The Killing Kind (13 page)

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Authors: Chris Holm

BOOK: The Killing Kind
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Franklin looked her up and down. Stick skinny in ratty clothes. Eyes sunken in deep hollows. Her skin a jaundiced yellow-gray beneath the streetlights. Her forearms pocked with scars from wrist to elbow. “Bullshit, you did. You’re looking to score.”

Aisha looked at her shoes. “I just need a little to get by until payday.”

“You mean until your pimp gives you your take.”

“C’mon, Iffy. You and me go back. I could make it worth your while,” she said, approaching him and reaching for his open fly.

Franklin shoved her. She went down hard. Whimpered as she hit the ground. “Get the fuck off me, bitch. I ain’t the same little nickel-bag nigger who used to float you shit back in the day. I’m big weight now, hear? I’m
better
than you. Don’t come around no more with your whiny bullshit—the shape you’re in, I wouldn’t let you suck a stolen dick.”

He cocked his leg back to kick the girl. She squealed and covered her face with her arms, but didn’t move to stop him. From somewhere nearby, Franklin heard a cough. When he raised his head to look, a homeless man stood at the alley’s mouth, silhouetted by the streetlights.

Franklin, momentarily chastened by the audience, lowered his foot.

When the blow she was expecting didn’t come, Aisha peeked between her forearms, eyes widening when they lighted on her unlikely savior.

The homeless man said, “Go.”

Aisha scrabbled wordlessly to her feet, tears streaming down her cheeks, and ran. Franklin looked from the homeless man to her, wondering if he should maybe give chase and teach that bitch a lesson.

The homeless man took a step toward Franklin. “I wouldn’t.”

Franklin stayed put. Though he’d never admit it, even to himself, something in the man’s tone frightened him.

They stood that way—an uneasy détente—until the sounds of Aisha’s hurried footfalls were swallowed by the night. Then Franklin puffed out his chest in an attempt to repair his wounded pride. “The fuck are you still looking at?” he asked, trying to force some edge into his voice.

“Nothing,” the man replied. “Nothing at all.”

And then he disappeared into the shadows.

 

Engelmann was rolling slowly westward on 11th when a young black woman burst from the alley to his left and bounced, crying, off the fender of his car. He slammed the brakes and peered back the way she came. He spotted Franklin fifty yards up the alley, zipping his fly in the shadows of a nearby Dumpster, alone. When Franklin finished, he looked around, and then hiked back toward the park.

Engelmann circled the block, but the homeless man was nowhere to be found. He did another circuit for good measure, and then slid the Chrysler back into his chosen parking lot. Apparently, this poor young woman was the reason Franklin had abandoned his post, and the timing of the homeless man’s awakening was no more than an unfortunate coincidence.

For two more days, he trailed the boy. For two more days, no one approached him. On the third day, two large men of Italian extraction dragged Franklin from his grandmother’s home while she begged for them to stop and shot him in the street—two taps, head and heart, like the professionals they were.

Irving Franklin was a dead end.

13

 

McKay Pond was still as glass in the chill morning air, a fine mist rising off it and shrouding the reflected image of Mount Washington that graced its surface. It looked to Michael Hendricks like a Japanese landscape painting hung upside down.

Hendricks checked his GPS and nodded slightly to himself. This was the place. He scanned the dense New Hampshire forest, its massive pines so tall they appeared slender from a distance—the needled branches jutting from their trunks suggesting feather more than Christmas tree. But up close, those trunks were big enough that a grown man couldn’t wrap his arms around them if he tried. Hendricks drank in their scent and smiled at the thought that these trees had stood for centuries, yet may never have been seen by anyone but him. And as his eyes followed one trunk upward, spotting the dull glint of fiber-optic camera hidden in its branches some twenty feet off the ground, he hoped they never would be.

Though it was barely six a.m., Hendricks had been up for hours, hiking the length of the perimeter he’d set up around the cabin he called home since he’d returned from Afghanistan—checking pressure sensors, ensuring his cameras were still hidden. It was a ritual of his—something he did whenever he came home from a job. He told himself it was a necessity. That his line of work made him a target. But the truth was far simpler than that. The truth was, those days spent in the woods quieted his mind—allowed him to leave the baggage of the job outside the cabin.

He followed the sight line of the camera to the spot that he was looking for—his footfalls silent on the thick mat of needles below. The cameras were too numerous for him to remember their precise placement; he’d hung two hundred of them in a perimeter that stretched for five square miles of forest. So instead, he relied on GPS and instinct. Locating them was simply a matter of assessing the landscape and determining the optimal placement. Invariably, that was where he’d placed them.

Hendricks was as competent as he was consistent. He had his Uncle Sam to thank for that.

Fresh tracks pitted the earth all around. Fresh, but not human. Hendricks knelt and ran his fingers through the churned up loam.

There. The broken wire, just as he’d suspected.

He removed a tool kit from his belt, and set to work stripping, splicing, and re-shielding the wire. When he was finished, he covered it over with a thin layer of soil and pine needles, and took a big step forward—over the wire.

Instantly, the satellite phone on his belt began to buzz.

Hendricks waved at the camera in the tree, so small as to be nearly invisible. He knew when he returned to the cabin, there’d be a video of that wave waiting for him.

The wire led from the camera to a series of pressure-sensing mats, one of several he had wired up throughout the forest. They didn’t span the full circumference of the perimeter—that would have been too great an undertaking, even for Hendricks—but as far as he was concerned, they didn’t need to. New Hampshire’s White Mountains provided ample protection in the form of treacherous terrain; Hendricks’s sensors simply monitored the most likely ingress points, the spots anyone with any tactical training might identify as attractive for an approach. Step on a mat, activate a camera—and give Hendricks fair warning that you’re coming.

In the three and a half years he’d been living out in Evie’s abandoned family cabin, though, any protection the system afforded was merely psychological. All his cameras ever captured were wildlife. Take today, for example: a mother moose and calf strolling through the woods set off the camera overhead, then bolted suddenly just before the feed cut out. The scene was worrisome enough to Hendricks that he packed a firearm for the hike— something had startled them into flight, after all—but it appeared his worry was unfounded. The tracks suggested they’d been startled by a black bear, and the absence of blood at the scene indicated they’d parted ways without incident.

The thought pleased Hendricks. He’d never been much of a hunter. He didn’t care to see animals suffer.

Hendricks’s stomach grumbled. He realized he’d been up for hours without food, that he’d hiked for miles without pause. Pushing himself a little harder than was typical. Usually, his post-job rounds were leisurely, leaving his mind refreshed and his body loose, relaxed, responsive. Today, though, all he felt was a knot of tension between his shoulders that made breathing an effort. He wondered not altogether idly if that tension was the result of the Long Beach trip proving so unsatisfactory—or if it had more to do with seeing Evie pregnant by another man.

The throbbing in his temples at the latter thought was answer enough to that.

No point dwelling, Hendricks thought. You made your choice—now you have to live with it.

The problem was, in some deep, self-pitying corner of his mind, he didn’t believe it.

Didn’t believe he’d been given any choice.

Or that you could call this living.

 

The faint ozone scent of the gas burner gave way to smoke and salty rendered fat as the bacon in Hendricks’s skillet began to sizzle. Three rashers—thick-cut, uncured—from a smokehouse just north of Ossipee. Once they were cooked just shy of burnt, he moved them to a paper towel, then cracked a pair of fresh eggs from a local farm stand into the hot grease. Whites bubbled as they hit the bacon fat, and the eggs cooked up quickly. As soon as the whites set, he transferred each egg onto a fat slice of tomato from his plot out back, then set the skillet in the sink to cool.

Hendricks ate standing at the butcher-block kitchen island, washing down his country breakfast with two cups of French-pressed coffee, black. The cabin—a sprawling post-and-beam log home with heart-pine floors, vaulted ceilings, and an open floor plan centered around an enormous stone hearth—was quiet and still, but to Hendricks, every corner of it echoed with memories of his fiancée. The kitchen where she’d fumbled her way through dinner after lousy dinner, playing grown-up and conjuring suspect recipes from the canned food her parents had stocked the cupboards with years before. The sleeping loft where he’d fumbled, too, unskilled and impatient—until her body, once so mysterious and unfamiliar, became an extension of his own, their rhythms synching as they began to understand each other. The hearth they’d huddled around, their only source of light and heat as autumn descended upon the mountains and they found themselves too poor to afford propane for the baseboard heaters or gas for the generator. Even his rusted old Chevy outside seemed to hold on to her scent—impossible, Hendricks knew, but still true enough in his own mind for him to keep it after all these years. He’d stash it in a public parking lot when he left for a job so that it would be waiting to carry him back home, and swap its plates with some other rust bucket’s every couple of months.

Back home. A funny way of thinking about a place he had no rightful claim to—a place owned by two people who hated him so much they disavowed their daughter just for taking up with him. A place where happy memories were just that, a literal lifetime away for the woman who filled them.

Yet it was the only place Hendricks had ever been that felt like home to him.

And so he haunted it as surely as if that roadside bomb had really killed him.

When he was here, surrounded by the echoes of his past, so close yet so out of reach, he could half-believe it had.

 

“Hey, pal—how’s life at the villa? I hear Tuscany’s lovely this time of year.”

Hendricks smiled. Though Lester was his closest friend—a title that sounded like faint praise from a man who had no others—he hadn’t the faintest idea where Hendricks hung his hat. It was a security measure, like the panic buttons Lester’d rigged up at his bar and his apartment to warn Hendricks via text if anyone came looking for him. They were Lester’s way of ensuring he could never compromise Hendricks’s safety—even under duress. Lester had no intention of harming a member of his unit ever again if it could be avoided, and he’d seen too much during his tours of duty to think he could hold out indefinitely if tortured—he’d seen too many true believers sell out God, country, family, and anything else they could just to end the pain. When pundits tell you torture doesn’t work, they’re only half right. It’s not that people can withstand it. It’s that they’ll tell you literally anything they can—true or not—to make it stop.

Les was not without a sense of humor, though. He teased Michael mercilessly for having a secret lair. Lately, he’d taken to guessing its location when Hendricks called. As Lester’s guesses went, Tuscan villa was kind of tame. Last time, it was an arctic Fortress of Solitude. Time before that: moon base.

“Overrated. All I can get delivered is Italian.”

“Yeah,” said Lester, “sounds awful.”

“It is when you’ve got a hankering for lo mein.”

“Ain’t it a little early in the day for lo mein?” It was barely nine a.m.

“Not in Tuscany, it’s not,” Hendricks said. Lester laughed. “You got anything for me?”

“Yeah,” he said. “Some rumblings about a gig that may prove up your alley. We clear to talk?”

Hendricks tapped a couple keys on his laptop, and a diagnostic screen came up. Lester’d built the laptop for him from scratch. It looked like a cheap off-the-shelf Dell. Its insides were anything but. “Clear on my end. No signs our encryption’s been compromised, and I swept the place for bugs this morning. I assume we’re clean on your end?”

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