get on with the business of killing Winter Massey and the Gardners. He also needed to check in on Cynthia and call her daddy again.
61
The first light from the sun illuminated the vast Delta with a warm orange glow as they rolled across the barren landscape at sixty miles per hour. Brad was behind the wheel of an old station wagon that had been his mother’s, and Winter drove the Yukon. Six miles from Brad’s door, surrounded by cotton fields bisected here and there by long straight lines of leafless trees, twin hills made of soil stood just off the road. The dirt in the county- owned dumpsite was used for construction projects. Driving down a narrow dirt road, the vehicles entered a sixty- foot-wide valley crisscrossed with deep impressions left from dump-truck tires. The dirt would block the Yukon from the prying eyes of all living things except the birds, and perhaps some poor fool walking across the fields to collect scraps of cotton that were now being blown horizontal by a stiff northeastern wind. It was unlikely that anybody would stumble across the vehicle and, if they did, there was little chance they’d break in and steal the weapons with a corpse sitting inside keeping watch.
Winter left the SUV without looking again at the body that sat belted in the passenger seat. He climbed into the Buick wagon to join Brad, who drove out fast. They were a mile from town when Winter saw an oncoming SUV and slumped down in the seat so he wouldn’t be seen.
“Keep driving,” he told Brad.
“What are you doing?” Brad asked.
“An SUV at our twelve o’clock.”
“I see it.” Brad pulled at the brim of his ball cap before the SUV passed, heading in the opposite direction at a high rate of speed.
“Talk about close shaves,” Brad said, exhaling loudly. “Five minutes off and they’d have found us dumping their pal.”
“Too close for my taste,” Winter said, meaning it.
They entered a long curve and the SUV was out of sight.
“There were at least three men in that truck,” Brad said. “How many more you think there are?”
“Fewer than there will be pretty soon. They take losses very badly. They’ll swarm in now.”
Brad opened the glove box, found a sealed pack of Kool cigarettes, and opened it. After he put one between his lips, he lit it with the car’s lighter and dropped his window a good six inches.
“I didn’t know you smoked,” Winter said.
“I don’t,” Brad said, inhaling deeply. “Want one?”
62
The grime-encrusted eighteen-wheeler, which had been parked at a rest area just across the Mississippi state line for ten hours, made the trip to Tunica in twenty-three minutes. Despite the well-worn exterior, the working parts-the brakes, suspension, tires, and the motor-were painstakingly maintained. The electronics and the communication system, most of it hidden from prying eyes, were highly advanced. The transmissions it sent and received were encrypted and routed through the network of NSA satellites encircling the globe like buzzards.
The truck’s two-man crew, both professional cleaners with twenty years of experience between them, had spent the idle hours watching movies in the cabin. The well-stocked selection of DVDs was all action movies. These men enjoyed critiquing films on subjects they knew best. They agreed that the action choreography between the two criminals in
When the emergency broadcast came in, the men were watching
When he pulled off the county road and drove between two massive piles of dirt, he waved at the waiting three-man watch team, drove past the Yukons, then pushed a button and released a ramp that extended itself hydraulically and dropped gently to the ground.
Watts, freshly dressed in a disposable jumpsuit, a particle mask, and surgeon’s gloves, climbed down and ran around to get behind the wheel of one of the Yukons, which he drove into the trailer. As soon as he returned to the truck, Herf closed the rear. After Watts climbed back up into the rig, carrying the jumpsuit in a garbage bag, Herf expertly turned the truck around and headed east toward the interstate.
“One cold one in the Yukon,” Watts said. “It’s Duncan.”
“How’d he buy it?”
“Edge to the throat.”
“What about his partner, Rowe?” Herf asked.
“Missing and presumed captured,” Watts said.
“Missing and presumed Styered,” Herf said flatly.
“Makes you glad to be on the truck this time,” Watts said. “Cold Wind is a rough job. I’d love to land that bastard. What’s the bonus on him now?”
“One point five, last I heard. We’re to drop off this load and be back in position ASAP.”
“I knew the team should have been larger from the get-go,” Watts said.
“This might be one long weekend,” Herf said. He used the GPS to plot the fastest route to the naval air base north of Memphis, where a C-130 would be waiting to take the Yukon and its cold-meat cargo to a backwater base in Texas where the equipment would be salvaged, the Yukon would be crushed into a block of steel, and their dead comrade would be unceremoniously cremated.
“The way of the gun,” Watts said to himself.
63
Walking into the house, Winter and Brad found Alexa breaking eggs into a skillet.
She pointed to a note on the kitchen counter that said,
“Smells good,” Winter said after reading the sheet and handing it to Brad. Alexa had the radio blaring rock music from the late ’60s.
“Be ready in three shakes of Ruger’s tail,” she said cheerily. She looked at him inquiringly. “Woody called looking for your father.”
Winter scribbled on the paper,
They ate while making small talk about the Delta and the weather. Afterward, Winter cleared the dishes and washed them in the sink.
“What’s on the schedule today?” Alexa asked.
“Sherry’s funeral,” Brad said.
“Think Jacob Gardner will be there?” Winter asked.
“I wouldn’t be surprised. He’ll be sticking close enough to count Leigh’s heartbeats until the deal is done,”