Traffic on the interstate was light, and we were to the other side of town in just a few minutes. Vince had to lay on the brakes pretty hard coming down the ramp. He was still doing seventy when I saw the traffic light ahead of us.
He hung a right, then took another right into the HoJo parking lot. The SUV I’d ridden in earlier was parked just beyond the doors to the lobby, and when Blondie saw us he ran over to Vince’s window. Vince powered it down.
Blondie gave his boss a room number, said if you drove up the hill and around back, it was one of the ones you could pull right up to. Vince backed up, stopped, threw it into drive, and headed up a long, winding driveway that went behind the complex. The road swung hard left and leveled out behind a row of rooms with doors that opened onto the curb.
“Here it is,” Vince said, pulling the truck into a spot.
“I want to talk to him,” I said. “Don’t do anything crazy to him.”
Vince, already out of truck, gave me a dismissive wave without looking back at me. He went up to a door, paused a moment, noticed that it was already open, and rapped on it.
“Mr. Sloan?” he said.
A few doors down, a cleaning lady who’d just wheeled her cart up to a door looked in our direction.
“Mr. Sloan!” Vince shouted, opening the door wider. “It’s the manager. We have a bit of a problem. We need to talk to you.”
I stood away from the door and the window, so if he looked out he wouldn’t see me. It was possible, if he was the man who’d been standing in front of our house that night, that he knew what I looked like.
“He gone,” the maid said, loud enough for us to hear.
“What?” Vince said.
“He just check out, a few minute ago,” she said. “I clean it next.”
“He’s gone?” I said. “For good?”
The woman nodded.
Vince opened the door wide, strode into the room. “You cannot go in there,” the maid called down to us. But even I was inclined to ignore her, and followed Vince in.
The bed was unmade, the bathroom a mess of damp towels, but there were no signs that anyone was still staying in the unit. Toiletries gone, no suitcase.
One of Vince’s henchmen, Baldy, appeared in the doorway. “Is he here?”
Vince whirled around, walked up to Baldy and threw him up against the wall. “How long ago did you guys find out he was here?”
“We called you soon as we knew.”
“Yeah? Then what? You sat in the fucking car and waited for me when you should have been keeping your eyes open? The guy’s left.”
“We didn’t know what he looked like! What were we supposed to do?”
Vince tossed Baldy aside, walked out of the room and nearly ran into the maid.
“You not supposed-” she started to say.
“How long ago?” Vince asked, taking a twenty out of his wallet and handing it to her.
She slipped it into the pocket of her uniform. “Ten minute?”
“What kind of car did he have?” I asked.
She shrugged. “I don’t know. Just a car. Brown. Dark window.”
“Did he say anything to you, say if he was heading home, anything like that?” I asked.
“He didn’t say anything to me.”
“Thanks,” Vince said to her. He tipped his head in the direction of his pickup, and we both got back in.
“Shit,” Vince said. “Shit.”
“What now?” I said. I had no idea.
Vince sat there a moment. “You need to pack?” he asked.
“Pack?”
“I think you’re going to Youngstown. You can’t get there and back in a day.”
I considered what he’d said. “If he’s checked out,” I said, “it makes sense he’s going home.”
“And even if he isn’t, looks to me like that might be the only place at the moment where you might find some answers.”
Vince reached across the car in my direction, and I recoiled for a second, thinking he was going to grab me, but he was just opening the glove box. “Jesus,” he said, “fucking relax.” He grabbed a road map, unfolded it. “Okay, let’s have a look here.” He scanned the map, looking into the upper left corner, then said, “Here it is. North of Buffalo, just north of Lewiston. Youngstown. Tiny little place. Should take us eight hours maybe.”
“Us?”
Vince attempted, briefly, to fold the map back into its original form, then shoved it, a jagged-edged paper ball, at me. “That’ll be your job. You get that back together, I might even let you do some of the driving. But don’t even think of touching the radio. That’s fucking off-limits.”
39
Looking at the map, it appeared our fastest route was to head straight north, into Massachusetts as far north as Lee, head west from there into New York State, then catch the New York Thruway up to Albany and west to Buffalo.
Our route was going to take us through Otis, which would put us within a couple of miles of the quarry where Patricia Bigge’s car had been found.
I told Vince. “You want to see?” I asked.
We’d been averaging over eighty miles per hour. Vince had a radar detector engaged. “We’re making pretty good time,” he said. “Yeah, why not?”
Even though there were no police cars marking the entrance this time, I was able to find the narrow road in. The Dodge Ram, with its greater clearance, took them a lot better than my basic sedan, and when we crested the final hill, where the woods opened up at the edge of the cliff, I thought, sitting up high in the passenger seat, that we were going to plunge over the side.
But Vince gently braked, put the truck in park, and engaged the emergency brake, which I’d never observed him do before. He got out and walked to the cliff’s edge and looked down.
“They found the car right down there,” I said, coming up alongside him and pointing.
Vince nodded, impressed. “If I was going to dump a car with a couple people inside,” he said, “I could do a lot worse than a spot like this.”
I was riding with a cobra.
No, not a cobra. A scorpion. I thought of that old American Indian folktale about the frog and scorpion, the one where the frog agrees to help the scorpion across the river if it promises not to sting him with its poisonous venom. The scorpion agrees, then halfway across, even though it means he, too, will perish, he plunges his stinger into the frog. The frog, dying, asks, “Why did you do this?” And the scorpion replies, “Because I am a scorpion, and it is my nature.”
At what point, I wondered, might Vince sting me?
If he did, I couldn’t imagine it would be like with the frog and the scorpion. Vince struck me as much more of a survivor.
Once we neared the Mass Pike, and the little bars on my phone started reappearing, I tried Cynthia again. When there was no answer on her cell, I tried home, but without any real expectation that she would be there.
She was not.
Maybe it was just as well that I couldn’t reach her. I’d rather call her when I had real news, and maybe, after we’d reached Youngstown, I’d have some.
I was about to put the phone away when it rang in my hand. I jumped.
“Hello?” I said.
“Terry.” It was Rolly.
“Hi,” I said.
“Heard anything from Cynthia?”
“I spoke to her before I left, but she didn’t tell me where she was. But she and Grace sounded okay.”
“Before you left? Where are you?”
“We’re just about to get on the Mass Turnpike, at Lee. We’re on our way to Buffalo. Actually, a bit north of there.”
“We?”
“It’s a long story, Rolly. And it seems to be getting longer and longer.”
“Where are you going?” He sounded genuinely concerned.
“Maybe on a wild-goose chase,” I said. “But there’s a chance I may have found Cynthia’s family.”