“What the fuck are you doing?”
Mars answered as he lit another candle.
“They might cut the power. Here, take this.”
He stopped with the candles long enough to toss a flashlight to Dennis. It was the one from the kitchen utility drawer. He tossed a second to Kevin, who dropped it.
Dennis turned on the light, then turned it off.
“Those candles are a good idea.”
Soon, the office looked like an altar.
Thomas watched Dennis. Dennis seemed inside himself, following Mars with a kind of watchful wariness, as if Mars held something over him that he was trying to figure out. Thomas hated them all, thinking that if he only had the gun he could kill them, Mars with the candles, Dennis with his eyes on Mars, Kevin staring at Dennis, none of them looking at him, pull out the gun and shoot every one of them, bangbangbang.
Dennis suddenly said, “We should stack pots and pans under the windows in case they try to sneak in, things that will fall, so we’ll hear.”
Mars grunted.
“Mars, when you’re back there, do that, okay? Set up some booby traps.”
Jennifer said, “What about my father?”
“Jesus, not that again. Christ.”
Her voice rose.
“He needs a doctor, you asshole!”
“Kevin, take’m back upstairs. Please.”
Thomas didn’t care. That was what he wanted.
“Do you want me to tie them again?”
Dennis started to answer, then squinched his face, thinking.
“It took too long to cut all that shit off, you and Mars tying them like a couple of fuckin’ mummies. Just make sure they’re locked in real good, not just with the nails.”
Mars finished with the candles.
“I can take care of that. Bring them up.”
Kevin brought them, holding Jennifer’s arm, almost having to drag her, but Thomas walking in front, anxious to get back to his room though he tried to hide it. They waited at the top of the stairs until Mars rejoined them, now with a hammer and screwdriver. He trudged up the steps, thump thump thump, with the slow inevitability of a rising freight elevator, dark and dirty. Mars led them to Thomas’s room first, the end of the hall. It was spooky without light.
“Get in there, fat boy. Pull your covers over your head.”
Mars pushed him inside hard, then knelt by the knob, the one Thomas would use to get out. He hammered the screwdriver under the base, popped it off, unfastened three screws, then pulled the knob free, leaving only a square hole. He looked at Jennifer then, no one else, Jennifer.
“You see? That’s how you keep a child in its room.”
They left Thomas like that, pulling the door, then hammering the door closed. Thomas listened until he heard the crash of Jennifer’s knob coming free and her door being nailed, and then he scrambled for his closet. He was thinking only of the gun, but as soon as he turned on his flashlight he saw Jennifer’s purse. He had dropped it just inside the hatch when he scrambled back into the room. He clawed it open and upended it.
Out fell her cell phone.
10
Friday, 8:32 P.M.
Palm Springs, California
SONNY BENZA
The three of them had Glen Howell on the speaker, Benza, Tuzee, and Salvetti, the TVs muted so they could hear. Benza, on his third pack of Gaviscom, nursed an upset stomach, his acid reflux acting up.
Howell, his voice crackling with the shitty cell connection, sitting in his car somewhere in the dark, said, “He’s got a wife and kid, a daughter. They’re divorced or separated or something. The wife and kid live down in LA, but he sees the kid every two weeks or something.”
Tuzee, his face pasty beneath the tan, looking like a corpse from the strain, rubbed irritably at his face and interrupted.
“Stop it.”
“What?”
“Stop with the ‘or something.’ Don’t end every sentence with ‘or something.’ It’s pissing me off. You’ve got a college education.”
Benza reached out, patted Tuzee’s leg, but didn’t say anything.
Tuzee had his face in his hands, the flesh folded around his fingers like a man twice his age.
“He either sees them every two weeks or he doesn’t; it’s either a fact or it isn’t. Find out the fucking facts before you call us.”
The connection popped and hissed, a background roar.
“Sorry.”
“Keep going.”
“He’s seeing them this weekend. The wife is bringing up the daughter.”
Benza cleared his throat, phlegm from the Gaviscom.
“And you know this to be a fact?”
“Book it. We got that from his office, an older woman there who likes to talk, you know, how sad it is and all because the Chief’s such a nice man.”
“Where are they now, the family I mean?”
“That, I don’t know. I got people on that. They’re due up tonight, though. That part I know for sure.”
Benza nodded.
“We’ve gotta think about this.”
Salvetti had already made up his mind. He leaned back, crossed his arms, his legs splayed and open.
“That shit just happened, that was too close. We’ve gotta move.”
“You mean the Sheriffs?”
“Yeah.”
“Yeah, that was close.”
They were silent for a time, each man lost in his own thoughts. Benza had dialed up Howell as soon as he saw the Sheriffs rolling into the neighborhood. Then, when the TV reported that shots were fired, he damn near tossed his soup, thinking this was it, SWAT was going in and they were cooked.
Howell said, “There’s more.”
“Okay.”
“They’re looking into the building permits.”
“Why the fuck?”
“Something like this happens, some asshole barricades himself in a building, they want the floor plans. So now they’re trying to find the people who built the house so they can get the plans.”
“Shit.”
Benza sighed and leaned back. Tuzee glanced at him, shaking his head. Benza owned the construction companies that built the house and installed the security systems. He didn’t like where this was going. He stood.
“I’m going to walk, so if you can’t hear me just say, okay?”
“Sure, Sonny.”
“First thing first. Our records. I’m looking at this house on the TV right now. There’s a ring of cops around it like they’re about to hit the beach at Normandy, but let me ask you something.”
“Okay.”
“Could we get our people in there?”
“In the house?”
“Yeah, in the house. Right now, right in front of the cops, the TV cameras, everything; get a couple guys inside the house?”
“No. I’ve got good people, Sonny, the best, but we can’t get in right now. Not the way it stands now. We’d have to own the cops to do that. You give me a day, two days, I could probably do it.”
Benza, irritated, glowered at the televisions, two pictures, one showing the house with a bunch of SWAT cops out front, the other some blonde dyke being interviewed, short hair slicked back, dressed like a man.
“Could we get close? Now. Not owning the cops, but now.”
Howell thought about it.
“Okay, look, I don’t have a TV. I’m not seeing what you’re seeing right now, okay? But I know Smith’s house and I’m familiar with the neighborhood, so I’m going to say yeah. We could probably get close.”
Benza looked at Tuzee and Salvetti.
“How about we burn it down? Right now, tonight. Get some guys in there with some accelerant, everybody’s gonna know it’s arson so who gives a shit what, torch the place, burn it to the ground.”
He spread his hands, looking at them, hopeful.
Salvetti shrugged, unimpressed.
“No way to know the disks would be destroyed. Not for sure. I promise you this, if Smith has any of that stuff in his security room, it isn’t gonna burn. Then we’re fucked.”
Benza stared at the floor, ashamed of himself, thinking what a stupid idea, burn the place.
Tuzee leaned back now, crossing his arms, stared at the ceiling.