Sudden Prey
anything that’d go through and ricochet around the halls. So all the energy’ll get dumped inside his skull. If I hit him anywhere on the face—and I will—he’ll be gone like somebody turned off a switch. That fast.”
Lucas looked at him for another long moment, and said, “I hope you can do it right.”
“No problem,” the kid said, and he stroked the rifle like he might stroke his girlfriend’s cheek.
Lucas nodded and went back to the medics and to look at the floor plan. Basically, the suite was one long hall with double doors in the middle, dividing the operating rooms from the support offices. He’d put the sniper at the far end of the hall, open the doors himself and talk to LaChaise, who was in one of the offices at the other end of the hall.
“We’ll put the gun on a gurney,” Lucas said. “We’re gonna need an office chair . . . and then I’ll call, and go through the doors. . . . Will the doors stay open?”
“You’ve got to push them back hard,” one of the doctors said.
A cop said, “Lucas, the chief . . .”
“Tell her to call back,” Lucas said. He looked back at the sniper and said, “Let’s do it.”
“ . . . PEOPLE DON’T UNDERSTAND that,” LaChaise said. “People don’t understand how country folks get ripped around by the government. Christ, you start out just trying to get ahead . . .”
Weather was quietly amused at her own reaction: in some way, she liked the guy. He was like two dozen high school classmates back in Wisconsin, kids who didn’t have much to do if they stayed around home. You’d see them trying to put together lives with part-time jobs in the resorts, out in the woods, trying to guide . . . willing to work, but without much hope, afraid of the cities.
LaChaise was like that, but gone down some darker, more twisting trail. He hated his father; didn’t much like his mother. Idolized his younger sister, and even his wife.
“Candy sounds like trouble, though,” Weather said. “Sometimes people push too hard.”
“Yeah, I guess. But she was so damn lively . . .”
LUCAS GOT THREE big stacks of surgeon’s scrub suits, all green, from the laundry. The sniper took off his jacket and pulled one of the scrubs on, and tied a pair of pants around his head. They put one stack of scrubs in the middle of a low stainless-steel instrument gurney. The sniper sat in an office chair behind the gurney, and dropped the rifle across the top of the stack, and put a couple more scrubs on top of it. The other two stacks went on either side of the center pile.
Lucas walked down the hall toward the double doors and looked back. He could see the glass of the scope and the rifle barrel, but they made no visual sense. He couldn’t tell exactly what they were, and LaChaise would be twice as far away. The sniper himself was invisible with the green scrub pants tied around his head.
“Good,” Lucas said, hustling back. “If we can drop one more suit right here . . .” He spread one across the barrel.
Lucas and another member of the ERU walked down the length of the hall again, and looked back a second time. The other cop said, “This scares the shit outa me.”
“Me, too,” Lucas said. He nodded at the sniper. “But can you see him?”
“I can only see him because I know he’s there. LaChaise . . . no chance.”
Lucas walked back. “All right,” he said to the Iowan. “I hope to God you haven’t been bullshitting me.”
The kid said, “You wanta quit fuckin’ around and get the show on the road? And stay to the right side of the corridor. The slug’ll be coming right past your ear.”
THE PHONE RANG again, and LaChaise bent over to pick it up: pain shot down his leg and he grunted, almost stumbled, caught himself, and lifted the phone.
Lucas said, “I’m right down the hall from you. If you look out, I’ll open the double doors, and you’ll see me.”
He was that close? LaChaise put his eye to the door crack and looked at the double doors. “Let’s see you.”
The first of the two doors opened, slowly at first, and then quickly, pushed against the wall; it stayed open. The man who’d pushed it open was standing behind the other door. He peeked out at LaChaise.
“All right, here I am,” Lucas said. “We got a lot to talk about.”
“You killed my goddamn wife and sister,” LaChaise said. “And I say, ‘Eye for an eye.’ ”
“When your sister was killed, she was firing a gun at
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