Dead Guilty
executed,’’ LaSalle continued. ‘‘Then he cut off her fingers and hauled her up with a winch, her screaming like a wild animal. While she was dan gling in the air, kicking and screaming, he climbed on top of the cab and put the noose around her neck, took off the rope from around her chest that he pulled her up by, and let her swing by the neck. Sick bastard said a prayer. He did the other two kids, one at a time. Each one of them having to watch what he did to the ones before them. By the time he got to me, I’d sobered up and managed to cut my rope on a file he had in the back of the truck. While he was doing the last kid, I got out of the truck and ran for the woods. He looked for me for a long time, but I found the road and got the hell as far away from there as I could. I jacked a car from somebody’s front yard and got back to town. I got even with the son of a bitch, though. I got to slice his throat.’’
Diane was looking for a place that would put her at an advantage. She would have no more than one chance, and it had to work. She had to surprise him. If she didn’t do it right, he’d kill her and the others. She wasn’t under any delusions that he would let her go. He’d get the diamonds, kill her and come back and kill them. But she needed just the right place.
This tunnel was looking very different from the ones they had passed through. It was larger, with more breakdown littering the floor. The hydrology that had created it was different, and the shape of the tunnel was different. Would he notice? Diane searched for more conversation.
‘‘What happened to Steven Mayberry?’’
‘‘Bastard almost got away—still trying to steal my diamonds. He’ll be found by hunters one of these days.’’
‘‘How did you know about Chris Edwards and Ste ven Mayberry?’’
‘‘I got lucky. I saw them being interviewed on televi sion. I knew that Everett threw the pouch with the rest of the diamonds into the woods. I went back there to look for it, and it was gone. I figured maybe these guys found it. I discussed the possibility with them.’’
LaSalle stopped suddenly and looked around the tunnel, shining his flashlight on the walls and floor.
‘‘Are you trying to distract me? I don’t recognize this place. None of the tunnels were this big. Damn you, bitch, I told you not to shit with me.’’
He slapped her in the jaw with the side of the flash light. Instead of recoiling, Diane lunged into him with her shoulder. Off balance, he stumbled over a rock, fell and hit his head on the floor. The gun and the flashlight went flying. The cave had done for her what she was searching for a way to do.
Stunned, he rose to his knees, shaking his head. She switched off her headlamp. He scrambled in the dark for the thing that was most important to him, the thing he thought he couldn’t live without—his gun. Diane scrambled for the thing he needed most in a cave— his flashlight. She got to her prize first and switched it off. They were plunged into absolute darkness. Diane silently picked a path several feet away to a large rock near the entrance to the passage, crouched behind it, and listened. She could hear him feeling for his gun.
‘‘Okay. You’ve had your little laugh. Get the fuck over here with the flashlight.’’
Diane said nothing.
‘‘Are you listening to me, bitch! Turn on the goddamn fucking light.’’
She was silent.
‘‘If I have to find you, you won’t like it.’’
Diane concentrated on breathing softly, hoping he couldn’t hear her, hoping she wouldn’t have to cough or sneeze. She waited, trying not to think of the others.
‘‘Okay. You win. I’ll help pull your friend out of the hole she’s in. You know how to make deals. How’s that for a deal?’’
He was silent for several moments, as if he was waiting for Diane to ponder his offer.
‘‘Look, you stupid bitch, you have to get out of here too. Did you think that far ahead?’’
Yes, thought Diane. I did.
‘‘You can’t move. If I hear you I’ll shoot, you have to know that. I’m a pretty good shot. I can aim by sound.’’
Diane heard him fumbling in the dark. He’d started walking, bumping against the rocks. She picked up a stone and threw it. He didn’t fire.
‘‘You didn’t expect me to fall for that old trick, did you?’’
Diane said nothing. She picked up another stone and threw it. Again, he didn’t fire. This time she rose and slowly slipped out of the passage, and this time he
Weitere Kostenlose Bücher