“You in charge of the Women’s Light bombing investigation?” Carver asked. He still couldn’t quite believe it.
“Sure am. I’ve got my agents looking at all the leads, investigating the hell out of everything. Seems I’ve got you investigating, too.”
“I’ve got a personal interest.”
“Uh-huh, I understand. Something you need to understand is that you best stay out of the bureau’s way. As much as you can, that is. And when and if you find out anything pertinent, you get the information to us pronto. To me personally if at all possible.” He handed Carver a card. It was embossed in gold. Very official and meant to be impressive, very like the bureau Carver knew.
“What about doing this in both directions?” Carver asked. “Will you share information with me?”
“Hell, you’re a private citizen. I can’t confide in you about bureau business.” Wicker’s face broke down into its creased smile again. “Except maybe in a very general way, if conditions warrant it, if the planets are in proper alignment.”
“Just your occasional opinion, maybe?” Carver said.
Wicker peered up at the darkening sky, possibly at the planets, then back down. “Maybe. Now and again.”
“Do you think Norton did the bombing on his own?”
“That I honest to God don’t know. In that respect, you and I are sniffing along the same trail. That’s why you need to tread careful and make sure everything’s above board. I wouldn’t want to see you get in trouble. Even more so, I wouldn’t want to see you cause trouble.”
“When are you going to question Beth Jackson?”
“Oh, real soon. It’s not for you or her to worry about though. She’s a victim, not a suspect.”
“She can’t tell you much,” Carver said. “She walked inside and got blown back outside.”
“We’ll let her tell it, make it official.” Wicker grinned and turned slightly to face in the direction of the sea, as if to luxuriate in the cool ocean breeze that came with the evening. When he looked at Carver, it was with a slight sideways tilt of his head. “We know about you, how you were an Orlando cop, got the bad luck and the bad leg and a pension. Went private, stayed honest. Making out okay most of the time.”
“That’s me on a postcard,” Carver said.
“You witnessed the clinic explosion.”
“From some distance. I was sitting in my parked car half a block away.”
“What did you see?”
“Not much. Beth walked in, right behind another woman, then the bomb went off.”
“Were the demonstrators a proper distance away from the clinic?”
“Yeah. Maybe because they knew the bomb was going to blow.”
“Did you see anyone run out from behind the building?”
“I think I glimpsed someone, carrying a sign. But there was so much confusion and running around after the bomb went off, I can’t be sure, much less if whoever I might have seen was Norton. I was concentrating on Beth, trying to put together in my mind what had just happened, figure it out.”
“Maybe there is no way to figure it out,” Wicker said. “At least figure it all the way so everything makes sense. Crazy bastards might not really know themselves why they do things like that.”
“I don’t think anyone really knows why they do anything. They only think they know, if they think about it at all.”
Wicker ran his tongue around the inside of his cheek for a few seconds, considering that somewhat nihilistic philosophy. “That’s a fact. But it’s up to people like us to tell them why, when what they do is a crime. What’s your take on the locals?”
Carver knew he meant the police, not the average Del Moray citizen. “They’re mostly okay. Some rotten wood here and there.”
“Like Lieutenant McGregor?”
“Just like.”
“Local law resents the bureau moving in on them, usually. They got a nickname for us they use behind our backs: feebs, they call us. You know that?”
“I’ve heard,” Carver said.
“Abortion clinic bombing’s a federal offense, though, so they got to learn to get along with us. Even your Lieutenant McGregor.”
“Not my lieutenant. If he were mine I’d have a vet put him down.”
“He didn’t have many kind words for you, either,” Wicker said. “Doesn’t matter. We got a line on both of you real fast. It’s true McGregor’s no good.”
“Worse than no good.”
“Still, nothing can be pinned on him. He’s a real artist at covering his ass. And this is your town and he’s the local law, so you’ve gotta stay legal with him, play along and follow the script. Just like we do.”
“He knows that, takes advantage of it.”
“Oh, I’m sure he does. And he sort of sees himself in competition with us to solve this case, either prove it was Norton or prove it wasn’t and catch whoever did it.”
“Or whoever hired Norton or gave him orders.”
“Exactly,” Wicker said. “Anyway, in a sense McGregor’s right about competition. It’s not a bad thing through and through. It tends to keep people concentrating on the job, gets it all done faster and closes the book on a case.”
“Competition’s a good thing,” Carver agreed. “I’m thinking of baseball, football, basketball players, how it makes them and the team better.”
“Not thinking of FBI agents and local police lieutenants?”
“Yeah, as long as the competition doesn’t get in the way of cooperation.”
“Uh-huh. Like you cooperate with Lieutenant McGregor?”
Carver had gleaned Wicker’s angle. “Don’t you want me to keep cooperating with him, Special Agent Wicker?”
“Oh, I sure do. The question is, how fast? I mean, you got this piece of maybe important information, say. You’re gonna give it to both of us, but how soon and in what order? You understand?”
“I think so. You want to win this competition.”
“I want the bureau to know all about whatever and whoever was behind this bombing, and I want the bureau to make the arrests.”
“If there are going to be more arrests,” Carver said.
“I think there will be. I’ve heard tapes of Norton’s interrogation. He’s not what you’d describe as the mastermind type. He’s hung up on God, pickup truck, family, flag, in whatever order. That kind of guy.”
“God way out in front, I imagine,” Carver said.
“His idea of God, anyway. Angry old man with a white beard, hurling lightning bolts down at folks who don’t share Norton’s views.”
“Has he got a lot of views?”
“Uh-huh. And about a lot of things. Government conspiracies, the United Nations, bar codes, secret world governments, gun control, the Trilateral Commission, bankers of a certain ethnicity plotting to control the world’s economy, the Internal Revenue Service’s secret agenda, covert NATO operations meant to destabilize Europe so arms manufacturers can make a fortune, the murders of Marilyn Monroe, Vincent Foster, Elvis . . . the usual list. He’s a fool for talk radio.”
“Think he might be right about just a few of those things?” Carver asked.
Wicker stuffed his hands in his pockets and shrugged. “Elvis, maybe.”
Carver slid Wicker’s card into his shirt pocket. “Okay, you feebs are first on my list. Mostly because I hate McGregor.”
“Fine,” Wicker said. “I like the folks I’m involved with to know exactly where they stand. That was the real purpose of this conversation-so you’d know.”
“I’ve known from the beginning where I stand,” Carver said. “I’m in the middle.”
12
There wasMcGregor. His feet, anyway.
As Carver got out of the Olds and limped toward the cottage, he saw what had to be the soles of McGregor’s huge wing-tip shoes propped up on the porch rail. They weren’t simply long shoes, they were wide. Size fourteen double-E, McGregor had once bragged to Carver. Good for kicking ass, he’d pointed out.