Выбрать главу

He had his hand on the door handle, and was starting to get out.

And then she was gone, walking away quickly against the traffic.

Abby wasn’t finished screaming at people.

Now that she’d started, she felt as if she had been holding in a lot of screaming and a lot of tears for a lot of years.

She was running again, slowing down now because she was out of breath, but still fueled by the most bewildering set of emotions she had ever felt in all the years since Mitch left. But she had one more stop to make, now that she was on a roll, one more person to scream at, and he was going to listen to her, because it was long past time that somebody ought to, and it wasn’t right, none of it was right, it had always been so wrong, and she was going to make it right if it killed her.

***

Mitch saw that he was holding up cars from four directions.

A couple of people started honking. Many others were staring.

He thought about chasing her down the street, grabbing her, holding her until she heard him out, until she let him explain, until she understood…

And then he got back into the Saab, finished his left turn, and drove on with his hands shaking, his heart pounding, his gut in an uproar, and all of his carefully laid plans in splinters. He had spent much of the last few days calmly and coolly figuring out his own legal vulnerabilities if he went public with what he knew. He had witnessed a crime and had not reported it. Normally, the Kansas statute of limitations would have run out a mere two years afterward, and he’d be safe from prosecution. But that rule didn’t apply when an accused person was absent from the state, and he had been gone for the entire time from then to now. In that case, the statute of limitations only began to run again the moment he set foot back in Kansas, and here he was. The awful irony was that Doc Reynolds and Nathan Shellenberger were safe from prosecution because they’d been in-state the whole time and so the statute of limitations applied to them, at least in regard to the only crime that Mitch knew for sure they had committed, which was covering up the identity of a murder victim.

But being prosecuted for failing to report a crime would be the least of his problems if Doc and Nathan decided to play rough with him. There was no statute of limitations on murder. They were smart men. Between the two of them they could cook up a story and manufacture evidence to trap him. At the very least, it would be his word against theirs, as his father had always said it would be. And who was he but the boy who’d run away, which could also be used against him.

Mitch felt so filled with pain and anger that he thought he would explode if he couldn’t release it, and he knew just who his first target was going to be. There was only one way for him to know what they had planned and that was to confront one or both of them and see exactly what they threatened him with.

Then he would decide what to do about them.

He pulled onto his father’s street, but not into the old man’s driveway.

Instead, Mitch parked in front of the big house across the street, the house where Abby had grown up. He got out of his car. It was Wednesday and apparently the clinic at the back was open for business. There were three cars parked in the wide driveway toward the rear of the house. Doc was seeing patients.

Mitch strode up the front walk, counting on the fact that, except for his own parents, nobody in Small Plains ever locked their doors.

***

Jeffrey Newquist stood outside the side door of his father’s house and stared across the street at the foreign car parked there. Black Saab. It could only be his brother’s cool car. Brother. It felt weird in his mind, even weirder to say, but he tried it out loud: “Brother.” Didn’t feel right yet, felt weird, but he thought he could get used to it.

Growing up, there hadn’t been much talk of the brother who left, but the house had felt haunted by him. By how smart he was supposed to have been, how good looking, what a sports star, how popular, how everybody loved him. Every time Jeff failed at something he saw the comparison in people’s eyes.

Substitute son.

Well, he was no failure now. After his success at selling his video and the story of the girl in the tornado, he felt the equal of anybody in town, even of his brother.

Sometimes he’d hated Mitch for going away and for abandoning him to Nadine and the judge. At those times, Jeff fantasized about how someday everybody would hear how Mitch Newquist was a serial killer or bank robber or something and they’d all realize how wrong they’d always been about him. Other times, Jeff imagined the perfect older brother-successful, rich, secretly devoted to his kid bro, who he would give anything to see but who he was prevented from seeing for some mysterious but totally understandable reason. And this cool older brother would come back to Small Plains and see how miserable Jeff was there and take him away to live in, like, New York City, where he’d buy him a cool car of his own and clothes and introduce him to gorgeous women.

And damned if it wasn’t that version that was coming true!

Jeff stepped forward. His brother. He had a right to go see him.

The night they’d met, Mitch had seemed okay to Jeff.

They’d gotten along okay, he thought, even down to the beer.

He didn’t know how Mitch felt about him taking the gun and the extra beer, because Jeff had left early so there wouldn’t be the opportunity for any confrontation about it, but he figured Mitch was probably cool with it.

From that first meeting he had begun spinning subsequent scenarios. He saw the two of them getting in that black car and driving together back to Kansas City. Okay, it wasn’t New York City, but it also wasn’t Small Plains. He saw Mitch putting him up in his own house, giving him the run of the place, maybe giving him a job or getting him into college somewhere cool. He imagined how Mitch was probably ready to trade in that Saab for the new model and how he’d pass the keys to the “old” one over to Jeff.

He tried the driver’s door and discovered it was not locked.

But instead of getting in to see how it felt to sit behind the wheel, Jeff looked up at Doc Reynolds’s house. It was his childhood doctor up there. And his own brother. He had a right to go in there, too. Just like he had as much right to have their father’s old silver pistol as Mitch did. He had it with him even now, tucked into his waistband, below an overhanging shirt, where he liked the weight of it and all it meant to own a gun. Or at least to have possession of one. On the other hand, he didn’t really have a place to keep it where the judge wouldn’t find it, so maybe he’d give it back so Mitch could return it to the bedside table, or maybe he wouldn’t. Maybe that would depend on whether Mitch was glad to see him again. A lot of things might depend on that. With his right hand resting on the handle of the gun sticking out from his waistband, Jeff started up the front walk, taking long, loping strides.

Chapter Thirty-seven

It had very briefly passed through Marty Francis’s mind to avoid drinking for a while after he got out of jail this time. Sitting on a stool at the bar of the Cottonwood Inn in the middle of the day, surrounded and jostled by a lunch crowd of strangers, he was on his sixth bottle of beer, thinking it over, pro and con, when somebody shoved a napkin under his nose.

The arm that shoved it was gone as quick as it had appeared and Marty’s reaction time wasn’t good enough to look around for the rest of the body that went with it, but he could see that the napkin in front of his nose had writing on it.