“I got me an assignment. I’m on PC,” he said, using the shorthand for paracargo. “Packing and strapping in the loadmaster’s room. You, too, pal,” he told Gull. “Swede pulled the loft.”
“Yeah, I saw that, and that anybody on the Alaska jump could take a two-hour break first. But what the hell.” He leaned over, kissed Rowan. “We’ll get back to our agenda later.”
“Count on it.”
“I don’t see how it’s right and fair you got a woman right on base,” Dobie said as they walked toward the loadmaster’s room together. “The rest of us have to hunt one up, if we’re lucky and get a turn at a bar.”
“Life’s just full of not right and not fair. Otherwise I’d be stretched out on a white sand beach with that woman, drinking postcoital mai tais.”
“Postcoital.” Dobie snickered like a twelve-year-old. “You beat all, Gull. Beat all and back again.”
SINCE HE DIDN’T FIND
her in her quarters, Gull assumed he’d finished up his duties before her, and went back to his room to continue on his project.
He sat on the bed, left the door open in a casual, nothing-to-see-here mode.
People walked by now and then, but for the most part his section stayed quiet.
Since he’d left his window open as well, he caught snippets of conversation as people wandered outside. A small group not on the jump list made plans to go into town. Somebody muttered to himself about women as the shimmering afternoon light dimmed.
He took a moment to shift to look out, and saw Rowan had been right about the eastern sky. Clouds gathered now, sailing in like warships.
A storm waiting to happen, he thought, toying with getting his run in before it did, then decided to wait for Rowan.
She and the first grumble of thunder arrived at the same time.
“Lightning strikes all over hell and back,” she told him, and flopped on the bed. “I ran up to check the radar. Tornadoes whipping things up in South Dakota.”
She circled her neck, rubbing hard at the back of her left shoulder as she spoke.
“We’ll probably have to run on the damn treadmill. I hate that.”
He pressed his fingers where she rubbed. “Jesus, Rowan, you got concrete in here.”
“Don’t I know it. I haven’t had a chance to work it out today. I need that run, some yoga . . . or that.” She sighed when he shifted and dug his fingers and thumbs into the knotted muscles.
“We’ll do our run after the storm’s over,” he said. “Use the track.”
Lightning struck, a flash and burn, and the wind rattled the blinds at his window. But no rain followed.
“When things slow down, we’ll hit L.B. up for a night off and get a fancy hotel suite. One with a jet tub in the bathroom. We’ll soak in it half the night.”
“Mmm.” She sighed her way into the image he painted. “Room service with fat, juicy steaks, and a great big bed to play on. Sleeping with somebody who has money and doesn’t mind spending it has advantages.”
“If you’ve got money and mind spending it, you can’t be having much fun.”
“I like that attitude. Are you e-mailing back home?”
“No, something else. You’re not going to like it.”
“If you’re e-mailing your pregnant wife to ask about your two adorable children and frisky puppy, I’m not going to like it.” She angled around. “That’s the kind of tone you used. Like you were going to tell me something that meant I had to punch you in the face.”
“My wife’s not pregnant, and we have a cat.” He gave her shoulders a last squeeze, then got up to close the door.
“You didn’t do that because we’re going to continue our planned agenda from this morning.”
“No. It’s the tampering, Rowan. Brakeman thinking of it, then pulling it off—all while eluding the cops. That’s just not working for me.”
“He knows this area better than most. He’s a mechanic, and he has a grudge against us. It works for me.”
On the surface, he thought, but you only had to scratch off a layer.
“Why tamper with some of the equipment?” Gull began working off his mental list. “He doesn’t know how we roll here, or in a fire. Not all the ins and outs.”
“His daughter worked here three seasons,” Rowan pointed out. “She had a working knowledge of how we roll, and he’s spent time on base.”
“If he wanted to hurt us, there are more direct ways. He had weapons; he could’ve used them. Sure, he could’ve known or found out where the equipment is,” Gull conceded, “and he could’ve gotten to it. This stretch of the season, most of us would sleep through a bomb blast. We’d hear the siren, the same way a mother hears her baby crying in the night even when she’s exhausted. We’re tuned, but otherwise, we’re out for the count.
“This was subtle, and sneaky, and it was the kind of thing, it seems to me, you’d know to do if you knew just how broken equipment could impact a crew on a fire. Because you’ve been there.”
He was right, Rowan thought. She didn’t like it. “You’re actually saying one of us did this?”
“I’m saying one of us could have done it, because we know how to access the equipment, how to screw it up and how it could impact an attack.”
“How stupid would that be since you could be the one impacted?”
“There’s that. Let’s take that first. Who didn’t jump either fire?”
He toggled his screen back to the document he’d worked on.
“You’re right; I don’t like it one damn bit. And first, Yangtree jumped with us.”
“He spent nearly the entire jump coordinating, doing flyovers.”
“That’s crap. And L.B.? Seriously?”
“He didn’t jump. Cards worked as spotter, so he didn’t jump. Neither did any of these. That’s over twenty, with six of them off the list altogether for personal reasons or injuries.”
“Yangtree’s been jumping thirty
years
. What, suddenly he decides to find out what’ll happen if he screws up equipment? Cards has ten years in, and L.B. more than a dozen. And—”
“Look, I know how you feel about them. They’re friends—they’re family. I feel the same.”
“In my world people don’t make up a suspect list of friends and family.”
“How often in your world has your equipment been sabotaged?” He laid a hand on her knee to soften the words. “Look, it’s more with you because you’ve been with them a long time. But I trained with a lot of the names on this list, and you know going through that makes a tight bond.”
“I don’t even know why you’re doing this.”
“Because, damn it, Rowan, if it wasn’t Brakeman, then we can do our patrols, our rechecks and spot checks, but . . . If you wanted to get in the ready room, the loadmaster’s room, any damn place on base tonight and mess something up, could you?”
She didn’t speak for a moment. “Yeah. I could. Why would I? Why would any of us?”
“That’s another deal entirely. Before that, there’s the possibility, if it’s one of us, it
is
somebody who jumped, who knew they were high on the list. Who wanted to be there, be part of it. We’re in a stressful line of work. People snap, or go too far. The firefighter who starts fires, then risks himself and his crew to put it out. It happens.”
“I know it happens.”
He hit another key, took her to another page.
“I divided the crews, the way we were that day.”
“You’re missing some names.”
“I think we can eliminate ourselves.”
“Dobie’s not here.”
“He had the duct tape.”
“Yeah, that was real handy.”
“He always carries . . . Okay, you’re right.” It burned his belly and his conscience, but he added Dobie’s name. “I should add us because you wished for the damn tape, and I remembered he’d have it.”
“What’s our motive?”
“Maybe I want to scare you off the job so you’ll stay home and cook me a hot dinner every night.”
“As if. But I mean the question. What’s any motive?”
“Okay, let’s roll with that. Yangtree.” He toggled back again. “He’s talking about giving it up. His knees are shot. Thirty years, like you said. He’s given this more than half his life, and now he knows he can’t keep it up. The younger and stronger are moving in. That’s a pisser.”
“He’s not like that.” She snapped it out—knee-jerk—then subsided when Gull only looked at her. “All right. This is bogus, but all right.”
“Cards? He’s had a bad-luck season. Injuries, illness. It wears. The woman he wanted to marry dumped him. Last summer, when he was spotter, Jim Brayner died.”
“That wasn’t—”
“His fault. I agree. It wasn’t yours, either, Rowan, but you have nightmares.”
“Okay. Okay. I get it. We could walk down your lists and find a plausible motive for everyone. That doesn’t make it true. And if it’s such a good theory, the cops would’ve thought of it.”
“What makes you think they haven’t?”
That stopped her. “That’s a really ugly thought. The idea they’re looking at us, investigating us, scraping away to hunt for weaknesses, secrets. That they’re doing what we’re doing here, only more.”
“It is ugly, but I’d rather take a hard look than ignore what might be right here with us.”
“I want it to be Brakeman.”
“Me too.”
“But if it’s not,” she said before he could, “we have to think of the safety of the unit. It’s not L.B.”
He started to argue, then backed off. “What’s your reasoning?”
“He worked hard for his position, and he takes a lot of pride in it. He loves the unit and he also loves its rep. Anything that damages or threatens that reflects on him. He could’ve closed ranks and kept this internal, but he opened it up. He’s the one shining the light on it when he knows he may pay consequences.”
Good points, Gull decided. Every one a good point. “I’ll agree with that.”
“And it’s not Dobie. He’s too damn good-natured under it all. And he loves what he’s doing. He loves it all. Mostly he loves you. He’d never do anything that put you at risk.”
“Thanks.”
“I didn’t say that for you.”
“I know.” But it soothed both his belly and his conscience. “Thanks anyway.”
She looked out the window where lightning flashed, and thunder echoed over the gloom-shrouded peaks. “The wind’s pushing the rain south. We just can’t catch a break.”
“We don’t have to do this now. We can let it alone, hit the gym.”
“I’m not a weak sister. Let’s work it through. I’ll tell you why it’s not Janis.”
“All right.” He took her hand, disconcerting her by bringing it briefly to his lips. “I’m listening.”
28
G
ull figured he had an hour, tops. With Rowan hip-deep on her reports for the Alaska fire, she’d be occupied for at least that long. He came down from his duties in the loft, checking the time as he struck out on the service road at a light jog.
Nobody would question a man doing his PT, and there’d be no reason to suspect he’d arranged a meeting away from any casual observers.
Especially Rowan.
In any case, he liked being out, taking a short extra run, getting inside his own head.
The storm the night before hadn’t squeezed out more than a piss pot of rain, but it had managed to drop the temperature. They’d rolled a load that morning to jump a fire east, so he didn’t want to go far in case the siren went off.
He didn’t have to.
Half a mile out, Lucas stood in running sweats and a T-shirt talking on his cell.
“Sure, that’d be great.” He gave Gull a slight nod. “Perfect. I’ll see you then.” After closing the phone, he tucked it in the pocket of his sweats. “Gull.”
“Thanks for meeting me.”
“No problem. I still run here some days, so I got a mile or so in. I have to figure this has to do with Rowan since you didn’t want to talk to me on base.”
“With her, with everybody. Nobody knows the players better than you, Lucas. The staff and crew, the Brakemans, the cops. Maybe not the rookies as much as the long-timers, but I’m betting you’ve got some insight there, as they jump with your daughter.”
Lucas cocked an eyebrow at that, but Gull just shrugged.
“You’d size them up, ask some questions, get some answers.”
“I know you’re fast on your feet, had a good rep with the hotshots, and L.B. considers you a solid asset to the crew. You don’t mind a fight, like fast cars, have a head for business and good taste in women.”
“We’ve got the last in common. Let me ask you straight out, does Leo Brakeman have the brains, the canniness, let’s say, the aptitude to do all that’s being laid down here? Forget motive and opportunity and all that cop shit.” Gull shrugged it off. “Is he the man for this?”
Lucas said nothing for a moment, only nodding his head as if affirming his own thoughts. “He’s not stupid, and he’s a damn good mechanic. Starting from the back, yeah, he could’ve figured how to disable equipment without it showing until it was too late. Killing Latterly . . .”