“Maybe he just grew up,” said Robie.
She looked at him strangely. “Do boys ever really grow up, Will?”
“I’m not sure I can answer that.”
“Where are you off to now, more investigating?”
He looked down. “No, just getting some fresh air.”
“Well, we have an abundance of that here. Your partner not going with you?”
“No… she’s tired.”
“Aren’t we all? Well, I won’t keep you.”
He watched her walk off and then climbed into the truck.
He got there in fifteen minutes, driving at a rate of speed that was above reckless on such an inclement night.
Maybe a part of him was hoping he wouldn’t reach the place at all. Too fast around a curve, an animal jumps out of the darkness directly in his path, then it would be over.
He would be over.
He pulled into the driveway of a neat story-and-a-half bungalow painted blue.
The skies opened up again and the rain poured down.
Malloy’s police cruiser was under a carport. A potted plant was on the front stoop, the flowers drooping under the barrage of rain.
She was waiting at the front door with a drink in hand. He took it.
And then up the stairs the pair went, undressing each other along the way.
By the time they got to the bedroom, they were both naked.
They hit the mattress hard and Robie used up every last bit of energy he had pleasing her, pleasing someone, letting her rising moans and groans and the prodding of her fingers against his body guide where she wanted him to go.
He increased his intensity of motion to the point where the bed was in peril of collapsing under them. Seeming to sense this, Malloy locked her legs around his torso. Right on cue, he lifted her off the bed and pushed her against the wall.
In his mind Robie sought to drive the both of them right through the drywall and out into the storm, to just let the rain engulf them. Wash everything he was feeling away. Gone.
For good. Never to return.
Climaxing simultaneously, she screamed and ripped at his hair and he cried out as though in pain, though he was feeling the exact opposite.
Totally spent, he carried her back to the bed and collapsed on top of her. Still gasping, she gently stroked the back of his head. Though the room was as cool as the outside, they were both drenched in sweat with their commingled efforts.
He could feel the smacks of her heart against his heaving chest and she could no doubt feel his as well.
Robie felt like he had just run a marathon, every nerve and muscle twitching.
He also somehow sensed that he had not yet finished the race. That he would never reach the finish line.
Robie finally rolled off her and put an arm over his eyes, blocking everything out.
“My God,” she whispered breathlessly into his ear. She slipped her leg on top of his stomach and lay curled tight to him. “My God,” she said again. “That was intense, Will.”
He nodded his head, trying to silently tell her that it was the same for him.
Though he had just finished having sex with a very lovely woman, the only image in Robie’s head right now was of another woman.
A woman who had this night, for the first time in her life, told Robie that she loved him. And then in the next breath, she had destroyed that astonishing admission before he even had a chance to react.
Or to tell her that I felt the same way about her.
“What are you thinking, Will?”
Robie blinked, came back to the room he was in, and turned sideways to stare at her.
I’m thinking about the woman I wish were here with me.
Of course he couldn’t say that, and he didn’t.
Guilt and shame were added to the swell of other emotions he was already feeling.
Guilt, shame, whatever you wanted to call it. The precise name didn’t matter. It was all bad.
“Nothing,” he said.
He could feel her relaxed body tense just a bit and then that tension was released.
Malloy replied, “You can talk to me, you know.”
“I’m fine. It was great. It was beyond great. Thank you. I… Thank you.”
His words rang hollow even to him.
He turned away from her and fell asleep on his side.
She lay there for a bit watching the sharp edges of his muscular back before she turned in the opposite direction and eventually fell asleep.
Robie did not slumber long. He woke thirty minutes later. He was dressed, out the door, and back on the road two minutes after that.
He saw the headlights behind him about ten miles outside of Grand. They stayed with him the whole way, never speeding up, although he gave the vehicle several chances to pass him.
When the bullet cracked the rear glass of his truck, he smiled. That was all the confirmation he needed.
God help you, whoever you are.
CHAPTER
52
Jessica Reel had watched from her window as Robie drove off into the night after speaking with Patti Bender.
Part of her wanted to run down the stairs and stop him. Not only because she thought she knew where he was going, but because people had been trying to kill them ever since they had set foot in Grand.
But she had not run down the stairs. She had not tried to stop him.
She had sat like a slug at the window watching him go off.
She had seen him glance toward the sheriff’s station, where the police cruiser was not parked. The thoughts in his mind had been easy enough to decipher. As was the identity of the person he had phoned as she again watched from the window.
Valerie Malloy.
She shifted her position and looked across at the bar. It was ten o’clock now and it seemed like the place was just getting going.
And Jessica Reel, ever the woman of action, decided she needed to get going, too. She was tired of sitting here doing nothing.
She gunned up, left the hotel, and walked across the street. She spotted the stretch limo and wondered for a moment if the Randalls were at the bar. It seemed unlikely. She doubted the couple would stoop to drinking beer with the great unwashed.
She entered the bar and took a few moments to look around.
In one corner were a half-dozen Apostles, though she didn’t see Dwight Sanders among them.
In another corner were several burly men wearing Confederate caps and do-rags and others with T-shirts that said DON’T TREAD ON ME.
Someone had put money in a jukebox, and a few couples were doing their best drunken moves on the small dance floor set up on the right side of the bar.
Sitting at the bar was the limo driver she had seen out at the bunker. The one who had thanked them for taking the Randalls down a peg. That explained the stretch parked outside.
She walked over to the bar and sat down next to him. He glanced up from his beer and flinched.
“So how are the Randalls?” said Reel.
He smiled and swallowed some of his beer.
“Who gives a shit? He don’t even tip. Punk’s got more money than God and he can’t even slip me a fiver? And she just sits there either checking her phone or fixing her makeup. Oh, and I’ve been ‘instructed’ to not make eye contact with her.”
“Well, that might be a good thing. You look at Medusa, you get frozen.”
He laughed. “Can I buy you a beer?”
“Why not.”
He ordered and then held out his hand. “We were never formerly introduced. Tommy Page.”
“Jessica Reel,” she replied, shaking his hand.
Her beer came and they tapped bottles. Page ran a hand through his thick gray hair.
Reel took a swallow of her beer and said, “So you been driving limos long? Doesn’t seem like there would be much demand out here.”