A flatbed truck exited the two-lane road leading into the mill. It rumbled past, carrying a load of colossal beams destined for a construction site somewhere in the city.
Jake reached into the backseat for a pair of binoculars and trained them on the sidewalk running down one side of the long street. A few pedestrians trod the concrete walkway. Some were workers, swinging a lunch box or paper sack, on their way to the afternoon shift at the mill. Others perhaps were out for a stroll, or heading to a neighbor’s house to enjoy a cup of coffee and an afternoon of gossip.
He wound down his window, moved his glasses to the left, and gazed past a house to the adjoining property behind it, focusing on the rear of the Thorburn residence. Through the powerful lenses, he saw the rosebushes lining the back wall of the dwelling.
He scanned the neighborhood in all directions, training the glasses on anything that stirred, then turned back to the Thorburn house.
Leaning forward, he squinted through the lenses. Something moved. He sharpened the focus. The rear basement window swung open and Jake held his breath.
It could be Adam.
A figure squirmed from the window and stood, a grocery bag in one hand. Jake focused his binoculars on the face. It was Adam, no doubt.
He watched the figure stoop in front of a rosebush a moment, then stand, lope across the rear of the house, and disappear from view.
Jake tossed the binoculars onto the passenger seat, and the Firebird roared to life when he turned the key. The wheels spun on the soft shoulder, then caught on the asphalt as he swung the vehicle into a sharp U-turn.
He rounded the block, headed to Mill Street, and turned quietly onto the road. He continued at an idle, keeping a close eye out for the fugitive.
Adam was nowhere in sight.
He drove the entire block, scanning the sidewalks and properties until he reached the intersection, and then turned right and headed back to Steel Road.
His quarry had cut through a neighbor’s property and was now approaching the sidewalk, the grocery bag swinging in one hand. Still two hundred feet away, Jake touched the gas and the car surged ahead.
Adam moved into the street, took a few steps, and stopped halfway across. He turned his head and froze a moment, staring at the car bearing down on him. Then the fugitive leaped into a run, crossed the street, and dashed toward the steel mill as Jake ground the Firebird to a stop on the shoulder and jumped out.
He charged ahead, his long legs cutting across the gravel and weeds. Adam approached one of the many ancillary buildings that dotted the property and disappeared behind it. Jake followed, spun around behind the structure, and stopped. Adam wasn’t in sight. He could be hiding behind any of the buildings, maybe inside, or long gone.
Jake glanced around and listened for sounds of his quarry, straining to hear above the constant whine of machinery, rhythmic thumping, and screeches of metal on metal that came from the main building close by.
There were dozens of places to hide and scores of paths to freedom. Jake circled the nearby buildings, scouring the area, then continued toward the back of the property and approached a set of railroad tracks.
The engine of a powerful locomotive labored under a heavy load as it moved gradually forward, screeching in Jake’s direction. He stepped across the tracks and looked in both directions as the train lumbered past.
A crash sounded a distance away when a crane dropped a load of scrap onto a stockpile, soon to be turned into molten metal.
Jake ran forward, his feet crunching on the gravel yard as he raced toward the rear of the property. The sounds of the mill lessened, becoming background noise, white noise, as he moved further away.
He stopped at a chain-link fence, ten feet high and barbed at the top, designed to keep the curious from wandering into danger. This was the absolute edge of the city. An empty field lay beyond, unused and overgrown, and a mile further on, a dark line of trees could be seen.
Then on the other side of the fence, fifty feet away, Adam was plodding up the fence line, his head down as he moved toward Jake. He had made it around or through the fence and appeared to be circling back.
Jake glanced up. There was no way to climb over; the barbs at the top would stop him. He crouched down and waited. Adam still came, now twenty feet away.
Five feet away, the fugitive panted from the exertion of the chase, his breathing labored. So close, but out of reach.
Jake stood. “Adam Thorburn.”
The fugitive stopped quick, his mouth open, staring wide-eyed through the links of the fence. He turned suddenly, ready to run, then stopped and spun back, his brow furrowed. He glared at Jake and spoke cautiously, his eyes narrowed. “What do you want?”
Jake studied the young man’s face. He didn’t look like a vicious killer, but Jake knew from past experience, looks can be deceiving.
“Why’re you chasing me?” Adam asked with a puzzled frown.
“The police would like to talk to you.”
Adam scowled. “I have no wish to talk to them.”
“You can’t run forever, Adam,” Jake said.
“How do you know my name?”
“I’ve been looking for you. I want to help you.”
Adam laughed. “I doubt that.” His face sobered. “Nobody can help me. You must know that.”
“Give yourself up and you’ll see.”
“Never.” Adam tucked his hands into his pockets, the handle of the bag looped over his wrist. He raised his chin, his face darkening. “I know what would happen to me if I did.”
Jake looked at the man who had killed in cold blood, not once, but twice, now defiant, desperate, and on the verge of running.
“I know you killed Nina White by accident,” Jake said. “It wasn’t your fault.”
Panic gripped Adam’s face. “Nina White? Mrs. White, the counselor at school?”
Jake nodded.
Adam seemed confused and took a step back. He opened his mouth to speak but no words came out. Then he took a deep breath and looked away. In a moment, he looked back, pain in his eyes. “I wouldn’t hurt her. She was the only one who helped me. She believed in me when no one else did.”
Jake tried one last plea. “That’s why you need to surrender. We can get this all straightened out.”
Adam’s lips tightened and he shook his head adamantly.
Jake reached into his shirt pocket and removed a business card, tucking it through the fence. “Take my card. You can call me anytime.”
Adam kept his eyes on Jake as he reached out carefully and snatched the card. He glanced at it and frowned. “You came to see my mother,” he said, his eyes narrowed with suspicion.
“Yes, we did. She wants us to help you.”
“Now I know you’re lying. She would’ve left me a note and told me that if you only wanted to help.” He took a step back and flipped the card through the air. It fell behind a tall weed. Adam turned, took a step, then glanced back. “Don’t try to find me anymore. You never will. I’m heading west where you can never catch me.”
As Adam jogged away, Jake ran along the fence, keeping pace with the fugitive. Before long, the fence stopped abruptly at a building, too high to scale, and too expansive to run around.
Jake watched helplessly as Adam disappeared into the distance. It was hopeless to give chase now; the man would soon be long gone.
Chapter 27
Wednesday, 2:55 p.m.
ANNIE’S CELL PHONE sounded, notifying her of a text message. It was Jake. He missed her and was on his way home. The message continued: “Have interesting news. Called Hank to drop by.”
She pushed aside her notes and sat back in her swivel chair. It made sense to her, since Adam had killed a second person yesterday, that he was still in the area and wouldn’t be leaving anytime soon. That gave them a better chance of catching him, but it also meant the killings might continue.