Home > Cemetery Road(103)

Cemetery Road(103)
Author: Greg Iles

“Is he dead?”

“I don’t think so.”

“That’s why you were about to hit him again?”

She hesitates, then nods.

“Jet, what the fuck? What’s going on?”

“I’ll tell you, I swear to God, but can we please get out of here?”

“No! We have to see if Max is dead or alive.”

Terror lights her eyes. “Why?”

“To know what to do next! A lot of people could have seen you riding in this truck with him. Plus, you can’t steal this thing. Not after what you did. You have to leave it here, and your prints are all over it.”

“How did you even get here?” she asks. “Were you following me?”

“Yes and no. Too long a story. Pull back up to the turnaround.”

Terror lights her eyes again. “No! Marshall, please. We have what we need. Look!” She digs a large cell phone from her pocket.

“Is that Max’s phone?”

She nods with excitement. “No more video! No more blackmail.”

“Great. You’ve traded blackmail for a murder charge. Jet, back this thing up to the turnaround, or I will.”

“Let’s just leave the truck!” she yells. “We can talk somewhere else. Anywhere.” She grabs my arms. “Please get us out of here. I’ll throw Max’s keys into the woods. If Max dies, he dies. Nobody will ever know we were here.”

“Jet—” I reach down and yank the door handle, then push the door open.

Her eyes go wide again. “Where are you going?”

“To check on Max.”

She looks like a cornered animal. “Okay, okay . . . shit.”

Jet jams the truck into reverse, looks down at the rearview camera, then starts backing around the curve that leads up to the clearing. As we roll uphill, I notice that her blouse is badly torn. She’s shoved it up under her bra strap to stay covered.

“Max tore your top?” I ask.

She nods but says nothing. Five seconds later she kicks the brake pedal and stops. “What now?”

“You’d better come with me,” I tell her, suddenly worried that she’ll bolt while I’m checking on Max.

“Do you have your gun?” she asks.

“Yeah. Does Max still have his?”

“No.” She reaches into the console and brings up the .380 I saw in Max’s ankle holster yesterday afternoon.

“Bring that,” I tell her.

She opens her door and climbs down to the ground. Using the LED light on my iPhone, I lead her along the footpath toward the pool, gun in hand.

“What are we going to do if he’s alive?” she asks.

“I don’t know.”

“You’re not taking him to a hospital or anything? He’ll lie, Marshall. He’ll say I tried to kill him.”

Would he be lying? “Let’s just see what shape he’s in.”

We’ve come to the band of grass that separates the trees from the water on this side of the spring. I see the deep ruts Max left behind when he drove his truck up to the water’s edge. Emerging from under the trees, I make out the wooden pier in the moonlight.

What I don’t see is Max.

“He’s gone,” Jet gasps beside me. “Holy fuck, he’s not here.”

The raw fear I felt when confronting Paul in my office returns, jacked to double intensity. The urge to run blindly is almost irresistible, but instead I focus on the ground. From the marks in the mud, it looks like Max belly-crawled into the underbrush beneath the trees, like a wounded alligator.

“We have to find him,” Jet whispers.

After checking the tree line to make sure Max isn’t sneaking up on us, I kneel in the mud and shine my LED down on the spot where I think he fell. Blood loss is hard to judge, but there’s a lot of bright red on the ground. It looks like somebody kicked over a tester can of paint. That came from Max’s head, I realize. I can’t believe he could move after a blow like that.

“Where’d you hit him?” I ask. “Front of the skull? Or the side?”

Jet looks almost too rattled to function. “Um . . . right side, I think. My right. His left. He was facing me, and I swung right-handed.”

“Did you hit him with the ball of the hammer? Or the flat side?”

“Does it make a difference?”

“Ball would probably be worse. He’d have a depressed skull fracture. I know a little about those. He could definitely die.”

“I think it was the ball.” Her voice has a frantic edge. “When he fell, it sounded like Paul dropping a bag of pool salt on our patio.”

“He could have a subdural hemorrhage . . . a cerebral contusion. He could die five minutes from now or tomorrow.”

“He can’t have gone far,” she whispers, her eyes on the trees. “Let’s find him.”

“No,” I say, getting to my feet.

“Why not? He can’t—”

“Jet! He can’t what? Fight back?” I grab one shoulder and pull her face close to mine. “Did you bring Max up here to kill him?”

Even in the dark I see the whites of her eyes growing. “God, no! If I’d got him up here to kill him, I’d have been in control. I was fighting for my life.”

“He attacked you?”

“He tried to rape me, okay?”

This stops me cold. “He tried to rape you? But . . .”

“My God,” she says. “Not one more word until we’re safe.”

I nod slowly, my gaze on the tree line again. “Okay. We’re going back to town.”

“Without knowing whether he’s dead or alive?”

“We’re sure as hell not going into the woods after him!”

“Why not? We have the guns.”

“Jet, Max did two tours of duty in Vietnam. Most of it jungle fighting. He was hit by an AK-47. He fell on punji stakes smeared with shit and survived. So far as we know, he’s alive right now. You want to go crawling through that brush in the hope of finishing him off? Max could kill us both before we even knew he was close.”

She’s staring at the long scar in the mud as though she wants to drop to her belly and crawl after him. Instead of arguing further, I turn and walk back along the path to the turnaround.

“Wait!” she calls. “I’m coming!”

 

 

Chapter 38


Once we reach Max’s truck, which I approach with great care, we spend two minutes wiping down its wheel, its dash, and the brown leather of its interior. Jet uses the remainder of her blouse, while I use my shirt, keeping my pistol in my left hand. Though it makes the job harder, I also keep the truck doors shut. If Max is still alive, doing this work under the dome light would qualify as suicidal behavior.

“Wipe your fingerprints off Max’s keys,” I tell her. “We’ll toss them in the woods on the way down. Max won’t find them tonight, but if he dies, the police eventually will.”

“Are you going to call the sheriff or anything?”

As we wipe down the door handles and shifter, I remember what Jet said beside the pool. With this memory comes an image of Max sitting in my kitchen, warning me never to have sex with her again.

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