He quickly covered the few steps to get to her-one fast clout to the jaw would take care of her nicely-except she had time to scream, and she managed to duck. It was more of a fall out of the way than a controlled movement, but it served. She screamed again, calling at the others loud enough to break through to some. Cornelius stirred with a sleepy grunt and squinted around, confused.
Raymond had to nip this in the bud. He reached down for Bianca, who was trying to crawl away, slapping a hand over her mouth and another around her throat. She fought him frantically, still trying to call out, kicking, beating, and scratching at him. This was too much. He lifted her-she was a small woman-and slammed her head against the edge of the fireplace flags. That stunned her. She instantly went limp.
Cornelius was his next problem, and far more formidable. He may have been complaining and fussy, but he had size and thirty years ago had been an excellent rugby player. He tackled Raymond bodily and started hitting hard. Their scuffle carried them into others, rousing them.
Raymond punched back, but with little effect. He managed to roll the groggy actor toward the fireplace, flailing out for a weapon. His hand closed on a piece of firewood. He heard the crack and felt the impact go up his arm without realizing what it meant. Only after Cornelius suddenly collapsed did Raymond understand. Blood ran down the side of the old man"s skull. A lot of blood.
One of the girls who had been sleeping near Bianca cried out. Stan Parmley was stirring, nearly awake, mumbling questions.
It was too much. Robbery was one thing, but they"d never let him get away with this. He had to think, but they weren"t going to let him think. If they"d only just shut up a minute... The girl opened her mouth again. Raymond lashed out, using the piece of wood like a club. It proved to be very effective at making her quiet. He whirled on Stan. The first swing was a glancing blow, the second far more solid.
Then came the third, the fourth, the fifth...
Just to be sure.
He had to be sure.
And he had to be sure about all of them.
It took an amazingly short time to finish the task.
Noise. Not too distant. Sluggishly surfacing from his daze, Charles eventually identified it as the cabin door slamming shut. Someone must be in need of the facilities. He"d have to leave.
Easier thought of than accomplished.
He was still not cold, but very stiff from sitting in one place for so long. Shifting himself sparked off lots of painful clamorings from his joints and especially from his legs. The pins and needles marking the return of circulation to them slowed him down.
Another sound came to him: that of a car motor starting up. What a good idea. A good idea to start it so it wouldn"t freeze up and fail to run in the morning.
A state that was likely to befall him if he didn"t get up and move around soon. As he forced himself along, he noted with some confusion that the sound of the car was gradually fading. That couldn"t have been right. Perhaps his fever was distorting things.
Pushing on the door put him back in the snow again, in the utter stillness. Not one whisper of wind now stirred the surrounding trees, though in the distance he could just catch the determined rumble of the car. Certainly one of their Fords, for only one remained in the yard. Showing clear in the pristine snow were the tracks and ruts where the driver had turned the second vehicle and taken it away.
Why? Had some of the members decided to leave once the storm was past? That hardly made sense-unless it was to find the properties truck and let the people with it know the rest of the company was all right. Bianca might sanction such a trip. She and Henry must have taken off, since the missing car was the newer one Henry always drove.
Charles trudged toward the cabin, feeling frail and sick, though not so bad as before, and very, very tired. He wanted to sleep for a few months. And later, take a very hot bath. And never, ever have another sausage sandwich as long as he lived.
He quietly let himself in, noting that someone had built the fire back up. It was very warm inside and now that he had something to compare it with, he realized how truly cold he"d become, after all. He picked his way carefully over to the fireplace, afraid of waking those he pa.s.sed.
None of them stirred, though. He sat in front of the blaze and thawed out his hands. His feet were icy as well. He"d have to go with Cornelius to find extra socks for himself if this kept up.
G.o.d, but it was so still in here-as though for some reason everyone held their collective breath. The last time he"d felt anything remotely similar had been in the aftermath of his first battle. The only sound had been his own heartbeat and the only movement were the flocks of ravens come to feed on the dead.
He pushed that thought out, as he always did. The war was past and done, and he was free to forget its horrors.
He"d seen to his patriotic duty and survived.
And yet it was so b.l.o.o.d.y quiet. Had Stan Parmley forgotten how to snore? He was so infamous for it that none of the other men ever wanted to share a room with him.
Charles turned from the fire, peering about, waiting for his eyes to adjust to the dimness. As his attention shifted to the others, additional details emerged: some of them weren"t lying in a normal manner, arms were raised above their heads, or flung out to their sides, resting on those next to them. Nothing really alarming, just odd. But there was a smell in the air, like rusted metal, and very strong beneath it the stink of urine and feces... just like that d.a.m.ned battlefield. When death took the soldiers their bodies relaxed and...
No. He was imagining it. His fever was bringing back one of his really bad memories and casting it upon his friends here. Then his gaze was finally drawn to Bianca, who lay just a few feet from him. She often played the doomed Queen Gertrude when they did Hamlet and always died quite well in the arms of the young prince. Now she seemed to have achieved a similar stillness, that same slight arch of torment to her body. But Bianca always closed her eyes for that scene. However dramatic an open-eyed death might be, sooner or later you betrayed yourself to the audience by blinking.
This time, however, Bianca did not blink. Charles stared at her a full minute, waiting.
He gave up and looked away, not wanting to understand what was before him. He turned toward Cornelius, who lay on his stomach, his head pressed against the bare floor in what must be an uncomfortable position. He usually played Polonius, but never did he die at the hands of Hamlet in such a pose. He usually sank slowly down, managing to instill even that action with a hint of comic pomposity. He never just gracelessly dropped.
Then Charles saw the blood, saw that it was everywhere, on everyone, on every single one of them-and the dread comprehension he"d refused to accept broke upon his numbed mind like an avalanche.
Hours later in the too bright light of morning, the properties truck lurched into the yard and paused next to the remaining Ford. Clarence Coldfield got out and went around to help Katherine Hamilton down. They"d left Elkfoot Flats at dawn to search for the lost members of the company, and Clarence had spotted tire tracks coming out from a side road that cut into the woods. Being the only available clue, they decided to follow it and it had unexpectedly paid off.
Both walked toward the small cabin, calling out to announce their arrival, but getting no answer.
Chicago, 1937
Shoe Coldfield improvised another cup of coffee for himself with the cooking pan. I didn"t think he really wanted to drink it so much as have something to do with his hands.
"That"s pretty much it," he said, sitting again. "That"s what we pieced together from what Charles told us and the guesswork on what we knew about Raymond and the investigations the cops did. At first they thought Charles had done it and threw him in jail, but Katherine Hamilton raised holy h.e.l.l and made the police go to work. That"s when they found all the money was gone, then they traced the car to Ottawa. The only member of the company who was missing was Raymond Yorke, and a man fitting his description had sold the car that afternoon after the murders."
"Then he skipped?"
"Christ in heaven, he vanished off the face of the earth. Not easy to do, because everyone was after him. The papers up there called it "The Cabin Killings" and played on it for weeks, demanding action, but nothing came of it. We had no picture of Raymond to pa.s.s around, and when we tried to trace his history nothing came of that, either. His description fit half a dozen con men and thieves from all over. He"d made himself up from head to toe when he joined us and tossed the role away when he left."
"What about Charles?"
He shook his head, looking down at the coffee. "The doctors said it was like sh.e.l.l shock. He was in a bad way.
Crazy and scared out of his mind. Soon as I walked in the door and saw, I shoved Katherine back and made her stand out in the yard. I wasn"t raised in what you would call a nice neighborhood; I"ve seen a lot of bad, but not then or since have I ever seen anything as bad as what was in that cabin. Twelve of my friends, twelve good and harmless people... I heard a moaning sound over by the fireplace, and found Charles just sitting there, and the look on his face...
"I asked him what had happened, and that set him off. He screamed, just shrieked out at me that he didn"t do it, and that"s all we could get out of him for a time. Of course he didn"t do it, but he felt guilty all the same. I got him out of there and then had to tell Katherine and then had to keep her from going in. She didn"t need to see.
"The whole thing was one wicked mess after that, what with the cops accusing him and his condition adding to their suspicions. They thought he"d gone crazy and killed them all. There"s probably a few up there who still think he did it. When the smarter ones started looking for Raymond, things eased up, but didn"t improve much beyond that."
"What happened to the company?" "With her sister dead Katherine didn"t have the heart for it anymore, so it broke up. The rest of the players moved on. Some of the bodies were shipped off to relatives, others with no families to claim them were buried side by side at Elkfoot Flats. It was the worst thing that had happened up there in anyone"s memory. The town church always has a special ma.s.s every year for those dead on the day they were killed. People still stop at the cemetery to look at the markers and hear the story. The man who owned the hunting cabin eventually burned it. Said he couldn"t stand to go inside for thinking of what happened there, and no one blamed him for it."
"What about Charles?"
"Charles had what you would call a breakdown. h.e.l.l, he was only twenty-five, just a kid. He"d been in the war, but this was different. This was like his family was dead, and he felt guilty for being alive. My G.o.d, while they were being murdered he was outside half asleep in a d.a.m.ned s.h.i.thouse."
"But he was sick and drugged. The tea Raymond gave him-"
"Yeah, it had a dose of morphine, too, only it didn"t stay in him long enough to have as strong an effect. We all figured that in the heat of the moment Raymond didn"t make a body count, and that"s how he overlooked Charles. Or maybe he remembered and thought Charles would get some of the blame, which did almost happen."
"What sort of breakdown did he have?"
"The kind where a man"s sorry he"s alive. He used to say he should have been with them, either to save them or die with them as well. It tore him up in his soul, and he couldn"t shake free of it. The authorities finally put him in a sanitarium, and the doctors there shot him full of morphine to keep him quiet. When I found out no one was really helping him I asked Katherine to see about getting him released. I took him home with me to Chicago, tried to find a doctor who could help, but it turned out the best doctor was time. Once the morphine got cleared out of him, he seemed to get better, started sounding like his old self again. He even found an acting company here that he joined for a time. I think it was mostly to prove he could go back to the work, not because he really wanted to. But every so often he"d save up, buy a few bottles of booze, and try to kill himself with it."
"Good G.o.d."
"He knew what he was doing. I finally got fed up with it and beat the h.e.l.l out of him one night. That opened his eyes. Maybe it scared him, maybe he was angry. A couple days later he tells me he"s going back to England, and off he went. I never expected to see him again, but a few years later he turned up in the Belt asking after me. By then I had a start looking after my business, and he tells me he"s doing insurance investigation work. Said it was something like what his father did. When Charles got enough experience behind him to get his investigator"s license he broke away and opened his own agency. Considering what he"d been through, he"s not done bad for himself at all. Leastwise until now."
"And if this bender he went on is connected to the shooting, you think he found Raymond?"
"I think it"s more of a case that Raymond must have found him."
"And Raymond"s calling himself Ike LaCelle?"
A third voice, very subdued, cut in to answer. "No. No, he is not."
Startled, we both turned toward the speaker. Charles stood in the hall doorway, looking bad. He still hadn"t shaved, though he"d otherwise cleaned up and dressed. His face was fish-belly gray, his eyes haunted pits, and he swayed slightly. He"d sobered up some, but not completely; it hurt to see him like this. Coldfield rose and brought him over to the table. Escott slumped into the chair and groped for the coffee. He choked on it at first, but got half of it in him.
"Can"t either of you learn to brew a decent cup?" he complained. "Tastes like ashtray leavings."
"Did you find Raymond?" Coldfield asked.
"I did."
"And he"s not LaCelle?"
"No, but he is very good friends with the man. You see, Raymond"s name these days is now Archy Grant."
Coldfield stared at him a long time, his mouth open. I did the same. "Oh, sweet Jesus, are you sure?"
Escott laughed, a dry whisper of sound without mirth, without joy. "Yes, my friend. I am very sure. I am as certain of that as I am of death itself."
14
"How can that be?" I asked. "I mean, how? He"s Archy Grant. He"s famous. Everyone knows who he is."
"Who he is, not who he was. His life history, prior to ten years back, is but a sketch, and, I"m sure, entirely fiction."
"What"s your proof? I mean, you gotta have something solid to take to the cops before they"ll do anything."
More of that whispery laughter. I wanted to hit him to make it stop.
Coldfield stepped in. "Come on, Charles. Tell us what you found out."
Escott gave up laughing and just stared ahead, but without seeing. "The irony of this is that I was not looking for Raymond Yorke at all. I was looking for the man who shot at me. Gil Dalhauser was the most likely suspect, but when I let him see me today he scowled, but wasn"t particularly surprised. The man is doubtless an excellent poker player; he did not so much as flick an eyelid. So I dismissed him from my list and sought to test the lesser probability that Ike LaCelle represented."
"Did you tell Gordy any of this?" I asked. "Warn him someone wasn"t listening to his orders?"
"I"d planned to call him, but only after I ascertained the ident.i.ty of the guilty party. I made other calls and learned what I needed to know. Ike LaCelle usually spends his ample free time in the company of Archy Grant, perhaps because it affords the opportunity to meet new celebrities. Grant was having a rehearsal today for his show next week, something LaCelle usually attends, so I went to the studio."
"Bobbi was there, she didn"t mention seeing you."
"That is what you may expect when I do not wish to be noticed. I sat in the back and did not draw attention to myself, wanting to have the full effect on LaCelle when I finally confronted him."
"So he could shoot you again?"
"I still wore my vest. It was a reasonable gamble."
"Reasonable?"
Coldfield waved a warning hand at me from where he stood just behind Escott and mouthed the words "Let him talk." I recalled what he"d said about our mutual friend"s desire not to live, and suddenly all those times Escott had risked himself made sense. "Go on, Charles," he said. "What did you do?"
"Waited until the end of rehearsal. I watched them working through things, making changes, suggestions, laughing, arguing-it quite took me back to old times. Grant had piqued my curiosity last night. I couldn"t help but think I"d met him before, yet his face was unfamiliar to me. But sitting so far in the back of the auditorium, where his face was only a small pink oval, I paid more attention to his body movements and his voice.
"I did not grasp it at first, and then I told myself I certainly must be mistaken. It"s been thirteen years since I last saw Raymond, and he"d only been with the company for a month, but some details do stay in the brain, hidden deep and difficult to coax forth, but there all the same. The longer I watched Grant work, the more the past came back to me.
I remembered how he carried himself, that c.o.c.ky I-own-the-world walk, the shape of his head, his laugh, patterns of speech, and accent. All of it.
"By the end of the afternoon, they finished the rehearsal and everyone left. I took myself around to the exit Grant was heading toward and waited for him on the other side. He was alone for the moment, but LaCelle was not far behind. Grant came through the door, saw me, and stopped. Stopped and simply stared at me. He didn"t say a word.
Neither of us did. But I knew. I knew. And so did he.
"LaCelle came through just then, with a crowd of hangers-on, but I turned and walked away before he could notice me and react. I had what I wanted, the name of the gunman and the reason why he tried to kill me. Then I had to leave before... before..."
"You went nuts and killed him?" asked Coldfield.
"Yes. Exactly that. I began shaking all over and couldn"t seem to stop. Thought I"d pa.s.s out in the elevator down to the street. It came right back to me again, the rage. I had to calm myself and try to think."
"So you went out and got drunk."
"I don"t remember much of that part. I suppose I must have, for the both of you to make such a fuss, and I don"t feel at all well."
"But you did it, Charles. You found that son of a b.i.t.c.h. You got what you most wanted."
"Except for proof, my friend. I"ve no admissible proof against him." He breathed out one short puff of air to express defeat. "No proof. There"s no way to prove he did the shooting last night or that he was ever Raymond Yorke. All I have is inside my head, and you cannot set a personal conviction on an evidence table in a courtroom."
"Fingerprints," I said. "The cops must have taken fingerprints back then. It wouldn"t be much to-"
"There are no prints of his on record from the scene. He wore gloves."
"Come on, he must have left some for them to find. Did he wear gloves the whole month he was with the company?"