Silent Prey
already outside. That fits Bekker’s character, as far as the media’s concerned.”
“Do you think . . . ?”
“No, I think he suckered us.”
“So do I.” Kennett stared at his feet for a moment, then glanced at Lily and O’Dell. “The story might not hold up for long.”
“If we get him before it breaks, nobody’ll care.”
Kennett nodded. “I better go talk to O’Dell. We’ll need a ferocious off-the-record media massage.”
“You think he’ll help?”
Kennett permitted himself a very thin grin. “He was here too,” Kennett said. “They’d just pulled up outside . . .”
Kennett started toward Lily and O’Dell, then stopped and turned, hands in his pockets, no longer grinning. “Get your ass back to Minneapolis. Find something for us, God damn it.”
CHAPTER
19
Lucas sat alone in the worst row of seats on the plane, in tourist class behind the bulkhead, no good place to put his feet except in the aisle. The stewardess was watching him before they crossed Niagara Falls.
“Are you all right?” she asked finally, touching his shoulder. He’d dropped the seat all the way back, tense, his eyes closed, like a patient waiting for a root canal.
“Are the wheels off the ground?” he grated.
“Uh-oh,” she said, fighting a smile. “How about a scotch? Double scotch?”
“Doesn’t work,” Lucas said. “Unless you’ve got about nine phenobarbitals to put in it.”
“Sorry,” she said. Her face was professionally straight, but she was amused. “It’s only two more hours . . . .”
“Wonderful . . .”
He could see it so clearly in his mind’s eye: ripped chunks of aluminum skin and pieces of engine nacelle scattered around a Canadian cornfield, heads and arms and fingers like bits of trash, fires guttering just out of sight, putting out gouts of oily black smoke; women instretch pants wandering through the wreckage, picking up money. A Raggedy Ann doll, cut in half, smiling senselessly; all images from movies, he thought. He’d never actually seen a plane crash, but you had to be a complete idiot not to be able to imagine it.
He sat and sweated, sat and sweated, until the stewardess came back and said, “Almost there.”
“How long?” he croaked.
“Less than an hour . . .”
“Sweet bleedin’ Jesus . . .” He’d been praying that it was only a minute or two; he’d been sure of it.
The plane came in over the grid of orange sodium-vapor lights and blue mercury lights, banking, Lucas holding on to the seat. The window was filled with the streaming cars, the black holes of the lakes stretching down from just west of the Minneapolis Loop. He looked at the floor. Jumped when the wheels came down. Made the mistake of glancing across the empty seat next to him and out the window, and saw the ground coming and closed his eyes again, braced for the impact.
The landing was routine. The bored pilot said the usual good-byes, the voice of a Tennessee hay-shaker, which he undoubtedly was, not qualified to fly a ’52 Chevy much less a jetliner . . . .
Lucas stunk with fear, he thought as he bolted from the plane, carrying his overnight bag. My God, that ride was the worst. He’d read that La Guardia was overcrowded, that in a plane you could get cut in half in an instant, right on the ground. And he’d have to do it again in a day or two.
He caught a cab, gave directions, collapsed in the backseat. The driver took his time, loafing along the river, north past the Ford plant. Lucas’ house had a light in the window. The timer.
“Nice to get home, huh?” the cabdriver asked, making a notation in a trip log.
“You don’t know how good,” Lucas said. He thrust a ten at the driver and hopped out. A couple strolled by on the river walk, across the street.
“Hey, Lucas,” the man called.
“Hey, Rick, Stephanie.” Neighbors: he could see her blond hair, his chrome-rimmed glasses
“You left your backyard sprinkler on. We turned it off and put the hose behind the garage.”
“Thanks . . .”
He picked up the mail inside the door, sorted out the ads and catalogs and dumped them in a wastebasket, showered to get the fear-stink off his body and fell into bed. In thirty seconds, he was gone.
“Lucas?” Quentin Daniel stuck his head out of his office. He had dark circles under his eyes and he’d lost weight. He’d been the Minneapolis chief of police for two terms, but that wasn’t what was eating him. Innocent people had
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