Winter Prey
horse trainer’s body in a snowdrift behind the barn, and unloaded enough feed to keep the animals quiet, it’d be several days before the cops started looking for Bloom and his truck.
By then . . .
He jumped off the couch, fists in his pants pockets, working the road map through his head. He could dump the truck somewhere in the Canadian wilderness, somewhere it wouldn’t be found until spring. Then catch a bus. He’d be gone.
“Where’n the fuck are they?” he shouted at the yellow-haired girl.
“Should be here,” she said calmly.
He needed Rosie and Mark to get back. Needed the gas from the truck if he was going to make the run down to Flambeau Crossing.
The yellow-haired girl had put the ham-and-cheese in the microwave and then she’d gone back to her bedroom and started changing. Longjohns, thick socks, a sweater. Got out her snowmobile suit, her pac boots, began to go through her stuff. Took pictures. Pictures of her mom, her brother and sister, found a photo of her father, flipped it facedown on the floor without a second look. She took a small gold-filled cross on a gold chain, the chain broken.She put it all in her purse. She could stuff the purse inside her snowmobile suit.
Helper had told her about the cops. There had been nothing he could do about it. They were right on top of him. She could feel the sense of entrapment, the anger. She patted him on the shoulder, held his head, then offered him food and went to pack.
She heard the watch chiming, then the ding of the microwave. She carried her stuff to the kitchen, dumped it on a chair, took the ham-and-cheese out of the oven. The package was hot, and she juggled it onto a plate. She’d put a cup of coffee in with the ham-and-cheese, but it wasn’t quite ready yet. She punched it for another minute and called, “Come and get it.”
Her mom used to say that a long time ago. She sometimes couldn’t quite remember her face. She could remember the voice, though, whining, as often as not, but sometimes cheerful: Come and get it.
The phone rang, and without thinking she reached over and picked it up. “Hello?”
The Iceman looked at her from the couch.
Rosie spoke, her voice a harsh, excited whisper. “Ginny—don’t look at Duane, okay? Don’t look at him. Just listen. Duane just killed two cops and all those other people. There are cops all around the house. You gotta get out so they can come in and get him. When Duane’s in the bathroom or something, whenever you get a chance, just go right out the front door and run down the driveway. Don’t put a coat on or anything, just run. Okay? Now say something like ‘Where the heck are you?’ ”
“Where the heck are you?” the yellow-haired girl said automatically. She turned to look at Duane.
“Tell him we’re still downtown and we wanted to know about the roads out there. Now say something about the roads.”
“Well, they’re a mess. It’s snowing like crazy,” the yellow-haired girl said. “The drive’s filling up, and a plow came by a little while ago and plowed us in.”
The Iceman was off the couch, whispering. “Tell her weneed them to come out. I gotta have the gas. Don’t tell them I’m here.”
She put a finger to her lips, then went back to the phone. “I really kind of need you out here,” she said.
Rosie caught on. “Is he listening?”
“Yes.”
“Okay. Tell him we’ll be out in a while. And when you get a chance, you run for it. Okay?”
“Okay.”
“God bless you,” Rosie said. “Run for it, honey.”
The yellow-haired girl nodded. Duane was focused on her, fists in his pockets. “Sure, I will,” she said.
CHAPTER
29
The snow was getting heavier and the thin daylight was fading fast. Climpt was a dark lump in the snow to his left, unmoving. Lucas had settled behind a tree, the pine scent a delicate accent on the wind. And they waited.
Five minutes gone since Carr had called on the radio: Okay, the kid knows, she’s gonna make a break for it. Everybody hold your fire.
A man moved along the edge of the woods opposite Lucas, and then another man, behind him, both carrying long arms. They settled in, watching the door.
The radio kept burping in Lucas’ ear:
John, you set?
I’m set.
I don’t think there’s any way he could get out this end—the storm windows got outside fasteners.
Can’t see shit out back. Where’s Gene and Lucas?
Lucas: “I’m in the trees about even with the front door. Gene’s looking at the
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