Of course, standard procedure on 99 percent of people pulling into a filling station was to take their car keys if they left the car to go inside. But now and then someone left them in the ignition. I’d surely done this from time to time myself.
And that’s what I looked for. I mean, I was smack in the heart of the Deep South, right? Everyone was trusting here…
The next two or three drivers just filled up their tanks and didn’t stray far from their vehicles. A middle-aged woman in a Honda drove in, parked, and went inside the mart, but took her keys with her.
This could be futile.
But then a heavyset black guy in long denim shorts and an oversize Hornets jersey drove up in a gray Buick. I watched him start to fill up his tank, the keys still in the ignition, then, almost as if it was an afterthought, take a run into the station. Maybe to pay. Maybe to buy a Ring Ding or something. Or use the john.
I tossed my coffee in the garbage and meandered over to his car. I saw the keys still in the ignition. I felt like a creep, loitering around, but I had no choice. Hallie’s fate necessitated it. I glanced inside but couldn’t see the guy. Maybe he’d gone to the john.
I didn’t care.
I disconnected the pump and hopped inside his car. No one seemed to notice.
Heart racing, I hit the ignition and pulled out of the station. If anyone had seen me, no one ran after me. No one shouted.
I hit the light as it was just turning yellow and made a sharp right, following the sign to I-77.
I shot on the ramp for the highway, heading south, whooping with relief and exultation.
In twenty minutes I’d be in South Carolina.
Chapter Sixty-Two
Carrie was held in the chief’s office at the local police station in Mount Holly, looking at pictures of Chief McDaniels fishing and with his grandkids, until they squared her story with the Jacksonville police.
Hours.
Around six, she heard some discussion going on outside. The door opened, and her brother, Jack, stepped in.
He was the last person she wanted to see. “Before you even go there, Jack…” Carrie stood up.
He had one of those reproving-older-brother looks on him, like when she’d drunk a few too many beers back in high school (he was always the straight one) or when she left their bathroom looking like a shit storm had passed through it. Except this time it had kind of melded with one of those serious, more official looks Jack had learned at the FBI.
He sank into the chair across from her. “What the hell were you doing, Carrie?”
“He didn’t do it, Jack. No one back in Jacksonville wanted to hear me. You can check with this guy Bud at the gun store in town; where Steadman supposedly bought that gun. He never did. Vance Hofer bought it.
Jack looked it over, scratching his bushy hair and squinting his intelligent brown eyes.
“It’s all pretty clear, Jack. In fact, Hofer just called him earlier today. I have photos of his car in the vicinity of both murder sites. We traced the plate on the car to one of his work buddies. He knew Martinez from that incident you described, and he also knew when Steadman would be in town, and had Martinez stop Steadman and come up with this song and dance about him talking back, maybe just to razz him at first, and then he killed him. He also killed Steadman’s friend. He admitted as much to Steadman. And apparently there are others as well…”
Carrie nodded. “You already know about his daughter. He claims he traced the OxyContin back to a clinic owned by Steadman, so no doubt there are a few gaping holes in the chain of supply that may turn up somewhere. And there’s motive. His life was in shambles. The last straw was his daughter. He twisted the blame to Henry-”
“Gimme a break, Jack. If anyone back in Jacksonville was doing their police work, they could have found the car at both scenes. They could have checked that Steadman was at his office the day the gun was supposedly bought. They could have asked where he would possibly have gotten a gun, just getting off a plane. Instead of running around pulling triggers… Check with this gun-store guy Bud in town. He’ll tell you-”
“I’ve already spoken with Bud,” her brother said. He let out a breath and loosened his tie. “Chief McDaniels said he was the one who alerted him, so I stopped on the way in. I also traced that plate back to a guy from that metalworks factory, where Hofer worked-”
“
“Attaway.” He winked at her and smiled.
“But it’s gotten deeper, Jack. A lot deeper… No one will tell me anything. What’s happened? I need to speak with him.”
“
“What call, Carrie?”
She hesitated, not knowing what was right, pushing the hair out of her eyes. “I don’t know, Jack, I can’t-”
“
Carrie closed her eyes and let out a breath she’d been holding in for hours Then she nodded. There was nothing else she could do.
She told him. About Hofer’s call when Henry had fled to his friend Mike’s house, moments after finding his body.
“He’s crazy, Jack. He’ll do everything he says. Whatever you do, you can’t let his name get out, or else… He’ll kill her, Jack.
“I understand…” Jack nodded, his brow furrowed in thought. His look seemed to say,