CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

At last it was dark, and time for Nathan to continue his journey. Finding the keys this time had been a much more difficult task. It took him nearly an hour of frantic hunting before he finally found a single Honda key among a clutter of loose change in an ashtray stashed in the back of a dresser drawer.

In a flash of inspiration, Nathan had killed the last thirty minutes in the steamy garage, using electrical tape to change the ones on the Honda’s license plates to fours.

The Honda started up on the first turn of the key. He took care to make sure that the transmission was in neutral, but kicked out the clutch nonetheless. If there was one thing he’d learned in the past two days, it was that you couldn’t be too careful. With the engine running, he searched for the button to the garage door opener, but found none.

“Oh, man,” he grumped, turning the engine off. “Something’s got to go right tonight.” He groped under the seats and searched in the glove compartment for the opener, but found nothing. He’d have to use the button on the wall, an option he feared because it would bathe him in light while he was completely unshielded. His decision made, he walked to the door between the garage and the kitchen, but again found no button.

Could it be?

Sure enough, for the first time in his twelve years, Nathan Bailey had to manually lift a garage door. He was surprised by how little effort it took.

Once out of the garage, he set the parking brake, shifted back into neutral, and manually closed the overhead door again. Back in the driver’s seat, he fastened his seat belt, coasted down the slightly inclined driveway, shifted into first, and gently engaged the transmission. His acceleration wasn’t exactly smooth, but it wasn’t anything like he’d feared.

His heart jumped as he approached the end of Little Rocky Trail. Three police cruisers, traveling bumper-to-bumper with their blue lights flashing, slid the turn into the neighborhood, speeding off down the street he’d just traveled.

Nathan figured that the guy from that morning had finally made his phone call.

 

“Are you sure it’s him?” Greg pressed. His tone was urgent and abrupt, making Todd wonder if he had done something wrong.

“How sure do you want me to be?” Todd retorted, exasperation showing through in his own voice. “You left a picture of the kid at our door, and I’m telling you that the kid I saw for about five seconds fifteen hours ago looked like the picture.” Patty, Peter, and the dog had all joined him at the kitchen table to witness the inquisition.

Greg took a deep breath and let it out. Clearly, his anxiety was showing, and he was telegraphing the wrong message to his witness. As the investigating officer for this portion of the Bailey case, he faced a difficult dilemma. If he reported to the state police that the Bailey kid had been sighted in Jenkins Township, the whole law enforcement world would descend upon them, perhaps to the exclusion of where the kid actually was. Just as surely as his discovery this afternoon could be a career-maker, a mistake could sentence him to life as a beat cop.

There had been hundreds of Nathan sightings over the past twenty-four hours, some as far away as California. None of them had panned out. Greg needed some additional proof before he cried wolf. There had to be a way to verify Mr. Briscow’s story.

“Tell me again what he was wearing when you saw him,” Greg said, straining inside to sound patient.

Patience, however—real or pretended—was not Todd’s long suit. “I already told you, Officer, that I don’t remember. He had shorts, I know that, and some kind of sports team shirt. I don’t recall which team.”

According to the reports from Virginia, Nathan Bailey had taken a Chicago Bulls shirt from the Nicholson house.

“And where was he headed when you last saw him?”

“When I first caught sight of him, he was coming toward our house, crossing the street.”

“From where?”

“Like he was coming from the Perlmans’ house.”

Not knowing who the Perlmans were or where they lived, that information was less than helpful. “Could he have been coming from St. Sebastian’s Church?” Greg asked.

Todd considered the question for a moment, calculating the map directions in his mind. At length, he nodded. “Yes. If he’d cut through the woods, that’s the general way he would have come from.”

Greg clapped his hands together. “I think that’s enough to call it an official Nathan sighting,” he said with a smile. Turning to the other police officers who had gathered in the front hallway, he said, “Sounds like the real thing, guys. Let’s go door-to-door and find him.”

It was frequently this way in police work. What you’re looking for showed up in the place you’d already searched. Greg thanked the Briscows for their assistance and rose from the kitchen table to assist the others in the search. As he approached the front door, he realized that he hadn’t asked the most important question of all.

“Mr. Briscow?” he said, turning around to face the family again.

“Yes?”

“Do you know if any of your neighbors are on vacation this week?”

Todd winced as though he had a sudden toothache. “Jeeze, Officer, I don’t know,” he said. “I really don’t know that many people in the neighborhood yet. We haven’t lived here long enough.”

Greg nodded through his disappointment. He supposed there’d be no shortcuts on this one. “That’s all right, sir. Just thought I’d ask. Thanks for your help.”

“Sorry.”

“No problem.” He turned again for the door.

“Wait a minute!” Todd exclaimed before Greg could take a step. Todd had the look of a man who had just discovered something important. “The Grimeses up the street are on vacation,” he said. “I just remembered that the kid next door’s been picking up their newspapers all week.”

At Greg’s request, Todd walked the police officer up the street to the Grimes residence at 4120 Little Rocky Trail. To Greg, the house looked no different from the others in the neighborhood, except he remembered this as the one at which he had been compelled to look through the front window, having seen—no, sensed, really—motion through the sheer curtains.

In the daylight, it had looked just like all the other empty houses on the street, but now, at night, its darkened windows stood out like an ink stain on a white tablecloth. As he drew his weapon from his holster, Greg told Todd to wait by the curb. Todd did him one better and volunteered to go back home.

At this point, procedure mandated that Greg call for backup. A lone-officer search of a structure for a confessed killer was insanity, and even to consider doing it violated every procedure he could think of. Crazier still was the prospect of bringing every cop in the free world to bear on a property that was merely empty. In the world of the police officer, it was far better to be dead than embarrassed. With no serious thought at all, he decided to perform this search on his own. In his worst moments of self-doubt, it had never even occurred to him that he couldn’t outshoot a kid. Now he was surprised that the thought gave him such comfort.

He started where he’d left off last time, shining his flashlight through the front window. In the dim, deflected glow of the light, nothing seemed out of place. Just a darkened living room, not entirely unlike his own. He walked down off the front porch into the side yard. Not sure what he was looking for, exactly, he noted that there were no footprints in the grass, and no broken glass. The air-conditioning compressor was running, but that didn’t necessarily mean anything, did it?

The backyard was more of the same. He’d read in the report from the Nicholsons’ house that Nathan had gained entry through the back door, but this house had no back door on ground level. Rather, it was a half-level up, where a deck might have been built, but wasn’t. A wooden railing in front of the door blocked any direct access anyway.

The only conceivable means of entry would be through the kitchen windows, which seemed intact, or through one of the tiny grass-level basement windows. As a random thought, he admired the housekeeping skills of the homeowner. At his own home, the basement panes were perpetually mud-spattered, but here, the Grimeses’ windows were spotless. One was so clean that it appeared not to be there at all.

The significance of the thought made Greg’s skin crawl. No matter how clean the glass, there should always be a reflection of a flashlight.

“Well, I’ll be damned,” Greg mumbled aloud. He assumed a shooter’s position on his belly, playing his light around the inside of the basement, backed up by his service revolver, with his finger a half-pull on the trigger. Once he verified that nothing was either moving or alive, he lowered himself through the window and inside the house.

The voice of his field training officer from long ago boomed in his mind to call for backup, but he ignored it. He could sense the nearness of his prey, and he was going to finish this one himself. It would be the perfect day: discovering the car, and capturing the kid. He just hoped to God there’d be no shooting. The paperwork on shooting an adult was ridiculous. Greg didn’t even want to think about what would be involved with shooting a kid.

Greg’s movements inside the house were spiderlike. His weapon was an extension of his right arm, held stiffly out at ninety degrees, with the base of the grip cradled in his left hand, which also held the mini Maglite, whose powerful light beam was aligned with the muzzle of his pistol, brightly illuminating his field of view. His back was rigidly straight, his knees were bent, and he advanced through the basement and up the stairs like a fencer, his feet never crossing. He was perfectly balanced for a fight.

The door at the top of the basement stairs was closed but not locked, posing only a moment’s delay in his search. If the kid were there, and if he were smart, he’d be waiting on the blind side of the door, and he’d take his shot at the first sign of movement. Aware of this, and being smarter than the average bad guy, Greg paused before proceeding, playing his flashlight around to provide the boy who wasn’t there with a false target. Then he charged forward and shoulder-rolled into the kitchen, recovering expertly to jerk his gun and light in a horizontal arc, covering all compass points. There were no visible targets to be shot.

It was only after a thorough search of the second floor of the house that Greg found a note on the kitchen table signed by Nathan Bailey. The good news was that this was the right house. The bad news was that they had missed the kid. The note apologized for breaking in, and assured the homeowners that he’d done the laundry for them. It went on to say how badly he felt that he had to steal their car, and that, oh, by the way, he now had a gun.

Greg lifted his portable radio and keyed the mike.