Claw Back (Louis Kincaid) (23 page)

BOOK: Claw Back (Louis Kincaid)
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“Lily!” he shouted. “Lily!”

A muffled, kitten-like cry from below.

“Lily! Are you okay?”

“I’m scared.”

He let out a painful breath. “Are you okay?”

“My arm hurts.”

He could hear her crying now.

“Don’t cry,” he said quickly. “I’m coming down to get you. Don’t move!”

“Okay.”

He jumped to his feet, scanning the dark room. It looked like it was a kitchen but with no light he couldn’t be sure. And because the shutters were on the outside, he couldn’t even break the window. His mind raced and then suddenly he remembered the oil lamp he had seen through the window. He ran back to the front and grabbed the lamp. He shook it and let out a breath of relief when he heard a sloshing sound.

Matches...goddamn it, matches.

He took the lamp to the kitchen and started yanking open drawers.
Nothing.
He was about to give up when he spotted a small tin box on the wall near the stove. He thrust a hand in the bottom and pulled out a handful of wood matches.

“Louis?”

“I’m coming, honey!”

It took four strikes against the fireplace to finally light a match. The old kitchen shimmered pale gold and he dropped to his knees at the hole in the floor.

He carefully lowered the oil lamp into the darkness.

A spot of yellow.
Then Lily’s tear-streaked face looking up at him.

Oh my God.

She was lying on a bed of bones.

READ AN EXCERPT FROM DEAD OF WINTER

CHAPTER ONE

 

It was just a dull thud, a sound that drifted down to him as he lay in the deepest fathoms of his sleep. He struggled up to the surface and opened his eyes with a start. Darkness, and then, emerging from the shadows, a bulky form and a glint of light. He let out a breath.
Just the oak bureau and his badge lying on top.

The sound had probably come from his dream, and the thought made him relax back into the pillows. But his ears remained alert for foreign sounds amid all the familiar groans and squeaks of the house.

He glanced over at Stephanie, snoring softly by his side. She always kidded him about his excellent hearing. “Tommy, baby, you can hear the snow falling,” she said. Hell, sometimes he thought so, too. He pulled the quilt up over his wife’s shoulder and swung his legs over the side of the bed.

He rose, shivering in the cold air, and went to the window.  He pulled back the drape. Sure enough, it was snowing.
Already covered the yard, leaving pillows of meringue on the kids’ swing set.
He gazed at the softly falling snow.
First big snowfall of the season.
It was beautiful.

His eyes narrowed. There was a truck parked across the street, a few houses down in front of the McCabe house. The headlights were off but he could see the trail of smoke coming from the exhaust pipe. He squinted, trying to remember if he’d seen it before. It looked to be brown although it was so dirty he couldn’t really tell. He felt his body tense slightly, that involuntary response to an unknown situation.

It was probably nothing. Maybe
someone visiting
the
McCabes
. But except for the Christmas lights around the front door, the McCabe house was dark. He squinted to see who was in the car and thought he picked out two forms. Shoot, it was probably that crazy teenager Lisa, necking with some boy just to make her old man mad.

He glanced back at the clock on the bureau.
Three-ten.
Late for a Sunday night, even for Lisa.

He shivered again and he knew it wasn’t from the cold. It was his body sending out its old signals, that familiar release of adrenaline.

Stephanie gave out a soft moan and he looked back at her. It occurred to him, as he watched her, that he should have told her what was going
on.
He had never held back things from her before and he shouldn’t have now. But she was so happy in this place and he hadn’t wanted to give her a reason to worry. This isn’t like Flint, he had told her not long after they had arrived. They don’t hurt cops in a place like this.

He hadn’t really wanted to leave his old job, especially to work in this speck of a town in the Michigan woods.  But the bullet had had taken in the shoulder by that crack-crazed kid had
been the last straw. We’re safe here, baby, he told her, we’re safe here.

He moved silently to the closet. He ran his hand along the top shelf until found his service weapon, a .357 Colt Python. He checked the cylinder and with a glance back at Stephanie tiptoed out of the bedroom.

The gun was cold; he could feel it against his thigh through the thin cotton of his pajamas as he crept down the hall. Outside the kids’ room, he paused. The baby had colic and it occurred to him that it might have been just the child’s restless thump that he had heard. He strained his ears in the darkness.
Nothing.

Downstairs in the foyer, the white tiled floor shimmered with a kaleidoscope of color, created by the Christmas lights outside, refracted through the leaded-glass panel of the front door. He stopped. No sound. He looked out the small window in the door but couldn’t see the truck. He let out a breath of relief and turned away from the door.

A soft tap.
Someone knocking.
He drew back the curtain and looked out at the face in the shadows outside.

A sharp, snapping sound.

His heart slammed up against his sternum then froze.

It was a sound he had heard before.
Too many times before.

The pump of a shotgun.

Dear God Almighty...

Glass exploded over, around and into him. He was hurled back against the staircase. His fingers groped for the spindles but he couldn’t move. He couldn’t feel his legs. He couldn’t feel anything.
Except, except...except a horrible pumping.
His blood pumping out a hole in his chest.

Oh Jesus, help me. Stephanie...

Then he felt nothing.

The colored lights danced over the white tile, turning the shards of glass into gaudy jewels. Snowflakes swirled in through the gaping hole in the door, dying as they hit the warm blood. A Christmas wreath lay across his legs, its sound-activated battery pack sending out a tinny rendition of “Silent Night.”

A scream came from upstairs.

The man holding the shotgun looked up the staircase and then reached into his jacket and withdrew a blue-backed playing card. With a flick of his wrist, he tossed it through the hole in the glass. It spun to the floor, settling on the white tile near the body.

“Merry fucking Christmas, Officer Pryce,” he said.

 

 

CHAPTER TWO

 

It was a lousy day for drive. Smog-stained sleet left dirty streaks on the windshield. Slick patches of ice sent the tires spinning for grip. It seemed to take forever for the gray Detroit skyline to disappear in the rearview mirror.

The bad weather followed him as he drove up I-75, past the sooty factories in Flint and the sodden cornfields outside Saginaw. Somewhere north of a town called Standish, the temperature dropped and the sleet turned to snow. Now it was coming down hard, flakes so big he could make out their lacy patterns on the windshield before the wipers slapped them away.

Louis Kincaid followed a snowplow into Rose City and pulled into a gas station. As he waited for the old man to fill the tank, he unfolded the wrinkled map. It couldn’t be far now,
maybe twenty-five miles.

“That’s eleven-fifty,” the old man said, holding out a
mittened
hand. “Check your oil?”

Louis nodded. “Yeah, guess you better.
Got a small leak.”

The old man eyed the scarred white ’65 Mustang. “That
ain’t
your only problem,” he said. “
that
back right tire’s bald.”

Louis nodded grimly and man trudged to the front of the car and popped the hood. As he watched the man pull the dipstick, he thought of Phillip Lawrence’s warning that morning.
Take my truck,
Louis, that
Mustang will never make it.
It looked like his foster father was right again, which bothered him. And it bothered him that it bothered him.

“It took a quart but you’re
gonna
need another soon.”

“Thanks.” He handed the old man some bills.
“How far to Loon Lake?”

“About thirty miles.”
His snow-encrusted browed knitted.

You going
up there for some ice fishing?”

“Nope.
A job.”

The man nodded and handed back the change. “Well, good luck to you. Pretty place, Loon Lake.”

“So I’ve heard.”

As he pulled back onto the highway, Louis shook his head and smiled. It was obvious that the old man had been trying his
damndest
to figure out what business a young black man in a beat-up convertible had in Loon Lake. Phillip had warned him it would be like that.
I just don’t think you’ll like it there, Louis. It’s a resort town where rich white men from Chicago build hunting lodges so they have a place to get away.

Louis reached down and turned up the heater to its highest setting. It answered with a cough and a blast of cold air. He banged a fist on the dash then switched the dead heater off.

A place to get away.
That didn’t sound so bad. It wasn’t like he had such a great life back in Detroit.
A roach-filled efficiency.
And no job.

He shook his head, thinking back over the events of the last couple months.
Stupid.
Had he really expected to walk into the station and get his old job back after being gone for year? It had been official, his leave of absence, but by the time he got back to Ann Arbor there were cutbacks on the force. Last one in, first one out. Jesus, tough luck, Louis, you’re a good cop but you know how these budget things are, but if you need a recommendation...

The next day the letter had come. He could still see the envelope sticking out of his mail slot with the royal-blue seal that made his heart stop.

             

D
ear Mr. Kincaid: Thank you again for your interest in the Detroit Police Department. We have given your application careful consideration and are impressed with your credentials. However, due to cutbacks in the City of Detroit budget, we will not be adding additional officers to our force this year.  Your application...

 

He saw the classified ad in the
Free Press
the same day. It was slipped in between the computer prog
rammers and fast-food managers.

 

Police Officer.
Loon Lake,
Mich.
Must
be MLEOTC.
$22,000.
P
hysical/drug test required.
Application deadline Dec. 18, 5 p.m.

 

Come back home, Louis, Phillip had said. Just until you get your feet back on the ground. We’re worried about you. Loon Lake isn’t the answer.

The snow was starting to let up. Louis glanced at his watch. It was four-thirty.

He straightened in the cold vinyl seat, his teeth chattering. A green reflector sign caught the headlights: WELCOME TO LOON LAKE, GATEWAY TO THE WINTER WONDERLAND.

The pines parted, opening onto a two-lane residential street cast in the soft glow of old-style street lamps. Neat frame houses lined the street, with swings on the porches, smoke curling from the chimneys, and snowmen standing guard in the yards. In the dusk, ruddy-faced men shoveled their driveways. Louis drove past a redbrick school. Kids were sledding down a hill on cafeteria trays, chased by a barking golden retriever.

Louis continued down Main Street. There were garlands of lights festooned across the street and the store fronts were filled with signs announcing Christmas sales. Women stood in knots on the sidewalks, holding babies and packages.

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