Chapter 34

Mate

The huge white metal box looked grotesquely like an ancient sarcophagus. But that was because of the dead body frozen inside it, the human being hidden beneath an international variety of frozen vegetarian dishes. The dead woman was bent at the legs, just as Tyler must have lowered her into the freezer, although she was short enough to have lain straight in her curious tomb. Her dark skin and jet black hair made a startling contrast with the white ice around her. It was Lupe Guevarra, the Garifuna woman. Her skull was crushed, much as we’d found her sister Maria’s in the garbage bag at Southern Depot.

Rhonda moved aside for us. “She’s been in here a couple of days. Probably since the night she left Trinity.”

Cuddy said, “Norris probably told her he was bringing her here to her sister. Goddamn it, how many more?”

“No more,” I promised him. I left Rhonda and him on phones calling for an HPD SWAT team to help search the woods. The other agent was already out there with a big flashlight following the bicycle tracks. The ID people, forensics, photographers, the medical examiner, they’d all be here soon. No one—not even Norris family friends on the city council—was going to tell us to leave Tyler alone anymore.

But around the subdivision there were at least five hundred acres of undeveloped woodland bordered by only partially cleared land where new houses were under construction. If G.I. Jane could lie undiscovered for two months a mile from the access road, how likely was it that in this dense forest we would find a man in black riding a black bicycle, even in full moonlight?

Unless we knew exactly where he was going.

I closed my eyes, listened to the conversation with my mother in the hospital:

Finally they found him hiding in this little tree house he had on their lake property. He’d gotten himself all the way out there on his bicycle.”

“Where’s this lake property?”

“Oh honey, you know. Right next to that new resort, what’s it called? Something about Vivaldi.”

Sprinting to the frontyard, I was already opening the door to Cuddy’s car (where I knew he’d left the keys in the ignition), when I saw a red Jeep slam to a stop right behind it. Nancy was driving, Zeke beside her in the front seat; behind them I could see the huge dark head of Zeke’s shepherd Heidi. Nancy was yelling at me out the window, “Roid called. You get Norris?”

“No! Turn around!” I ran back through the house to the utility room where I’d seen a wicker basket of dirty clothes; I grabbed a Haver sweatshirt off the top and raced outside again. Zeke pulled the dog over when I jumped in beside him. The jeep took off with me shouting directions at Nancy as she skidded out of Balmoral Heights on two wheels.

We were on our way to North Cove on Pine Hills Lake. If I was right, Tyler Norris was headed for his family’s lake property. He was still doing what he’d done as a child, escaping to his “safe place” when threatened with danger. And once we’d looked inside his freezer, he was in fatal danger and had to know it. If I was wrong about where he’d gone, the HPD team would be walking the Balmoral woods all night and maybe they’d find him there.

As we drove, I phoned the stables where I boarded Manassas. The teenage girl whose parents owned the place sounded as if I’d interrupted her favorite television show. (It was eleven at night.) But finally I talked her into saddling Manassas and waiting with him by the croquet lawn of The Fifth Season. The resort shared a boundary with the stables on one side and the Norris property on the other. By crossing the terrain that hid the luxury bungalows, we could reach the bridle path beside the lakefront and approach the Norris house from its blind side without the sound of a car engine.

Speeding north, I briefed Nancy and Zeke. We agreed that we’d have a better chance if we came at Norris from more than one direction. Zeke and I would come in through the woods. He hadn’t wanted me to borrow a horse for him, claiming he could move faster on foot. Nancy would block the driveway into Norris’s family’s home in case he tried to flee by car or bike, but I told her not to get out of her Jeep and not to attempt to approach Norris if she saw him. “Listen to me, Nancy, what he said in his trial about never using a gun. Not true. He’s got a fistful of marksmanship medals.”

“You’re kidding?”

“No, I’m not. So forget being Annie Oakley.”

“Who?”

“Jesus, okay, forget about being Mel Gibson. Just block the road.”

“You hear him?” Zeke asked his wife.

“Yeah yeah yeah.”

Nancy dropped us off on The Fifth Season’s circular drive. We found the teenage girl beside the lush clipped green of the croquet lawn with an unsettled Manassas dancing on the lead she held. I took him and gave her two twenties which cheered her more than she acknowledged as she left.

Up on Manassas, I had to calm him from twisting in a circle to keep his wary eye on the large Malinois shepherd Zeke had on its leash. Zeke shook out Norris’s dirty sweatshirt and let the dog Heidi smell it. Then he set out with her at an easy loping run into The Fifth Season’s woods. I followed them. Zeke was remarkably fast, and he proved right about the terrain. Manassas and I, picking our way through the uneven and branch-cluttered forest floor, could do little more than keep Zeke in sight as the big man and his dog threaded their speeding way through the trees. He made no more noise in this familiar land than his Cherokee ancestors might have hundreds of years ago, before my ancestors harried them westward.

Suddenly ahead of me, Heidi began lunging and growling. Zeke must have then unsnapped the leash, for I saw the dog streak away into the night with Zeke racing effortlessly along the path after her.

I kicked Manassas into a canter as the path took its curve past the clearing in the pines and opened onto the small pebbled beach owned by The Fifth Season. In the moonlight I could make out the shadowy gray outline of the wooden dock where I’d seen Mavis Mahar diving into the lake on a summer dawn that now felt very long ago.

We’d gone over two miles now, and neither Zeke nor Heidi showed any sign of strain as they ran along the moonlit gravel. All at once, they turned off the path into thick woods. Deep in the pines I could see a strange flickering light. I followed the back of Zeke’s broad white polo shirt into the dark. Suddenly he stopped, grabbed Heidi’s collar and, leaning down, spoke to her. I pulled Manassas over beside him and looked where he was pointing.

Forty feet away from us, the woods ended in an unkempt lawn leading to a large gingerbread Victorian house whose pale yellow paint was cracked and peeling. Lights illuminated a screened-in back porch. The lights were bright enough to show blood splattered against the siding.

At the lawn’s far edge, an immense old sycamore tree, its white bark glowing in the light of the full moon, shadowed two cars. Tyler Norris was throwing kerosene from a large red can onto the tree base where small branches had been stacked. About twenty feet above his head, I saw the weathered flooring of a tree house that had been built in the fork of two huge boughs. On this platform, an American flag draped over his body, and kindling wood stacked neatly beneath and around him, lay Fulke Norris, the killer’s father. I could tell who it was because of the beautiful white hair haloed in the moonlight. I could even see the red of the blood in his hair.

I calmed Manassas. “Jesus, he shot his dad and hauled him up there,” I whispered to Zeke, who was straining to hold back the lunging dog.

About to dismount, I checked for my gun in the back of my belt. Suddenly I heard a woman’s voice. “Tyler Norris! Halt! Police!”

“Goddamn it,” I whispered.

“You’re under arrest,” Nancy shouted. “Put your hands behind your head! Do it! Now! Do it!”

But Tyler dropped to the ground and started rolling. My eyes shot ahead of his motion and spotted the double-barrel shotgun against the sycamore. Next to me, Zeke saw it too. His hand flew up from Heidi’s lead and the dog surged forward. With a long low growl, she was on Norris, her jaw clamped on the hand inches from the stock of the shotgun. The two of them twisted kicking in an indistinguishable blur of noise and motion. Zeke was running onto the lawn, yelling at Nancy, “Don’t shoot! Don’t shoot!”

Norris had remarkable strength, the force that madness gives to rage. He kicked free of Heidi and scrambled up to the closest tree branch, swung onto it with a scream of pain. One of his hands was bloody and the dog had probably broken bones. With Heidi leaping and snapping at his feet, Tyler pulled himself by pure will up onto the branch and then climbed quickly higher, from bough to bough, following a path through the tree that he’d climbed since childhood.

He reached the platform and squatted beside the improvised funeral pyre on which his dead father lay.

Kicking Manassas forward, I gestured for Nancy and Zeke to keep back out of range as I shouted up into the tree. “Tyler, you got any weapons up there, throw them down! Game’s over!”

In the still night air, I could hear his rasping open-mouthed gasps for breath. Finally he called down to me, “Think so?”

“You’re under arrest. You have a right to remain silent, you have a right—”

“Savile, you people have been so stupid, it almost wasn’t fun.”

“You think murdering six women and now your father is fun?”

He laughed in an eerie childish way. “You think that’s all there is?”

All at once, a whoosh of fire leapt in a red arc beside him as if lightning had struck the tree bough. He shouted, “Checkmate!”

The kindling on the platform must have been soaked in kerosene too. In seconds, a ring of fire circled the body of Fulke Norris. Smoke quickly engulfed the platform.

I kicked Manassas to the tree trunk as he fought me to keep away from the fire. Reaching up, I grabbed the bough and swung onto it. Pulling my shirt up as a mask against the smoke, I started climbing the tree. If Norris had another gun, he was going to use it on himself or on me or on both of us. It was impossible to see where he was. All I could do was keep climbing, hoping that if I couldn’t see him, he couldn’t see me either.

Coughing and blinded, I flung myself onto the platform and crawled forward. I found Tyler about five feet from his father’s burning body. He was seated like a Buddhist monk, cross-legged, his hands neatly folded in his lap, his insane eyes watching the flames dance around him, smiling at the fire.

I pulled him away from the flames, back toward the tree trunk. “You are under arrest. You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law…” He ignored me.

• • •

“Nancy,” I told her as the medic finished wrapping my arm in gauze. “You want to tell me why you don’t listen to my orders?”

In Zeke’s large embrace, she shrugged, unrepentant. “You never listened to Cuddy’s.”

“She’s got you there,” said the police chief stepping forward to join us. Cuddy looked at his cheap watch that always worked. “Well, Justin, it’s the Fourth of July. Looks like I’m still your boss and as I recall, you’re supposed to be on two week’s suspension. So I don’t want to see you ’til after Bastille Day.”

By now there were at least twenty law officials and firemen walking around the lake house yard. The first ambulance had just left with Fulke Norris’s body—what could be recovered after the fire. The silver of one of his World War II medals had melted all the way into his charred flesh.

The second ambulance was waiting for the gurney on which two attendants were wheeling Tyler Norris, conscious but badly burnt, strapped down to the stretcher with a splint on his leg. Even with Zeke’s help, I’d only been able to lower his unresisting weight half way down the tree before he fell, shattering his leg bone. Cuddy stared at him as the stretcher went by.

Norris turned his bandaged head and looked at Cuddy with that monstrous cold smile of his. He coughed. “Should have castled, Captain. Protect the home front.”

“Get him out of here,” Cuddy said.

Norris twisted his face around as he was lifted into the ambulance and said, “Seen your dog lately? Try your trunk.”

Cuddy stared as the ambulance doors closed. Then suddenly he turned to run for his white Taurus parked among the cruisers on the lake house lawn. I could see him reaching into his pocket for his keys. He clicked the trunk door with his remote and then moved to lift it.

Don’t!” I yelled and flung myself through the air at him. My hands stretched out, I was just able to catch his ankle as I landed, tackling him and then knocking him away from the car.

But it took Zeke’s help to hold Cuddy down and stop him from trying to open the trunk.

It took the bomb squad over two hours with the white Taurus up on the rack at the HPD garage before they managed with meticulous precision to cut their way into the trunk without raising the lid. Raising the lid more than six inches would have set off the dynamite that was taped around the still-living body of the old poodle Martha Mitchell, for all these years the faithful first lady in Cuddy’s life.

I handed him his dog, cradled in my bandaged arms. “Cuddy, when I tell you there’s a bomb in a car, you’ve got to believe me. Sooner or later, I’m going to be right.”