Robin advanced to the bed, taking her Glock from the waistband of her slacks at the small of
her back while Denny walked to the bathroom door, making no attempt to muffle his footfalls.
It was too late for that. He stood beside it, gun raised to the side of his face.
The pillow on the woman’s side was still indented from the weight of her head. Robin put it
over the man’s face and fired into it. The Glock made a low coughing sound, no more than
that, and discharged a little brown smut onto the pillow from its vents.
Eileen came out of the bathroom, looking worried. “Herb? Are you all r—”
She saw Denny. He seized her by the throat, put the Glock to her temple, and pulled the
trigger. There was another of those low coughing sounds. She slid to the floor.
Meanwhile, Herb Ellis’s feet were kicking aimlessly, making the coverlet he and his late wife
had been sleeping under puff and billow. Robin fired twice more into the pillow, the second
shot a bark instead of a cough, the third one even louder.
Denny took the pillow away. “What, did you see
The Godfather
too many times? Jesus,
Robin, his head’s halfway gone. What’s an undertaker supposed to do with that?”
“I got it done, that’s what matters.” The fact was, she didn’t like to look at them when she
shot them, the way the light went out of them.
“You need to man up, girl. That third one was loud. Come on.”
They picked up the goggles and went down to the boy’s room. Denny hoisted Luke into his
arms—no problem there, the kid didn’t weigh more than ninety pounds—and gave his chin a
jerk for the women to go ahead of him. They left the way they had come, through the kitchen.
There were no lights on in the adjacent house (even the third shot hadn’t been
that
loud), and
no soundtrack except for the crickets and a faraway siren, maybe all the way over in St. Paul.
Michelle led
the way between the two houses,
checked the street,
and motioned for the
others to come ahead. This was the part Denny Williams hated.
If some guy with insomnia
looked out and saw three people on his neighbor’s lawn at two in the morning, that would be
suspicious. If one of them was carrying what looked like a body, that would be
very
suspicious.
But Wildersmoot Drive—named after some long-gone Twin Cities bigwig—was fast asleep.
Robin opened the SUV’s curbside back door, got in, and held out her arms. Denny handed the
boy in and she pulled Luke against her, his head lolling on her shoulder. She fumbled for her
seatbelt.
“Uck, he’s drooling,” she said.
“Yes, unconscious people do that,” Michelle said, and closed the rear door. She got in the
shotgun seat and Denny slid back behind the wheel. Michelle stowed the guns and the aerosol
as Denny cruised slowly away from the Ellis house. As they approached the first intersection,
Denny put the headlights back on.
“Make the call,” he said.
Michelle punched in the same number. “This is Ruby Red.
We have the package, Jerry.
Airport ETA in twenty-five minutes. Wake up the system.”
In the Ellis home, the alarms came back on. When the police finally arrived, they would find
two dead, one gone, the kid the most logical suspect. He was said to be brilliant, after all, and
those were the ones that tended to be a little wonky, weren’t they? A little unstable? They’d ask
him when they found him, and finding him was only a matter of time. Kids could run, but even
the brilliant ones couldn’t hide.
Not for long.
7
Luke woke up remembering a dream he’d had—not exactly a nightmare, but definitely of the
not-so-nice variety. Some strange woman in his room, leaning over his bed with her blond hair
hanging around the sides of her face.
Sure, whatever you want
, she’d said. Like a chick in one of
the porno clips he and Rolf sometimes watched.
He sat up, looked around, and at first thought this was another dream. It was his room—
same blue wallpaper, same posters, same bureau with his Little League trophy on it—but where
was the window? His window looking out at Rolf’s house was gone.
He shut his eyes tight, then sprang them open. No change; the windowless room remained
windowless. He considered pinching himself, but that was such a cliché. He popped his fingers
against his cheek instead. Everything stayed the same.
Luke got out of bed. His clothes were on the chair, where his mom had put them the night
before—underwear, socks, and tee-shirt on the seat, jeans folded over the back. He put them on
slowly, looking at where the window should have been, then sat down to put on his sneakers.
His initials were on the sides,
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: