Canyons of Night Page 16
“Maybe those guys will leave soon.” Devin looked around. “Wonder where they are?”
“Probably trying to see how far they can get inside the Preserve. Every so often someone tries it on a dare or just to see what will happen. They’ll find out soon that they can’t get through the fence.”
“If they’re trespassing, Chief Attridge can arrest them.”
“He won’t do that,” Nate said with cool certainty.
“Why not? The chief used to work for the FBPI. Those guys are tough. They arrest serial killers and drug lords and really dangerous dudes.”
“I’m not saying he couldn’t arrest ’em, just that he won’t. Why bother? Everyone knows that the fence stops most folks from getting more than a couple of feet inside the Preserve. People who do manage to get inside don’t come out alive. Why put folks in jail for trying to get themselves killed?”
“Yeah, I guess.”
“What do you want to do? Find another place to look for treasure or wait and see if those guys with the boat leave soon?”
Devin hesitated. The logical decision was to move on up the shoreline. There were plenty of other interesting locations to explore on the perimeter of the Preserve. But Hidden Beach was the one that intrigued him the most. He wanted another look at the cavern.
“We’ve been planning this trip for days,” he said. “Those guys will probably leave soon. Let’s wait and see what happens.”
“Okay.”
They took a couple of energy bars out of their packs and hunkered down to wait.
“Do you really think we’ll find Captain Sebastian’s treasure inside the cave?” Nate asked after a while.
“Maybe.” Devin wasn’t sure how much more to say so he decided to keep quiet.
The entrance to the cave down below on the beach was almost invisible, a narrow crevasse in the rocks that widened unexpectedly once you got inside. Devin had sensed something intriguing inside the cavern the last time they had explored it, something that needed to be found, but he had no idea what it was. Some part of him was certain that the secrets hidden inside the cavern were valuable. He could not explain how he knew that to Nate, though, without explaining his new senses.
“I wonder if the guys who came here in that boat found the cave and went inside to look for the treasure,” Nate said. “Maybe that’s where they are now.”
“I hope not. That cave is ours.”
They munched the energy bars and drank the bottled water. Time passed. Devin was about to suggest that they dig out another round of energy bars when he heard the low rumble of voices. The sound did not come from the nearby woods where the Preserve fence began. It emanated from the hidden entrance to the treasure cave down on the beach.
“I don’t believe it,” he said softly. “They did find it.”
“Yeah,” Nate said. “But they’re leaving now. We’ve still got plenty of time to look for the treasure.”
Down below two men squeezed out of the slit in the rock face and emerged into the open. A jolt of fear flashed through Devin when he saw the mag-rez pistols on their hips. Beside him, Nate froze, too.
“Oh, shit,” Nate whispered. “They must be smugglers or drug runners.”
Real-life pirates, Devin thought. He felt a terrible prickling sensation on the back of his neck.
“Come on, we’d better get out of here,” he said.
“If we move they might see us,” Nate said.
“Okay, okay.”
Devin stilled. Beside him, Nate seemed hardly to breathe.
As if sensing that they were being observed, one of the men glanced up. His eyes locked with Devin’s. He reached for his gun.
“Company,” he snarled to his companion.
The other man looked up. “Couple of kids.”
“Doesn’t matter. They’ve seen us.”
Both men bounded up the trail that would take them to the top of the cliff. They moved very fast, faster than Devin had seen anyone move in his entire life.
He jumped to his feet. “We’ve got to get out of here.”
Nate watched the men coming up the cliff trail. It was as if he were paralyzed with fear.
“Come on.” Devin reached down and grabbed his friend’s arm. “Run.”
Nate scrambled to his feet. “We’ll never make it. They’ve got guns.”
“They can’t follow us into the Preserve.”
“We can’t get inside, either.”
“I think maybe I can get us in,” Devin said.
He did not know where the knowledge came from. Some voice inside his head was screaming at him that the Preserve was their only hope. He ran for the trees, hauling Nate with him.
“What about the fence?” Nate gasped.
“I think I can get you through it. Just don’t let go of my hand, okay?”
“Are you sure?”
“It’s not like we have any choice.”
He sensed the first jarring sparks that told him they were entering the strange energy field that marked the outer boundary of the invisible fence. Beside him Nate sucked in a sharp, startled breath.
“You okay?” Devin asked.
“Yeah. I think so. I’ve never been this far inside. It hurts.”
Devin risked a glance back over his shoulder.
The men were at the top of the cliff now.
“They’re heading into the Preserve,” one of the smugglers shouted. “We can’t let them get away.”
Devin heard gunshots but neither he nor Nate went down so he figured the shooters had missed. He ran as fast as he could. Nate pounded along beside him. The freaky energy was pulsing all around them now. It was like running through a lightning storm, Devin thought. Jolt after jolt shot through him but he pushed his new senses as hard as he could and the pain of the shocks seemed to diminish. Nate gripped his hand harder.
“I can’t see them anymore,” one of the gunmen shouted. “I can feel the fence. This is as far as we can go.”
Both men slammed to a halt.
“Forget ’em,” the second man said. “The Preserve will take care of them for us.”
Chapter 18
“HOW DID YOUR DATE WITH CHARLOTTE GO LAST night?” Myrna asked from the doorway of the office.
Slade did not look up from the list of names on the computer screen. “If one more person asks me that question, I may have to fire everyone in the department.”
Rex was on the desk. He had his beaded clutch open and was busy selecting paperclips to go inside. He paused long enough to chortle a greeting to Myrna. She went to the desk and patted him a couple of times. Then she studied Slade.
“Fire everyone, hmm?” she said. “All two of us?”
“Yes.”
“Did things go that badly or that well?”
He pretended that he had not heard the question. “Where’s Willis? Did he finish checking out the alibis of Gaines’s known associates?”
Kirk Willis materialized in the doorway. “Just finished the last one, Chief.” He walked into the office and put a file folder down in front of Slade. “None of the people on your list seems to have been anywhere near the island in the past year, let alone on the night Gaines died. What’s our next move?”
Slade turned away from the screen and opened the folder. “There’s a rule that applies to situations like this. It comes from an Old World investigator, Sherlock somebody. Something to the effect that once you have excluded the probable, whatever remains, however improbable, is the answer.”
Myrna frowned. “What the heck does that mean?”
“It means,” Slade said, “that there’s a high probability that our killer is still here on the island.”
Kirk and Myrna stared at him, disbelief in their eyes.
“You really think so?” Kirk asked, dubious but intrigued.
“Yes,” Slade said.
“I can’t believe that any of the locals is a killer,” Myrna said slowly. “This is such a small town. Everyone knows everyone else.”
r /> “You’re forgetting the B&Bs that are scattered around the island and the folks attending those Reflection Retreats out at the lake lodge,” Slade reminded her. “We can get the names and addresses of the guests from the innkeepers.”
“What, exactly, are we looking for?” Myrna asked. “We already know most of them probably don’t have solid alibis. Any one of them could have snuck out of a B&B or the lodge and met up with Gaines at Looking Glass.”
“But most of them probably aren’t serious collectors of the kind of antiques that Charlotte handles,” Slade said.
Kirk brightened. “You want me to see if I can find out if any of them are collectors?”
“I want to know about any connections at all that any of them might have to the antique or antiquities trade.”
“I can do that,” Kirk said.
“I know you can,” Slade said. “But do it quietly. I don’t want the killer to get the idea that we think we have a murder on our hands or that we’re looking for him on the island. He’ll be gone on the next ferry and we might lose him altogether.”
“What makes you think he didn’t leave the day after the murder?” Myrna asked.
“I don’t think he got what he wanted,” Slade said. “He stuck around because as far as he knows there is no murder investigation going on. He feels safe. We want him to continue to feel that way.”
“I’m on it,” Willis said. He straightened away from the doorjamb, preparing to head out.
“One more thing,” Slade said. “Good work on these alibis. I know that some of the people on that list were very low profile. I’m impressed that you were able to confirm their whereabouts on the night of the murder.”
Kirk reddened a little. “Yeah, well, I’ve always liked working on a computer.”
“Good skill to have on this job. Get back to me as soon as you’ve got some information on the island guests.”
“Yes, sir.”
Kirk turned and went briskly down the hall. A moment later the front door closed behind him.
Myrna gave Slade a knowing smile. “Young Officer Willis has certainly developed a lot more enthusiasm for the law enforcement profession since you arrived on the island. I think he’s starting to feel like a real cop.”
“It’s his first murder investigation,” Slade said. “The experience tends to have that effect.”
“Actually, I think it may be the first murder investigation we’ve had on the island since Letty Porter decided she’d had enough of her husband getting drunk and beating up on her. She got him drunk one last time, drove him to Death Wish Point, and pushed him off. They never did find the body. That was almost twenty years ago.”
“What happened to Letty Porter?”
“She’s still here. Has a cabin out on Higgins Road. She’s in her seventies now. Chief Halstead was new on the job at the time. He was never able to prove murder. Not that he tried real hard. As far as everyone around here was concerned, George Porter had it coming. He was one mean drunk.”
Slade leaned back in his chair and drummed his fingers on the desktop. “She killed once.”
“Forget it,” Myrna said. “Take my word for it, Letty Porter has absolutely no interest in antiques. And knowing Letty, even if she had wanted to kill Gaines for some reason, she would have used the nearest blunt object.”
“All the same, see if you can find out where she was on the night Gaines died.”
“Okay.” Myrna glanced at her watch. “It’s not quite four o’clock. I can take a run out to her place right now.”
“Do that.”
Myrna started to step back from the doorway. She hesitated. “You know, I’m starting to get a little worried about Devin and Nate.”
“Wasn’t this the day of the big treasure hunt?”
“Yes, but they left early this morning,” Myrna said. “I expected them back by lunchtime. They’ve only got a few energy bars and some bottled water with them. They’re thirteen-year-old boys. They should be starving by now.”
“Maybe they’re living off the land.”
“Trust me, a few summer berries wouldn’t do it for boys that age. I called Nate’s mom a short time ago. Laurinda said she had expected them back earlier, too, but she wasn’t worried.”
“You are?”
“Devin’s a city kid. He doesn’t know his way around the island.”
“Nate does.”
“I know.” Myrna nibbled on her lower lip. “I’m being overly protective, aren’t I?”
“He’s a growing boy. He needs to spread his wings. This island is a lot safer place to do that than the big city.”
“I know that, too.”
“But you’re still worried.”
“It’s just that I’ve had this weird feeling since this morning.” Myrna sighed. “There are some dangerous places on the island. Steep cliffs. Rip currents in the coves and inlets. What if one of the boys fell?”
“The other would have come back to town to get help,” Slade said.
“What if they tried to get through the fence and got lost inside the Preserve?”
“When was the last time an island kid got through the fence?”
Myrna sighed. “It’s never happened as far as I know.”
“The fence works, Myrna,” Slade said.
At least it did when it came to keeping out those with no measurable levels of talent, he thought. Devin, with his newly stirring senses, might have been tempted to try to get inside but Nate would not have made it. If Devin had managed to get lost in the Preserve, Nate would have raced back to town to report the problem.
“There are other things that can happen to a couple of kids alone,” Myrna said.
“It’s okay to worry,” he said.
“Gee, thanks for that, boss. I feel so much better now.”
“Sorry,” Slade said. “That wasn’t very reassuring, was it? Look, Devin said that he and Nate were going to Hidden Beach to do their treasure hunting. They would have taken Merton Road. You could drive out there and see how they’re getting on for yourself.”
“Are you kidding? I can’t check up on Devin. He would be absolutely mortified if I did that to him in front of Nate.”
“True. I’ll tell you what, I’ll drive out there and take a look.”
Myrna looked inordinately grateful. “Thanks, Chief. I really appreciate this.”
Slade looked at Rex. “Let’s go, buddy.”
Sensing a new adventure, Rex chortled, grabbed his clutch, and bounded up onto Slade’s shoulder.
Slade looked at Myrna. “It has been suggested that hanging out with a dust bunny who carries a purse might have a negative impact on my image as a hard-core crime fighter.”
“Don’t be ridiculous,” Myrna said. “It’s a very nice clutch.”
Chapter 19
NATE GRABBED DEVIN’S ARM. “DID YOU HEAR THAT?”
“Ouch.” Devin winced. “Yeah, let go, man. That hurts.”
They were sitting side by side, their backs against a massive granite rock. Nearby a waterfall splashed into a pool. It was late afternoon but night fell fast and early inside the Preserve. The last of the sun had vanished a few minutes ago and a deep twilight was descending.
The plunge through the weird energy fence had been bad for both of them, although Devin suspected that it had frightened Nate more than it had him. Nevertheless, they were now facing the prospect of spending the night inside the Preserve and he was not looking forward to it any more than Nate was.
At least there had been no sign of the two smugglers. The really bad part, Devin thought, was that they did not have a flashlight. They hadn’t had anything to eat for hours. He thought wistfully about the packs they had left on top of the cliff above Hidden Beach.
“There’s that creepy noise again,” Nate whispered. “Maybe it’s those two guys.”
Devin stared hard at the dense darkness between the trees. Nate was not imagining things, he decided. Something had moved in the shadows. He could have sworn
that for a couple of seconds he saw a pair of glowing eyes but it was hard to be certain because whenever he concentrated with all of his energy it seemed to him that there were a lot of small, strange things glowing in the dark around them. He’d realized very quickly that Nate could not see all the scary glow-in-the-dark stuff so he had decided not to mention it. Nate was already freaked out enough as it was. One of them had to stay calm.
“No,” he said. “It’s not the smugglers. If they had found us they would have shot us by now. You heard them back there at the cove. They said they couldn’t follow us into the Preserve.”
“They think that whatever is in here will get us. Don’t know about you but that doesn’t make me feel any better. Who knows what’s in this place?”
“You’ve lived on Rainshadow all your life. If there were dangerous wild animals in here you would have heard about them by now.”
“I’m not talking about wild animals. I’m talking about other stuff. Lots of people have gone missing in the Preserve over the years. What if they didn’t just die? What if they’re still around?”
“There’s no such thing as ghosts.”
“How do you know that?”
It was, Devin thought, a legitimate question. How did he know there was no such thing as ghosts? He decided he did not want to pursue that line of logic.
“At least it’s not too cold in here,” he said. “If we have to spend the night we won’t get that hypo thing.”
“Hypothermia,” Nate said automatically.
“Yeah. That.”
Devin took out the old compass that Charlotte Enright had given him. He held it tightly in his hand. He had already discovered that it didn’t work inside the Preserve. When he’d tried to use it earlier he saw that all four points of the compass were glowing equally brightly. There was no way to tell which way was true north. But it felt good to hold it in his hand. Comforting.
“I’m thirsty,” Nate said after a while. “I’m going to get some water.”
“Me, too.” Devin got to his feet.
They moved across the grass to the grotto pool and looked down at the frothy water.