They slipped around the corner of the pole barn, inside, out of sight. 'Now just… just get behind the car or something,' Lucas told Nadya.
She was peeking around the corner of the garage access door. The house was fifty feet away, with the Honda disabled halfway between. She didn't move, so Lucas took her by the arm and steered her toward Carl's Chevy. 'Just… stay.'
'I'm not a dog,' she said.
Lucas went back to the garage door and shouted at the house. 'Carl. We need to talk with you. Put the gun away. Put the gun away. If you shoot it at us, you'll go to jail. We need to talk to you, son.'
No answer. Movement on the drapes? Maybe.
'Carl…'
'Go away. You killed my grandpa.' Lucas peeked. Definite movement on the drapes on the far corner of the house. A bedroom, maybe.
'We didn't kill your grandpa.'
Nadya stepped up beside him and Lucas said, 'Jesus Christ, Nadya…'
Nadya called, 'Carl. I have just spoken to your mother. She's afraid you'll be hurt. She wants you to come home, Carl…'
'Go away.'
Lucas: 'We can't go away, son…'
The glass broke in the window where Lucas thought he'd seen drapes moving, and Lucas shoved Nadya, hard, and went after her, pulling her down, and a second later a bullet smashed through the metal side of the building where they'd been standing.
'Jesus…' He pulled at Nadya, and they scrambled behind Carl's Chevy.
Somebody yelled, 'Davenport, you okay?'
'We're okay, hold your fire.'
Another shot ripped through the garage, and then another, and small pieces of metal showered over the Chevy. Daylight streamed through the holes, and Lucas could see inch-long peels of the thin sheet steel where the slugs had punched through. Another shot didn't hit the garage. 'He's shooting up in the woods, now,' Lucas said.
Nadya, on her hands and knees behind the John Deere, shouted, 'Carl, please, we are trying to help you.'
Bam.
Another shot hit the garage and maybe ricocheted off one of the snowmobiles. Wolfe wasn't going to be happy.
A burst of three-one of the deputies up in the woods was shooting back.
'Hold on!' Lucas shouted. 'Hold on… Carl, we've got the house covered. Come on, man, you haven't done anything yet…'
Two more shots tore through the garage. Lucas yelled, 'Carl, man, you're shooting up your own car. You're shooting up your car, Carl…'
Carl reloaded; he had a full load plus two for his pocket. No way out? If he could get to the garage, there was still the car, he could come flying out in the car and go the other way, they'd never think of that, he could drive out the utility access, there might be a couple of small trees and some brush in there… and he thought, nah, you'd never fuckin' make it.
Grandpa's image flashed up in his head: Grandpa dead. The gun's muzzle floated in front of his eyes, a few inches away. He could put the muzzle, up under his chin… wouldn't hurt. He'd go from here and now, to nothing, with nothing in between. Be better than landing in some prison where he'd be living in a shoe box and getting fucked by some old guy.
It wasn't supposed to be like this. He was supposed to be underground, or a guerrilla fighter, or something- but not stuck on the bedroom floor of a crappy cabin with a half dozen shells and no food except six cans of soup and some peanut butter. When he saw the thing on TV the cops suddenly speeding out of town, he'd thought they'd be coming, that he'd been spotted somehow, or the Wolfes had talked to somebody. He'd taken five minutes to throw a little camping equipment in a nylon laundry bag, along with the soup and peanut butter, but it was all bullshit, he really knew that-he didn't even have a sleeping bag, or a tent, or good clothes. He'd freeze out there at night.
The muzzle of the gun just hung there, the smell of the powder, not bad; from something to nothing, no pain, no transition…
Then the guy in the garage yelled, '… you're shooting up your own car. You're shooting up your car, Carl…'
A wave of rage went through him. He worked at the fuckin' pizza place every night for six months to buy that car, then he got screwed on the car, it was a piece of junk. But it was his car, and these people…
He picked up the gun and headed for the door.
Then Carl came out, the front door slamming behind him. He walked, striding, angry, swift, toward the garage.
Lucas said, 'Oh, shit, stay down…'
Carl had the rifle, held low, pointed into the garage. He screamed, 'Get away from my car, get away from my fuckin' car…'
Lucas pulled his pistol and shouted, 'Don't come in here, put down your gun, I don't want to have to shoot you.'
'Fuck you,' Carl shouted back.
'Carl, don't do this,' Nadya screamed.
Carl was moving across the front of the garage, and Lucas and Nadya tried to move back, so they could get around the back fender, but Lucas thought he was coming too fast, that he wouldn't make it, and braced his shoulder against the back door and pointed the. 45…
Boom. Carl fired the rifle, and the bullet went through the car's windshield, Lucas thought; and maybe the back window. He heard the glass crack, not shatter, but pop with a funny glass sound, and Carl was still coming and then,
Crack.
The shot came from the woods and Carl went down, screaming, lost the gun. Lucas was around the car in three quick running steps, kicked the rifle, the kid twisting in the dirt like a broken-back dog.
The sniper was running down the hill with his rifle, and Lucas yelled to the radio guy, 'Call an ambulance, tell them we need an ambulance…'
He pushed Carl down, the kid moaning in pain, checked his belt for a gun, found nothing, picked up the rifle, carried it out of arm's reach, and put it down again.
The sniper had stopped and was talking into his shoulder microphone; Wolfe was in the woods, standing, looking down at them. Another deputy was running in from the other side of the house.
Carl started crying. He looked very young, lying on the ground, with his slender blond face and pink cheeks. Lucas bent over him and asked, 'Where are you hit, where are you hit?' and Carl began stuttering incoherently. The sniper came up and said, 'I tried to take him in the butt. I was sure he was going to get you.'
'Okay,' Lucas said. 'Help me roll him.'
Another deputy came up, and Wolfe, and then the third deputy, and they rolled Carl up on one hip and Lucas saw the blood soaking into his jeans. 'Let's get his jeans off, make sure it's not arterial.'
Nadya helped, held Carl's hand, and Lucas noticed that she was bleeding; she had three or four small cuts on her face. She said to Carl, 'You will be okay, you will be okay,' and stroked his hair as a mother would.
The single, copper-jacketed bullet had penetrated the top of Carl's left buttock, angling down, then went through his right buttock and exited. Blood was flowing from all four wounds, but the flow wasn't too heavy. 'I got a first-aid kit in the car; I'll bring it over,' one of the deputies said. He left his rifle behind and ran off through the woods for the cars.
'Am I gonna die?' Carl asked.
'No, but you're gonna spend some time in the hospital,' Lucas said. 'Hell of a lot better than what you did to Oleshev or Jerry Reasons.'
Carl, in pain, opened his mouth to say something, then a light came on in his eyes and he looked at Lucas and