Peterson shrugged. "On your head."
"Yup. It is. Have your guys check every inch of this place. We can't afford to miss anything."
"I'll stay in touch," Peterson said. "Been easier if we'd finished it here."
Lucas rode back down with the SWAT guy designated to hang in the mail room, left him there like Third Class Mail, and collected Shrake and Jenkins.
"Dumpster dive," he said, on the way down to the garage.
"Man, I'm wearing some high-end threads," Shrake said. "Why don't you ever get me when I'm wearing jeans?"
"Maybe it'll be the first bag; maybe it'll take one minute," Lucas said.
"Fat chance. We're gonna smell like rotten bananas, rotten tomatoes, or rotten eggs," Shrake said. "It's always one of those."
"Not always," Jenkins said. "Sometimes there are baby diapers, and then you smell like baby shit."
"I don't believe they brought a baby with them," Lucas said. "You can sniff all the bags, and we can skip the baby-shit ones."
"Terrific…"
The bag wasn't first, second, or third, but they thought it might be the fourth, a regular black-plastic garbage bag with a pull-tie, and filled with fast-food remnants and pizza boxes and an unused box of plastic garbage bags. Why would anyone throw away a perfectly good box of trash bags, unless they were cleaning out an apartment, and had no further use for them? They took a closer look, and among other things, found a receipt for a wrench and a shovel and a box of garbage bags from a Home Depot in Hudson, Wisconsin.
"Sonofabitch. That's one block from the motel where the Hudson cop was shot," Lucas said. "I mean, one block. The store's right there."
"So this is them," Shrake said, emptying the last of the trash on the floor. "What else is in here?"
A few things: receipts in paper sacks. A receipt for two golf shirts at Macy's, size extra large, $69 each; a receipt from a sandwich shop on Wabasha Street a couple of blocks south of Macy's; a receipt for a box of bonbons from the St. Andrews Hotel. All paid in cash. A pizza box from Perruzi's, a higher-end Italian place down the street from the convention center. "It's all right here, right downtown, except for the stuff from Hudson," Shrake said.
"I gotta think the job is, too," Lucas said.
"Got some cash pickups at the bars, by the O'Meara armored cars. That's about the biggest cash deal downtown," Shrake said. "The O'Meara warehouse is pretty well protected…"
Jenkins shook his head: "Maybe they finally broke, and took off."
They left the SWAT team in place: "You have to plan to stay until daylight," Lucas told Able Peterson. "They may pull the job, whatever it is, and duck back here."
"Why?" Peterson asked.
"Get their shit together," Lucas said. "Maybe they've got a car stashed in the parking garage."
Peterson was skeptical, but agreed to stay-which was what
Lucas wanted in the first place. Cohn wasn't coming back, but he might be around somewhere, and Lucas wanted the SWAT guys in his hip pocket, not out wandering around St. Paul.
He'd left Peterson, heading downstairs, when his phone rang: took it out, saw that he'd missed three calls, all from Weather, while he was in the underground ramp-no reception there-and answered: "Weather?"
"Lucas: where have you been?" She sounded frightened.
"Working-out of range, in a parking ramp."
"Oh, God, I've been frantic. It's Letty."
Chapter 20
Randy Whitcomb had checked himself out of the hospital against medical advice, and they drove across town to the house, the asshole guy and his girlfriend trailing behind. They got the asshole guy's cash at the house, and then Briar, leaking tears again-Whitcomb told Ranch that he'd beat it out of her eventually, dry her up-had gone off to the motel, with the assholes right behind her.
So Whitcomb had big money but no way to get downtown to spend it. Ranch woke up when Whitcomb came in with the money, and offered to walk downtown and find George, but there was no way that Whitcomb would trust Ranch with more than two dollars, and maybe not that.
So they waited, and stewed, and sweated, as hours crawled by, and Ranch even went down the hill where a pill seller sometimes set up, but the guy was not there, and he came back in a mood and he and Whitcomb had a screaming argument, because both of them were seeping back to a drugless world.
Ranch shouted, "You're a tit. You're gonna grab this cop's kid, and what do we do? Nothin." Not a fuckin' thing, you tit."
"Gonna get her," Whitcomb shouted.
"Bullshit, because you're a tit," Ranch shouted back.
"Gonna get her. Gonna suck some smoke, then we're gonna get her. You're gonna fuck her. I'm gonna beat her with my stick until she's hamburger."
"Maybe I'll fuck her, if I say so," Ranch shouted. "I'm not gonna fuck her because you say so, because you're a tit."
"This is my house…"
Then Ranch tumbled facedown into a beanbag chair and didn't move anymore, though he snored every couple of minutes. Whitcomb rolled between the kitchen and living-room windows, looking out, looking out, looking out'
Briar got back after dark. Whitcomb had whipped himself into several furies, and had gone into a half-dozen emotional slumps, looking at the two thousand dollars, right there, and not a fuckin' thing in the house, wouldn't you know it, and when the van finally turned into the driveway, he could hardly believe it.
He met Briar at the door: "You fuckin' moron, you, we needed that van. I'm fuckin' crippled…"
"I got arrested by the cops," Briar said.
Ranch woke in the beanbag chair. He was used to the disappearance of large parts of his life. Sometimes, he passed out at ten o'clock in the morning, and when he woke up, it was nine o'clock in the morning-some other morning. At first, the time changes were disorienting, but over the course of a couple of years, he got used to it. He simply gave up on time-now life was daytime and nighttime, strung along like beads on a string, and the minute, hour, and date were irrelevant.
When he woke up in this darktime, he could hear Whitcomb screaming in the kitchen, which wasn't unusual, and wouldn't normally have shaken him out. He pushed up, and a string of drool drained away from his lip. He wiped it off, heard the noise that woke him. Telephone, right under his head.
Whitcomb had backed Briar against the wall, extracting details of her arrest, when Ranch wandered in from the other room and handed Whitcomb a phone and said, "I got George, scrote."
"Who you callin' fuckin' scrote, you fuckin' douche bag?" Whitcomb shouted, and then stopped, as Ranch's words penetrated, and said, "George?"
Ten minutes later, Whitcomb was careening around the living room and kitchen in the wheelchair, waving his head-shop pearlescent-gold-twirl glass pipe over his head, shouting, "George is on the way." And he whirled in the chair and chanted it, waving the pipe as though directing an orchestra: "George is on the way; George is on the way; George is on the way."
He was rolling back toward Briar, pipe over his head, spasmodically jerking it back and forth, in time to the arrhythmic chant, and it slipped from his sweaty fingers in a long dangerous arc. Briar reached out to catch it, fumbled it, fumbled it again, and then it hit the side of the stove and shattered, and they all three stood looking at it, in all its pieces, scattered along the kitchen floor.