Killer Summer (19 page)

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Authors: Ridley Pearson

BOOK: Killer Summer
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“I’m not jumping the fence, that’s nuts. It’s, like, a federal crime or something.”
“Are you afraid?”
“No. I’m just not going to do it.”
“Because you’re afraid . . .”
“No. Because I can just walk through Sun Valley Aviation and get to the same place.”
“At some point,” she said, “my father’s going to look for me, we both know that. Tonight, tomorrow? When he does, he’s going to check everywhere. He doesn’t do anything halfway. If you and me go through Sun Valley Aviation, we’ve been seen together. And then, when I’m suddenly not around . . .”
“Which is why this is where you get out.”
“That’s not going to happen.”
“Yes, it is,” he said. “Seriously, I’ve got to go. Have a safe flight.”
She yanked the keys from the ignition, popped open the door, and sprinted for the fence. She climbed the fence like a cat. Through the chain link, she grinned playfully, dangling Kevin’s keys from her finger. She glanced furtively to either side, wondering if she’d been seen, then was all the more obnoxious when she realized she was in the clear.
“If you want ’em, you’re going to have to come and get ’em.” She slipped the keys into the tight front pocket of her jeans. “Throw my suitcase over, while you’re at it.”
He left the suitcase in the car and climbed the fence, landing flat-footed on the tarmac.
She backed away, her right hand still guarding the keys in her pocket.
“Your bag for the keys,” he said, looking around hotly, terrified of being caught.
“Come and get it,” she said.
She sprinted toward one of the jets.
He caught up to her just as she was slipping a key in the jet’s lock. The top half of the jet’s hatch lifted up as a set of stairs simultaneously lowered with the bottom half.
She grabbed Kevin by the front of his shirt and pulled him toward her. Then, as their lips were about to touch, she spun around, placing her backside against his crotch, and pulled his right hand down around her, his fingers inching into her pocket.
It was warm inside the pocket. And
terrifying.
“They’re yours, if you want them.”
His fingers touched his keys. She forced his hand lower, deeper into the pocket. It was like a furnace down there.
He grabbed his keys, pulled them out, stuffed them in his pant pocket.
She pulled his now-free hand against the skin of the jet.
“Now that you’ve touched it,” she said, confusing him, “don’t you want to
see
it?”
“I . . . don’t think so,” his voice cracked. He looked back at his car.
“One beer,” she said. “Have a look around. Stay or don’t stay. Whatever you want. But I’ve got time to kill, and we might as well kill it together.”
Her warmth lingered on his fingertips.
Now that you’ve touched it . . .
He followed her up the stairs.
37
H
aving set the charge in the golf cart, Roger McGuiness had met up with Matt Salvo, who’d had a much easier time stealing the logging truck than on his first try.
McGuiness dropped the semi into a low gear, and they drove off, leaving behind Sun Valley Company’s Cold Springs base camp, an area of collected construction equipment and material.
“We’re good?” Salvo said.
McGuiness replied, “I must have passed a dozen patrol cars headed north.”
A siren
whooped
from behind them.
“Heads up!” McGuiness said, his attention on the truck’s wing mirror.
Salvo checked the opposing mirror and he pounded the truck’s dash. “Shit!”
“Chill. We’ve got this,” said the driver.
The GREENHORN/EAST FORK traffic light was just ahead. Less than a quarter mile past the light, and slightly downhill, was the highway bridge, a three-lane concrete span.
Salvo reached over and picked up the fat black electric cable that lay between the seats. The rest of it ran out of the cab’s sliding rear window to the load of logs chained to the truck bed. Attached to the cab end that Salvo held was a black button switch.
The cop car had pulled to within a few feet of the red safety flags stapled to the ends of the longer logs.
“Not yet,” McGuiness said.
“The fucker is right there!”
“And what’s he going to do, run us off the road? Do not detonate those charges, Matt. Hold off.”
Salvo’s thumb hovered over the button.
The truck ran the light, speeding toward the bridge.
“Timing is everything,” McGuiness said. “I set those charges. I know how this thing is going to work. Don’t freak out over some cop car.”
The cop car jerked out into the turn lane and pulled up alongside. Oncoming traffic swerved to avoid it.
A hundred yards and closing.
Salvo’s thumb loomed over the button.
“You strapped in?” McGuiness said, double-checking.
“Yeah.”
“Good. Hold on.”
McGuiness tugged the steering wheel sharply left, quickly corrected, and then applied the brakes. The tires squealed and smoked as the cab and trailer drifted in slow motion, first in unison, then like the tail wagging the dog, as the truck jackknifed into a graceful skid. The move got the cop’s attention—one second, alongside the rig; the next, about to be crushed by it. He veered off the highway, spewing a rooster tail of dust and crashing head-on into the berm that supported the bike path.
McGuiness had landed the cab and trailer squarely between the bridge’s opposing guardrails. A thing of beauty.
“Now!”
Salvo pushed the button.
A great cloud of gray smoke arose from a series of small explosions along both sides of the trailer. The giant logs tumbled from the trailer in both directions.
It happened exactly as Cantell had proposed—a nightmarish tangle of enormous logs, rolling and bouncing off the truck. The truck shuddered to a stop, complaining steel squealing. McGuiness had jackknifed the truck into the mouth of the bridge like a cork in a bottle.
“Nice,” Salvo said, as he grabbed the chainsaw at his feet.
“See you at the rendezvous,” McGuiness said, sliding down out of the cab.
Salvo made his way through the fallen timber, and, keeping an eye on the damaged patrol car, climbed to the bike-path bridge, dragging the chainsaw with him.
He tugged its cord and the saw sputtered to life. He planted its blade into a power pole.
He looked away, avoiding the spray of wood chips and sawdust, only to see cars everywhere. In both directions, traffic had come to a stop, causing a few rear enders, and leaving the highway in chaos.
He made a second cut with the saw. A wedge of wood broke loose and fell out. He started a third cut.
The driver of a pickup truck climbed out and started shouting at him. The man ran for the wrecked police car.
Sirens called from the north. He looked south. No sign of cops coming from there, just as Cantell had planned.
He leaned his weight into the chainsaw. The power pole popped and splintered. Then it teetered and fell.
Overhead, wires sparked and flashed. Salvo had failed to remember he was bringing down a few thousand volts with the pole. A half dozen wires now sparked and jumped on the ground. He dropped the saw and took off south across the bridge. Car horns sounded. He took them as applause for a job well done.
He sprinted across the highway, jumped down an embankment, lost his footing, and rolled to the bottom. He got to his feet and took off running.
Some hero had left his car and was coming after him. “Hey, asshole, hold up!” the man shouted.
Salvo reached for his knife. He stitched his way through a thicket of aspens and found himself in a yard next to a tool shed. He ducked around the side, silently begging his pursuer to give it up.
But the hero came crashing through the aspens a moment later, and Matt, who’d grown up in Sparks, Nevada, in a neighborhood where survival required a degree in viciousness, timed the blow perfectly. He swung around the corner of the shed just as the hero arrived, delivering the hilt of the knife to the man’s forehead.
The guy dropped like a rock.
“Nice try,” he told the hero.
He then looked around to get his bearings, wondering how long Lorraine and McGuiness would wait for him.
38
A
s Walt’s Cherokee approached a string of taillights, his mobile rang. Seeing the caller ID, he answered it.
“What’d you find out?” he asked Myra.
“He’s at the airport,” she said. “I used the tracking thing. Best I can tell, he’s there, or right around there.”
“That’s not good,” he said. “She was seen getting into his car with a suitcase. If he’s seen as having aided her flight . . . Myra, he’s in trouble.”
Brandon looked out the side window, pretending not to hear.
“I’m on my way there,” she announced.
“He’s still not picking up?”
“No.”
“Can you text him?”
“Me? I have no idea how to do that. And I’m in my car.”
She was about to cry.
“I’ll call Pete. Hopefully, he can find him and put a cork in this.”
She thanked him and hung up.
A flash of brake lights. He flipped on the light rack and took the empty middle lane, reserved for vehicles turning either direction.
Walt quickly called Pete, head of operations at the airport, and filled him in on Kevin’s situation. Pete said he’d head down to the terminal and take a look around.
“I’ll call over to Sun Valley Air as well,” Pete said.
“Appreciate the help.”
“Back to you shortly.”
As they passed the entrance to the Rainbow Bend subdivision, Walt got a better look at the chaos up the road: a long line of taillights ahead of him, no headlights coming at him. A patrol car off the road—Ketchum police, maybe. A second later, he could make out the truck blocking the road.
“Are those logs?” Brandon asked.
Drivers were out of their cars. A few had gathered around the wrecked patrol car.
Walt and Brandon hurried to the patrol car. Brandon moved the onlookers aside. Walt wrenched open the door and determined the driver was dazed but otherwise seemingly okay.
He looked around, focusing first on the spilled logs, then the power pole lying across the bike-path bridge, the downed wires still spitting sparks.
He handed Brandon the keys to the Cherokee. “Get the power pole cleared first. No civilian traffic is to use the bike bridge, but get me a couple of our guys across if you can.”
“Got it,” Brandon said. “You?”
“Stay on comm,” Walt said, running for the bridge.
39
W
ith the jet door shut, Summer encouraged Kevin forward. W“Come on, I want to show you,” she said. She squeezed past him, making sure to rub up against him, not wanting his interest to lag. “Seats eight. All eight can sleep flat. Each seat has its own TV, and there’s the big TV on the wall.” She pointed. Light shined weakly through the oval windows.
She handed him a cold beer. There were two microwave ovens, a built-in coffeemaker, a stainless-steel sink. A fire extinguisher was clamped to the wall. Beyond the kitchen, a folding door gave way to a padded seat over a toilet. It faced an emergency exit door. Just over the toilet was a partially open roller panel that accessed a sizable storage area.
Kevin drank some beer, impressed and overwhelmed.
A rechargeable flashlight hung next to the toilet. There was a first-aid kit on the wall.
“All the comforts of home,” he said.
“That’s the idea. Including a satellite telephone.” She pointed to her father’s seat.
“Are you okay?” he said.
“I love this thing. I never tell my father. I don’t want him knowing what I like and don’t like because sometimes I feel like anything I mention liking means he has to buy or get it for me. Believe it or not, I don’t love that. It’s love/hate with this plane. He’s so into it, it actually bugs me. But I love flying it.”
“TMI,” he said, “too much information
.

“Whatever . . .”
“It’s very cool,” he said.
“You should feel it take off. Oh my God, it’s
so
totally random! Like a rocket or something. My dad . . . he puts his head back, you know? During takeoff. Shuts his eyes, and it’s like he’s getting off or something.” She blushed and giggled again. “Forget I said that,” she spit out quickly.

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