After that he set the vial in front of her face and left her alone for some time. She waited in terror, certain that he'd continue the torture and leave her dead in this forsaken spot.
But he closed the trunk's lid, drove back to where he'd found her, and left her lying hidden behind the hedge. Before much longer, she was able to move again. She managed to get to her inn. Next morning she went back to the husband who'd had this done to her and swore she'd never leave him again.
Laurie uncapped the brandy bottle and tipped it high, draining it. The glisten in her eyes spilled out onto her cheeks. I pulled off the road into one of the bleak fields and held her, wishing to Christ I'd known that story earlier today when Madbird and I had taken John Doe into the woods.
45
We drove on south to Great Falls, stopping at a big Safeway emporium to buy a gourmet picnic of fresh sourdough bread, pate, cheeses, and wine; and then at a liquor store where I replaced the bottle of Knob Creek bourbon I'd given Doug Wills. My pocket was fat with the roll of hundred-dollar bills that Madbird had given me, and I didn't see any reason to save for the future.
Then we went looking for a room. Great Falls was a fair-size place, with more than twice the population of Helena and plenty of motels. I didn't want to risk using my ID, but I was sure that a woman like Laurie, flashing fifty thousand dollars worth of jewelry, could float a story about losing her purse but having enough cash to pay for the night. The first place she tried, a new-looking Best Western on the Tenth Avenue strip, was happy to oblige. She registered under a phony name and let me in through a back entrance.
She ran a bath while I poured drinks, sauvignon blanc for her, whiskey on the rocks for me. When I took the wine to her, she was just stepping into the steaming tub. She knelt slowly, holding the sides, then sat back and slid forward up to her neck, with a little "oof." She accepted the glass with a radiant smile. I lingered for another moment. There was something very special about watching a lovely woman luxuriate in a bathtub. I hadn't done it in a long time. It was worth the wait.
After she was done we got into the smorgasbord. We'd eaten sandwiches from a convenience store earlier in the day, but we were plenty hungry again, the food was delicious, and we pretty well demolished it. Then I took a shower and shaved, savoring yet another pleasure of hot water and feeling clean.
When I came out, she was sitting up in bed, looking solemn.
"She loved horses, too," Laurie said.
Her eerie revelation about Celia last night had been swirling around in my head with all the other craziness. The only explanation I could come up with was that my overheated brain had given Laurie's words a meaning that wasn't really there.
But goddammit, she was starting again.
"A lot of people do," I said.
"I mean in a special way. She could feel them-their pain."
"I'm not sure what you mean. No horse she was around ever got mistreated."
"Maybe not outright. But we geld the males, force the females to breed with strangers, take away their children."
I'd never thought of it like that.
"They loved her back," Laurie said. "They wouldn't have hurt her."
I blinked. This was getting less imaginary.
"How do you know she got hurt?" I said.
"I just do."
"Do you know how?"
Hesitantly, she said, "There was a stallion."
That flat startled me. It was a stallion that supposedly had thrown and killed Celia.
"You said a horse wouldn't have hurt her."
Laurie shook her head, confused now. "It's gone from my mind. It was there for just a second, and it seemed right. No to a horse, yes to a stallion."
I sat on the bed beside her. I still couldn't believe this was anything but crazy, but I couldn't stop a tickle of wondering if I'd been maligning Pete Pettyjohn all these years.
Her face softened and she relaxed against the pillows, turning on her side toward me.
"Do you want her again?" she said.
"I want you," I said, but in truth, I was talking to her and Celia both.
46
I was falling into the sleep that my whole being craved, soothed by the good bed and the comfort of the woman beside me. Her fingernails stroked my chest, sending me into near rapture. But then they started digging in, harder and harder until I opened my eyes.
"We can't rest yet," she said. She was propped up on an elbow, watching me.
"We can't?" I said groggily.
"I've been hopeless for so long, Hugh. But I feel like you've given me a new chance."
That was sweet to hear, but I couldn't see that I'd done much to earn it. When she'd yelled at me about jerking off, she was right. My scenario might have enough meat by now to get the cops interested, but the danger from Balcomb hadn't changed. He was probably already working on a replacement for John Doe. I'd been clinging to this dream time with her, holding off the snarling black dog of reality. But she was right about that, too-we couldn't just hide out and wish it away.
But all I could see was the same wearying labyrinth of dead ends.
"I was hoping I'd have something smart by now, but I don't," I admitted.
Her fingers returned to their light delicious teasing.
"You know there's only one real answer," she murmured.
I did-killing Wesley Balcomb.
The thought came instantly and naturally, without any element of shock. I realized that Laurie was only voicing aloud what had been growing in my mind all along.
But while I'd turned over many plans during the day's driving, I hadn't come up with any that weren't risky as hell. Right off came the problem of getting physically close without alerting him. Then there was the near certainty of getting caught. Rationally, I knew that spending my life in prison was preferable to both her and me being dead, but I still couldn't bring myself to accept it.
"I'd do it," I said. "I just can't see a good way."
"Maybe I can help."
I waited, not expecting much. Suggestions were cheap.
"That rifle is Kirk's, right?" she said.
"Yeah?"
"But nobody knows you have it. I mean, the police would never find out."
I ticked off the chain of ownership in my head. Balcomb had given the rifle secretly to John Doe, to plant the suspicion that Kirk had murdered me. For either of them to admit that would incriminate them. Laurie, Madbird, and I were the only others who knew what had happened to it.
"Probably not," I said.
"Wesley's a night owl. He's in and out of his office all the time, checking business on his computer. There are windows around the desk."
That got my full attention. I sat up.
"You drop the rifle like you panicked, and you hurry back here," she said. "The drive's not long, is it?"
"An hour and change."
"So it'll still be night. Nobody will see you. And I'll swear you were with me the whole time." Her fingers kept moving, making slow circles on my chest. "They'll find Kirk's rifle and think it was him. You'll have an airtight alibi. I'll have money again, so if there's any trouble, we'll hire the best lawyers in the country."
I had no trouble understanding her wanting Balcomb dead. Still, I was impressed at how much thought she'd given it.
"You think he'll be checking his computer, with everything else that's going on?" I said.
"He's compulsive about it. He'd do it if there was a mushroom cloud on the horizon."
"How would I get inside that fence?"
"I don't think you'd have to. It's not that far from the house."