“Unlock those fucking doors, you fucking asshole!” Hardwick shouted at Ashton.
Ashton’s father reached into the pocket of his sweater and withdrew something with a shiny end. As he unfolded a small blade from its handle, Gurney realized what it was-a simple pocketknife, the kind a Boy Scout might whittle a stick with. He held it at his side and stood, expressionlessly, his eyes on the high back of his son’s chair.
Scott Ashton’s gaze was fixed on Gurney. “This is not the finale I would have preferred, but it’s the one your brilliant interference requires. It’s the second-best solution.”
“God, let them out of that room, you fucking maniac!” shouted Hardwick.
“I did my best,” said Ashton calmly. “I had hopes. Each year a few were helped, but after a time I had to admit that most were not. Most left here as poisonous as the day they arrived, left us to go out into the world, poisoning and destroying others.”
“There was nothing you could do about that,” said Gurney.
“I didn’t think so, either… until I was given my Mission and my Method. If someone chose to lead a poisonous life, then at least I could limit her exposure, limit the period of her toxicity to others.”
The shouts and shrieks from the monitor speakers were growing more chaotic. Hardwick started moving toward Ashton with a black look on his face. Gurney put out his hand to hold him back, as Ashton raised his gun calmly, centering his aim on Hardwick’s chest.
“For Christ’s sake, Jack,” said Gurney, “let’s not provoke the bullet solution when we don’t have any.”
Hardwick stopped, his jaw muscles bulging.
Gurney offered Ashton an admiring smile. “Hence the ‘gentlemen’s agreement’?”
“Ah. Mr. Ballston has been talking.”
“About Karnala, yes. I’d like to know more.”
“You already know so much.”
“Tell me the rest.”
“It’s a simple story, Detective. I came from a
On the screen, two pews were in flames, flames were rising from half the lamps, some of the drapes were smoldering. Most of the girls were on the floor, some covering their faces, some trying to breathe through torn pieces of their clothing, some crying, some coughing, a few vomiting.
Hardwick appeared to be on the verge of an explosion.
“Then you came along,” Ashton repeated. “Clever, clever David Gurney. And this is the result.” He waved his gun at the screen. “Why didn’t your cleverness tell you that this is the way it would end? How else
Hobart Ashton took a few short steps to the back of his son’s chair.
Hardwick screamed, “This is your solution, Ashton? This is it, you crazy fucker? Burn a hundred and twenty teenage girls to death?
“Oh, yes, yes, yes, it is! You really thought when I was finally trapped, I’d let them go?” Ashton’s voice was rising now, out of control, hurtling at Gurney and Hardwick like a wild thing with a life of its own. “You thought I’d turn a nest of snakes loose on all the little babies of the world? These toxic things, these slimy, venomous things! Demented, rotten, sucking, slimy things! These slither-”
It happened so quickly that Gurney almost thought he hadn’t seen it. The sudden flash of an arm around from the back of the chair, a quick curving movement, and that was all-Ashton’s rant cut off in the middle of a word. Then the old man stepping quickly, athletically to the side of the chair, grasping the barrel of Ashton’s gun, pulling it away with a twisting yank and the disturbingly sharp crack of a finger bone. Ashton’s head lolled forward on his chest, and his body began to tilt forward, curling downward, toppling onto the floor, collapsing sideways into a fetal position. It was then that the actual method of killing was made obvious by all the blood that began to pool around his throat.
Hardwick’s jaw muscles bulged.
The little man in the brown cardigan wiped his pocketknife on the back cushion of the chair in which Ashton had been sitting, folded it deftly with one hand, and replaced it in his pocket.
Then he looked down at Ashton and, as if in benediction to his son’s passing soul, said softly, “You’re a piece of shit.”
Chapter 78
The intense revulsion Gurney had felt toward violence and blood as a rookie cop, especially the blood from a fatal wound, was something he had learned to contain and conceal during his twenty years in homicide. When he had to, he was able to cloak pretty effectively what he felt-or at least to wrap his horror in the semblance of mere distaste. Which is what he did now.
Commenting on the blood spreading out in a slow oval, being absorbed into the delicate intricacies of the Persian rug, he said, as if he were describing nothing more tragic than bird shit on a windshield, “What a fucking mess.”
Hardwick blinked. He stared first at Gurney, then at the body on the floor, then at the fiery bedlam on the screen. He looked uncomprehendingly at Ashton’s father. “The doors. Why don’t you unlock the fucking doors?”
Gurney and the old man gazed at each other with an eerie lack of any visible concern. In past difficulties the ability to project an attitude of perfect calm had served Gurney well, given him an advantage. But that didn’t seem to be the case now. The old man was radiating a quiet, brutal confidence. It was as though killing Ashton had brought him a deep peace and strength-as though an imbalance had finally been righted.
This was not a man with whom one could win a simple staring contest. Gurney decided to up the ante and change the rules. And he knew that he needed to do it quickly if anyone was going to get out of that building alive. It was time to take a wild swing.
“Reminds me of Tel Aviv,” said Gurney, gesturing toward the screen.
The little man blinked and stretched his lips in a meaningless smile.
Gurney sensed that the wild swing had produced a solid hit. But now what?
Hardwick was staring at them with a bewildered fury.
Gurney continued to focus on the man with the gun. “Too bad you didn’t come a little sooner.”
“What?”
“Too bad you didn’t come sooner. Like five months ago instead of three.”
The little man looked honestly curious. “What’s that to you?”
“You could’ve stopped that crazy shit with Jillian.”
“Ah.” He nodded slowly, almost appreciatively.
“Of course, if you’d intervened even sooner, back when you should have, everything would be different now. Better, I think, don’t you?”