Huey had fired his salvo.
He just wondered what McClellan and Eastland were planning.
His plan to spook them might just have backfired.
Big-time.
Chapter 64
Gone?”
Jamison stared across at Decker at their table in the motel’s dining room.
Decker nodded. Mars was beside him.
“It’s Huey’s doing.” Decker glanced at Mars. “Tell her about last night.”
Mars took a few minutes to fill her in.
When he’d finished she said, “Okay, so Roy’s not going to help us. The FBI’s been knocked off the case. We have no proof of anything. Which means we’re right now in the lion’s den with no cover.”
“You want to get out of town?” asked Decker.
“I don’t know. What do you want to do? And don’t say find the truth, because that one I get. I’m talking about what do we do today, right this very minute, in fact. And staying alive might be a good goal.”
Mars said, “She’s making sense.”
Decker said, “If we can only find what Roy has.” His face suddenly brightened. “Melvin, where is your mother buried?”
“She’s not. She was cremated, her ashes were scattered.”
“You know this for a fact?”
“I was there, Decker. I scattered them. This happened before I was arrested. I did the same with my da— well, with the guy I thought was my dad. But of course we know it wasn’t him. It was ashes of the guy he killed.”
Mars fell silent and looked down at his plate. He hadn’t touched any of his food.
Decker rubbed his chin while Jamison watched him.
“Well, you guys look cheery.”
They watched as Mary Oliver walked toward them pulling a rolling suitcase. She sat down in the fourth chair and wearily rubbed her face.
“Left before the crack of dawn. Three connections later, here I am... Obviously, haven’t even checked into my room yet.” She looked around. “Where’s Agent Bogart?”
“He and his team have been recalled to Washington,” replied Jamison.
“Not again. Are you joking?”
Jamison shook her head. “I wish I were.”
“Any news on Davenport?” asked Oliver.
Decker answered. “No ransom demand, no nothing.”
Oliver grabbed a piece of toast from the stack on a plate in the middle of the table and started buttering it. “Sorry, they didn’t even have peanuts on any of the flights. And all the planes were like the size of my car, by the way.” She bit into the toast and sighed.
Mars said nervously, “How’s it going on the legal end?”
She looked at him sympathetically. “I don’t think you have to worry about that, Melvin. From what I can tell the prosecutors in Texas have decided that you are a pit of vipers that they don’t want to go near. At least right now. If they were going to try anything I would have had to have been notified.”
He breathed a sigh of relief. “Well, that’s something good at least.”
Oliver studied him. “Melvin, what’s wrong?”
He glanced up at her. “What do you mean?”
“I’ve been around you long enough to know your moods. Something’s bothering you.”
Jamison said, “He got a visit last night from his father.”
“Only he’s not my father.”
Oliver choked on her toast. “What?”
Mars took a few minutes to explain.
Oliver looked stricken. “My God. I never would have thought... I mean.” She touched Mars’s hand. “That’s awful.”
Decker said, “And it also means Roy has no incentive to help us.”
“But wait a minute. I need to get filled in. What have you discovered so far?”
Mars and Jamison looked at Decker. He cleared his throat. “We have some persons of interest. We have no proof against them.”
“Who are they?”
“The police chief of this town, for starters,” said Jamison. “Roger McClellan.”
“The police chief! Wait a minute. What crimes exactly are we talking about?”
“Bombings in the 1960s,” answered Jamison.
Oliver looked bewildered. “You have totally lost me. Bombings?”
Decker said, “We followed some leads. We learned some things. But we still need proof.”
The waitress came over and asked Oliver if she wanted some coffee. She said, “Yes, and make it extra strong.”
The waitress smiled and picked up the cup in front of Oliver. “Let me just swap this out, hon, it’s dirty.”
“Thanks.”
Decker flinched like he’d been slapped. He mouthed one word: Swap.
Oliver turned back to Decker, who instantly refocused. “Do you think you can get the proof?”
“We have some avenues to get there. But it won’t be easy.”
The waitress came back and poured out fresh coffee for Oliver and everyone else. After she left Oliver said, “What can I do to help? If it’s legal issues, I can definitely provide assistance.”
Decker nodded. “Thanks. It may very well come to that.”
Jamison added, “The key will be to find what was in Roy Mars’s safe deposit box. We think that will be more than enough proof.”
Oliver said, “And since he met with Melvin, we know he’s nearby.”
“He was nearby,” corrected Decker. “He could be a long way away by now. Particularly if he got on a plane.”
Mars looked at the others. “I’m not sure we should pursue this.”
They all looked at him.
Oliver said, “Melvin, we have to.”
“Why? To correct the wrongs of the past? By my count a mother has been killed and her son left as an orphan because of our investigation. The guy I thought was my father is a stone-cold killer. My mother was dying of brain cancer before he blew her head off. Decker, Milligan, and me almost died in a fire set by these assholes. And these crimes from the sixties? I’m not saying I don’t want to nail the bastards responsible, but at what price? Are you going to get killed next, Mary? Or Alex? Or Decker?”
Decker said, “We all signed on for this.”
“Well, I didn’t. I think maybe I need to get on with whatever life I have left.” Before they could say anything else, Mars rose and left.
“He’s upset and frustrated,” said Oliver. “I’ll talk to him.”
“Let him be for now,” said Decker. “He’s had to deal with one body blow after another. Those punches add up. I’m surprised he’s still standing.”
“He’s tough,” pointed out Oliver.
“He’s going to have to be,” replied Decker. “We all are.”
Chapter 65
Once more Decker was awoken from a dead sleep.
This time the man wore a mask. The hand over his mouth was gloved. The other held a semiautomatic pistol. The muzzle was placed against Decker’s temple.
It was a hell of a way to wake up.
“You need to really listen to what I’m going to say,” said the man in a low voice. “Nod if you understand.”
Decker nodded.
“You have two choices. One, you abandon what you’re doing and go home. Your buddy is out of prison and he’ll stay out. We’ll see to that. You will pursue this no further. Do you understand the first choice?”
Decker nodded.
“The second choice is that you continue investigating. The consequences of that will be that you start to lose people close to you. Jamison first, then Oliver. It won’t be pretty. But it is guaranteed. There will be no second request. One step more and they die. Then you. Do you understand the repercussions of the second choice?”
Decker nodded once more.
Then something stuck him in the neck, his eyes rolled back in their sockets, and he passed out.
Sometime later his eyelids fluttered a bit and then popped open.