After that, Vinnie would just leave T.J. and the boat floating on the reservoir. Cops’d be thinking: What the hell happened here? Something don’t look right.
But what the fuck did Vinnie care? Nothing would point to him because he wasn’t actually murdering T.J. T.J. would be killing himself, without even knowing it. Yeah, it was much easier this way, not having to do the deed. Not having to put a gun to the back of T.J.’s head and pull the trigger.
Sitting there on the boat, in the dark, Vinnie smiled. It was pretty clever, really.
Peabody was locked securely in Marlin’s truck, and now Marlin was tending to Sal Mameli, trying to keep him comfortable. It was a pretty bad fracture, and Mameli appeared to be slipping into a mild shock.
Mr. Briggs appeared at Marlin’s elbow. “Just got hold of Jean,” he said, referring to his niece, the dispatcher. “There’s an ambulance on the way, but it sounds like they’re having a little excitement over at the sheriff’s office.”
“Oh yeah? What do you mean?”
Mr. Briggs gave him a small jerk of the head, pulling him aside. In hushed tones, the elderly man said, “The details are a little rough right now, and Jean’s not really supposed to share this stuff with me anyway….”
Marlin nodded. “Between you and me.”
Mr. Briggs’ expression was grave. “Apparently, Jack Corey just shot Wylie Smith.”
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
The small building that housed the Sheriff’s Department and the county jail was surrounded by vehicles and people, mostly deputies and other personnel who worked inside the building. Marlin saw two black-and-whites from the Texas Department of Public Safety, and he spotted a couple of staff members from the newspaper office across the street. The rest of the crowd was composed of curious bystanders, locals who had been eating or shopping in the small downtown area. An ambulance idled out front.
Marlin backed up and found a spot as close as he could get, a block away. He turned to Peabody, whose eyes were still puffy and wet. “Stay put,” Marlin said. “I’ll be right back.” He didn’t wait for a sneer, but then again, Peabody hadn’t seemed too lively on the trip over.
Marlin jogged toward the building, swerving through the milling crowd.
“John! Over here!” It was Bobby Garza, a few paces outside the front door, huddled in a conference with the DPS troopers and a couple of deputies. As Marlin approached, Garza stepped toward him and steered him against the outside wall of the building. “Here’s the situation. Corey…Jesus, John-what happened to your arm?”
“Guy bit me. Long story.”
Garza nodded and continued, speaking quietly and quickly with his back to the crowd. “Wylie came back from Corey’s house and decided to have another go at him. He felt pretty good about the evidence he has so far, and wanted to see if Corey would cop to it.” Garza took a breath. Marlin couldn’t remember the sheriff ever looking so grim. “Next thing we know, there’s a shot from inside the interview room. I don’t know if Wylie went in there with his weapon or what, but Corey’s barricaded in there, he says Wylie’s been shot, and he’s not coming out.”
“Any word from Wylie?”
“Yeah, he hollered that he was wounded but okay before we evacuated the building. There’s nobody in there now but Corey, Wylie, and Darrell.” Darrell Bridges was one of the night dispatchers. “Corey insisted that we clear the building, and the damn place is so small, he’d know if we tried to keep a couple of guys inside. But Corey said it was okay for Darrell to stay when I told him that we had to have a dispatcher in there, otherwise nine-one-one would be down. I got Darrell wearing a vest. Jean was still in there at first, right when this thing got started, but Darrell’s shift started at eight and he insisted on relieving her. Acted like it was no big deal, but man, in my book, that makes him pretty brave.”
Marlin appreciated the information, but wondered why Garza had called him aside. After all, Marlin was a game warden-an employee of the state, not of the Sheriff’s Department.
Garza gave him a quiet stare. “We tried talking to him earlier on Wylie’s cell phone,” Garza said, “but he wouldn’t listen. Said he’d only talk to you. Then he hung up. We’ve called back a dozen times, but all he says is, ‘I want Marlin.’”
“Oh, you’ve gotta be kidding me.”
“No, sir. Not a good time to kid.”
Marlin glanced around the crowd, noting the worried looks on the deputies’ faces, the excitement in the civilians’ eyes.
He looked back at Garza. “You know I’m not trained for this. I don’t know the first thing about negotiation.”
“I know. But I’m not sure we have any other options.”
Marlin batted the idea around in his head, wondering how much guilt he’d feel if the deal went sour. On the other hand, what if he refused to act, and Wylie-or Corey, for that matter-wound up dead? Either way, he was taking a gamble. “Well, hell,” he finally said. “Where’s the phone?”
“That’s the other thing,” Garza said, giving Marlin a smile that said, Don’t kill me when you hear this. “He kinda wants a face-to-face.”
Marlin opened his mouth, but Garza shook his head and said, “I know…one of the first rules of hostage negotiation is, don’t send in other potential hostages. You should know that straight-out. I’m not gonna lie to you. But you seem to have a pretty good rapport with Corey, and since Wylie might be wounded in there, I thought I’d at least run it past you. I’m willing to give it a try.”
“You’re willing to give it a try?”
Garza shrugged. “You know what I mean.” He lowered his voice. “Look, John, don’t get me wrong here. I’ll understand completely if you tell me to screw off. It’s not your job, and the guy’s probably killed one man already….”
Marlin let out a snort. “Boy, that’s a pep talk. You and Knute Rockne, two of a kind.”
Garza grinned at him, but there wasn’t much behind it.
“No weapons, right?” Marlin asked.
“No, you leave your belt out here. We can get you a vest.”
Marlin rubbed the nape of his neck, feeling the sweat back there. He made his decision quickly, because he knew if he mulled it over too long, he’d never go in. “Wylie is gonna owe me a damn six-pack for this one.”
Garza placed a hand on Marlin’s shoulder, an attempt at emotional support. “I hear ya.”
The office of the Sheriff’s Department occupied roughly two thousand square feet, and that included a recent expansion. The county jail occupied the other half of the stone building, with no interior doorway leading between the two sides. It was a hassle for officers to shuttle prisoners back and forth, but in this instance it made things simpler. There was only one way in and one way out, and that was through the glass door on which Marlin’s hand currently rested.
Looking through the door, Marlin saw that everything looked quiet inside. Plenty of lights on. Desks stacked high with paperwork. But it looked odd without any people in it. Down the left wall-what used to be an exterior wall-Marlin could see two wooden doors. The first was a small coffee room, and that door stood open. The second was the door to the interview room, which was closed. The small eye-level window was dark. Marlin eased the glass door open and yelled, “Corey? Can you hear me? It’s Marlin. I’m coming in.” He waited, but there was no answer.
He glanced back at the crowd, which had been pushed back now by about fifty yards. Marlin could see a couple of news-station vans from Austin or San Antonio already setting up shop, bright lights shining on reporters who were covering the breaking story.
Garza, a handful of deputies, and the two DPS troopers stood about thirty yards away.
Marlin took a step into the office and let the glass door close behind him. He glanced toward the dispatcher’s cubicle, a small partitioned area in the right-hand rear corner of the large main room. “Darrell, you back there?” he called out.