Yet, for someone with Kohler’s experience, the file he now scanned allowed him to reconstruct in some detail a portion of Michael’s life. This fragment was startlingly illuminating. He was vaguely familiar with the file, having acquired it four months before, when Michael came under his care. Kohler now wished he’d paid more attention to its contents when he first read it. He wished too that he had more time now to review the material it contained. But having skimmed the pages once, he noticed that the white van had left the parking lot. Richard Kohler set the folder on the BMW’s floor.

He started the car and drove over the wet asphalt to the one-story building he’d been watching for the past half hour. He circled behind it and located the back door, which was near a battered green Dumpster. He braked to a stop, debated for a moment and then-after wisely clipping on his seat belt-drove the right front bumper of the auto into the door at what seemed to him a leisurely rate of speed. Still, the impact shattered the wood so violently that the door cracked free of both hinges and flew deep into the darkness inside.

He pulled the Chevy onto the shoulder of Route 236. The battered truck listed hard to the left and an Orange Crush empty rolled against the door. The brakes squealed as the truck stopped.

Trenton Heck pushed the door open and stepped out. The soda can fell clattering to the road’s rocky shoulder and Heck stooped painfully and pitched the empty under the seat.

“Come,” he said to Emil, who, already aimed down the incline of the seat, relaxed some muscle or another and slid forward then out the door. He landed on the ground and stretched then blinked at the flashing lights of a state-police car across the highway.

Next to the lit-up Dodge cruiser sat another black-and-white, and beside that was a tan county-coroner’s meat wagon. Four men looked up as Heck crossed the wide strip of black pebbly asphalt. He led Emil away from the cars-he always got the dog out of the truck as soon as possible at a search scene and kept him far from car engines; exhaust dulls dogs’ noses.

“Sit,” Heck commanded when they were in a patch of grass upwind from the cars. “Down.” Emil did as instructed, even though he eagerly noted the presence of some four-legged ladies nearby.

“Hey, Trenton,” one of the men called. He was a large man, large all over, not just the belly-food round, not drink round-and his weight pulled hard at the buttons and pockets of his gray uniform. He was holding back two young female Labrador retrievers, who nosed in the dirt.

“Hiya, Charlie.”

“Well, if it ain’t the Cadillac of trackers.” This, from one of the two young troopers standing on the roadside, a man Heck referred to, though not to his face, as “the Boy.” He was a narrow-jawed youngster, six years Heck’s junior in age though fifteen in appearance. Trenton Heck’s idea of dealing with a budget cutback would have been to fire this kid and keep Heck himself on the force at three-quarters salary. But they hadn’t asked his opinion and so the Boy, who though younger had hired on two months before Heck, was still a trooper while Trenton Heck had netted eighty-seven dollars last month carting old washing machines and water softeners to the Hammond Creek dump.

“Hey, Emil,” the Boy said.

Heck nodded to him and waved to the other trooper, who called back a greeting.

Charlie Fennel and Heck walked toward the tan hearse, beside which stood a young man in a pale-green jumpsuit.

“Not much of a search party,” Heck said to Fennel.

The trooper answered that they were lucky to have what they did. “There’s a concert letting out at midnight or so down at the Civic Center. You hear about that?”

“Rock ’n’ roll,” Heck muttered.

“Uhn. Don sent a buncha troopers over there. They had some boy got shot at the last one.”

“Don’t they have security guards for that sort of thing?”

“Was a guard who shot the kid.”

“Doesn’t seem like a brilliant use of taxpayers’ money, riding herd on a bunch of youngsters paying to deafen themselves.”

Then too, Fennel added, the captain had put a good portion of the troops on highway detail. “He figures what with the storm, they’ll be picking ’em off the pavement. Say, I hear there’s a reward for catching this crazy.”

Heck kept his eyes on the grass in front of him and didn’t know what to say.

“Listen,” Fennel continued in a whisper, “I heard about your situation, Trenton. I hope you get that money. I’m rooting for you.”

“Thanks there, Charlie.”

Heck had a curious relationship with Charlie Fennel. The same bullet that had left the shiny star-shaped wound in Heck’s right thigh had passed first through Fennel’s brother’s chest as he crouched beside their patrol car, killing the trooper instantly. Heck supposed that some of the man’s living blood had ridden the slug into his own body and that because of that he and Charlie Fennel were blood brothers, once removed. At times Trenton Heck thought that he and Fennel ought to be closer. The more time the men spent in each other’s company, however, the less they found they had in common. They occasionally talked about a hunting or fishing trip but the plans came to nothing. It was a secret relief to both of them.

Heck and Fennel now paused beside the coroner’s meat wagon. Heck lifted his head and inhaled air fragrant with the decomposition so prominent on damp autumn nights like this. He sniffed the air once more and Fennel looked at him curiously.

“No wood smoke,” Heck said in response.

“Nope. There don’t seem to be.”

“So wherever this Hrubek’s got himself to, it wasn’t toward a house he could smell.”

“You learn that from Emil? Heh.”

Heck asked the coroner’s attendant, “What happened exactly?”

The young man glanced at Fennel, silently asking permission to answer a civilian. Heck had gotten used to the demise of his own authority. When the attendant received a grunt of approval from Fennel, he explained how Hrubek had escaped then added, “We chased him for a ways.”

“Chased him, did you?” Heck couldn’t resist needling, “Well, it’s not hardly your job to catch him. I wouldn’t’ve blamed you if you’d just hightailed it out of here, to hell with a madman.”

“Yeah, well. We didn’t. We chased him.” The attendant shrugged, young and far above shame.

“All right. Let’s get to it.” Heck noticed that Fennel had put the tracking harnesses on his dogs some time ago. This had worked them up and confused them. If they weren’t immediately going on track, scenting dogs should wear only their regular collars. Heck almost said something to Fennel but didn’t. How the trooper ran his dogs was his business; Trenton Heck was no longer a man-tracking instructor.

He took the red nylon harness and quarter-inch nylon track line from his pocket. Emil tensed immediately though he stayed rump-to-ground. Heck hooked him up and wrapped the end of the line around his own left wrist, contrary to the general practice of right-hand grip; drugged up and giddy though this big fellow might be, Heck remembered Haversham’s warning and he wanted his shooting hand free. He then took the bag from his other jacket pocket. He opened it, pulling back the plastic from the wad of cotton shorts.

“Jesus,” the Boy said, wrinkling his nose. “Dirty Jockeys?”

“Musk is the best,” Heck muttered. “Yum…” He pushed the dingy underwear toward the young trooper, who danced away.

“ Trenton, stop that! They got crazy-man jism on ’em! Keep ’em away!”

Charlie Fennel laughed hard. Heck subdued his own laughter and then called sternly to Emil, “Okay,” which meant for the dog to stand.

They let Emil and the bitches sniff each other, muzzle and ass, as they exchanged their complicated greetings. Then Heck held Hrubek’s shorts down toward the ground, taking care not to rub the cloth on the dogs’ noses-just letting them get to know a smell that to a human would vanish in an instant, if it was detectable at all.


Перейти на страницу:
Изменить размер шрифта: