had helped Will steel himself for the things they’d had to do, the things he never talked about and that no one would believe. Not in their worst nightmares.
Will stepped away from his workbench and peeled off his tinted welder’s glasses. He didn’t feel like working anymore. Not after the news and the memories that had been stirred.
He felt like having another beer, but not at home.
He felt like talking to someone, but not his wife.
Joe Vine and Kray were in Kray’s black rental Ford Explorer, driving north. They had everything they needed. Kray had seen to it.
Vine was slumped against the door in the passenger seat, staring intently ahead into darkness. His gaze didn’t seem to carry, as if he were concentrating on the bugs occasionally flitting in the headlight beams and smacking against the windshield. Kray didn’t like the way he looked.
“We can pull it out, Joe,” he said, shooting glances sideways while paying attention to the highway. “We’ve been in deeper shit.”
“I’m not in any shit. I’m gonna get what I want.”
“We’re trained for the impossible,” Kray reminded him. “Don’t change your mind and go pussy on me, Joe.”
“You know I won’t. I want to kill her more than you do.”
“Closer than brothers. That’s how the unit survived.”
“Those of us who did.”
“Fuckin’ right!”
“I’m fine in the guts department. Anyway, like I told you, there really isn’t a choice. Not for me. I’m on my way to kill the cunt who ruined my son.”
“There’s always a choice. You throw up your hands and get fucked, or you become the fucker.”
“I don’t have a choice.”
“Truth is, I know that, Joe. In this, you don’t have any
Vine pulled himself up to sit straighter, though he continued his intent stare out the windshield at the headlight beams and rushing highway. Kray hoped Vine was going to be okay. Vine was at the edge. His blood lust might overwhelm his reason, or worse, his madness might shut him down, paralyze him.
“Closer than brothers, Joe. That’s how we got it done. That’s how we’ll get this done. You ready?”
Vine didn’t answer for a while. The intermittent
Finally Vine said, “Fuckin’-A. I’m better than ready. I’m eager.”
Kray smiled tightly. Confidently. Those words from Vine had been good enough before. They’d be good enough again.
Horn got the call that evening at his brownstone. He’d just snuffed out a cigar and was getting ready for bed when the phone rang.
Rollie Larkin.
“We don’t have the DNA yet,” he said to Horn, “but I thought you’d like to know that microscopic analysis matches the strand of hair found stuck beneath Alice Duggan’s duct-tape gag with hair taken from Joe Vine’s comb. Vine killed her, not that there was much doubt.”
“No doubt at all,” Horn said, “but thanks for calling. Everything in place for Anne?”
“I’m in tight communication with the operation. Everyone’s in place. Men in the woods and in the creek bed, sentries watching the road. An officer is sitting guard while the cabin sleeps.”
“I guess I can sleep then.”
“Go ahead, Horn. Drink some of that scotch of yours, if it’ll help.”
Horn smiled. “I might do that. Then I’ll drive up to the cabin in the morning.”
After hanging up the phone, Horn was glad the conversation hadn’t been on the cell phone. It would have been more likely overheard.
On the other hand, given the capabilities of Joe Vine, the phone line to the brownstone might be tapped.
Horn decided he probably wouldn’t sleep very well, scotch or no scotch.
But he did-for less than an hour.
Then he was wide awake and fumbling for the phone.
Larkin said a thick hello, as if Horn had woken him.
Horn didn’t care. “Rollie, I’ve thought of something!”
“I’m thinking of something right now, too,” Larkin said sleepily.
“Cindy Vine,” Horn said. “I remembered something she said during her interrogation, about when her husband confessed the murders to her. She said, ‘. . they never told their wives or anyone else about the murders.’”
“Yeah,” Larkin said.
“Vine said
“This means?. .”
“Joe Vine was telling her about more than one other killer besides himself. He must have been referring to Victor Kray. The three of them-Mandle, Vine and Kray- took up murder together during the SSF’s black operations.”
“It’s possible,” Larkin said cautiously. He sounded all the way awake now and somewhat skeptical. “But why Kray?”
“Mandle stayed in the SSF and was never called on the murder Vine witnessed, so Vine must not have talked.”
“True,” Larkin said.
“Unless he did go to his commanding officer, and it went no further.”
“Makes sense.”
“And it went no further because Mandle must have had something on Kray.”
“So why didn’t Vine go over Kray’s head?”
“My guess is by that time he was in too deep,” Horn said. “All that’s important is we know he
“So why is Kray trying to help us nab Vine?”
“He doesn’t want us to nab him; he wants to make sure we kill him, so he can’t talk and implicate Kray. He wants to stay close to the investigation so he can control it, make sure Vine dies before talking, even if he has to kill him himself. Kray probably helped his old military buddy Vine kill Mandle after he escaped from the van, then thought the situation was contained. He had no way of knowing Vine would go on a killing spree of his own. Something else: I mentioned to Kray that Anne was going to be hidden away in her brother’s cabin.”
“You mention where the cabin was?”
“Do you really think Kray couldn’t find out?”
“I get your point. You say Kray’s at the Rion Hotel?”
“Yeah.”
“I’ll send around a detail to bring him in.”
“No,” Horn said. “Just put a tight tail on him. No need yet to let him know we’re on to him.”
“Chess game, huh?”
“I hope we’re still at that point.”
“Where’s Bobby Fischer when you need him?”
“I’m driving up to the cabin.”