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Authors: T. Jefferson Parker

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BOOK: Full Measure: A Novel
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“I wanted something back from you but instead I got nothing.”

“The card had a frog on it.”

“It was a Pacific tree frog. They’re all over Fallbrook but they only come out when it rains.”

“I hear them in the creek by my house. Is there something specific you came here to talk about?”

“The concert by Cruzela Storm. I want you to cancel it.”

“That’s a terrible thing to say, Ted.”

“It’s my honest opinion and I vote. You are not my mother or my nanny.”

“The concert is to help pay for two lighted crosswalks, Ted. George Hernandez lost his life right there on Mission for no reason. No reason at all! You should be asking to help, not to hinder.”

“To help you?”

“Help Fallbrook.”

“Are the lighted crosswalks big and meaningful?”

“Yes. They’re big and meaningful and
affordable
. If we have the concert, that is.”

Ted looked around as if considering. “I’d like to join your re-election staff.”

“But, Ted, you and I disagree on almost every issue. Besides, the campaign work is mostly done. It’s just a matter of taking down the posters after the vote.”

“Then I would like to show Cruzela Storm around Fallbrook after the show. A tour of our city, in my taxi. For free.”

Evelyn’s scalp cooled and tightened. “That’s sweet of you. But she’ll have lots of security.”

“They can come, too. My cab has room for four adult passengers. So—me, you, Cruzela, and two security guards. It’s clean and comfortable.”

“She’s a very private and in-demand person, Ted.”

“Will you at least ask her?”

“No. I won’t.”

“You are everything I don’t like about government and women,” said Ted. “All you say is no, no, no, and no. You should be ashamed of yourself.”

“Sometimes I am ashamed, when I can’t do enough. I’m trying here, Ted, with the crosswalks I’m
trying
to say yes to something good.” Evelyn’s phone chimed and she listened and rang off. “My nine o’clocks just got here.” She looked past Ted’s shoulder at Brian, standing out in the hallway, phone in hand. She could hear footsteps coming up the old wooden stairs, their echoes climbing the stairwell and spilling into the lobby. God bless the LaPointes!

“I also don’t like that you’ve lost all Mom and Dad’s money,” said Ted. “They’re losing everything, because of you.”

Evelyn stood. “I have not lost all their money. And I won’t discuss anything more with you.”

“No, you won’t. Because you’re government and a woman, and a thief and a liar.”

“Leave now.”

Ted grabbed the tarantula off the desk and looked at Evelyn as he worked the sandwich box back into the waistband of his pants. “I’ll do something big and important. I don’t need you.”

 

CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN

 

Ted clomped down the stairs, through the lobby and onto Main Street. His stab wounds hurt. His vision had constricted and he was short of breath. When he got to his truck, the dome-headed man he’d seen lurking around Fallbrook was sitting on a sidewalk bench in the late morning shadow of the buildings. As before, he wore a suit, this time olive. His complexion was pale and he had open, expressive eyes and a small neat mustache. He held up a badge holder then slipped it back into his jacket pocket. “Hello, Ted. I’m Homeland Security Department, Homeland Security Investigations Special Agent Max Knechtl.”

Ted stopped and looked down the long rifled tunnel at the end of which sat the agent. He didn’t think Anders would get him that riled up. My government, he thought, working for me. Now more of it. “I’m Theodore Archibald Norris. Citizen.”

“What’s that under your shirt?”

“A tarantula for the mayor. She didn’t like it.”

“That’s an unusual gift.”

“You must be the arson expert. Your boss was on the news but they didn’t show you.”

“Yes, I am that expert.”

“I didn’t set the fire.”

“Sit down and talk to me. Take a load off those feet and those stitches in your side.”

Ted reached under his shirt. Knechtl’s hand was already on a gun holstered within his suit coat, and his expression had gone blank. Utterly. His face was nothing but two eyes with sunlight coming into them. Ted could see dark blue steel twinkling behind the olive lapel. “The tarantula,” said Ted, slowing extending the sandwich box for Knechtl to see. “She’s a female.”

“Nice one. I’m relieved. Sit, Ted.” Knechtl smiled but left his hand inside his coat for a moment. Then he crossed his hands over his knees but he still had an empty look on his face. Ted took the opposite side of the bench and set the sandwich box next to him. “Tell me about the fire.”

“I just told you I didn’t set it.”

“I know
you
didn’t set it. But someone did. And I think you’re a smart man. You know every inch of this little town and the people in it. You know its streets. I see from your political cartooning that you’re a student of current affairs and a man of clear and strong beliefs. Talk to me about this town and the man who set this fire, Ted. Educate me.”

A sheriff’s patrol car went by, driven by the black deputy who’d given him the nystagmus test for all of Fallbrook to see. The deputy nodded behind his sunglasses and Ted nodded back, then noted that Knechtl nodded back also. Ted felt suffocated by government: the mayor—formerly his own babysitter with whom he had once been in serious love—spinning financial webs upstairs in her lair; domed Knechtl ambushing him on Main Street; and of course the cursed black sheriff’s deputy on scene,
always
on scene like a character in a repeating dream. Ted yearned to be in his cab, for motion and protection, to be watching the world through heavy glass. “I was driving the taxi when the fire broke out. You can check my Friendly Village Taxi time card.”

“Oh, I’ve done that. And your call-in log, too. You had five fares that morning.”

“I was too busy that day to set a fire.”

“If you say so.” Ted’s vision began to reassemble and he took a deep breath. It was beginning to seem possible that Knechtl was not here to arrest him for anything. Across the street, Mary Gulliver stood outside Gulliver’s Travels, sipping a mug of something, getting some of the morning sunshine on her pretty face. Yes, she was twice his age but who cared? “Oh, there’s Mary,” said Knechtl. “I’ve talked to her about you. And I’ve talked to Dora Newell and Evelyn Anders and Lucinda Smith about you, too.”

Ted felt as if he was naked now, sitting on a bench on Main Street, with everybody able to see his naked, pale, flabby body, his shy little penis, and his open, unprotected soul. God he could use some protective glass. He reached into his pocket for his sunglasses but had left them somewhere. “I hope they said good things, Agent Knechtl.”

“It’s
special
agent. How do you like the Glock?”

“It’s legal. It’s for self-defense. I was robbed at gunpoint not long ago.”

“And at knifepoint just two nights ago.”

“I passed the background check for the gun. I’ve never been convicted of a crime. I had a high D average at college until they kicked me out.”

Knechtl took a cell phone off his belt, checked something, put it back. “You had a C-plus going in the media and politics class.”

“I loved that class.”

“And I saw that almost every book you checked out of the library was about current events, recent trends, our nation.”

“I read books because I don’t trust the media. There’s always more than they’re telling us. The truth is always on the back page but TVs don’t have pages. I don’t like you knowing what books I check out and what my grades are. It doesn’t seem American.”

Knechtl nodded and uncrossed his legs. He picked up the plastic box and tilted it up and down. “I can assure you it is. You’re defensive, Ted. Is there a reason?”

“Because I’m innocent.”

“Of what?”

“Everything.”

“Then why be defensive?”

“I don’t like being followed by you. You’re a pit bull of the nanny state. It doesn’t matter how nice a guy you are, Max. I didn’t do anything wrong. Nothing. Except, well, a few days ago I painted some of the burned trees without triple-washing the sprayer. Then I stripped off the bark when I was trying to get the poison paint off. Killed about thirty trees in less than a day. Talk about making your dad mad.”

Knechtl set the container back on the bench. “Why did you go to the
Inspire
magazine Web site?”

Ted was suddenly amazed that the DHS could have found out about that digital visit. But just as quickly he realized that he’d read somewhere, or maybe heard on TV, that every single e-mail, cell call, and Web site visit in America is recorded. “I researched
Inspire
because it was on the news. I’d never heard of it. I wanted to see if it really was trying to get people to set wildfires in the United States.” He looked across Main Street to the pedestrians walking by and he could feel Knechtl staring at him.

“Did you read the instructions on how make a firebomb with a timer?”

“I’m not interested in things like that.”

“But you saw them, the instructions?”

“Because they were part of the site.”

“The timer on the Fallbrook device was similar to the one described in
Inspire.

“But I went on the
Inspire
Web site after the fire, not before.” Ted turned and faced Knechtl, saw the strange neutrality on his face, like when the special agent had put his hand on his firearm.

“I’m not accusing you, Ted.”

“Sounds like you are.”

“I’m trying to let you help me. Domestic terrorism is our number one threat. Tell me about Ibrahim Sadal down at the GasPro Station.”

“Ibrahim? I don’t know him.”

“You’ve spoken to him many times, Ted. And yes, he’s spoken to me about you.”

“He’s a good gas station manager. He always fixes the carwash when it breaks, and the window-washing water is always clean and he never runs out of paper towels. He’s always a few pennies a gallon higher than the Arco across the street, but I think his station is better.”

“He came to this country from a violent Muslim nation. His family has ties to militant mullahs.”

“I thought Saddam killed them all.”

“Maybe we should have let him.”

Ted picked up the sandwich box and lifted off the plastic lid and gently spilled the big spider onto his lap. She methodically started creeping up his aloha shirt.

“Aren’t they poisonous?” asked Knechtl.

“Mildly. Their fangs are big but they’re not interested in biting people. They just want to be left alone. If I grabbed her now, she’d bite me. Or if I badgered her into it. Just like if you badger people too much, they’ll bite you, too.”

“Have you and Ibrahim Sadal talked politics?”

“Why would we do that?”

“Has he made anti-American remarks?”

“Not that I ever heard.”

“What’s your gut tell you? We know for a fact he’s a practicing Muslim. He keeps the Koran behind the counter at the station. I’ve seen him reading it when business is slow. Would Ibrahim set that fire?”

Ted gingerly scooped the tarantula off his shoulder. He opened his hands and let her walk from palm to palm, over and over again, while he thought. Her feet felt dainty but purposeful on his skin. He liked the way her first and third legs on one side rose in unison with the second and fourth of the other. Like she was compensating for sore feet. He set her on his lap again.

“Tell me about Cade Magnus, Ted. Do you find it interesting that the fire broke out exactly seven days after he moved back here to Fallbrook?”

“Not really. I don’t think he set it.”

“Why not?”

“He isn’t sneaky.”

“Interesting observation. Have you talked to Cade about the fire?”

The tarantula had summited Ted’s shoulder again, and again he lifted her off. “No.”

Knechtl steadied Ted’s arm for a better view of the tarantula. His grip was surprisingly strong. “Is she warm or cool?”

“Slightly warm. Sun.”

“What are those two little things sticking up under the rump?”

“Those are spinnerets, Max. They dispense silk.”

“Do tarantulas spin webs?”

“No way. They line their tunnels with silk. Then they decorate the tunnels with whatever they find. I found a tiny plastic soldier in a tunnel once. A prone rifleman.”

“What do you talk about at Pride Auto Repair when you shoot pool with Cade and Trevor and the women?

“Why don’t you just hide a bug in the place?”

“Expensive and time-consuming. I don’t think Cade Magnus set the fire, either. But I do like to keep tuned to what he’s up to. I’d appreciate you passing along anything that strikes you as unusual. Domestic terrorists are our number one threat.”

“You said that twice.”

“It can’t be said too many times.”

Once again the spider had climbed Ted’s shoulder. She now seemed to be considering a climb up his neck, her two foremost legs raised as if to take the first steps. Ted angled his head and looked down and saw the eight stacked eyes looking up at him. “Are you good enough with that gun to shoot a tarantula off my shoulder?”

“Piece of cake. Nice talking. I’ll be in touch.” Knechtl headed down the sidewalk.

Ted slid his hand under the spider and tilted her back into the box. “I’d never let him do that.”

*   *   *

He stood at the Pride Auto Repair counter and watched Cade barge through the windowed double doors. Cade flung open the counter walk-through and pulled Ted outside by one of his ears. Ted yelped and tried to duck away but was forced to stoop and crab along to the front door or have his ear torn off, and to keep the spider from getting slammed around. Once they were outside Cade let go of his ear and pushed Ted to the ground. “Don’t come back here until you can account for yourself.”

“What did I do?”

“I don’t want your brother here. I don’t want the DHS or FBI here. I don’t want
you
here. You’re not worth it.”

“Account how, Cade?”

Cade looked like he was about to say something, then he slammed the door. Ted looked up at the neon sign of the blue Model T doing the wheelie, throwing the red flames. The sign was turned off but the sunlight played through the tubes and brought the colors to life. Ted gathered himself and stood. His knife wounds throbbed and he wondered if they were leaking. He checked the spider in the box and she looked hunched and afraid. He set the box on the seat of his truck and put a ball cap over it to give her some shade and peace. Standing by the open truck door he lifted his shirt and saw the pink discharge soaking through the dressings.

BOOK: Full Measure: A Novel
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