'D'Agosta. A happy accident. He was a loose end. I also took care of a couple of other loose ends--Blast and Blackletter. Two people who should have been removed from circulation a long time ago.'
Ventura spat into the grass by way of answer. 'I don't agree, and I never have. Blackletter was well paid for his silence. And Blast is only indirectly connected.'
'Nevertheless, he was a loose end.'
Ventura just shook his head.
'Now D'Agosta's girlfriend is down here. A girlfriend who just happens to be the youngest homicide captain in the NYPD.'
'So?'
Esterhazy took the pipe from his mouth and spoke coldly. 'Mike, you have no idea--and I mean
'How much could he possibly know?'
'He's found the Black Frame, he knows about Audubon's illness, and somehow he knows about the Doane family.'
A sharp intake of breath. 'You're shitting me. How
'Hard to say. He was in Sunflower. He visited the house. He's tenacious and clever. You can assume he knows--or will know--everything.'
'Son of a bitch. How in the world did they find out?'
'No idea. Not only is Pendergast a brilliant investigator, but this time around he's motivated--
Ventura shook his head.
'And I've little doubt he's busy filling the ear of this homicide captain with his suspicions, just as he did with that partner of his, D'Agosta. I'm afraid it's only a matter of time before they pay our mutual friend a visit.'
A pause. 'You think this investigation's official?'
'It doesn't seem so. I think they're working ex cathedra. I doubt others are involved.'
Ventura thought for a moment before speaking again. 'So now we finish the job.'
'Exactly. Take out Pendergast and that captain. Do it now. Kill them all.'
'The cop you hit, D'Agosta--are you sure he's dead?'
'I think so. He took a .308 round in the back.' Judson frowned. 'If he doesn't die of his own accord, we'll have to extend a helping hand. Leave that to me.'
Ventura nodded. 'I'll keep the rest in line.'
'You do that. Need any help? Money?'
'Money's the last of our worries. You know that.' And Ventura walked away across the field, toward the pink sky of evening, until his dark silhouette disappeared into the pines at the far end.
Judson Esterhazy spent the next fifteen minutes leaning against the fire tower, smoking his pipe and thinking. Finally he reamed it out and knocked the dottle onto the iron strut. Then he stuck the pipe back into his pocket, took one last look at the light dying away in the west, then turned and made his way down the trail toward the road on the other side of the hill.
46
EXACTLY HOW MUCH TIME HAD PASSED--FIVE hours or fifty--Laura Hayward wasn't sure. The slow succession of minutes blended with a strange fugue of loudspeaker announcements, rapid hushed voices, the bleating of instrumentation. At times, Pendergast was at her side. Other times she would find him gone. At first she willed the time to pass as quickly as possible. Then--as the wait grew longer--she only wanted time to slow down. Because the longer Vincent D'Agosta lay on that surgical table, she knew, the more his chances of survival dwindled.
Then--quite abruptly--the surgeon was standing before them. His scrub blues were creased and wrinkled, and his face looked pale and drawn. Behind him stood Father Bell.
At the sight of the priest, Hayward's heart gave a dreadful lurch. She had known this moment would come. And yet--now that it was here--she did not think that she could bear it.
The surgeon cleared his throat. 'I've come to let you know the operation was successful. We closed forty-five minutes ago and we've been monitoring closely since. The signs are promising.'
'I'll take you to see him now,' said Father Bell.
'Only for a moment,' the surgeon added. 'He's barely conscious and very weak.'
For a moment, Hayward sat motionless, stunned, trying to take it in. Pendergast was speaking but she couldn't understand the words. Then she felt herself being raised--the FBI agent on one side, the priest on the other--and she was walking down the corridor. They turned left, then right, past closed doors and halls full of stretchers and empty wheelchairs. Through an open doorway they came to a small area enclosed by movable privacy screens. A nurse pulled one of the screens away and there was Vinnie. A dozen machines were attached to him, and his eyes were closed. Tubes snaked beneath the sheets: one containing plasma, another saline. Despite D'Agosta's hefty build, he looked fragile, papery almost.
She caught her breath. As she did so, his eyes fluttered open; closed; then opened again. He looked up at them silently in turn, his eyes at last looking into hers.