"Don't you see?" he said. "Lipton put it there. The police would've found it and I would've gone to jail for the rest of my life, if they didn't give me the death penalty. That's what he wants. He's afraid of me. I'm the only thing he is afraid of, because he knows he can't kill me. I'll crush him like a bug. He kills women, girls he can overpower, Frank Castle. He's big and he's strong and he's smart, but he still knows that I'll kill him if I get my hands on him. That's why he wants me in jail. Without me he can do what he wants, kill anyone he wants…"
"Meaning me?"
"You and others, too. He'll keep killing," Sales said simply. "He won't stop."
"Why are you so sure he wants to kill me?" Casey asked.
"Because I know. I thought so before I saw him going past your house. I saw the way he looked at you all during the trial. I know. It's a sense, but I know."
"How did you know it was him that drove past?"
"I watched your house for two days. I know him," Sales said.
"Why didn't you just follow him then?"
"I didn't have a car," Sales explained.
"What are you going to do with me now?" Casey asked quietly.
"I'm not going to do anything with you," he said. "I'm not going to force you to help me. At best, you'd slow me down. At worst, you'd trip me up. You do what you want. I'll take you to your car. But if you don't help me, you're making a mistake, a big mistake…"
Casey sat still, thinking. Sales got up and opened a can of beans. He handed them to her with a spoon. "You must be hungry."
Casey wolfed them down without a second thought. They tasted as good as anything she'd ever eaten.
"I'll hunt him until I die," Sales said vaguely as Casey wiped the last bit of sauce from the inside of the can with her fingers and licked them clean. "The police won't catch me, and I'll hunt him till I get him. But the longer it takes me, the more women he's going to kill."
"Even if I wanted to help you," Casey said wearily, "there's nothing I can do. The police are looking for you."
"They won't get me. I told you that," he said.
"But I can't help you by crawling around in the woods."
"You can help me by staying with me," Sales said. "I don't mean in a cave. You have a car. You have credit cards and money. You can show me that disk you were talking about. Maybe there's something on it that will tell us where he is or where he'll go next. You can help me track him down."
"No. I can't do that," she said. "I can't help someone who's running from the police. That's aiding and abetting a fugitive. That's a crime. In fact, I should tell you to turn yourself in. I'm not saying it just because of legal ethics, either. It's the smartest thing you could do. The police will get you. Sooner or later, they almost always do. If you turn yourself in, there isn't a judge in Austin who wouldn't give you a reasonable bail. I can help you that way if you want. I can help you turn yourself in…"
Sales shook his head. "No. That's not happening. I'm not turning myself in and taking that chance. I don't care what you say. The police won't get me."
"The police will be looking for me, though," she said. "That makes it even more likely that they'll find you."
"No," Sales said. "They won't be looking for you. I don't think they will anyway. Does the alarm company have the keys to your house?"
"No."
"So you must have had the alarm go off before," Sales said. "Think about what happens. First, they call the house. When there's no answer, they call the police. When the police get there, they look around the outside of the house. If there's no sign of anyone breaking in and the alarm company doesn't have a key to the house, they think it's a false alarm. They file a report and go away. Unless your husband came home yesterday, which from the size of his suitcase it didn't look like, then there probably isn't even anyone who knows you're gone."
"That's how you planned it," Casey said bitterly.
"That's how I planned it," Sales admitted. "I'm not going to beg you, you know. But if you don't help, there's going to be a lot more killing…"
"I can't just help you hunt someone down to kill them," Casey said, shaking her head. "That goes against everything I believe in."
Sales shrugged. "You believe he should go on killing?"
After a long pause, Casey said, "If I helped you in any way-if I helped you-then it would be to bring Professor Lipton to the police, not to hunt him down to kill him. I can't do that and I can't help you do that. I never would."
"Even if more innocent women are going to die?" Sales said sharply. "Even if he's going to try to kill you?"
"Yes, even if that," Casey said. "I believe in the system despite its shortcomings. We can't just go out and execute people. That's lawlessness."
Sales scoffed at that with a derisive snort. "Look what your system has done. It's nothing to be so proud of."
"That's your opinion," Casey retorted, defending her vocation out of habit, but aware deep down of her own new doubts. "Nothing's perfect, but it's what I believe in. Whatever help I can be, I have to be to the police."
"That's just what Lipton would want you to do," Sales said in disgust.
"Why is that?" Casey asked dubiously.
"Lipton knows how to stay ahead of the police," Sales cried. "They can't catch him any more than they can catch me. What do they do? Stake out his house, the way they did mine? That's a joke. He knows the rules of the game too well. The police can't get to him the way I can. I'm a hunter and I don't have anything holding me back. You should know that better than anyone. The police can't just bust into a hotel room or break into his van, but I can. He can't hide behind the law from me. But he'll beat the police. He beat them before and he's learned from it. He's always learning. He's a piece of shit, but he's smart.
"Listen," Sales continued. "I want him stopped, period. If you help me get him, I won't kill him."
Casey looked at him skeptically.
"If you help me in a way that'll guarantee he goes to jail," Sales added, "then I won't kill him."
"You're lying," Casey said.
"When Lipton told you he didn't kill that girl in Atlanta," Sales said, "did you believe him?"
"Yes," she said, after a pause.
"Why? Because that's what he said, right?"
"Yes," Casey replied. "That's what he said."
"So, I'm saying I won't kill him and I want you to believe me. I won't kill him. If it means you'll help me, then I won't. If that's what it takes, then I'm saying I'll bring him to justice, to the police. Just give me the same deal you gave him. Help me, Casey. I need your help."
"I want you to take me to my car," Casey said after a few silent minutes of contemplation. "I need to go home. I need to sleep. I need to think."
Sales nodded and rose. The mouth of the cave was beginning to fill up with the pale light of dawn.
"I'll take you to your car, Casey Jordan," Sales said. "But will you help me?"
"Maybe," Casey said, rising stiffly, anxious to get away. She was thinking of the computer disk Tony had. Part of her said it would be wrong to use it. Lipton had given her the computer in confidence as a client. But he was a killer. Didn't she have a higher duty to help stop him if she could?
"Maybe I will."
CHAPTER 23
Sales bundled up his things and offered to carry Casey to the car, but she refused. She stepped gingerly on the rough ground, though, and found herself wishing she'd accepted his offer. The cuts on the bottom of her feet opened up again, and as they descended a gently sloping face of bare rock, Casey became aware of how easy it must have been for Sales to follow her trail through the woods.
Sales turned back toward her, looking weary and depressed. "It's not far," he said.