Bücher online kostenlos Kostenlos Online Lesen
The Poacher's Son (Mike Bowditch 1)

The Poacher's Son (Mike Bowditch 1)

Titel: The Poacher's Son (Mike Bowditch 1) Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Paul Doiron
Vom Netzwerk:
see how they’re doing with those tire tracks,” said the lieutenant.
    I started to follow him, but Malcomb held up his hand. “Sorry, Bowditch. It’s a crime scene now and it’s off limits for you. Why don’t you take my truck back to the hatchery?”
     
    There was a different mood at the command post. The faces were longer, the energy had drained out of most of the bodies, but still the search continued. In his plane Charley Stevens called in locations where he saw headlights, but this was August in the Maine woods and ATV riders were commonplace across the region. Unless the task force got lucky, there was no way to pick him out. It was only a matter of time until the search was suspended, at least for the night. I sat in the corner and ate a ham sandwich.
    I wondered what kind of luck Kathy was having with our bear trap. She’d probably just checked it for the first time or would be checking it soon. I considered calling her, but I didn’t have the heart to face her questions.
    “Hey, Bowditch.” I looked up into a cherub face atop a deputy’s paunchy body. He had a big ban dage on his forehead and a cut on his lip. The name tag above his belly said twombley. For some reason he was now handing me a cell phone. “It’s your lieutenant.”
    I pressed the phone to my ear. “Sir?”
    “I want you to go home, Bowditch. I spoke with Carter and there’s nothing more for you to do here to night. The sheriff said one of his men will give you a ride back to Skowhegan.”
    “I’d prefer to stay.”
    “If anything breaks, we’ll get you back up here. But we’re looking at a new timetable for this thing now. We’ll talk again in the morning.”
    “Lieutenant—”
    The cherubic deputy held out his hand for his phone. “Let’s go,”he said.
     
    I followed Twombley to a patrol car and we got going. “I heard what happened, this morning,” I said. “How are you holding up?”
    “How the fuck do you think I’m holding up?”
    I knew then that I was in for a long ride back to Skowhegan.
    After what Twombley had been through, I was surprised the sheriff hadn’t sent him home earlier—or at least to the hospital. I could only assume that he’d insisted on taking part in the manhunt in order to repair his damaged reputation. At the command post I’d heard more than one officer laughing about the embarrassing predicament my dad had left him in. He already had a new nickname: Treehugger.
    I studied the deputy’s battered profile. There was something familiar about it. “So why did you drive out to Rum Pond?” I asked.
    “What?”
    “The sheriff said you went out there on your own authority. What evidence did you have on my dad?”
    He glanced over at me for the first time. “Go fuck yourself.”
    Outside the roadblock TV news vans were drawn up. I saw spotlights trained on reporters’ incandescent faces. Cameras turned in our direction as we made our way through the gauntlet of stopped traffic. Reflexively I raised my hand to conceal my face.
    What would I tell my mother? I’d scarcely thought of her at all. But Detective Soctomah would be calling her soon, and she was guaranteed to freak out, afraid my dad was going to drag her reputation through the mud. If they gunned him down tomorrow, her first concern would be that her friends would see her name in the newspapers. How could she bear her neighbors knowing that she’d once been poor white trash, married to such a violent man?
    I leaned my head against the glass.
    Some time later I was awakened by gunshots. I sat up with a start. Twombley was looking over at me, smirking. I’d been dreaming. We were cruising past the brightly lit shopping plazas outside of Skowhegan. That was when I remembered that pink face. Twombley was the deputy who had arrested my dad two years ago at the Dead River Inn, the one who made him kneel in broken glass. So they had a history together. He’d pegged my father as a likely murderer and decided to bring him in without proof.
    I could imagine what had happened next. “So what did he do—taunt you from the backseat? Is that how you ran off the road?”
    He kept his eyes on the road, as if he hadn’t heard me.
    I continued: “What happened next? You went around to drag him out of the car, and he knocked you down? How did he get your gun away from you?”
    “Fuck you.”
    I noticed his holster was still empty, but now that I thought about it, I remembered seeing him at the standoff—that evil baby face.

Weitere Kostenlose Bücher