The porch was long and roofed over with tin and so I enjoyed a few moments without rain coming down on my head. There were windows onto the porch. I crept from window to window, trying to see inside.
At the third window there was a little girl. She sat up on a bed and played with what looked like two Barbie dolls. I had to restrain myself from tapping on the window and getting her attention. But no-I wasn’t ready to do anything to put her in direct danger until I knew more.
The silhouette of a man passed by the open doorway to her bedroom and I started. Jake, or Freddie. I didn’t know which. Fortunately he hadn’t seen me.
The house wasn’t clear yet. I needed to rendezvous with Hank before I attempted to get Julie and the kid out of the house.
I would have to make for the stables. There was someone down there with a dog. Probably it was Archie Carpin, but I had no way of knowing.
Facing the stables I looked back toward the dark fence line. It cut a hundred yards across the open landscape and again disappeared into blackness to the south of the stables.
I hopped off of the porch and into the darkness.
One end of the stables lay in inky blackness. I could smell horses but I couldn’t see any of them. I moved from one stall to the next and listened.
No neighs or whinnies. No stamping of hoofed feet. All of the horses were gone.
I remembered: Julie had said that all the men-even the ones who tended the still operation-were at the races. That meant the horses were there as well.
I wondered where Hank was.
Suddenly there was a long low growl, growing in intensity. It came from the other side of the stables.
There was an answering bark. Dingo!
An instant later there came the unmistakable sound of Hank’s voice: “Git ‘em!”
I ran down to the center of the stables into the light, cut through the central corridor and out the other side.
Splashing through water nearly a foot deep in places, I approached the dogs.
There were strange shapes in the night. The strangest shape of all was the hill.
It was a manure pile. Perhaps thirty feet long and in places nearly the height of a man.
A lot of horses had created it over a long period of time.
As I came around the southern end of the pile there was a flash of lightning, and as if newly created by the storm, a man, standing with his back to me.
Five feet away from him was what appeared to be an ancient concrete culvert stood on end, three quarter embedded down in the manure.
The dark silhouette was Hank, standing there in the darkness.
Fifteen feet in front of him was somebody else.
Archie Carpin stood there staring at me.
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
“Where’s my money,” Archie Carpin asked me. There was a gun in his hand, pointed down at the mud.
The two dogs were out there, growling and splashing and snapping at each other.
“Why don’t you ask Julie,” I said.
“She ain’t talkin’,” he said. “She must think I’m gonna kill her after I’ve got it.”
“I wonder why she would possibly think that?”
“Smart fellah, ain’t ya?”
“Not so smart,” I said. “Looks like you’re holding all the cards.”
“I’m holding most of the cards,” he said. “I’ve got the kid and I’ve got Julie. I’ve got Jacob over there covering your partner.”
I looked. It was true. In the light of the stables I could see Hank’s hands coming up into the air. His backpack was gone. Jake stood behind him, gun raised. Also, I didn’t see Dingo.
“I’m only missing one thing,” Carpin said.
“What’s that?” I asked.
“The money.”
“What money?” I asked.
“Where’s the goddamned money?” Archie Carpin screamed.
There was a sudden screech. One of the two animals fighting out there in the darkness and the mud just experienced the sensation of teeth sinking down into throat, cutting off its last howl. Either Dingo or the mastiff was dead.
I took two steps forward.
His gun swung up, pointed at me.
I laughed. I laughed out loud at him as the lightning played and danced across the sky.
“What’s so goddamned funny, asshole?” he yelled.
“You. You and your stupid horses and your screwed-up family history and your pathetic control games. Money is nothing!”
“If it’s nothing, then maybe you wouldn’t mind handing it over,” he said, and grinned.
“I can’t,” I said. “You idiot. You’ve already got it.”
He looked around, then back up at me.
“I don’t see it,” he said. His smile had taken on the aspects of lunacy. His eyebrows were arched and I could see his teeth.
“That’s because it’s out of sight,” I told him.
“Where?” Carpin said. “Tell me, or your buddy there gets it.”
I looked over at Hank, his hands in the air, a gun pointed at his head. Jake grinned at me, the dark gap where one of his incisors had been lent him the appearance of ignorant evil.
I looked toward Hank, caught a split-second of his face in that perfectly illuminated world inside a lightning flash. He was smiling as well.
I remembered. The nitrates!
“Where?” Carpin shouted.
“Right there, you stupid piece of shit,” I said, and pointed to the ground at Hank’s feet.
“The manure pile?” Carpin laughed. “You gotta be shittin’ me.”
“Not the manure pile,” I said. “Under it. Way under it. The old tornado shelter.”
Back in High School I did a brief stint on the Junior Varsity football team. In those days we had coaches who weren’t afraid to rub our noses in the dirt when we screwed up, and if you happened to get on their bad side… look out.
I got on a coach’s bad side once, right in his office. Back then my mouth was a lot faster, sort of like a pistol with a hair trigger. So when I told the coach that maybe he ought to worry a little less about my lack of team spirit and a little more about the rumors of him and Miss Puckett-the young substitute teacher who was being handed around-and about how his wife might react when she found out, the white-headed old pug came unglued.
He stood up from his chair so quickly and violently that a lynch-pin underneath it fell out and the whole swivel seat and backrest fell over and rattled on the waxed tile floor. He never even noticed. His face was fiery purplish-red, the color of a freshly pulled beet.
We almost came to blows that day.
That’s what Carpin’s face reminded me of in the light from the stables and the intermittent lightning. His face was red, just as Coach Looney’s had been.
“What?” he screamed. “All along? All this time? While those two idiots were chasing her all over?”
“Yeah,” I said. “Ain’t it a riot?”
Jake started laughing, the laugh of a dullard who has stumbled across some simple yet profound truth.
“I fucking believe you,” Carpin said. “It’s the only thing that makes any kind of sense. You know why, right? ‘Cause it makes no fucking sense, that’s why it makes sense.”
“Good,” I said. “Your money is on your property. We can go then.”
I took a step toward Hank and Jake.
Carpin’s gun belched flame. A clot of mud leapt up from the ground and swatted me. He’d fired into the ground to my side.
“Not so fast,” he said. “I can’t let you people live. You know too much. You know about the still. You know about the kid. Besides that…”
”What?” I asked.
“I’ve been waiting to do this since I first talked to you on the phone.” He raised his gun, straight-armed, and pointed it at my face.
“Good girl,” Hank yelled.
There was a blur and belching fire. I felt hot air: a bullet whizzing past my cheek just as Carpin’s arm came down under the dark mass of some beast.
Dingo!
They were on the ground for a moment, rolling in the mud. Dingo’s teeth tore through wet cloth down into flesh and bone.