The Empty Chair
her.
“Man, look at this. Look!” Tom held up his split wrist, blood cascading down his arm.
“Fuck,” the Missionary muttered. “We gotta get that stitched up. You dumb shit. Why couldn’t you wait? Come on, let’s get it taken care of.”
Mary Beth watched Tom stagger into the field. He stopped ten feet away from the window. “You fucking bitch! You get yourself ready. We’ll be back.” He glanced down and crouched out of view for a moment. He stood up again, holding a rock the size of a large orange in his good hand. He flung it through the bars. Mary Bethstumbled backward as it sailed into the room, missing her by a scant foot. She sank onto the couch, sobbing.
As they walked toward the woods she heard Tom call again, “Get yourself ready!”
They were at Harris Tomel’s house, a nice five-bedroom colonial on a good-sized cut of grass the man’d never done a lick of work to. Tomel’s idea of lawn decorations was parking his F-250 in the front yard and his Suburban in the back.
He did this because, being the sort-of college boy of the trio and owning more sweaters than plaid shirts, Tomel had to try a little harder to seem like a shit-kicker. Oh, sure, he’d done fed time but it was for some crappy scam in Raleigh where he sold stocks and bonds in companies whose only problem was that they didn’t exist. He could shoot good as a sniper but Culbeau’d never known him to whale on anybody by himself, skin on skin, at least nobody who wasn’t tied up. Tomel also thought about things too much, spent too much time on his clothes, asked for call liquor, even at Eddie’s.
So unlike Culbeau, who worked hard on his own split-level, and unlike O’Sarian, who worked hard picking up waitresses who’d keep his trailer nice, Harris Tomel just let the house and yard go. Hoping, Culbeau assumed, that it’d goose the impression that he was a mean fuck.
But that was Tomel’s business and the three men weren’t at the house with its scruffy yard and Detroit lawn ornaments to discuss landscaping; they were here for one reason only. Because Tomel had inherited the gun collection to end all gun collections when his father went into Spivy Pond ice fishing on New Year’s Eve a few years ago and didn’t surface till the next tax day.
They stood in the man’s paneled den, looking over the gun cases the same way Culbeau and O’Sarian had stoodat the penny candy rack in Peterson’s Drugs on Maple Street twenty years ago, deciding what to steal.
O’Sarian picked the black Colt AR-15, the civvy version of the M-16, because he was always yammering on and on about Vietnam and watched every war movie he could find.
Tomel took the beautiful Browning shotgun with the inlay, which Culbeau coveted as much as he coveted any woman in the county, even though he himself was a rifle man and would rather drill a hole in a deer’s heart from three hundred yards than blow a duck into a dust of feathers. For himself, today, he chose Tomel’s nifty Winchester .30-06 with a ’scope the size of Texas.
They packed plenty of ammo, water, Culbeau’s cell phone and food. ’Shine of course.
Sleeping bags, too. Though none of them expected the hunt to last very long.
. . . chapter twenty-four
A grim Lincoln Rhyme wheeled into the dismantled forensic lab in the Paquenoke County Building.
Lucy Kerr and Mason Germain stood beside the fiberboard table that had held the microscopes. Their arms were crossed and, as Thom and Rhyme entered, both deputies regarded the criminalist and his aide with a blend of contempt and suspicion.
“How the hell could she do it?” Mason asked. “What was she thinking of?”
But these were two of many questions about Amelia Sachs and what she’d done that couldn’t be answered, not yet, and so Rhyme asked merely, “Was anybody hurt?”
“No,” Lucy said. “But Nathan was pretty shook up, looking down the barrel of that Smith and Wesson. Which we were crazy enough to give her.”
Rhyme struggled to remain outwardly calm, yet his heart was pierced with fear for Sachs. Lincoln Rhyme trusted evidence before all else and the evidence showed clearly that Garrett Hanlon was a kidnapper and killer. Sachs, tricked by his calculated facade, was as much at risk as Mary Beth or Lydia.
Jim Bell entered the room.
“Did she take a car?” Rhyme continued.
“I don’t think so,” Bell said. “I asked around. No vehicles missing yet.”
Bell looked at the map, still taped to the wall.
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