friend huddled down behind a rocky outcropping. Shane edged closer, not sure if he could muster the courage to actually do what he now knew he had to.

And then, without any warning, Jody sensed him and spun around.

Something, God knows what, kept Shane from pulling the trigger and killing him in that instant when he had the chance. Immediately his advantage was lost, and now they were about ten feet apart, both holding handguns aimed at each other, the barrels glinting in the moonlight.

Shane could see the madness in Jody's eyes.

"Put the gun down, Jody." Shane's voice was shaking.

"You can't win, Hot Sauce. I'll know a split second before you do, and I'll beat ya."

"Put it down..."

"I'm sorry about what I told ya in Joe's desert house. That was a mistake. I never shoulda told ya I didn't care. I could see it in your eyes.... I broke it between us when I told ya that." He smiled weirdly. "But when I said I never felt love, well..
. T
hat's not exactly right, Salsa. There were a few times I felt it, but I was always inside your head. I felt it through you."

"Put the gun down." Shane's voice was weak.

"I'll give ya a piece a'my end." Jody kicked the bag at his feet. "Jose transferred the cash. Hundred-thousand-dollar bearer bonds. The whole fifty mil is in this gym bag. I'm not talking a fifty-fifty split or anything screwy like that, 'cause I been through too much..
. B
een too far. But how 'bout ten percent? That's a good payday. Five mil. Then you and I go our separate ways. Least we don't end it this way..
. W
ith you dead."

"Why did you butcher Sandro Mantoor like that?" Shane asked, his voice still shaking.

"Felt like it," Jody said without emotion. "Matter of fact, there's something kinda sweet about it when ya do it slow like that."

Shane knew he had to end this. He had to pull the trigger. He couldn't trust Jody to the courts. He was smart and handsome. He might find a way to O
. J
. his way out, just like he always had before.

"Don't do it, Hot Sauce," Jody warned sharply. "Don't even think about it."

In that moment, Shane lost his resolve.

Even though he knew Jody was a sociopath, a monster, he couldn't pull the trigger. Jody must have sensed that, too, because he went on talking.

"I may not have loved you, man," he said softly. "But that was only because I couldn't. That piece wasn't in me..
. J
ust wasn't there. But, Shane, I respected you more than anybody I ever knew. That's why I'll cut this deal. I want us both alive. What's love anyway? It's just a buncha horseshit and a four-letter word."

And then, as if a long-hidden door had opened, Shane was suddenly inside Jody's head, just as Jody must have always been inside his.

What Shane saw was indescribable and horrible--black, poisonous, and beyond all reason.

They fired simultaneously.

Chapter
51.

HUNT
INGTON
HOUSE

ALL THE CHILDREN have their own beds and foot lockers," she said. "We have set morning bathroom times, and of course, we all eat together in Spring Hall. He'll be one of the youngest, but I think he'll be fine. "

Shane was looking up at her. She was pleasant
-
looking with a round face, but she had acne. She smiled at him, so he smiled back.

"Will he go to school here, at Huntington House?" a woman he couldn't see asked.

He was holding her hand, but she was out of sight above him. Shane felt very tiny, forced to crane his neck up to see the pleasant woman with the acne.

"Yes, school will be here at Huntington House until the sixth grade and then, depending on how Shane does, we'll arrange for him to attend either St. Augustus Elementary School, which is just a few blocks away, or he can go across town to Havenhurst. "

"Well, then, it's all settled," the invisible woman said.

"Fifty over ninety and falling
"
a man's voice said, piercing Shane's consciousness. A siren was somewhere behind him.

"Hit him with another A-shot, fifty cc's," a voice commanded.

"Come on, Shane," the pleasant woman with acne said. "We'll show you around. " He held her hand, but he had never felt so alone. He was becoming agitated, even frightened. He could feel his heart begin to beat hard in his chest. What would happen to him? Who were these people?

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