The thoroughness of it was terrifying. "Once you'd
decided that night was the night, you hurried to his
house, waited until Sam left, took the scalpel, and went
back downtown," I said. "But what if things went
wrong, and it turned out you couldn't use the scalpel
after all?"
His face flattened stubbornly. "Then I'd find another
way. But mostly, they didn't go wrong. Later the
tie was on the street where your ex dropped it. Reuben
picked it up, had it with him."
"And then," the last piece dropped into place,
"Weasel saw you with Reuben. Weasel was on the seawall
that night, wasn't he?"
Memo to self: When you're looking for connections,
remember that the absence of a connection might
also be meaningful. ...
"Weasel saw you," I went on, "but you didn't notice
it until it was too late. You couldn't afford anyone
remembering you were with Reuben on the night Reuben
died. So you had to go back and kill Weasel Bo
dine, and what better way to confuse things than to use
the method everyone in town thought Reuben had
used, long ago?"
He nodded smugly. "Now you're getting it."
It had been yet another improvisation; he was
good at them and had used them skillfully. Because it
wasn't enough to have a careful plan; to make a thing
like this work, you had to use every happenstance, too,
seize it and turn it to your advantage.
Which he had. "You've got guts, I'll give you that
much," I said, still hoping to put a new spin on things.
"The poison ..."
"Rat killer," he confirmed. "I tried not to use too
much. It wasn't supposed to work so fast."
At this, Ellie got into the act, trying to keep him
talking. "That doesn't sound like you, Mike, always
ready for anything. I mean, you didn't check on the
dose?"
He looked impatient. "You can't just call someone
and ask that kind of question. Besides, if it didn't work
the first time, I'd get to kill him twice, wouldn't I?"
Keep him talking ... I thought hard. "Reuben
was drunk, and he was probably drugged, too. You
invited him to take a ride. In the cemetery you lured
him from the car. ..."
He took over the story eagerly, this being, after all,
the last time he would ever be able to tell it. "I was
ready to drug him myself. Reached out to one of my
old buddies, got something to use on him."
Hideously, he produced a syringe. "I didn't need it,
though."
Because Reuben had probably already taken what
Victor had prescribed, on top of alcohol. "And once
you had the rope around his ankles, he was helpless.
You didn't have to lift him. You tossed the end of the
rope over the gate and hauled him, using the pulley
action for," Sam's words came back to me, "mechanical
advantage."
Wade was quietly working to pull his hands free; I
wanted to keep the conversation going, so he could.
"The only thing that really went wrong was Weasel
biting you while you killed him. So you covered it by
burning yourself on your woodstove. Then ..."
"And then," Mike said dreamily, "I put him in a
fix that made the one he'd put me in look like a fairy
tale. Now I'm going to wipe out all memory of what he
did to me, and show Molly that I can stop it from ever
happening to her," he finished.
"How," Marcus ventured, his baritone voice uncertain,
"are you going to do that?"
"You know," I began brightly, because this was
exactly the part I didn't want Mike getting to anytime
in the immediate future, "now that you've taught us all
a good lesson, this would be a fine opportunity to follow
up on it, by--"
Letting us all go, I was about to say. But he didn't
seem to be listening.
"This building," he uttered in a dead voice,
"should have burned down years ago."
I could see Marcus's hand now: the mark on it.
Once he'd left town, he must have washed off the
makeup. He saw me looking at it, flushed angrily.
"That was it, wasn't it?" I asked him. "What you
tried so hard to protect your dad from: his own actions."
Tommy Daigle's cheerful face rose in front of me,
with the scar on it. "That's the mark of his silver rose
of-Sharon belt buckle," I said, "on the back of your
hand. And Reuben knew it."
He added a note, Mike had said about the blackmail
letter. Reuben always knew how to hurt you.
And if word had got out that one of the Bible
Belters used to belt the other one--suddenly I wondered
how they'd chosen that name; deliberately or unconsciously?
--well, then neither of them would have
had a career in musical soul-saving ever again.
Or so they had feared. So they had paid. "Your
mother was formidable in public. But in private, your
father ..."
"But he'd changed" Marcus insisted, struggling
against his bonds. "He didn't deserve to--"
"Yes, he did," Mike said flatly. "What he got, and
more."
"Wise up," George said scathingly. "Everyone's
going to know we were here. And they'll figure out that
you did it."
"Oh, really?" Mike turned in mock interest to him.
"And how are they going to know that? Especially
since it's Ellie's car parked outside, not mine. Mine's
blocks away, and I was careful to speak to each of you
personally. And I'll be far away," he finished smugly,
"before the fire even starts."
That reminded me: "You called Victor to tell him
Reuben was dead, called Bob Arnold, even called the
garbage truck to take Victor's trash. How? You don't
have ..."
But of course he did. Always prepared: he would
have a car phone, of course. For emergencies. Still, how
had he gotten ...
"The phone numbers to reach Willow and Marcus
were in the Old Timers' book," Ellie said bleakly.
"From the Salmon Festival."
"That's right," Mike said. "As for Victor, I kept
watching him all that night, after Reuben was finished
off. That was the tricky part, what Victor did afterwards.
Working with it all and making sure it fit what I
wanted to have happen. And now ..."
Proudly, he opened his satchel: wax cubes like the
kind on all those canning jars in the cottage's pantry.
Sparklers, from the same bunch of leftovers, I supposed,
as the children had been playing with at the
Salmon Festival.
And finally--seeing this, I began at last to feel
really afraid, because it would work; what Mike had in
mind was going to work beautifully--a large can of
liquid charcoal starter. Opening it, he began squirting
it around with the happy air of a person releasing air
freshener into a musty room.
"You know," said George, "I always knew you
were nutty as a fruitcake. But this really caps it. You
know what, now? I'm glad I never lifted a finger for
you."
Ellie shot an admonishing look at him, but he
wouldn't stop. "He did stuff to all of us, Mike. He was
a bad guy. But you--I think you're worse. 'Cause you
can stop yourself. And Reuben--he couldn't. Reuben
just couldn't."
In answer, Mike squirted charcoal lighter under
George's chair. "Talk all you want. Yakity-yakity. But
better make it snappy. You'd better say all," he emphasized,
"that you have got to say. Because pretty
soon--"
He took one of the sparklers, stuck the wire end
into one of the blocks of wax. "Pretty soon, your little
vocal cords are going to be busy, screaming your lungs
out."
He lit the sparkler. "I set the sparkler here," he
said in a singsong, explain-it-to-children voice, placing
the small wax block in a puddle of the flammable liquid.
"Eventually, it will burn down low enough to tip
over, or a spark will fall."
"Jesus, Mike, what's wrong with you?" Willow
hissed at him, kicking at the sparkler to try to knock it
out of the liquid.
Her foot didn't quite reach it, but the sparkler
teetered, its bright chemical-flare head tipping dangerously
low toward the spreading pool.
I held my breath. The sparkler teetered up again
but now the wax cube was melting, the burnt sparkler
wire sagging dangerously downward. ... Mike
caught it, extinguished it. "Uh-uh. Not yet." Then he
finished placing sparklers into the cubes, set them
around.
"Outside, Molly," he ordered. "Start walking. I'll
catch up to you where we left our car. Get in and wait
for me there."
"But, Dad ..." The child gazed around unhappily,
seeming only now to understand fully what was
about to happen.
"Out" Mike snarled, turning on Molly, whose
eyes widened in fear. But she stood her ground bravely.
"Dad, I don't want you to hurt them. Now let them go,
this is bad."
Mike's voice went frighteningly flat. "You do what
I say or I'll make you wish you had. Understand?"
Molly didn't; not quite. But I did, and the knowledge
made my blood run even colder than the sight of
those sparklers set up in the puddles.
"It's what he said to you, wasn't it?" I put in quietly.
If I could get him, even if only for an instant, to
see the pattern that he was repeating--
--to see precisely how Reuben Tate was surviving,
in whom he lived on--
--but Mike wasn't hearing me. All he could hear
was Reuben's exact words, long ago as he terrorized
Mike.
And all he could do was repeat them.
Molly turned and ran, and I knew from her face
that she wouldn't tell anybody. She was too frightened.
Suddenly it hit me that she must have been there in that
graveyard. She must have seen; that was the point of it
all, really. No wonder she was scared. I heard the door
open, then slam shut.
Wade quietly worked his wrists and ankles, still
trying to loosen the twine. But he wasn't getting anywhere;
George either.
Or me; the thin cord had bitten in enough to make
my hands swell. I couldn't see whether Paddy or Marcus
was even trying.