Page 34 of Redemption Road


  “Yes.”

  He led her to the far wall, where a half dozen whiteboards were lined end to end. She saw dates and notes and photographs, so much information it was a blur. “Don’t look at the board, yet. Look at me.” Randolph stood between her and the board. “Thank you. Now listen. Dyer might show up any minute. He’ll be angry, so expect it. You’re not supposed to be here, and I’m sure as hell not supposed to be showing you this. You need to see it, though, because it will matter to you.”

  “Okay.”

  “Forget the bodies in the church. This is about the bodies under it. Nine of them. All female, all exhumed and with the medical examiner, but we’ve identified two so far. The first is Allison Wilson—”

  “Wait a minute. I know Allison. I grew up with her.”

  “I know you did.”

  “She’s one of the nine?”

  “She is, but that’s not the bad news.”

  Elizabeth held up a hand because she was struggling with the information. She remembered Allison, a pretty girl a year ahead of her in school. She’d made decent grades, smoked cigarettes, and played bass in a grunge band. She’d disappeared a few years after Elizabeth became a cop, but no one made anything of it. The home life was bad; there were rumors of a boyfriend out of state. People assumed she’d run off with him. Now, here she was, dead under the church. By itself, it was a lot to handle; but there was something else, some other problem …

  “Liz?”

  Elizabeth closed her eyes, seeing the girl as she remembered her: strawberry hair, pretty eyes …

  “Liz.” Randolph snapped his fingers. “Are you with me?”

  Elizabeth blinked. “Yes. Allison Wilson. Do you know when she died?”

  “Not yet.”

  “Adrian didn’t kill her.”

  “I completely agree.”

  Elizabeth grew still because his certainty didn’t fit. Cops doubted Adrian to the point of hatred. Since Julia Strange, that’s what they did. She narrowed her eyes, looking for the trick. “What’s changed?”

  “The second body.”

  “What about it?”

  Randolph waited a beat, then stepped left to reveal a photograph on the board. “I’m sorry about this. I’d tell Adrian the same thing if I could.”

  “Oh, my God.” Elizabeth stepped closer to the photograph, knowing the smile, the eyes, all of it. “How could this be?”

  “We don’t know yet.”

  She touched the photo, remembering the woman as she’d been: beautiful and quiet and somewhat sad.

  Catherine Wall.

  Adrian’s wife.

  * * *

  Elizabeth didn’t wait for Francis Dyer to come looking. She found him in his office, on the phone. Beckett was there, too. “Is there something you want to tell me?”

  Dyer met her eyes, still on the phone. “No, she’s here now. I’ll handle it. Thanks for the heads-up.” He settled the phone on its receiver. “Apparently, you made quite an entrance.” He gestured at Beckett, who closed the door. “That was the FBI agent in command. He wants to know what a suspended detective is doing poking around in what is now the heart of a multijurisdictional operation.”

  “When were you going to tell me?”

  “I’m asking the questions,” Dyer said.

  “When?”

  “Liz, listen—”

  She swung to Beckett, hands fisted on her hips. “Don’t tell me about task force protocol, Charlie. I know the protocols. I don’t care about that.” She turned back to Dyer, her voice tight. “When did you plan to tell me that Adrian Wall is in the clear?”

  “He’s not.”

  “His wife is a victim. She died after his incarceration.”

  “Adrian beat a prison guard to death with his bare hands.” Dyer leaned back and touched his fingertips together. “He may as well have killed a cop.”

  Elizabeth turned away, reeling from the injustice of it all. Adrian went to prison for something he didn’t do. Now, he was wanted for killing a guard he should never have known. “He’s lost thirteen years, and now his wife.”

  “I can’t change the fact he killed William Preston. Officer Olivet has given a sworn statement. We’ll have DNA soon.” Dyer opened a drawer and removed her service weapon and shield, placing them on the desk. “Take them.”

  “What?”

  “Take them back, and tell me where to find Adrian Wall.”

  Elizabeth considered the badge and understood the offer. She could be a cop again, and word would descend from on high: Liz is in the fold; Liz is one of us. But, readmission came with a price, and the price was Adrian Wall. “What if I told you Channing Shore was missing?”

  “I’d tell you she’s a grown woman, free on bond. She can go anywhere she wants. Take the badge.”

  “What if I told you she was in trouble?”

  “Do you have some proof of this? Something concrete?” Elizabeth opened her mouth, but knew it was pointless. A smear of blood. A lost phone. “Take the shield. Tell me where to find Adrian Wall.”

  His palm was on the badge and the gun, his fingers spread. He didn’t care about Channing. He wanted Adrian. That’s all he wanted.

  She pointed at Beckett. “What about you?”

  “I think she’s an unhappy young woman, and she’ll turn up when she’s ready. This is more important.”

  “So it’s all about Adrian?”

  “Officer Preston had a wife and kids. I have a wife and kids.”

  Elizabeth stared from one man to the other. There was no give or doubt. “If I give him to you, I want help with Channing.”

  “What kind of help?” Dyer asked.

  “Resources. Manpower. I want her name on the wires. I want her found, and I want it a priority. Local, state, and federal.”

  “Do you know where to find Adrian?”

  “I do.”

  “And you’ll tell me where he is?”

  “If you help me find Channing.”

  Dyer slid the badge across the desk. “Take it.”

  “I want to hear you say it.”

  “I’ll help you find her.”

  “All right.” Elizabeth picked up the badge; clipped it on her belt. She lifted the weapon, checked the loads.

  “That’s the easy part.” Dyer pushed pen and paper across the desk.

  Elizabeth looked once at Beckett, then wrote down an address and room number.

  “Don’t hurt him,” she said.

  Then slid the paper back across the desk.

  30

  Channing felt as if she were dying, and that was all about the heat. It filled the silo, pressed her into the dirt. After so many hours, she didn’t have any tears left, or sweat. She had the dark and the heat and a single question.

  When was he coming back?

  That was the only thing that mattered. Not why it would happen or where she was, but when?

  When would he come?

  She rolled onto her knees, her face flat against the hot soil. She could taste it on her lips and in her mouth; feel it in her nostrils.

  “One more time.”

  She straightened, and the plastic ties cut her again. Same pain. Same slickness. The earth tilted in the blackness, but she got to her feet, hands still behind her back, ankles still lashed together.

  “I can do this.”

  She’d already fallen fifty times, or a hundred. It was pitch-black. She was bleeding.

  “Okay.”

  She shuffled an inch, didn’t fall.

  “Okay, okay.”

  She tried a hop and kept her balance. She did it two more times, and that was the most she’d managed without going down. That was the pattern. Stand. Fall. Spit out the dirt.

  There had to be an exit.

  Something sharp.

  She tried again and fell as an ankle twisted, and her body whiplashed. She couldn’t catch herself, and her face hit hard enough to drive dirt into her throat. She rolled, choking.

  “Elizabeth…”

/>   The name was like a prayer. Elizabeth would know what to do. Elizabeth would want her strong. But, Channing felt terror like a palm on her back.

  The basement.

  Now this.

  The palm pressed hard enough to drive everything good right out of her. She’d killed two men, so maybe this was just, to be alone in this place.

  Sliding through the dirt, she covered an inch at a time, first on her side, then on her stomach. She was sobbing quietly as she did it, but, at the far wall, pulled herself up and felt her way along it, finding vertical beams every ten feet, each of them as rusted as everything else. It took an hour, or maybe two; but the fourth beam had a narrow edge where metal had rusted away enough to make it sharp.

  So sharp …

  Channing backed against it, working her wrists, the zip ties. Skin went with the plastic, but she didn’t care.

  Now!

  It had to be now!

  The plastic parted with a snap, and her arms swung like deadwood as she sobbed again and waited for them to burn. When she could move them, she lay on the ground and used the same sharp metal to strip the ties from her ankles. After that, she followed the curve of the wall until she found the door. Made of solid steel, it opened half an inch before the chain outside snapped tight. She stared out with a single eye, saw dirt and grass and trees. Afternoon, she thought, yellow light. She called for help, but knew he’d chosen the silo for a reason. That meant no one was coming. No one was there.

  Channing pushed fingers through the crack a final time, then dragged herself up to explore the silo again. The structure was ancient and rusted and crumbling. She went around the perimeter from the door all the way back, tripping twice, then circling again. She found the ladder on the second trip. The lowest rung was high above her head, so she almost missed it, her fingers grazing it once, then coming back. When she pulled it made a clanking sound, and bolts scraped in the concrete. She dragged herself onto it, finding enough strength to reach the third rung, and pull her knees onto the first. When she stood, everything swayed. The ladder was skinny, barely a foot wide. Moving carefully, she climbed another rung, then a dozen more. Twice, the ladder groaned, and each time she froze, thinking it would pull from the wall or drop away beneath her. She managed another twenty rungs before she froze from all the blackness that tried to drag her down. Only the weight on her hands and feet told her which way was up and which was down. Channing closed her eyes and counted to ten.

  The ladder was solid; the ladder was real.

  Ten feet later, the first rung came off in her hand.

  It broke quickly, and she spun into the dark, screaming as something in her shoulder stretched and tore. It took a mad scramble to get her feet back on the ladder, another rung in her hands.

  But, the damage was done.

  She felt all the space below and pushed a cheek so hard into the ladder it ached.

  “Please.”

  It was a useless plea, no more substantial than the air beneath her feet. Channing was alone and going to die. She’d fall or he’d kill her.

  That simple.

  That sure.

  But did it have to be? Would it be like that for Liz?

  Taking a breath, she forced herself past the empty space where the broken rung had been. It wasn’t easy. The metal was rusted thin, and her mind painted every rung the same.

  It would break.

  She would fall.

  Already, she was fifty feet up, maybe sixty. How tall was the silo? Eighty feet? A hundred? She counted rungs, but lost track when the ladder shifted in the concrete. She held her breath for a hundred count, then started again, thinking, Please, please, please …

  She was still thinking that when she reached up, and her hand struck the dome of the roof. It was inches from her face, and she couldn’t see it.

  So black.

  So still.

  But the ladder was there for a reason; there had to be a hatch.

  She pushed against the roof and found the hatch easily because it wasn’t latched or locked. A line of yellow appeared, fresh air spilling in as she pushed harder and the crack widened. Channing drove the hatch until it fell backward and struck the roof with a clang. Light burned her eyes. Fresh air was a gift. She clung until she could see, then clambered onto the roof, finding handholds and a place for her feet. A breeze blew, and the forest walked away beneath her. Miles of it. Many miles. She leaned out, thinking there should be another ladder going down; but it had broken off years ago. She saw bolts snapped clean, and a tangle of ladder twisting away from the silo halfway down. Everything else was sloping roof and sheer sides. She climbed to the top of the dome to be sure; but there was never any real doubt.

  Inside or out, she was just as trapped.

  * * *

  Elizabeth made sure Channing’s name and photograph went out to every officer in the county. The FBI stepped up, and so did the state police. That was politics, Francis Dyer holding up his end of the bargain. When it was done, she returned to the conference room. The stares still lingered, but not all of them were distrustful. Maybe, it was the badge. Maybe, the novelty was wearing thin. Whatever the case, she put her back to the glass wall and focused on what she had. There was the message, the blood on the stoop, the broken glass, and the abandoned phone.

  Could Channing’s disappearance have something to do with the church?

  Elizabeth came back to that repeatedly. Too much coincidence, she thought. Too many moving parts. Other women had disappeared; others were dying.

  Was there a connection?

  Elizabeth combed through the files, the evidence. She worked it all, then ran it again going all the way back to Adrian’s conviction, looking first at Julia Strange, Ramona Morgan, and Lauren Lester. They were found in the church, on the altar. What did they have in common? Why were they chosen? They were different ages and backgrounds, different heights and weights and builds. What about the ones found beneath the church? What about Allison Wilson and Catherine Wall?

  Photographs of all five women hung from the murder board, and Elizabeth walked the line, studying their faces. Adrian was convicted of killing Julia Strange. Did the others die because the wrong man went to prison?

  She walked the line again. Some of the victims were buried, and others posed as if meant to be found. Was that about Adrian?

  The questions piled up, yet Elizabeth found herself staring most often at the photograph of Allison Wilson. Something bothered her, and it wasn’t a small thing.

  “They look like you.”

  Elizabeth turned to see James Randolph. “What did you say?”

  “I said they look like you.” He crossed the room and stood beside her at the whiteboard. “Julia Strange. All of them.” He touched one photo, then another. “Something about the eyes.”

  * * *

  Sixty miles away, armed men gathered in an empty lot two miles from a decrepit motel that rented rooms by the hour. Stanford Olivet was among them, though he did not wish to be.

  “The room is in the back. You know the target.” That was Jacks. He checked the loads in a Sig Sauer .45, then holstered it. “He’s fast and strong, and liable to freak when he sees us. That means we get him down fast and we get him in the van.”

  “I don’t like this,” Olivet said.

  “When do you ever?”

  Olivet looked from Jacks to Woods. They didn’t care for him. They never had. “The cops have the same address. You know that, right? They could be here any second.”

  “Fuck the cops.”

  “You’re joking.”

  “Just get in the van.”

  Jacks shoved Olivet through the rear door and rolled it shut. When everyone was in the van, it lurched from the lot and rolled fast until the motel appeared around a bend in the scrub. The building was old, the earth around it sandy and baked. For an instant, Olivet peered into the haze behind them. The warden was out there somewhere. Ten miles away, or twenty. Somewhere safe, Olivet thought. He wouldn’t take a cha
nce like this, not with cops coming, too.

  “Here we go.” Woods twisted in the seat. “Slick and fast and get the hell out.”

  The van rocked into the parking lot and turned for the back. Olivet rolled a ski mask over his face, said, “Come on guys, masks.”

  But Jacks wouldn’t have it. “Uh-uh. You saw what he did to Preston. I want that son of a bitch to see our faces when we come through the door. I want him afraid and aware. I want to see it register.”

  Olivet wanted to argue, but they were already past the office and nearing the side of the motel. The parking lot was empty, the pool full of green slime. They rounded into the rear lot, backed up to the door, and spilled from the van, Woods with a sledge, Jacks with the .45 out of the holster and low against his leg. Nobody said a word. They squared up on the door and, when the lock burst, took the room in a silent rush.

  It was empty, the bed rumpled.

  “Shower.”

  Jacks pointed, and they fanned out around the bathroom door, everybody’s gun up now, Jacks counting down to three as water stopped running and he eased the door open. Steam rolled out. They saw gray tile, a shower curtain, and clothing on the floor. For that instant, the tableau held, then plastic rings scraped, and the curtain slid back. Behind it was a man in his thirties, and a girl ten years younger. She screamed when she saw them. The man screamed, too. He was skinny, with eyes too large for his face. The girl covered herself with the shower curtain.

  Woods said, “Ah, hell.”

  “You.” Jacks centered the .45 on the man’s face. “How long have you been here?”

  “Please, don’t hurt us. There’s money—”

  “How long have you been in this room?”

  “Two days. Jesus, don’t shoot me. We’ve been here since the day before yesterday. Two days. Two days.”

  “You’re certain?”

  “Of course, yes. God. Please—”

  Olivet saw it coming a second before it actually did. He opened his mouth, but there was no stopping it. The .45 spoke twice: sprays of blood on tile, bits of brain and bone.

  “Damn it, Jacks! Why’d you do that?”

  “They saw our faces.”

  “Whose fault is that?”