the other vehicle easily enough to confirm that part of the story. For identification purposes the VIN is all we really need.”
Lovejoy consulted with Moore while the search team packed up their equipment and the deputies made arrangements to have the car towed. In the east the sky was brightening, the long night at an end.
“We’ve almost got him.” Lovejoy felt himself shaking, literally shaking, with excitement. “He’s very close.”
“Close.” Moore ran her hands over her hair, a nervous, distracted gesture. “But still one step ahead. Where’s that map we borrowed from the sheriff’s station?”
“In the car.”
They turned on the sedan’s reading light and studied the map of Upper Matecumbe Key.
“He walked to that trash bin from here.” Moore traced Jack’s probable route with her finger. “A half mile south, just off Route One. Industrial Drive’s a dead end. Let’s assume he returned to the highway and continued south…”
Her fingernail reached a narrow inlet labeled marina. She raised her head to look at Lovejoy.
Both of them were thinking of Albert Dance’s trips to Florida in the Light Fantastic, the postcard that began, “Jack and Steve and I took the boat out yesterday,” the snapshot of young Jack and his friend posed casually at the end of a dock.
“Boats,” Moore whispered.
Lovejoy nodded, his hands closing slowly into fists. “Boats.”
43
Deep in the tropical hammock, amid blooms of orchids and bursts of bromeliads like frozen fireworks displays, under a canopy of leaves allowing glimpses of pale pink sky, Jack Dance hunted.
Throughout the night he had been bitten by mosquitoes, stung by centipedes, jabbed by thorns and briers, scraped by poisonwood and manchineel. His shirt was speckled with burs, his pants shredded; dried mud crusted the insides of his shoes.
Acre by acre he quartered Pelican Key. He had explored the cove and the salt ponds, where roseate spoonbills sifted the fine silt for a breakfast of shellfish, and now he prowled the forest south of the swamp, moving slowly toward the island’s eastern shore.
His prey was here somewhere. He would find her. He would not be denied.
He was no longer quite sure why it was necessary to kill Kirstie Gardner. The boat would arrive in a few hours. All he had to do was ambush the captain, then race for the Bahamas. Kirstie could do him little harm after that.
Still, he wanted her. She was precisely his type. Another Meredith.
His eyes narrowed at the memory of Meredith Turner. Bitch. Evil, emasculating bitch.
The songs of cardinals and yellow-throated warblers whistled giddily through the clear, fragrant air. Morning glories opened tremulous blue petals to receive the day’s first light. Fastened to the bark of a gumbo-limbo, a tree snail gleamed like a gemstone, its porcelain-smooth shell a rainbow in miniature.
Beauty. Beauty everywhere.
Jack saw none of it.
“Bitch,” he breathed, the word low and susurrant, scratchy in his throat.
He was eleven years old. Sleepless in the dark, listening to faint noises from the living room.
His parents were out. He was alone in the house with his baby-sitter.
Or perhaps not alone.
Silently he crept to the top of the staircase, peered out from under the banister.
In the flickering glow of a lava lamp, two pale figures twisting on the sofa. Meredith’s white breasts flopping as she groaned. The man with long hair grinding his hips in the slow, measured rhythm of a dance.
Jack watched though the bars of the balustrade till both bodies shuddered in mutual release.
The man left shortly afterward. Jack, in bed once more, touching his penis and thinking, heard the back door swing shut.
Soft footsteps on the stairs. Meredith checking on him, leaning through the doorway, her face limned by the dim light from the hall.
Lying still, eyes half closed, Jack whispered, “I saw what you did.”
“What, Jack? You say something?”
“I saw it. You let that guy fuck you. Did it feel good?”
“I… You had a dream, that’s all. I didn’t-”
“Felt good, didn’t it?”
“Go to sleep, Jack.”
“I could do it. I’m old enough.”
“Jack, please…”
“I’ve got a dick, too. See?”
He snapped on the bedside light, kicked off the covers. He’d removed his pajama bottoms. His penis was stiff and red from rubbing.
“Oh, God, put on your p.j.’s-”
“P. j.’s are for little kids. I’m not little. I’m eleven. You’re really pretty, Meredith.”
“Cut it out-”
“I’ll tell. I’ll tell what you did. I’ll tell my folks, and they’ll tell yours.”
“Christ, what are you trying to do, get me killed?”
Jack liked her sudden panic. Enjoyed the sense of power it gave him. Meredith’s parents were devoutly religious, fanatically strict; she had to be terrified of what would happen if they found out about the longhaired boy.
“Let me put it in you,” he said softly, “and I won’t tell.”
“Are you crazy?'
“I can do it as good as that guy. I’m old enough.”
“You are not old enough-Christ-you’re in the sixth grade!”
“Let me do it to you, or I tell.”
“No.”
“Let me, or else.”
“Stop it.”
“Let me.”
“Oh, God, this is sick, you can’t mean this-”
“Let me.”
“Jesus. Jesus…”
“Let me.”
Sobbing, she turned away from him and tugged at her skirt. Jack watched, pleased with the control he now exercised over this girl who was in high school, nearly an adult, taller and stronger than he was, yet a captive to his will.
Guilt makes people do things. It was a lesson he meant to remember.
Meredith’s skirt was a wrinkled rag on the floor, her panties dangling from one ankle. She sat on the bed and spread her legs.
“What are you waiting for?” Her voice had thickened like paste. Tears glistened on her cheeks; Jack thought of slug tracks. “Do it. Get it over with.”
“Aren’t you supposed to kiss me and stuff?”
“Just goddamn do it.”
He eased himself inside her, slowly, slowly.
And his erection died.