That same look, it comes in their eyes when you give ’em the business.
It’s something a man can hang on to, come black-frost or sun.
—ROBERT PENN WARREN
The deputy had decided to wait one day at the Prospect House. Mary was glad of it. It saved her having to decide whether to wait for Tom or go on with Mike.
“Don’t know much what MacDougal wanted done with yer boy,” the deputy told her. “If he don’t come back, or I don’t hear from him, I s’pose I’ll have ta wire Glens Falls, see what they want ta do.”
Mary and Rebecca ate in the dining hall. Mike had to eat in their room, his ankle shackled to the bed. He’d insisted on them going down to eat, as if all was normal, preferring to eat in his room, staying away from curious eyes and whispered remarks.
Mary thought he was holding up remarkably well, considering. He might have easily slipped into a dark mood and be forgiven for it, but he seemed serene instead. Mary didn’t understand it. She figured he was just hiding his true feelings, or perhaps trying to be strong for her and ’Becca, putting on a confident face.
She’d asked him about it the night before as she adjusted the wrapping around his ribs. She wanted him to open up, to tell her how he really felt, give him a shoulder to cry on, if he needed it. She didn’t get what she expected.
“You weren’t there, Mom. You didn’t see Mitchell and Dad. They wouldn’t give up, no matter what. If you’d been with us you’d know.”
Mary had nodded as if she understood. She knew well enough how determined Tom could be, but that was nothing new, at least not to her.
“The only reason I’m sad is I’m not out there. These…,” Mike said, holding up a leg and jingling the chain, “these’ll come off when Dad catches Tupper.” Mike grinned. “Like Mitchell said once, ‘It’s when the lakes are low that I know the rain will come.’”
“I’m not sure I follow you,” Mary said.
“I suppose you kinda had to be there, but it means that when things are looking low and at their worst, it’s then that things are about to turn for the better. Don’t worry,” Mike said with a reassuring smile, “they’ll catch him.”
Mary sat on the verandah while Rebecca threw pieces of bread to the fish down by the dock. She thought about Mike and the things he’d said. He’d never in all the last six years been an optimistic boy. There had been too much hardship in his life, too much tragedy. But something had changed. Somewhere in the forest something had happened. Mary did not begin to understand what, or how it had taken hold so completely, but it was plain that even in chains Mike was free. Mary wished that she could see with the same clarity.
Mary came out of her reverie. Rebecca was calling to her. Mary laughed and waved. She saw Owens then, coming up the lawn. He gave her a tip of his hat, as if she’d waved at him, and came up the broad stairs. He clumped down the nearly empty verandah, his boots sounding heavy.
“Afternoon, ma’am,” he said. “Heard you were back. How’s the boy? Sorry to say I heard about him, too.”
Owens wore a concerned look, but there was something in his tone Mary couldn’t put her finger on. She thanked him for his concern, though, and asked him to join her. It was lonely at the hotel now with most of the guests gone. Even Durant’s little steamers seemed to whistle sadly as they carried one or two passengers between the lakes.
“Did I notice you limping, Mister Owens? Are you quite all right?” Mary asked. Though it wasn’t polite for a woman to comment on a personal matter with an unattached man, Mary didn’t much care. She certainly didn’t want to discuss Mike’s predicament, nor Tom’s failure to capture Tupper, so she latched onto the first thing that came into her head.
“You have a sharp eye, Missus Braddock,” Owens said. “A sport damn near shot my leg off. Tripped and dropped his rifle.” He pulled up his pants leg to show her the bandage on his calf. “Came this close,” he said, holding up a thumb and forefinger an inch apart, “to hitting the bone. Lucky though. Ended up with just a scratch.”
“That is lucky,” Mary said in an absent sort of way. Something about Owens had struck a chord with her. She wasn’t sure what it was, but the notion that there was something oddly familiar about him seemed to wash her other thoughts away.
“Does it hurt much?” she asked, looking at his leg. Perhaps it was the boots, she thought. They seemed to remind her of something.
“Been hurt worse. A little tender is all.”
“I see,” Mary said. She’d decided it wasn’t the boots and tried to put the notion out of her mind. “I suppose it can be a dangerous business, hunting.”
“Hunting’s not dangerous. It’s fools that’re dangerous,” Owens said, waggling a finger. “Guides see plenty of fools.”
Their conversation continued for some time, as the sun started to settle toward the mountaintops. From time to time the odd feeling returned, and Mary found herself watching Owens for some clue to its cause. Rebecca came running up, saying she was out of bread and was going to ask a waiter if she could have more. She waved at Owens, who waved back as she turned and skipped off.
As if for the first time, Mary saw the shirt, the mended tear in the sleeve. Her heart stopped, then fluttered in her chest like a bird in hand. She could not seem to draw the next breath. The fabric!
Mary’s eyes went wide and she gripped the arms of her chair as if she might be blown away if she didn’t. Owens noticed and gave her a curious frown.
“Missus Braddock, you look like you’ve seen a ghost,” Owens said with a narrow-eyed look that mimicked concern. It was a cold look, though the voice was soothing, “Are you all right?”
Flustered, Mary said, “Oh, oh yes. I’m fine. I just remembered something, that’s all,” she mumbled.
Mary’s palms started to sweat and a cold trickle of fear crept down her spine. She got up without thinking, finding herself standing before she thought of a plausible explanation. She flushed, and her fingers fumbled at her waist.
“I—I promised my husband I’d send a telegram for him,” she said.
Owens just raised an eyebrow. “I’d be happy to take it to the telegraph office for you, if you like,” he said, which flustered Mary even more.
“Oh no! I mean I wouldn’t dream of imposing,” she said. “It is a private communication, as well,” she added, regaining her command a bit. “I’m afraid I’ve been a goose. Tom will be so mad if I forget,” she said, adding some urgency to her excuse.
“How any man could stay mad at a wife as charming as you, Mary, I don’t know,” Owens said as he stood.
He put out a hand, catching one of hers before she knew it. His palm was as cool as the skin of a snake and he barely restrained his finger’s crushing power. He looked into her eyes, holding her spellbound for a horrible instant. Mary felt like a mouse before the strike. Owens’s eyes were dead. His voice was caring, but it was a carefully contrived imitation of how a caring man might sound.
“Is there nothing I can do to help?” he was saying, though Mary hardly heard the words. “I’d be happy to help you, Mary, in any way I could.”
“Goodness, no! It’s really something I must see to myself,” Mary said, avoiding his eye.
Her skin crawled at Owens’s touch, and for a horrifying instant she let herself imagine what those hands had done. “Thank you, Mister Owens. You’re too kind,” Mary forced herself to say, “but I must go.”
She slipped her hand from his with the best smile she could muster. “Sorry to run off. Now, where is that daughter of mine?”
Mary walked into the shelter of the lobby, wishing there were more people about. She tried to tell herself that she could be mistaken, that there must be hundreds of shirts just like that in the Adirondacks. Surely, she had to be wrong.
Tupper was the murderer: Hadn’t Chowder and Tom been sure of it? What difference did a shirt make after all, when all the evidence pointed to Tupper? Mary’s heels echoed through the lobby as she hurried to find Rebecca.
Rebecca was in the kitchen, playing with one of the many cats who kept the mice at bay.
“’Becca! There you are! We have to go.”
“Go where, Mommy? I’m playing with the kitty.”
“Maybe you can do that again a little later, sweetie. We need to send a telegram to Daddy now,” Mary said, taking her hand.
“Oh good, a telegram. I love to watch the key go clickety-clackety.”
Mary smiled, “That is fun, isn’t it?” she said, though her mind was elsewhere.
Mary thought for a moment to tell Frederick or William, but had to dismiss the idea. She had no proof. She’d given the swatch of fabric to Chowder. If she told the Durants, they’d surely confront Owens, but without the evidence they’d be unable to hold him. Flushing him before they were ready to arrest him would only result in another chase.
The only way was to get a message to Tom, if she could, and stay away from Owens until Tom got back. She was thinking of just how to word the telegram. She’d need to be very careful, she decided. There was no telling if some friend of Owens’s might see it.
It could be days before Tom got it, and half the Adirondacks might know of it before then. By the time she got to the telegraph office she’d made up her mind. She hoped Tom would understand.
Owens watched as Mary and Rebecca disappeared back into the Prospect House a few minutes later, their telegram sent. He ambled into the telegraph office once they were gone.
The telegram was waiting for Tom when he woke. It had been near noon when he and Mitchell rumbled up to the Sabattis place. Though he’d wanted to keep on to the Prospect House, he was dead-tired and unsteady in his seat. He and Mitchell collapsed with orders to Mrs. Sabattis to wake Tom in an hour. She’d let him sleep a half hour longer. He read the telegram with foggy eyes and an even foggier brain.
I FOUND THE SHIRT YOU WERE LOOKING FOR STOP
CHOWDER HAS ONE LIKE IT STOP COME QUICK STOP
Tom read it again, “What the hell,” he muttered. He rubbed his eyes and tried to focus as the words swam in front of him. “A shirt?”
Steaming bowls of biscuits and fresh corn pulled his attention away and the sizzle of frying steaks had him frothing at the mouth. He put the telegram down and dug in. For fifteen minutes Tom shoveled food without a break. Only when he took a moment to butter his third biscuit did he glance at the telegram again.
“Why she all on fire about a shirt?” he mumbled with his mouth full. “Fuck!” he shouted, bits of biscuit flying. He jumped up from the table as if he’d been kicked out of his chair. “Sonofabitch!”
“What the hell?” Mitchell said, staring in amazement. Tom offered a stammered apology to Mrs. Sabattis and said, “Owens, he’s at the Prospect House! Mary’s seen him! I gotta go!”
Mitchell jumped up and ran out the back door. Tom was close behind.
“Mitchell,” Tom said. He’d scribbled a message on the back of the telegram. “Can you get this sent to Mary? I’ll go ahead.”
“Sure, Tom. I’ll be fifteen, twenty minutes behind you. Go!”
It paid to have friends who, like himself, had no love for the Durants. Owens crumpled Tom’s telegram as he put it in his pocket and walked out of the telegraph office. He looked around at the deepening gloom. The sun had set a half hour before. Hardly anyone was about. There was a low rumble off to the west, and the sky flickered, outlining the black trees in blue-white lightning. The storm was still some distance off, but rolling in fast. Owens smiled. Perfect cover for the night’s work. He figured he had about an hour to get ready. Lights were coming on in the hotel.
“Thank you, Mister Edison,” he mumbled, grinning in the glow.
It had been hours since Mary sent her telegram. She’d stayed in her room with the doors bolted while the hours ticked away. They’d taken their dinner in their rooms, too. The only time the door had opened was to let the waiter in with his cart. Rebecca grumbled about being cooped up for hours, but Mike had helped occupy her as best he could.
Mary told him about Owens. Mike agreed that they were best to stay behind locked doors until Tom returned. For now she’d have to wait, like bait in a trap.
A rap at the door interrupted her thoughts. The waiter announced himself. “Picking up the trays, ma’am,” he said through the door.
Mary threw the bolt and opened it a crack. She was about to peer out before opening it all the way when the door was shoved hard, cracking her in the head, sending her staggering back.
“Sorry, Mary, but I really must intrude,” Owens said, as if he were interrupting dinner conversation. He gripped her arm as she started to turn, and with the other hand punched her on the side of the head.
Mary opened her eyes and looked at Owens’s boot just inches from her face. The world had turned on its side and the room towered above her. The floor pressed against her face and something sharp dug into her temple.
“The boy, he’s in the next room?” Owens asked, “And Rebecca, too?” When Mary didn’t answer immediately, Owens slapped her and said, “Don’t make me kill you, Mary. Really, don’t.”
The way he said it froze the blood in her veins, but helped bring her to her senses.
“They’re asleep,” she managed to say.
“Good. Good,” Owens said, seeming quite satisfied. “Now I’m going to let you up. Do you understand? Yes?” Owens helped her to her feet but held his bone-handled bayonet ready at his side. “Well then, now that that’s over,” he said in an impossibly friendly tone that frightened Mary more than the length of steel in his hand, “we can go. You do want to see Tom, don’t you?”
Mary stiffened, her eyes widening under a small trickle of blood from her forehead.
“Tom?” she managed to say.
“Oh yes,” Owens said with a dead-eyed smile as he handed her a kerchief, “he’ll be along shortly.”
The connecting door opened. Rebecca slid in with a finger to her mouth. “Mikey’s sleeping,” she whispered.
Mary looked from her to Owens, whose eyes had narrowed to black slits over a toothy smile. She felt the tip of the bayonet press against her back.
“Oh, hello, Mister Owens,” Rebecca said when she realized he was there. She walked to them, her small pink feet tiptoeing.
“Say anything and I’ll butcher her right here,” Owens whispered in Mary’s ear. Mary’s world rocked and screamed. The room may as well have been on fire, her precious little girl wading through he flames. Mary’s voice croaked. No words came out.
“Hello, ’Becca,” Owens said. “We’re going to see your daddy. Do you want to come?”
They made their way through the deserted hallways of the near-empty hotel, their footsteps echoing. With each step Mary’s mind raced. She tried to plan, tried to imagine how she might escape, raise an alarm, or at least save Rebecca. She thought of Tom and prayed he wasn’t already dead. As long as he’d gotten her telegram, there was a chance. She knew that as long as he was alive he’d come for them, and no force on earth would stand in his way.
Owens took them through a back door, out through the rain, which had just started. Lightning lit the way to the small building that housed the dynamo, the Long-waisted Maryann. They rushed inside, out of the rain.
The room was empty. A boiler hissed. A steam engine spun wheels. A long, leather belt ran to the dynamo, which hummed in time with the thumpeta-thumpeta rhythm of the engine. There was a horrible smell to the place, a burnt-flesh smell, mixed with oil, wood smoke, and ozone.
“Where’s Daddy?” Rebecca said, looking around. “This is a scary place. I don’t like that thing.” She pointed to the Long-waisted Maryann, it’s copper-wrapped coils standing well over her head. Owens paid her no mind. He looked at his watch.
“I think we have some time,” he said, as if waiting for a train. “Give me your hands, Mary,” he added, once he’d bolted the door. Mary put her shaking hands out. Owens, who had lengths of rope ready in his pocket, tied her hands in front of her. It was done so quickly Rebecca didn’t say a word, just stared in confusion.
“Mommy?” she said when Owens was done. “What game are we playing?”
Owens grabbed Rebecca’s hand and pulled her to a chair in the corner of the room.
“You stay here, ’Becca,” Owens said. “We’re playing a scary game. But don’t worry, your daddy will be here soon.”
Owens went back to Mary and pulled her to the other side of the room. The thumping steam engine hid them from Rebecca.
“The woodpile,” Owens pointed. “Bend over.” He shoved her down across the wood and pulled up her skirts.
“No! No! No! You can’t!” Mary cried, but not so loud as to scare Rebecca. She started to rise but Owens hit her, and a moment later she felt the tip of the bayonet at her temple.
“Someone’s bound to come in,” she said, trying to reason with him, buy time. “The man who runs the dynamo.”
Owens chuckled. “He’s too busy cooking. Don’t you smell him? Chopped him up and stuffed him in the boiler. Now, either I fuck you in front of her or I kill you in front of her. Your choice.”
Mary couldn’t say anything.
“Cat got your tongue?” he whispered in her ear. “Well, suppose I was to do her first? Not a bad idea, now I think about it.”
“Mommy?”
“It’s all right, ’Becca,” Mary forced herself to say in a strong voice. “You stay right there. Just close your eyes and wish for Daddy to come.”
Under the noise of the steam engine and the storm beating on the roof, Mary turned her head and said, “Go ahead and fuck me, you pathetic bastard. When Tom gets here, we’ll see who gets fucked.”
Owens slammed her down onto the woodpile. Mary felt him pressing hard between her legs. A hard hand felt for her sex, pulling her underclothes away.
“Fuck you like I did that little maid,” Owens growled in her ear. “See how you like that. Stuck her in one end then stuck her in the other.” He pressed the bayonet against her temple. A trickle of blood ran down her face, dripping off her chin into the wood.
“Shoulda seen her squirm,” he said, chuckling.
Mary gagged in horror. Bile rose in her throat.
“Get away from my mommy,” Rebecca said. Mary felt a rush of water on her legs and back.
Owens jumped off, turning on ’Becca, who stood defiantly with a bucket in her hand. Owens kicked it away, sending it bouncing across the room. He raised a fist, but before he could strike, Mary grabbed a length of firewood and with both hands swung it against Owens’s skull.
It was a glancing blow, but it opened a gash that fountained blood as Owens staggered to his left. Mary swung again but missed, the wood whistling inches from his face. Owens struck out with his bayonet. It went through Mary’s left arm, just above the elbow and punched into her side, grating on a rib.
Mary stared, frozen in shock, looking at the length of steel skewering her flesh. Owens grinned through the blood streaming off his head. He twisted the blade. Mary screamed and dropped the wood.
“That’s right. Scream!” Owens yelled, his eyes bulging and the veins standing out on his neck like blue wires. He brought his face close to hers. Blood from his head wound dripped off his nose, falling between her breasts. “Nobody’s gonna hear you,” he whispered. Mary felt the room wobble and her vision swirl with tiny lights and moving shadows. The floor came up to meet her face.
“Be here any time now,” was the first thing Mary heard. She woke looking at her knees, her head hanging down. She tried to focus. “Won’t they be surprised,” Owens was saying to himself.
“What was it about the shirt?” Owens said when he saw Mary coming to. She was bound to a chair, her arms tied tight. “Huh? Why the shirt? You know, if you hadn’t sent that telegram, I’d have been done with it. So, tell me,” he said, tilting her head up to give her some water. Mary was dizzy and her arm felt like a bolt of fire had been shot through it. She looked at Owens through the screen of her hanging, black hair. He looked ghastly. Blood was smeared all over his face and the scalp wound continued to trickle.
“Go fuck yourself,” she mumbled once she saw that Rebecca was still all right.
“Hmm. Well, we’ll just see about that, won’t we?”
Owens fished in his pocket. “Like to see what your Tommy wrote back? It says STAY IN YOUR ROOM, STOP. THERE IN TWO HOURS, STOP.” Owens looked at his watch. “That would make it any minute now.” Owens smiled but clucked at Mary.
“You know, you really did complicate matters with your little telegram. Forced me to change plans rather drastically. Now I’ll have to get rid of your Tommy, too. Very inconvenient, Mary.” Owens shook his head almost regretfully. “I’m afraid you’ll be paying rather dearly for that.”
Mary, looking about, thought the room had changed, then noticed the light in the ceiling was shining in one direction. Some sort of shield had been rigged on it so it left half the room in shadow. Owens had what she thought was a towel in one hand, the bayonet in the other. When she looked closer she saw that the towel was wrapped around a pistol. “Only question,” Owens continued, “is who gets here first.”
Mary frowned and Owens smiled at her confusion.
“Tupper’s on his way to our little party, too. Thought I killed him, but I guess I didn’t. Friend o’ mine saw him stealin’ a boat over ta Long Lake,” Owens said with a frown. “So, you see, this will all work out very nicely. Tupper was headin’ this way. Guess he thinks he’ll get even.”
Owens chuckled at that and shook his head as if the notion was unbelievably stupid. “So, Tupper will kill you and little Rebecca here,” he said, running a hand through Rebecca’s golden curls, “and of course, poor, noble Tom. Happily, I will be able to dispatch the obviously insane Tupper. He really is crazy, you know,” Owens whispered as if confiding some great secret, “and then all will be well.”
Owens beamed at the simple genius of his plan, then just as quickly his mouth turned down in a pouting parody of a frown.
“Regrettably, I’ll be too late to save you from the same fate as the unfortunate Lettie Burman. Such a sweet thing. I really could not resist, not after I saw her with your son, the lucky dog.”
Mary spat at him. Owens looked at the bloody, pink spit with blank eyes as it slid down his leg. “I take it you approve of the plan.”
He bent down and forced a wadded-up kerchief into her mouth, tying another over it and knotting that one at the back of her head. “Not too tight now, is it?” Owens asked when he was done. Mary just glared at him.
Rebecca was already bound and gagged in the chair next to her. Owens walked to the other side of the boiler then and waited, facing the door. The room thumped and hummed. The world outside crashed and flickered. Rain beat on the roof and rattled at the windows that Owens had covered with blankets.
Minutes crawled by while Mary fought to stay conscious, stay focused, keep thinking of what she might do. Here eyes locked with ’Becca’s. Mary did her best to comfort her with only her eyes. For the longest time, longer than Mary could remember since Rebecca was just an infant, she held her with her eyes. Rebecca looked back and, despite their red rims, the tears, the fear, Mary saw there was still strength there.
A click of the latch brought their heads around.
The sudden movement had Mary’s vision swimming. A wave of nausea swept over her. She felt her stomach rise in her throat. In a panic, she fought it back, fearing she’d drown behind her gag. She locked her eyes on the door and tried to concentrate as the room wobbled and rolled. The door, which Owens had apparently unlocked, swung slowly open. The night shouldered it aside, a solid, black wall streaked with rain. Nothing stirred. The door swung until it bounced softly off the wall. The rain hissed and splattered on the threshold.
Tupper had been watching the hotel for hours. He’d seen Mary and Rebecca go back and forth to the telegraph office, though he had no idea who they were. He watched as Owens crept into the office, too. He saw how Owens had watched the woman and girl. The hill behind the hotel was a perfect vantage point, and the field glasses Tupper had taken from the sheriff’s pack were excellent. Tupper had seen Owens go into the small building behind the hotel perhaps an hour before.
He wondered why the man had changed clothes inside. He’d been tempted to shoot him then, had peered down the barrel of the Winchester, nestling the front blade sight on Owens’s chest. His finger had caressed the trigger for a moment, but he had not fired.
Putting a bullet through the man was not enough, no matter how good it might have felt to do it. He’d put the rifle down then, and settled in to wait and watch. He knew there would be an opportunity, knew that, like the sky in the west, things were coming to a boil. The rain had started a little while later as he lay under a bush on the hilltop. He’d watched as Owens disappeared back into the hotel.
It had almost been too dark to see. The rain and the black night had nearly made them invisible. He saw them though, Owens and the woman, the little girl, running for the door of the building through the rain as lightning lit them, froze them as if in a photographer’s studio. As the door had slammed shut, Tupper gathered up his things. He had no choice now.
It was clear from Owens’s actions that the woman and girl were a part of his plan. Tupper felt, rather than knew, it was not a good part. There was no good reason for Owens to be spiriting them into an outbuilding in the rain. Tupper wished he’d taken the shot, grumbling under his breath at his foolishness.
“You cannot unmake the past, Jim,” his grandfather said at his side. “You chose well with what you knew.”
“But now I must go in after him. He’s going to kill them, I can feel it. He has the advantage now. All I have is this,” he said, knocking his knuckles against his chest, making a hard, hollow sound.
“You have more, Jim. Much more. The future is not given to me. I do not see it. But his advantage may only be in your head.”
It had been his grandfather who’d pushed open the door. “He is in the corner, behind the machine,” he said. “You must be careful.”
With a whoop, Tupper burst in, a pistol in one hand, the rifle in the other, tucked against his hip. He fired blindly, the light throwing off his aim. The bullet clanged off the Long-waisted Maryann, throwing off sparks. Thud, thud, thud, thud.
They didn’t sound like shots at first. Mary wasn’t sure what had happened, only that the man who must have been Tupper was now on his back and blood was on the wall.
Owens came out of the shadows. The towel-wrapped pistol smoked in his hand. He stood over Tupper for a moment, then kicked his foot aside, closed the door, and threw the bolt once more.
“Well, that went well, don’t you think?” Owens said, grinning, not talking to Mary so much as himself. He grabbed Tupper’s boots and dragged him across the room.
“Crazy, murdering Indian, running about, leaving bodies wherever he goes.” Owens made a whoop like an Indian and hopped once or twice in a mock war dance. Tupper’s legs jiggled in Owens’s grip.
“Scared shit outa the tourists. Cost the Durants a bloody fortune, but not near enough yet. Fucking William stole my land,” Owens said as he dropped Tupper’s boots with a thud on the floor.
“My family’s land since before I was born, my island, right smack in Raquette Lake.” Owens kicked at Tupper’s legs. “Forced me off.” He booted him again. The body flopped and jiggled. “Goddamn sheriff came with a shotgun.” Owens’s foot thumped into Tupper again. “Cleared me outa my own island!”
Mary was shaking her head. None of this made sense to her. Rebecca was silent, her eyes wide and red.
“Heard his sister was gonna sue him, how he cheated her like he cheated me.” Owens walked back and picked up Tupper’s pistol and tucked it in his belt. The rifle he held in the crook of one arm. “That lawyer, he’s a crazy old coot, crazier than me, maybe. He had some millionaire about to buy a camp from Durant, lot o’ land, too.
“‘Drive the price down, son,’” Owens said, imitating the gravely voice of an old man and sticking out his gut. “‘Hurt William West in the bargain, you can name your price.’”
Switching back to his own voice, Owens said, “Didn’t give a shit how I got it done. Didn’t want details. So I don’t give him no details,” he went on in a sing-song tone.
Mary still wasn’t sure if he was talking to her or not. He seemed to be in a trance. His eyes were unseeing. Blood dripped down his face, yet he made no move to wipe it away. “Just luck Jim here decided to stick his foreman,” he said, kicking a leg again.
“Shoulda seen the headlines: MURDERING INDIAN ESCAPES POLICE,” Owens chuckled with a wave of his hand. “Didn’t have an idea till I heard about him. It all fell into place after that. Like a sign from the Great God Almighty himself, a big ol’ finger from on high, saying this here is your instrument, Ex, use him any way you like.”
Owens looked at Mary, who wore an uncomprehending expression. For an instant, he seemed to falter. He looked from her to Rebecca and his eyes flickered and a deep crease stole across his forehead.
“The first one was the hardest,” he said. “After that it got easier, till I got to liking it, especially that little maid.” Owens seemed to catch himself, as if he saw what he’d become and didn’t much like it.
“Sorry you had to get caught in this,” he said softly. “But hell, what’s done is done.” He shrugged, his turn of conscience seemingly gone as quickly as it had come. Then he added, “What I said before about doing you like I did Lettie, well, I won’t do that, I guess. Kill you quick. No pain or nothing. Once your husband gets here we’ll get this all done an’ put behind us.”