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Authors: John Gilstrap

BOOK: Nick of Time
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All heads turned toward the boy as Donnelly said, “Is there something we need to know? A reason not to do that?”
“Have you seen the bugs that live under there?” Scotty said, prompting laughter from everyone but Trooper Hayes. “It's only about that high.” This time, his hand marked a space of eighteen inches over the table. “I lost a soccer ball under there a week ago. No way would I crawl in there.”
As one, all eyes turned to the trooper who was going to have to do just that. Matt gave a nervous chuckle. “Hey, you do what you've got to do, right?”
Chapter Thirty-five
C
arter told himself to slow down even as he pushed the accelerator to the floor. With his left hand pressing the telephone against his ear, he did his best to control the speeding Volvo with his right. Between the pouring rain and the surging adrenaline, he knew he'd be lucky to arrive in Lincolntown alive. He'd been on hold for nearly five minutes now, waiting for some 911 operator to chat with her supervisor.
He knew from the tone of her voice the instant she returned to the phone that his cause here was lost. “Mr. Janssen?” she said.
“I'm here. Please don't tell me no.”
“I'm afraid I have to, sir. There's just no way that I can patch you through to the command post. If you could just leave me your message, I can see to it that it's delivered.”
“But I
need
to speak to the officer in charge,” Carter said.
“I understand that, sir, and I've passed that along to my supervisor, but there's just no way—”
“Okay then,” Carter said, surrendering to the inevitable. “Take this down. One of the people in that standoff in Lincolntown is my daughter. The commander thinks that she is guilty of a murder this afternoon, but she in fact is not. We've just found confirmation of that.”
“We?”
“Deputy Darla Sweet with the Essex Sheriff's Department. She and I. The real perpetrator of the robbery at the Quik Mart was Jeremy Hines, Sheriff Frank Hines's son. He just confessed to it. So, this standoff is unnecessary.”
The operator conferred with someone on her end of the line, her microphone covered. “Um, sir, we've just received news about Sheriff Hines . . .”
“That he's dead. Yes, I know. His son shot him. Terrible thing. I was there.” As the words spilled out of him, Carter realized that he must sound crazy. “Look, it's a long story. All I need from the incident commander is for him to tell my daughter—Nicolette Janssen—that she's no longer a suspect in that crime.”
“Sir, I can't—”
“Goddammit, that's why I need to talk to him!” It was a trait of law enforcement people everywhere to never give the impression of urgency. They were to be calm and reasonable at all times, and it was annoying as hell.
A beep in his ear alerted him to another call trying to come through. He pulled the phone away from his face far enough to see a familiar New York area code. Shit, he'd forgotten to call Dr. Cavanaugh. “I have to take this,” he said to the call-taker. Without waiting for a response, he pressed the Send button and waited for the click. “Dr. Cavanaugh?”
“You're pissing me off, Mr. Janssen,” he said. Carter could tell from the anger in the doctor's voice that he was finished.
“Doctor, I need more time,” he said. “Not a lot, just another hour.”
“Absolutely not. I'm moving to the next name on the list.”
“Please don't do that.” The finality of the doctor's tone felt like broken glass in Carter's chest.
“I don't know what kind of a game you think you're playing, or what makes you think you have the right to play it, but I've been very clear with you from the very beginning—”
“Listen to me,” Carter said. “I've been through hell here—”
“Save it,” Cavanaugh said. “I was as clear with you as I know how to be. I won't go through this again with you. I'm moving on to the next name on the list. I'm sorry. For both your daughter and you.”
“Wait!” he yelled, but the line was already dead. “Shit!” He yelled the word so loudly that in the confines of the car it hurt his own ears. After all he'd gone through, he was going to lose Nicki anyway.
No. That was too simple. The stakes were too high and too many lives had already been ruined for him to fall back on fatalistic cynicism.
He'd come too far to lose the battle now. There had to be a way.
If only he could let Nicki know that she was off the hook, then she could just walk away. She could be back home tomorrow.
He needed to talk with her, one on one. But how? Even if he could get the number from directory assistance, the police would have already locked it up for negotiations. That was standard procedure in any barricade situation: the phones become a single-line connect to the command post, making it impossible for the hostage-takers to call in favors from their friends, or even to call for a pizza delivery. You had to make the bad guys one hundred percent dependent upon the good guys. Hostage negotiation was a high-stakes game that was as much mind manipulation as it was sharpshooting.
Carter had to find a way to put the transplant business behind him. What's done was done; there'd be time later to fret about the injustice. Putting the best face on it, he told himself that the negotiators now had all the time in the world, and that he himself had time to show the prosecutors that the two young people in their sights had nothing to do with the Quik Mart murders. Maybe that would take some of the itch out of the police officers' trigger fingers.
Of course, there were still the matters of the hostage-taking itself, and the outstanding warrants on Brad Ward, and the inevitable aiding and abetting charges that faced Nicolette when this was all over, but these were things that could be handled. Nicki would be alive long enough to retake her position at the end of the organ recipient list. There'd be jail time, no doubt, but with luck, Carter would be able to talk the judge into letting her receive the intravenous prostacyclin while they worked out all the details.
Nicki would be pissed, but at least she'd be alive.
The wild card here was Brad Ward. He was a desperate man with nothing to lose. Beyond the original sentence and the added time for breaking out of prison, he faced an inevitable death sentence—or, given a lenient jury, life without parole—for the killing of his fellow inmate in the joint. He had nothing to gain by surrender; faced no benefit by allowing himself to be taken alive.
It was a thought that had been nagging at Carter ever since Jeremy Hines had tried to manipulate the police into shooting him: Brad Dougherty was likely doing the exact same thing. And why not? If conditions in prison had been bad enough to commit murder and then risk death by escaping, then they were bad enough to be avoided at all costs.
With nothing left to live for, there was little room for negotiation. At the end of all the talk, it would boil down to one thing: a stranger with a badge and a gun telling a desperate kid not to die here, so he could be put to death later.
“Just kill yourself and get it over with,” Carter said aloud. “Save everybody the trouble.”
He felt guilty for even thinking such a thing, but then, out of nowhere, his mind grabbed on to an even more disgraceful thought.
His foot urged the accelerator even closer to the floor as he dialed a new number into his cell phone.
* * *
Matt Hayes wanted a cigarette. He
needed
a cigarette. Honest to God, he thought he'd quit for real this time, but something about the impossible tightness of the crawlspace under the house made him realize that life was too damn short and too damn dangerous to deny yourself the simple pleasures.
He lay on his back in the sand, trying his best to ignore the flies, ants, sand fleas, and God only knew what other creatures gnawed at him. As it turned out, Scotty Boyd was the smartest person in the room when it came to the wisdom of crawling under the house.
Matt had darted across the yard and approached from the living room side of the building—side two in the parlance of the police, in which the front door is always side one the others are assigned in a clockwise pattern, with side three typically being the rear. The windows were a concern, but only a minor one. The perps had closed the curtains and that cut both ways. The drapes denied snipers a view from their nest, but they likewise denied the occupants a view of what the police were doing.
On paper, his mission was a simple one. Using a powerful yet slow-turning carbide-tipped drill, Matt was to make a hole in the floor large enough to insert a tiny fiber-optic camera into the living room. He'd use the tiny monitor to position the camera, which would then beam a picture to the command post. The camera was the newest toy donated by taxpayers to the police department. A year from now, barring any unforeseen budget cuts, they expected to have an equally small microphone for audio surveillance.
Trooper Hayes had attended training for both the audio and video, but this was the first opportunity anyone from their barracks had had to use the camera in a no-shit tactical situation.
It had seemed a lot simpler in concept than it was turning out to be in practice. The biggest problem was the thickness of the flooring versus the speed of the drill. He was making progress, but it was so slow that he was beginning to feel exposed. The longer he lay here, the greater his chance of being discovered, yet he didn't dare drill any faster.
The nightmare that Matt had constructed for himself was that he would manage to drill straight into Dougherty's foot. The pissed-off gunman would then shoot through the floor, and then the folks in the command post would argue among themselves about who was man enough to climb into this dank nastiness to retrieve his bullet-riddled body.
After twenty minutes, the drill broke through. Withdrawing the bit from the hole, he unsnaked the coiled fiber-optic cable from his pocket and connected it to the transmitter box, locking it in place with a quarter turn. He rested the box in the sand and turned his head to watch the tiny monitor.
If all was right with the world, the command post would be able to see exactly what he was seeing in real time. Moving with impossible slowness and deliberation, he snaked the lens through the hole he'd drilled, praying that no one inside would glance in the wrong direction and see it.
From here on out, it was all about patience. And a little bit of luck.
* * *
Scotty jumped out of his seat, grunting against the pain in his head. “That's it!” he yelled, pointing. “That's her. That's Gramma.”
Donnelly motioned for the boy to settle down, and they all leaned in closer to the little television monitor on the kitchen table. The angle on the picture was an odd one, and the panoramic lens distorted everything, but they clearly were looking at the inside of a small house. They could see three people. An older woman—Scotty's Gramma—sat stiff and tall in a chair on the left. Her posture suggested that her wrists might be bound to the arms of her seat.
“They tied up my gramma,” Scotty said, his voice dripping with contempt.
No one seemed particularly bothered.
“Is that Nicolette Janssen there on the couch?” someone asked, pointing to the woman on the right-hand side of the screen.
Eyes turned to Scotty. “That's the sick girl,” he said. “The guy is Brad. He's the one I shot.”
From this worm's-eye view, they could see not only the two women, but also the short hallway that led to the bedrooms beyond them, and the edge of the door to the kitchen.
“You dictated a pretty good picture, Scotty,” Donnelly said. Scotty felt himself blush.
A cop touched the dark spot on the front of Brad's T-shirt. “Looks like he's bleeding.”
“I knew it,” Scotty said.
Donnelly seemed annoyed. “If he believes he's finished, we're in a hell of a lot of trouble here,” he said. “There's not an animal in the world that's not most dangerous when it's cornered and hurt.” He turned to a young dark-skinned cop that everyone called Muhammad. “Call the teams and verify that all assets are in position.”
Muhammad talked into his radio. A moment later, he reported, “When Hayes gets back to his post, they'll be all set. Two three-man entry teams, two sniper teams.”
“Good,” Donnelly said. “Tell them to get comfortable. We're in no hurry.”
Chapter Thirty-six
A
soaked trooper—his name tag read
P. EVANOW—
stood at Carter's car window against a backdrop of yellow barricade tape that blocked all access to the beach road. “You have to turn around, sir. There's a hostage situation in progress.”
Carter showed his badge and credentials. “I am a district attorney, and I have information that the incident commander needs to know.”
Trooper Evanow was unimpressed. “I'm sure that badge means something in New York, but right here, it means that you still have to move along.”
Carter felt his face flush as his mind raced. How could—
His cell phone rang, and Carter snatched it from the seat where he'd left it. “Janssen,” he said.
A familiar voice said, “Carter, this is Warren Michaels. You were right, June Parker does have a cell phone. I have the number right here.”
* * *
Brad gave in to the need to sit. His belly was getting hotter all the time.
“How are you feeling?” Nicki asked him.
“Like somebody's barbecuing chicken in my gut.”
Between the thick clouds, the setting sun, and the pulled drapes, it could have been midnight inside the Parker home. Out there somewhere, people were planning their deaths.
“Do you keep hearing noises?” Nicki asked.
“There's a friggin' army out there,” Brad said. “But we've got time. I don't think they'll make their move till the wee hours. They'll hold out as long as they can.” He tried to sound like the authority. Certainly, that's how it went down when they arrested him before. Then, they waited till four in the morning and took him out of a sound sleep.
“Why prolong the inevitable?” Gramma asked.
“You're a hundred years old,” Brad snapped. “Why do
you
prolong the inevitable by getting up in the morning?”
“Brad!” Nicki gasped.
Gramma's tone was smooth as cream. “I need to be alive for that little boy you brutalized.”
Brad's laugh came with a lot of pain. “Yeah, I brutalized
him
. He's got a boo-boo on his head and I've got a hole drilled through me.”
Nicki decided to try again. “Brad?”
“I'm not letting her go,” he said for the thousandth time.
“But she didn't—”
“—do anything to deserve this.” Brad finished the sentence for her.
“But you can't be willing for her to get hurt.” Nicki said this as a statement of fact. “Think how you'd feel if that happened.”
“That won't be a problem if she does what she's told and keeps her head down at the end.”
“But—”
“Nicki, please. I don't want to go through all of this again. I'm tired and I hurt. I know what I'm doing, okay?” He added with a smile, “Not that you can tell by looking.”
“If I get killed,” Gramma said, “you'll both be the murderers that you claim not to be.”
Brad shifted in his chair, wincing against the belly spikes. “I already
am
the murderer that Nicki claims not to be. She's innocent of everything but hanging around with me.”
“Unless you count kidnapping,” Nicki said.
“You had nothing to do with that, either,” Brad snapped. “You hear that, Granny?”
The new tone to his voice seemed to startle Gramma.
“You remember that, okay? All of this—everything bad that has happened here—has been my doing. Nicki wanted to call the police from the very beginning. None of this is what she'd signed on for.”
“Then let her go, too,” Gramma said. “If she's innocent, it's the thing to do. It's the reasonable—”
A high-pitched synthesized Bach fugue cut her off. The sound startled them all.
“Cell phone,” Nicki said.
They shifted their eyes to Gramma. She nodded toward the bag perched on top of the television. “In my purse.”
“You expecting a phone call?” Brad asked.
“I only have it for emergencies,” Gramma said. “I don't think I've ever gotten a call on it.”
“Gee, who do you think it's for?” Brad asked, clearly knowing the answer. The arms of the kitchen chair popped as he pressed against them to raise himself to his feet. He hobbled over to the purse, pulled out a cheap featureless cell phone, and pressed the Send button. “Yeah?”
* * *
Donnelly jumped as if someone had nailed him with a cattle prod. “What the hell's he doing?” A second later, it was obvious. “Cell phone! Where the hell did he get a cell phone? Goddammit, why didn't someone think to jam that!”
* * *
Carter's heart froze as a man's voice answered, “Yeah?” He worked hard to keep his voice soft. “Is this Brad?”
“Who wants to know?”
“This is Carter Janssen. Nicolette's father.”
“She hates to be called that.”
“I know,” Carter said, holding his head just so, thankful for the good signal and not wanting to risk it. “I rarely call her that, actually. Usually it's Nicki. Is she there?”
“Yeah, she's here. I don't know that she'll want to talk to you.”
“How about you, Brad?” Carter said. “Are you willing to talk to me?” Carter imagined himself as a fisherman, luring his prey oh-so-gently toward the hook. If he pushed too hard, he'd lose him before he had a chance to present his proposal.
“She's here of her own free will,” Brad said. The words sounded rehearsed.
“I know. But things have changed, Brad. They know who the real killer is from the Quik Mart. It's a kid named Jeremy Hines, the sheriff's boy, and he's in custody.” He decided not to mention the sheriff's murder.
“So?”
Carter scowled. It was obvious, wasn't it? “So Nicki has nothing to run from anymore.” He paused to let the words sink in. “She needs to know that. Will you let me speak to her?”
Brad's tone got softer as he said, “Maybe she doesn't want to.”
“Give her the chance. Please. Just let me talk to her for a few minutes.”
“How do I know this isn't some sort of a trap? You could be making all of this up.”
“You're not getting it, Brad. Nicki doesn't have to worry about traps. She's free and clear, and she needs to know that.” Another pause, just a second or two. “There's also a way out for you, Brad. There's a way to turn all of this into something good.”
Carter could hear voices on the other end of the phone, but they were not directed at him. One of them belonged to Nicki. “Brad?” Carter said. “Are you there?”
* * *
“Who is it?” Nicki asked.
“The police want to talk to you,” Brad lied, holding out the phone to Nicki. “I told them I didn't think you'd want to.”
“What do they want?”
“To talk you into giving up and leaving me here.”
“Tell them to forget it. I'm staying.”
* * *
Commander Donnelly pounded the table with his fist, making everyone jump. Suddenly, Scotty didn't want to be there anymore. “Can we trace that call?” he asked the room.
“Once we know the number for the cell phone, we can.”
“Find it,” Donnelly barked. He turned to Scotty. “How about you? Do you know your grandmother's cell phone number?”
The boy's eyes widened. “We were never allowed to use it. She just kept it for emergencies. I don't think I ever heard it ring, even.”
Donnelly kicked a chair across the room. “Dammit!”
* * *
“Why did you just lie to her?” Carter shouted. He couldn't believe it. In all the permutations Carter had run through his mind, this was one he'd never considered. “Why did you tell her that you're talking to the police?”
“She asked who I was talking to.”
“Listen to me, Brad. Don't do this. Please don't do this. I know where you're coming from, I think. You don't want to be alone. Not now, not at a time like this. I can respect that, but listen to me, okay? Just listen to me and promise that you won't hang up.”
“You've got one minute.”
“Okay,” Carter said. “Okay, good.” His brain raced to pull all the pieces together. “There's no easy way to do this, Brad, so I'm just going to lay it out on the line for you. You have to believe me when I tell you it's the truth: In the time since I last talked with Nicki on the phone—what was that, four hours ago?—another set of heart and lungs have come and gone. I got the page a couple of hours ago, and when the doctor found out what was happening, he knocked Nicki off the list. The first time was their fault, and they stepped up to the plate to make it right. This second time we were the ones who fumbled the ball, and now Nicki's only immediate hope for survival has evaporated.”
“And you want to blame me for that?” Brad said.
Yes, he wanted to blame him. He wanted to blame Brad for every goddamn thing that had gone wrong these past two days and kick the shit out of him for it, but what was the point? “I'm beyond casting blame,” he said. “Nicki's a big girl and she makes her own decisions. They're not always the brightest, but at least they're hers. None of that changes the fact that she's been knocked back to the end of the recipient list. That's done and can't be undone.”
“So, why are you telling me?” Brad asked.
Surely, he could see where this was going. Carter closed his eyes, praying that God would one day forgive him for he was about to propose. “Nicki's blood type makes her the so-called universal recipient. That means that she can take donated organs from just about anyone.” He waited to hear something from Brad. “Are you there?”
“Yeah, I'm here. What's your point?”
Shit, he was going to make Carter actually say the words, wasn't he? “Brad, when I see the world from your perspective, it's a damned unfriendly place. If you give yourself up, you'll never see the outside of a prison again, not for your whole life.”
“That ain't gonna happen,” Brad said, forcing a laugh.
“I don't blame you,” Carter said. “But it doesn't have to come to that. You can end it all right now. You've got a gun, and you know that one way or another your life is over, so why don't you make it for the good of everyone?”
“What the
hell
are you suggesting?” The sudden burst of anger told Carter that Brad had already answered his own question.
“A bullet through your head,” Carter said. He couldn't be any more direct than that. “That's all it would take. Leave a note there saying that you want your organs to go to Nicki, and the world can be right again. You could die doing something good, Brad. You could make—”
The line went dead.
“No, don't!” Carter yelled, but it was too late. When he redialed the number it was no surprise that Brad had turned the telephone off. Slamming the steering wheel in frustrated fury, Carter marched back to the cop at the roadblock.
“Look, officer,” he said. He produced his prosecutor's badge again. “I'll say this once more, and you'll either listen, or I swear I will have every one of your tax returns from now until doomsday audited, and I'll pull every string I can to ruin your career. And all of that's just a backup in case I can't get an indictment for criminal neglect if something happens to my daughter. I
need
to speak to the officer in charge of this incident, and I need to speak to him now.”
When he saw the color drain from Trooper Evanow's face, Carter knew that he'd broken through to the young cop.
* * *
The sudden anger startled Nicki. “Brad, what is it? What did they want?”
“Nothing,” he said, but a different kind of heat in his eyes told Nicki differently.
“What was the big explosion about?”
“Nothing, okay? It was about nothing.” He fiddled with the phone, then barked at Gramma, “How the hell do you turn this goddamn thing off?”
Gramma pointed with a nod. “The upper left-hand button.”
Brad pushed the button and the phone made a sound like a whistling bomb as it turned off. He dropped it back into her purse and paced the living room, holding his side tightly.
He limped over to stand in front of Nicki and gestured to Gramma. “If I let her go, will you promise to go with her?”
“Not a chance. We made a deal. We're sticking together till the end.”
“I don't want you getting hurt.”
“Till the
end,
Brad. We've gotten this far together, we can see it all the way through. I'm not going. I love you.”
The scowl lines deepened as he looked at her, and she tried to cheer him with a soft smile.
“I'm not going,” she said again.
Brad looked like he wanted to say something but couldn't bring himself to speak the words. He stomped the floor and rattled something in his gut that made him fold at the waist. “Shit!”
“What is wrong with you, Brad?”
He made himself stand straight, despite the pain. “Not a thing,” he grunted. “Not a goddamn thing.”
Nicki watched as he drew his Leatherman and limped toward Gramma.
* * *
Trooper Hayes had transitioned to his role as tactical sniper, and he wondered if it was possible to have worse conditions. A new wave of pelting rain had rolled in, pounding him and his team. Matt and his spotter, Luis Martinez, a close friend since the Academy, lay ridiculously close to each other atop the dune at the rear of the house—side three—each taking advantage of the limited cover provided by the jungle-camouflaged tarp they'd stretched overhead. While the true purpose of the tarp was to protect their equipment, they were nonetheless grateful for a little cover.

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