“What are you talking about?”
“Otis spent several years of his childhood with Helen and William Paxton at their farm. The same farm where you guys just found a half dozen bodies.”
CHAPTER 64
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A crash of thunder shook the entire cabin. It was enough to rattle everyone’s nerves. Except Jack’s. He looked calm and unfazed by the weather, even when Otis began pacing. Otis had changed from the bloody orange prison jumpsuit into clothes Jack had brought for him. The trousers were several inches too short, as were the sleeves of the shirt, but he didn’t seem to mind. He hung on Jack’s every word and did whatever Jack asked.
Jack pulled up two straight-backed chairs to the potbelly stove. He sat down in one and patted the other.
“Stop pacing,” he told Otis.
“You know I hate storms.” But he still had the grin, though it looked like he was clenching his teeth. He sat down, shoulders slumped and feet set and ready to go again.
“You know what a magpie is?” Jack asked Otis, and the big man shook his head.
“It’s a bird. Colorful, unpredictable, high-spirited with high intellect and reasoning that it uses for deceptive schemes. The bird is a scavenger. They say it’ll take down smaller birds and even rodents though it’s not classified as a bird of prey.”
“You sure do know a lot about them,” Otis said, but his smile looked forced, as if he were trying to ignore a foul smell, and his eyes darted over to Maggie.
“My mother knew all kinds of superstitious nonsense. I remember her telling me about the magpie and all the legends connected to it. If you dare to kill one, misfortune will strike you down. It’s best to treat a magpie with respect. It’s believed that they carry a drop of the devil’s blood under their tongue. Mother had a silly rhyme she used to say:
“One magpie for Sorrow
Two for Joy
Three for Silver
Four for Gold
Five for a tale never to be told
Six for one that’ll make you cry
Seven you Live
Eight you Die.”
Maggie’s fingers struggled with the zipper of Tully’s windbreaker. She glanced up and saw Otis look over at her again, but he didn’t look amused or pleased. He didn’t like that Jack was giving her so much attention. This was obviously a reunion of sorts for them. If Maggie remembered correctly, Otis had been in prison for almost a year. Did he not approve of Jack’s game?
“You don’t talk much about your mother,” Otis said.
“She died when I was pretty young. Left me with that bastard I was supposed to call Daddy.”
Otis’s head wagged. “Remember, Miss Helen always told us we’re better than who we came from. She was a real special lady, Miss Helen.”
Both men went silent. Heads down, leaning forward, and Maggie was struck by what looked to be a show of reverence.
“Some days I still can’t believe she made me executor of her will,” Jack said, and Maggie realized they were talking about the woman who had owned the Iowa farm.
“She always said you were real smart. She sure was proud of the business you built all by yourself like that.”
Silence again.
“You know she sent me a letter almost every week no matter where I was,” Otis said.
“She did that?”
“Yep. Told me what all you were up to and what have you. She had a way of keeping me calm, you know what I mean? Keeping me from feeling so messed up in my head. Like as long as I knew she loved me …” Otis actually sounded choked up. He wiped a hand over his face. “I don’t know much, but I do know I wasn’t starting no fires until after she passed.”
Jack stayed quiet. Up until now, he had been the one talking, telling, bossing, but the subject of Miss Helen subdued him. And Otis seemed to know it was a subject he could use.
“My little hobby keeps me in check,” Jack said, raising his head and smiling at Otis. “It’s a powerful thing. I can’t even describe it.”
“I like power.” Otis nodded his head again, excited now. “I told Miss Gwen I was a powermaniac, not a pyromaniac.” He laughed, what sounded like a nervous cackle.
“Miss Gwen?”
“The woman who came to see me in prison. She’s a friend of your Magpie’s.”
Jack gave him a hard, quick nod. He didn’t want to hear any more. “You liked taking that finger?”
Otis’s tongue darted out to wet his lips. “The Demon was an asshole but he was sure crying.” The lopsided grin spread wide across his face.
“When you cut open a person there’s like a steam that rises up out of the body,” Jack explained, resuming his role of mentor. “But it’s not just the cutting that gives you power. You know ancient warriors ate parts of their enemies. Did you know that?”
Otis shook his head. Stayed quiet.
“Just think of the power you’d get from a magpie.”
And Jack settled back and smiled.
There was something terrifying about that smile, and despite the warmth of the room, Maggie felt a chill.
By now, Maggie had realized that she and Tully might never leave this forest alive. But she didn’t want to think about what they might have to endure. Death might be preferable, and she wondered if she should have left Tully.
Her one hope was that Tully had actually sent off a text to Ryder Creed with their location. But that hope was fading fast. Too many “ifs.” Even if Creed found the dead troopers, even if the dog he brought led him to the water’s edge, even if his dog was able to follow the trail of bloody paper towels, he’d never be able to do it in this storm. And Jack giving them a chance to run? There was no way she could find her way through the forest with Tully barely able to walk.
Suddenly she felt Tully yank at his own zipper, helping her, not wanting her to stop. His head lolled with his chin to his chest. No words. A slight groan as she lifted and peeled the jacket off. She was able to tear away his polo shirt. And then she got a good look at the damage and she fought a wave of nausea. She had seen plenty of bullet wounds but usually on dead bodies that no longer required her help.
The hole still oozed dark blood that had the thickness of motor oil. The tissue around the rim of the wound was red and angry. Though she initially thought he had been shot in the heart, the bullet had hit much higher. It looked like it had gone all the way through his shoulder. She reached behind him and fingered the exit wound. He winced and stiffened.
Was it good or bad that the bullet had exited?
She started cleaning it, first with the water.
“You need to leave me,” Tully said, so softly she barely heard him.
Maggie glanced back and was glad to see Otis and Jack busy opening cans and packages, hungry and not interested. The thunder was a constant rumble. If she had a hard time hearing him, then so would Jack and Otis. Still, she leaned close.
“I’m not going anywhere without you.”
“Leave me,” he said through clenched teeth. “I’ll be damned if I’m gonna let him kill us both.”
“It wouldn’t matter because if I left you behind, Gwen would kill me.”
She thought she saw a hint of a smile.
She held up the whiskey bottle for him to see. Then she ran a thumbnail through the seal and leaned close to him again. “This is going to hurt like hell.”
He surprised her by putting out his hand for the bottle and she gave it to him. He took a long swallow. He handed it back and said, “Let’s do it.”
She wet down the towel with the whiskey but then remembered and whispered to him, “Do you still have those pills in your pocket?”
He gave a slight nod.
The antibiotics for his sinus infection might not be strong enough to battle this infection but it was worth a try, even if she had him take all that was left.
With his free hand he reached inside his jacket pocket and pulled out the plastic ziplock bag. With it came a pen and he handed her both. It took her a few seconds to realize that it was the one Gwen had given him. His James Bond pen.