Gosh, who wouldn't want this guy for their dad? Between being a bully, a child pornographer, and an anti-Semite, he'd be a delight every night around the hearth. At Home with Hermann Goering.
"I know about the photos you took of your daughter."
He didn't say anything. He just looked at me. I'm sure he was wondering if I was Jewish.
"You cocksucker."
"I'm just giving you a chance to prove you didn't kill her."
"Rick Hennessy killed her."
Henry and Frank were telepathically linked. The beast was picking up on his master's shift of mood. He moved slightly away from Caine, going into a crouch. And I'll be damned if there weren't tiny amber lights showing in the irises of the mad dark canine eyes.
"Henry's going to tear your nuts off, mister." Then he snapped his finger behind his back. It was quiet enough for me to hear.
"Then he's going to die for the privilege."
You get a lot of arguments in both directions about shoulder rigs. I've always preferred them myself, even if they are a tad more awkward than the holster on the belt.
I had my.38 out and aimed directly at Henry's face. "I'll put one right between his eyes."
"You sonofabitch." But angry as he was, he bent down and took Henry's collar and gave it an almost imperceptible tug. Cool it, Henry.
But Henry wasn't having any.
He leapt at me with perfect grace and timing. He was in mid-arc when I shot him. I wasn't lucky enough to get him between the eyes. I had to settle for two bullets in the throat.
Henry seemed to freeze in midair. I had a perfect slow-motion portrait of his face-silver spittle flying from his mouth, mad eyes madder than ever, teeth startlingly white, startlingly sharp. And then he flung himself to the ground. That was how it looked, anyway. A hundred and fifty pounds of dog hurling itself to the sandy back driveway. Blood started firing from his right ear. It was ugly to see and I half wished I hadn't killed him. He started choking and gasping.
The wailing, it took me a moment to realize, didn't belong to Henry but to Frank Caine.
He dropped the wrench, then dropped to his knees next to the dog. He was sobbing and wailing and rocking back and forth and touching the throat wound gingerly. And then sobbing all the more.
I wanted to feel sorry for him. I couldn't. Henry was the victim here. He hadn't asked to be raised this way.
"You fucker!" Caine screamed at me suddenly. "You fucking sonofabitch!" He was now as crazy as Henry had been. He stood up. He started walking toward me.
I kept my gun drawn. I aimed it right at his chest. "Don't be stupid, Frank. I'm going to get in my car and drive out of here."
"You fucking sonofabitch!"
"You said that already. You shouldn't have sicced him on me."
"I didn't give him a command. I didn't say jack shit to him."
"No, but you snapped your fingers, and that was the signal for him to jump me."
"You sonofabitch."
I walked backwards to my car.
He bolted towards me without warning. Ran up to my car and spit on the windshield. And then started pounding with his fists on the windshield. "You fucker!"
I got the motor going in the rental and backed away. For a few yards, he followed me back up the drive, just as Henry would have. But I gave it more gas and he soon fell away.
He turned slowly back to Henry. Then he was on his knees next to the dog, and sobbing again. I tried hard not to feel sorry for him. But I guess, despite myself, I did. He'd destroyed all hope for the dog to have a good life. But in some perverse way, Frank probably loved the big snarling mutant animal. Love is a strange thing sometimes.
Tandy was at the pop machine. Her blue-jeaned bottom was nicely rounded as she bent over to retrieve the Diet Pepsi can. She tangled her head to see me. "Want one?"
"Please." I dug in my pocket and produced the right change.
The machine was located at the end of the first-floor corridor. Early afternoon, the motel lot was pretty deserted. A fifteen-year-old Pontiac covered with NRA and BUCHANAN stickers had collapsed in front of one of the rooms. The only other cars belonged to us.
She handed me the can and said, "Guess what I did this morning?"
"What?"
"Went over to the railroad roundhouse and found out where all the trestle bridges are in and around town. There are four of them."
"Good idea."
We started strolling down the corridor toward her room. A cleaning cart stood in front of an open door. An aged Mexican woman smiled at us.
"Noah wants to come along."
"Well, he played a detective on TV. He should know what he's doing."
She laughed. "Right." Then, "I told him he didn't need to because you were going with me."
"I bet he loved that."
"He told me you were a jerk."
"You tell him what I thought of him?"
"I think he already knows." Then, "So will you go with me?"
"Sure. When?"
"About an hour."
"Just walk upstairs and knock on my door."
When we reached the stairs, she said, "You know this morning when you kissed me good-bye?"
"Uh-huh."
"You didn't kiss me very long."
"I'm sorry."
"It was my breath, wasn't it? I used Binaca and everything."
"Your breath was fine. God, kid, relax, OK?" I pulled her to me and held her.
"I know I'm crazy."
"No, you're not. You're just insecure. Real insecure."
"You would be, too, if you'd grown up around Laura." Then, "I can feel you." We were pressed pretty tight.
"Merely an errant afternoon erection."
"I like it."
"So do I, actually. It's sort of a teenage thing. Holding a girl in a public place in the afternoon. Makes me feel young."
"Maybe you're the one who's crazy, Robert."
I kissed her sweet little mouth. "That's a distinct possibility."
I called Chief Susan Charles.
"You're going to be hearing about me."
"I already have. You killed Frank Caine's dog."
"I feel like hell about it. Caine is the one who should have been shot. He was the one who raised the dog that way."
"He wants to press charges."
"Fine."
"I told him to forget it. I told him that a lot of people wanted to kill his dog. Even the folks at the pound. Henry attacked a couple of teenagers who were hunting in a field last fall. He nearly killed them."
"I sure could see that guy killing his daughter."
"So could I," she said, "if we didn't already have a confession from Rick Hennessy."
I sighed. "You find out anything new about our private-detective friend Kibbe?"
"He'd been here eight days, from everything we've been able to piece together."
"You find out who he was working for?"
"Got hold of his wife. She said she wasn't sure. Said he rarely talked about business because it always upset her. Said her brother has an Amway distributorship and was always trying to get Kibbe to join up."
"I have new respect for Kibbe. Resisting Amway folks isn't easy."
"He gave his wife the phone number of the motel here where he was staying and said he'd probably be back in a week, week and a half. He called her four or five times while he was here. Then for three days, she didn't hear anything at all. Until I called her and told her what had happened to him."
"You find a notebook on him?"
"Notebook?"
"You know. A list of people he saw or anything. They usually have to keep detailed records of where they went and who they saw. They copy it and send it along with the invoice to the client."
"No notebook, sorry."
"Now what?"
"There was an autopsy. No surprises. So now we ship the body to Chicago."