At random, she picked Hank Nance, the driver who was wanted for failure to pay child support.
“Yo,” he said, answering her call.
“Mr. Nance? My name is Casey Jones. I was wondering if I could talk to you about—”
The line hummed in her ear. She dialed again, wondering if Randy or Owen had warned him off, or if he thought she was someone who had hunted him down for the money he owed. This time he didn’t answer, and she went straight through to voice mail. She left a brief message saying she wanted to talk with him about Class A Trucking, and that if he didn’t call her back, she’d be in touch.
She tried Sandy Greene next.
“Listen, lady,” he said. “I’m not going to talk to you, and you better not call me again, or you’ll be sorry.”
Lovely.
John Simones had a different attitude, but the message was the same. “I’m sorry,” he said. “I really don’t know what to tell you. I can’t…please, don’t call me anymore.” And he hung up, too.
Casey sat back, letting her head fall against the corn, feeling the prickly stalk against her scalp. These people were scared. Scared to talk to her—to even answer their phones.
She only had one more number to call. Mick and Wendy Halveston. The couple in the photos. The driver who had killed an entire family when he’d overturned his truck. Casey hoped she’d be able to keep her feelings in check when she talked with them. She dialed. The phone rang until clicking into voice mail, and Casey sighed. Should she leave a message? No. It would just give them a chance to be warned of her call.
She let her hand fall against her shin, her arms wrapped around her knees. She’d pretty much just blown that whole angle.
The Bugs Bunny theme filled the air. The number displayed on the phone was the same one she’d just called.
“Hello?”
Silence.
“Hello? Is someone there?” Casey wondered if the call had been dropped.
“Um, hello?” A woman’s voice, quiet and shaking. “This is…this is Wendy Halveston. Someone from this number just called?”
“Yes. Hi. My name is Casey Jones. I was wondering if I might talk to you about Class A Tr—”
“Not here,” Wendy said.
“Okay, then where—”
“Tomorrow morning. The public library, in the reference section. Nine o’clock. I’ll be waiting.” She was gone.
Casey blinked, wondering what had just happened. These drivers were scared, and Wendy Halveston—she was scared, too. But something made her willing to talk.
Casey hoped she wouldn’t change her mind by morning.
Chapter Twenty-One
Casey set the alarm on Terry’s phone for a half hour and lay down to take a nap. She wanted to be sharp at the midnight meeting with Westing and whomever else he brought along. She awoke semi-refreshed, turned off the phone, and stood up to do some stretches.
“It’s not even dark yet,” Death said, strumming a guitar.
“I want plenty of time to get set up.”
Death played a few more chords. “Set up for what?”
“You don’t really think I’m going to just waltz in there expecting Randy to be alone and congenial?”
“Well, no.”
“Good. You’re not as dumb as you look.”
Death made a hurt face. “But I try so hard.”
“To be dumb or look smart?”
Death shrugged. “Either one.”
Casey snorted and made her way through the cornstalks to the road.
“So what’s the plan?” Death stayed one row in, while Casey walked on the pavement. The corn didn’t even rustle. “What are we going to do?”
“I am going to check out my options.”
“Are you going to beat them all up?” Death sounded hopeful.
“I don’t plan on beating anyone up.”
“Too bad.”
Casey took a detour and found the grove of trees where she and Death had rested after running from Davey’s. The field around it had been harvested, so there should be no one coming anywhere near. She moved a largish rock, dug out a hollow underneath it, and laid the bag with Evan’s papers on the ground. When she put the rock back and ran a stick over the dirt there was no sign that it had ever been moved.
Satisfied, Casey looked for traffic and headed toward town. The grocery store was easy to find, sitting all alone on the edge of a residential neighborhood. Casey watched from behind a Dumpster as customers walked in and out the front doors, lugging bags or having their bags lugged by store employees.
“Nice little store,” Death said. “Very hometown-y.”
“It’s probably owned by a local family. Definitely not a chain.” The lights in the parking lot had come on, triggered by the fading evening light. “I don’t see any of Randy and Owen’s guys. Either they’re not here yet or they’re in hiding.”
“They’re not that good.”
“I agree. If they were here, I’d see them.”
“Why do you do that?”
“Do what?”
“Speak like I’m not here. You said you’d see them. Not that we’d see them.”
“Am I hurting your feelings?”
“Yes.”
Casey smiled. “Good.”
Death turned away. Casey took the opportunity to slip across the parking lot toward the back of the store. It would be darker back there. Instead of lights on poles there were security floods on the sides of the buildings. They weren’t yet on, so Casey figured they were either motion sensors, or were turned on and off from a switch. A bread truck sat at the loading dock and two men worked at unloading the pallets. Besides that, there were nine cars—probably belonging to employees—and one semi trailer, sitting without a cab. Casey waited until the bread truck was empty, one man had signed a form, and the other had gotten into the truck and driven off. When the store employee went back inside and the lot was still, Casey snuck over to the back of the trailer. It was open.
“Empty,” Death said. “Wonder what was in it?”
“Nothing for quite a while.” She swiped her finger on the trailer’s bed and it came away dirty. “This lot’s just a convenient place to leave something this big.” She eyed it. “And I think it will be perfect.”
“For what?”
In response, Casey walked to the front of the trailer and jumped up onto the hitch. Using the metals pieces meant for holding cables, she climbed up and perched on the roof.
“You’re going to jump on them?” Death asked.
“Shh.”
An employee came out the back door and leaned against the building, pulling out a cigarette.
“You know she can’t hear me,” Death said.
Casey hoped not.
Death wandered toward the woman, who had placed the cigarette between her lips and pulled out her lighter. She flicked on a flame and held it to the cigarette.
Death blew it out.
The woman flicked it once more, and once more Death extinguished it, giggling.
Again and again the woman tried, until she finally threw the lighter onto the parking lot and stormed into the building.
“You’re cruel,” Casey said.
“I would’ve thought you’d be glad of my intervention. Because of me she will live a few minutes longer, having not had that cigarette.”
The door slapped open and the woman came back out, this time with a pack of matches. She struck the match. Death grinned, and blew out the flame.
The woman practically screamed with frustration, and lit one match after another, turning this way and that to avoid whatever draft she thought she was catching, until there was only one match left. With trembling fingers, she lit the match and held it up. Death leaned forward, lips pursed. The woman waited, then sucked in on her cigarette until the tip glowed orange. She crowed with triumph and exhaled happily.
Death put an arm around her shoulders. “Perhaps I’ll be seeing you soon, sweetheart.”