Linwood Barclay - Trust Your Eyes

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“Well,” I said, since I had no comment.

“And not for a second do I believe what Len’s been saying about Thomas,” she said.

“What would that be, Marie?”

“He can’t hear us, can he?” she asked worriedly.

“No.”

“Len’s been saying if the police ever started to investigate what happened to your father, they’d probably be taking a pretty good look at Thomas.”

“Why’s that, Marie?”

“Len says your dad always took chances on cutting grass on the side of that hill, but even so, he was the kind of man who always knew what he was doing. He says if the police ever started thinking he got pushed, that someone was there and let that tractor fall on him, well, they’d have to look no further than Thomas. I’m just telling you what Len says. I was thinking he might have said as much to you when you were over, before I opened the basement door, and I wanted to tell you I’m very sorry if he did. I don’t think Thomas would do that. He’s a good boy, basically. How high you got that oven set? Don’t put it up to 350 or anything. Just warm it a hundred degrees. Just for ten minutes or so.”

I adjusted the oven.

I thought I’d put it behind me, this obsession I’d been having about the tractor key being in the OFF position, the raised housing. Julie’s interpretation of things had made a lot of sense. But now I was wondering whether my earlier supposition, that someone had stopped to talk to my father, and might have been there when he died, could still be true.

But I didn’t hold Len in very high regard, especially lately, so the fact that he and I might be on the same wavelength also gave me pause. And why the hell was he doing this kind of speculating? What had kicked off this line of thinking? I’d only started letting my mind run a bit wild after I’d examined the tractor. Len, so far as I knew, had not been out here to inspect the accident scene before I moved the machine to the barn.

Was he basing his opinion on what my father had told him? If so, it seemed a stretch to draw a line from a push on the stairs to toppling a tractor onto someone. Especially when that someone was your own father.

Or was it possible Len was up to something else? Did he believe what he was saying, or was he trying to make trouble for Thomas? Why would he do that? Was he trying to plant an idea in Marie’s head? And again, why?

“The thing is,” Marie said, “Len’s always judged people harshly. He’s like that. You should hear him go on about the people in Thailand. They’re nice and all, but he says they don’t drive like Americans, their building standards aren’t the same as here, and the place can be so politically unstable at times. He says they need to get over all their petty squabbles and just run their country. And Len has never had much patience for monarchies. He doesn’t get why someone should get to run a country just because they were born into the right family. But it doesn’t stop him from going back, even if he has to go without me.”

Thailand.

Over the years, I’d heard friends talk about what a wonderful place it was. Hot, lush, one of the most beautiful countries on the planet. Terrific nightlife, a rich culture, spectacular food. But every travel destination had its problems. Paris had its pickpockets and unpredictable strikes. London was expensive and, occasionally, subject to terrorist violence. There were those bombs on the buses, and in the tube, a few years back. Same with Moscow. Mexico had its drug wars. Some of America’s greatest cities had to contend with vicious gang wars.

What was it I’d heard about Thailand? Certainly the political unrest Marie had mentioned. But there was something else.

Prostitution. Child prostitution.

I wondered whether Marie’s inability to travel was the real reason Len went on these trips without her.

FIFTY-THREE

“This is the sort of thing I’d have thought you might have checked first,” Nicole said, sitting in the passenger seat, her feet propped up on the dashboard, the ice pick poised between her two index fingers.

Lewis said nothing.

“I might have found out whether our guy was actually in Burlington, Vermont, before flying the hell up here. But that’s just me.”

“It was the right house,” Lewis said through gritted teeth. The van, driving through the night, was doing close to eighty, and felt as though it might float off the highway. They were heading west. He figured it would take them about two hours, maybe a little more, to get to their new destination.

An elderly neighbor had spotted them standing on the porch of Ray Kilbride’s house when no one answered. She said her name was Gwen, and that she was picking up Ray’s mail and any flyers left at the door while he was away, in Promise Falls. His dad had just died, she said, and he was staying there while he sorted things out. He was looking after his brother, too.

“Can I help you with something?” she’d asked.

“Wait a minute,” Nicole’d said. “You say someone named Ray lives here?”

“That’s right.”

Nicole had turned to Lewis and said, “I told you this was the wrong house. We’re on the wrong side of town.”

Lewis had shrugged. “I’m an idiot,” he’d conceded.

“So you’re not looking for Ray?” the neighbor had asked.

They’d said no, got back in the van, and pointed it in the direction of Promise Falls.

Along the way, Nicole needled Lewis about his fuckup. She wanted to get under his skin. Push him. See how angry he’d get.

It would be a clue to his intentions.

She said, “If it was me, I wouldn’t have gone up and knocked on the front door. You find a way inside the house, get the jump on them there.”

Lewis tightened his grip on the steering wheel. “Yeah, I guess you’re right. We’ll try it your way.”

Being nice.

That was when she knew he was going to kill her when this was over. He was being nice so she’d be off her guard.

It would be easy to take him out first. She could put the pick through his neck while he drove, then grab the wheel, get her foot on the brake. In a big van like this, it wasn’t hard to shift over to the driver’s side.

Nicole knew she could do it.

But she had to let this play out. She needed answers to what was going on as much as Lewis and his people did. Had to find out whether this Kilbride was as big a risk to her as he was to those who’d hired her in the first place. And then she’d have to decide how much of a risk her associates-not just Lewis-posed to her. Whether she’d have to do something about them. Because she was done with this. She was through. She’d had enough.

Something had happened to her in that basement in Chicago. When she’d killed that Whirl360 guy’s wife. Nicole didn’t want to take any more orders from any of these men.

She’d ride this one out to its conclusion, keeping a close eye on Lewis the whole time. She’d taken at least one major precaution in the event he got the jump on her.

Lewis said, “Maybe, if we get a second, we can run in somewhere, get some coffee. My treat.”

Oh yeah, he was definitely going to kill her.

FIFTY-FOUR

“This is good,” Thomas said, shoving another forkful of Marie’s tuna medley into his mouth.

“Yeah, not bad,” I said. But I’d found, once Marie had left, that I did not have much of an appetite. The things Len had said to her, that she’d repeated for me, were stuck in my head. I couldn’t shake the feeling he was up to something. Trying to lay something on Thomas that he hadn’t done.

“I’m going to have seconds,” Thomas said.

“That’s fine. And maybe you’d like to clean up after dinner.”

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