Mars turned back to him, his face lit by the dim light from the kitchen.
“If you want to get away, we should burn the house.”
Dennis started to say no, but then he stopped. He had been thinking of putting the kids in the Jaguar and opening the garage door with the remote as a diversion, but a fire made better sense. The cops would shit their pants if the house started to burn.
“That’s not a bad idea. We could start a fire on the other side of the house.”
Kevin raised his hands.
“You guys are crazy. That adds arson to the charges against us.”
“It makes sense, Kevin. All the cops will be watching the fire. They won’t be looking at the neighbor’s yard.”
“But what about these people?”
Kevin was talking about the Smiths.
Dennis was about to answer when Mars did it again. His voice was quiet and empty.
“They’ll burn.”
The back of Dennis’s neck tingled as if Mars had raked a nail across a blackboard.
“Jesus, Mars, nobody has to burn. We can put’m here in the garage before we take off. We’ll figure somethin’ out.”
They decided to use gasoline to start the fire. Dennis found a two-gallon plastic gas can that the family probably kept for emergencies, but it was almost empty. Mars used the plastic air hose from the family’s aquarium to siphon gas from the Jaguar. He filled the two-gallon can, then a large plastic bucket that was stained by detergent. They were carrying the gasoline into the house when they heard the helicopters again change pitch and more cars pull into the cul-de-sac.
Dennis stopped with the bucket, listening, when suddenly the front of the house was bathed in light, framing the huge garage door and spilling into the bathroom window even through the oleanders.
“What the fuck?! What’s going on?”
They hurried to the front of the house, gasoline splashing from the bucket.
“Kevin! Watch the French doors!”
Dennis and Mars left the gasoline in the entry, then ran into the office where Walter Smith still twitched on the couch. Spears of light cut through the shutters, painting them with zebra stripes. Dennis opened the shutters and saw that two more police cars filled the street. All four cars had trained their spotlights on the house and a great pool of light from the helicopters burned brilliantly on the front yard. More cars arrived.
“Holy shit.”
The television showed the L.A. County Sheriffs rolling through the dark streets of York Estates. Dennis watched a group of SWAT assholes trot through an oval of helicopter light as they deployed through the neighborhood. Snipers; stone-cold killers dressed in ninja suits with rifles equipped with night-vision scopes, laser sites, and-for all he knew-motherfucking death rays. Mars had been right; these bastards would drop them cold if they tried to drive away with the kids.
“This is fucked. Look at all those cops.”
Dennis peeked out the shutters again, but so many floodlights had been set up in the street that the glare was blinding; a thousand cops could be standing sixty feet away, and he wouldn’t know.
“Fuck!”
Everything had once more changed. One minute he had a great plan to slip away, but now all sides of the house were lit up like the sun and an army of cops were filling the streets. Overhead, the helicopters sounded as if they were about to land on the house. Sneaking through the adjoining neighbor’s yard would now be impossible. Dennis turned back to the television. Six patrol cars filled the cul-de-sac, washed in brilliant white light from the helicopters, as many as a dozen cops moving behind them.
Dennis went to Walter Smith, and inspected his wound. The bruising had followed his eye socket under the eye to his right cheek, and moved across most of his forehead above the eye. The eye had swollen closed. Dennis wished now that he hadn’t hit the sonofabitch. He turned away and went to the door.
“I’m going to check the windows again, okay? I gotta make sure Kevin isn’t falling asleep. Mars, you keep an eye on the TV. If anything happens, yell.”
Mars, leaning against the wall with his face to the shutters, didn’t respond. Dennis wasn’t sure if Mars heard him or not, but he didn’t care. He trotted back to the family room to find Kevin.
“What’s going on? Aren’t we leaving?”
“The goddamned Sheriffs are here. They’re crawling all over the goddamned neighborhood. They got snipers out there!”
Dennis was consumed with the sudden notion that he would be assassinated. These cops would want to pay back the bastard who had wounded one of their own, and that was him. If he passed a window or showed himself in the goddamned French doors, those sniper bastards would bust a cap and put one right through his head.
Kevin, of course, made it worse by putting on the pussy face.
“What are we going to do?”
“I don’t know, Kevin! They got so many lights out there I can’t see a goddamned thing. Maybe I can see better on those televisions back there in the safety room.”
Kevin suddenly turned toward the rear of the house.
“Did you hear that?”
Dennis listened, scared shitless that SWAT killers were even now slipping into the house like a tapeworm up a cat’s ass.
“Hear what?”
“I thought I heard a bump from back there.” Dennis held his breath to listen more closely, but there was nothing.
“Asshole. Just let me know if Mars is coming. I might be with the money.”
Dennis left Kevin at the mouth of the hall, then trotted back to the master bedroom, and into the safety room.
He hadn’t checked the monitors since the sky was rimmed with red. Now he saw Mars standing by the shutters; the front entry with bullet holes in the door; and the girl tied to a chair in her upstairs room. He couldn’t see the boy, but didn’t think twice about it; Dennis searched the monitors for angles outside the house, but those views were shadowed and unreadable.
“Shit!”
He spun away from the monitors, frustrated and pissed. He jerked an armful of hangered jackets from the clothes rack and threw them at the far wall. If there was any way to get fucked, he could find it!
Dennis turned back to the monitors. He considered the buttons and switches beneath the monitors. Nothing was labeled, but he didn’t have anything to lose. If it was up, he pushed it down; if it was out, he pushed it in. Suddenly a monitor that had shown nothing but shadows on the dark side of the house filled with a lighted view. He pushed a second button, and the pool area filled with light. A third, and the side of the house by the garage was lit. He saw the cops at the front of the house pointing at the lights that suddenly blazed at them.
Dennis pushed more buttons, and the wall at the rear of the property beyond the pool was bathed in light. Two SWAT cops with rifles were climbing over the wall.
“SHIT!!!”
Dennis sprinted back through the house, shouting.
“THEY’RE COMING!!! KEV, MARS!!! THEY’RE COMING!”
Dennis raced to the French doors in the dark beyond the kitchen. He couldn’t see the cops past the blinding outside lights, but he knew they were there, and he knew they were coming.
Dennis fired two shots into the darkness, not even thinking about it, just pulling the trigger, bam bam. Two glass panes in the French doors shattered.
“The fuckin’ cops are comin’! Talley, that fuck! That lying fuck!”
Dennis thought his world was about to explode: They would fire tear gas, then crash through the doors. They were probably rushing the house right now with battering rams.
“Mars! Kev, we gotta get those kids!”
Dennis ran for the stairs, Kevin shouting behind him.
“What’re we gonna do with the kids?”
Dennis didn’t answer. He hit the stairs three at a time, going up.
THOMAS
Three minutes before Dennis Rooney saw the SWAT officers and fired two rounds, Thomas lowered himself through the ceiling into the laundry room. It was so dark that he cupped his hand over the flashlight and risked turning on the light, using the dim red glow through his fingers to pick his footing. He let himself down onto the top of the hot-water heater, felt with his toe to find the washing machine, then slid to the floor.