Authors: Bill Pronzini
“The two of you made it nice and clear yesterday how you felt about ripping off the valley, and I knew I couldn’t talk you into it, right? But you didn’t know how bad I want this one, I want it like I never wanted any other score, it’s the cat’s nuts. The only thing is, I don’t figure I can make it alone, so I had to force you into it, you see? It’s simple.”
He paused, and his smile became sly. “Those people inside, I did a little talking to them. I told them all about the ripoff, and that’s not all I told them. I told them we were the ones who did the Greenfront job, I told them everything except our names—what do you think of that?”
Loxner had the same look on his face—that of a kid about to cry—that he had had after the security guard shot him at Greenfront. “Crazy cocksucker,” he muttered under his breath, “oh you crazy
cock
sucker!”
If Kubion heard him, he gave no indication. The smile still sly, he said, “I know what you’re thinking now, both of you, you’re thinking you want to put a bullet in me, maybe you’ve been thinking it ever since yesterday and that’s why I took the guns out of the suitcase in the car if you don’t already know about that and why I watched you like a goddamn hawk every minute I was at the cabin, I did you know. But suppose you could do it, suppose somehow you’re able to jump me, take this gun away, put one in my head? Where would it leave you? These hicks here know who you are but say you had the guts to kill seven people, three women and two kids, say you had the guts, well the rest of the hicks and the cops would figure damned quick who had to’ve done it and you know what kind of heat you’d have then, right? So you let them live and then you cut and run, use one of the snowmobiles to get out of the valley, but that’s the same situation as if we do the job only worse because these Eskimos would be found almost immediately and even if you took the time to bury Hughes’ body and cut the telephone lines and put the second snowmobile out of commission, even if you could do all of that without being hassled, you still wouldn’t have a clear jump. And you wouldn’t have any bread either, that’s the other important thing, you’d have to knock over a place for ready cash, you’d have to shag a car, you’d be taking risks every time you turned around and all with Murder One heat ready to blow you on your asses at any time.”
Kubion paused again and studied them cunningly. Brodie said in a flat, soft voice, “Keep talking, Earl.”
“Okay, you’re getting it now. You do things my way, you help me make the score, and we come out fine just like I told you yesterday. Bread in our pockets and two full days’ jump, time to travel, time and money to get a long way from Hidden Valley before the lid comes off.” Kubion used his left hand to take a roll of currency from his coat pocket. “Listen, you think there’s no money in this place? Nine hicks out of seventy-five and only two of the occupied buildings so far and I’ve already picked up fifteen hundred, two bills from the Eskimos that live in this house and eighty from the ones down the way and a hundred and twenty from Banker Hughes’ wallet, and that blond bitch, she had a thousand in her purse, just sitting there in her purse all nice and crisp in her
purse
for Christ’s sake. Fifteen hundred already and we haven’t even started.”
He shoved the money back into his coat and made a sweeping gesture with the gun. “So what do you say? I say we go inside the house here and work over the details again, and this time you listen good. I say we do the job tomorrow, just as I told it to you. I say when it’s done and we’ve made the split, we leave on separate snowmobiles and you go your way and I go mine, we’re quits. Well? Do we get it on together or what? You tell me, you tell me.”
There was a long, brittle silence. Loxner looked at Brodie to keep from looking at Kubion. And Brodie said finally in his flat, soft voice, “You haven’t left us any choice, Earl. We do it your way.”
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 23
Oh ye gods! what darkness of night there is in mortal minds!
—OVID
At eleven fifty-five Sunday morning, in the vestry behind the candlelit altar, the Reverend Peter Keyes released the bell rope and ended the resonant summons in the steeple belfry above. Then, opening the vestry door, he stepped out onto the pulpit and went to stand behind the lectern on the far right, to watch the last of the congregation file into All Faiths Church. Opposite him on the pulpit, Maude Fredericks sat waiting at the old wood-pipe organ, a hymnal propped open in front of her.
Seven of the twelve pews on each side of the center aisle were completely full, but the last five on either side were only partially taken. The Reverend Mr. Keyes had entertained little hope for a capacity attendance, but he had expected a larger turnout than this. He scanned the congregation—the women and girls in their warm, brightly colored winter finery (you did not see somber hues in church these days, which was, he thought, as it should be); the men and boys in carefully pressed suits and bright ties, to which they were for the most part unaccustomed—and a small frown tugged at the corners of his mouth. He did not see Matthew Hughes, and Matthew never missed Sunday services, was in fact always one of the first to arrive; very odd indeed that he was not present on this particular Sunday, two days before Christmas. He also did not see the Markhams or the Donnelly family, who rarely failed to attend as well; nor the San Francisco businessman, Charley Adams, to whom he had spoken on Thursday afternoon.
Maude Fredericks turned slightly on the organ bench and glanced at him, and he indicated that she should begin playing; it was just noon. Deep-toned chords, reverent and felicitous, filled the wide interior. The Reverend Mr. Keyes waited, looking out through the open half of the double doors at the empty, snow-dappled walk beyond; the Hugheses and the Markhams and the Connellys did not arrive. Finally, sighing inaudibly, he nodded to this Sunday’s usher, Dr. Webb Edwards. The middle-aged physician returned his nod, stepped out to look both ways along Sierra Street, and apparently saw no late arrivals in the vicinity; he came back inside, closed the open door, and took a place in one of the rear pews. The time was twelve five.
When the organ music had crescendoed into silence, the Reverend Mr. Keyes offered a brief invocation; a moment of silent and conjoined prayer followed. Then he led the congregation in the singing of “O Jesus, We Adore Thee” and “Saviour, Blessed Saviour” and “Joy to the World.” Time: twelve twenty. He arranged his notes on the lectern, cleared his throat, and prepared to deliver his traditional pre-Christmas sermon, the Bible text of which had been taken from the first chapter of the Gospel of St. Luke.
Time: twelve twenty-one.
And the double doors burst apart, the two halves thudding loudly against the interior wall, and three men came quickly inside. Two of them held deer rifles and fanned one to either side along the coat-draped wall. The third, pointing a handgun, stood with his feet braced apart just inside the entrance.
Heads swiveled around; faces blanched with incredulity and nascent fear. Kubion, who had the handgun, called out in a sharp, commanding voice, “All right, everybody just sit still. We don’t want to hurt any of you but I’ll shoot the first one who makes a move in this direction, let’s get that understood right from the start.”
The Reverend Mr. Keyes stared at the man he knew as Charley Adams, the man whom he had thought to be a good and devout Christian, stared at the two strangers with the rifles—and he could not believe what he saw or what he had just heard. It simply could not be happening; it was utterly impossible. He felt an unfamiliar but suddenly acute sense of outrage; his round cheeks flamed with it, his fingers gripped the edges of the lectern until the knuckle joints seemed about to pop through the stretched white skin. “How dare you!” he shouted. “How dare you come in here with guns! This is a house of
God!
”
“Calm down, Reverend,” Kubion said. He seemed to be smiling. “All of you calm down, keep your heads, and then I’ll tell you what it’s all about.”
The command turned the Reverend Mr. Keyes’ outrage to blind fury. He pushed away from the lectern and came down off the pulpit. Lew Coopersmith, sitting in the right front pew, said, “No, Reverend!” but Keyes did not even hear the words. He started into the center aisle, his eyes fixed on Kubion.
“Hold it right there, preacher man.”
Reverend Keyes brushed past the arm Coopersmith put out to restrain him and walked slowly and grimly down the aisle. He was not afraid because he knew he would not be harmed, not
here
; his anger was righteous, his position was sacrosanct, and he said, “I won’t have guns in my church, I won’t have you bringing weapons of destruction in God’s house,” and Kubion unhesitatingly shot him through the right hand.
The hushed, strained silence dissolved first into the hollow roar of the gunshot and then into terrified screams and cries from women and children, shocked articulations from the men. The Reverend Mr. Keyes had stopped moving. He held his hand up in front of him and stared at the blood beginning to stream from the hole just below the thumb: numbly, not believing what he saw any more than he quite believed, even now, that any of this was actually happening.
“Dear God,” he said then, and fainted.
Lew Coopersmith was on his feet and three steps into the center aisle before he realized he had moved at all. Abruptly he stopped and allowed his hands to unknot at his sides, standing rigidly. Others were on their feet now as well, faces stricken—John and Vince Tribucci, Webb Edwards, Verne Mullins—but none of them had moved from their places. The whimperings of the women and children intensified the atmosphere of horror which now pervaded the church.
Kubion said, “When I say something I mean it, you’d all better get that straight right now, the next one that makes a funny move I’ll shoot his face off. Okay—one of you’s the doctor, which one?”
“Here,” Edwards said.
“Get out here and tend to the Reverend.”
“I don’t have my bag. I’ll need—”
“You’ll need nothing. Get out here.”
Edwards went to where Reverend Keyes lay inert on the floor, knelt beside him, and examined the bullet-torn hand; it was still bleeding heavily. He used his belt as a tourniquet, his handkerchief to swab the wound.
Kubion said, “He got a key on him to the church doors?”
“I don’t know,” Edwards answered woodenly.
“Well look through his pockets and find out!”
Edwards probed quickly, gently, through the minister’s dark-gray suit and discovered a ring of keys. He held them up. Kubion made a tossing motion, and Edwards flipped the key ring underhand, as carefully as he would have thrown a ball to a three-year-old child. Making the catch with his left hand, Kubion turned and pulled the entrance doors nearly closed. He probed at the latch on one with three of the keys, found one that fitted, and then dropped the ring into the pocket of his coat. He faced the congregation again.
“Couple of you pick the Reverend up and put him on one of the benches.”
Coopersmith came forward, and Harry Chilton stepped out. With Edwards’ help, they lifted Keyes gently and laid him supine in the nearest pew.
“The rest of you men—shut those women and kids up,” Kubion said. “I want it quiet in, here, I want every one of you to hear what I’m going to say, and I don’t want to have to say it more than once, you got that?”
While husbands and parents did what they had been ordered to do, Coopersmith retreated a few steps and glanced over his shoulder to where Ellen was sitting; she was motionless, hands pressed against her white cheeks, her eyes round and glistening wet with tears. He saw Ann Tribucci sitting near Ellen, one arm wrapped in an unconsciously—or perhaps consciously—protective way around the huge convexity that was her unborn child, her other hand holding tightly to one of her husband’s. John Tribucci’s face, unlike most of the others, was as stiff and empty of expression as a store mannequin’s.
Kubion said as the congregation quieted, “That’s better. Here it is, then, plain and simple: we’re here because we’re taking over the valley and everybody in it and once we’ve got complete control we’re going to loot it, building by building. Money and expensive jewelry, that’s all we’re interested in, and if you people cooperate that’s all we’ll take, nobody else will get hurt.”
He paused to let the concept sink in fully. Then: “All right, now some details. When I’m done talking one of us will come around with a sack and you put your wallets and purses into it and anything else you’ve got in your pockets, don’t hold anything out, turn your pockets. After that’s done we’ll want a list of names of everybody who lives in the valley that’s not here right now, I mean everybody, because we’re going to go round them up one by one after we leave here and if we find anybody whose name isn’t on the list he’s dead. You can forget about the Markhams and the Donnellys and Matt Hughes and Peggy Tyler; we’ve—”
Agnes Tyler’s shrill, near hysterical voice cried, “Peggy? Peggy? Oh my God I should have known something was wrong, I should have known that telephone call last night was a lie!” She was standing, one hand clutching her breast, eyes like a pair of too-ripe grapes pressed into a lump of gray dough. “You’ve
hurt
her, you’ve hurt my daughter. . . .”
Kubion looked at her and said, “Somebody shut that bitch the hell up.”