Read The Maine Massacre Online

Authors: Janwillem Van De Wetering

The Maine Massacre (14 page)

"Why did you attack him?"

She laughed. "Because the man was such a slob. Father likes me to go to the Blue Crustaceans' club sometimes, and I can't constantly refuse. I was always sure to find Opdijk there, and he always grabbed me. An uncle's friendly petting, but the bastard was feeling me up. I don't like to be felt up by slobs. It was good to see him jump and run and fall over. But I overdid it a bit. I nearly flew the plane into the Opdijk's house."

"Do you have any idea who killed Opdijk and Mary Brewer and the other two, a man called Jones and another called Davidson?"

"I have an idea."

"Would you tell me?"

"Shouldn't you find out for yourself? It must be interesting to find little clues here and there and try to piece them together. Why should I help you?"

De Gier reached for his empty glass and she refilled it. His teeth chattered again and he held his jaw.

"If you cooperate you may clear yourself. Now you are a suspect. So far we are just bumbling about, but the sheriff may call in the state police, who might use different methods. They wouldn't be hampered by local conditions."

She smiled and he saw the tip of her tongue and her moist lips. "Why should I want to clear myself, sergeant? I'm sure I couldn't be arrested and I'm sure nobody can be arrested. I am playing my game, which is watching your game, and the way you play it, you and the sheriff and your chief. And you can watch our game again. You've been taking part in it. It's all very involved and rather exciting, don't you think?"

Watching the bear in the circus, he thought, while the bear watches the audience.

Her head was close to his hand and he stroked her hair.

"Yes," he said. "The game is exciting. My chief thinks so too. He was so excited that he almost danced in the snow. He looked very funny. He has been trying to understand your gang. He likes its name, especially the/prefix
bad.
You say you like experimenting. Your membership in the gang must be an experiment. You study philosophy, don't you?" I

"Yes, but the books and the lectures are just words. If I attend all the lectures and do my utmost I'll get letters after my name, and perhaps one day I'll write something clever and my genius will be acknowledged. But that part of it is just silly. The true philosophers have always experimented. I was fortunate that I grew up with others whose minds were similar to mine. It's fashionable to be rebellious when you're young. Most American kids have a destructive period, but the fox always wanted to go further and he continued refusing to accept values that he hadn't tested. We became a gang and destroyed things for a while, material things, but the activity didn't get us anywhere. It was boring. The the fox said we should seek out gangs in a big city. He selected the biggest, New York, and we went down there for a few weeks.

"We were in our late teens and early twenties then. We found what we thought was the best part for our purposes, the Lower East Side. There were lots of gangs, most of them uniformed in some way. They didn't touch us, not even when we provoked them. The fox tried various methods. He used me as bait, but they just thought I was a prostitute. Finally Tom got us into the required trouble. He was a little drunk and he walked by himself and some Puerto Ricans mugged him. We got into the fight and the P.R.'s got help too. It was a true fight, with one corpse on their side and one on ours. The fox knifed a boy, a beautiful boy in dungarees and a black leather jacket. Gérard, a French Canadian from Jameson, caught a knife that had been thrown in his chest. He didn't see it coming. We left Gérard's body. We carried no identification, and his corpse wasn't there when we came back later. The police probably took it away. We all had a crisis then I think. We nearly gave up, and the fox stepped back and let us make up our minds. There were six of us left. Two gave up later on— they left the city and went out of state. I've lost contact with them. They married, got suburban homes in some city or other. They do the normal thing. Only the fox and Albert and Tom and I continued."

"Gérard wasn't missed when you got back to Jameson?"

"No. His parents had got divorced and left. He hadn't been living with them. Nobody cared I think, and we didn't tell anyone what happened. We said he had stayed in New York."

"But you are telling me—"

"Sure, why not?"

"Do you do everything the fox tells you to do?"

She laughed. "No, sergeant. When we were in New York we ran out of money and he suggested I work in a porno studio. Some old man with a hairpiece and polished fingernails offered me two hundred dollars a day. The fox thought that was a splendid idea, but I refused."

"And the money?"

"I telephoned my father and got a check and flew home. The others came back much later. Maybe they worked or robbed a bank. I never asked them how they got money. We are very secretive, even with each other. It's part of the game. Perhaps we aren't really a gang but just individuals linked in some strange formation. If I disagree with an experiment I don't take part in it. 'Gang' is a childish word, but we've been using it."

"What's on the number plate of your car?"

"BMF ZERO."

De Gier laughed as she got up and put more logs on the fire. She came back and stripped. De Gier still felt cold. She pulled him to his feet and helped him undress.

"Do you like me, sergeant?"

"Yes."

"Most men do."

"It must make your experiments easy."

"Kiss me."

The loveplay took a good while. He controlled himself to make it stretch, but he still felt part of the advertisement, and the orange label on the whiskey bottle stayed in his mind. The dragon hadn't released the princess. It had made the princess available, and not for the first time.

De Gier was lured into various postures and all the while Madelin was submissive, inviting, seemingly passive. But he knew that she granted him no initiatives and that he was taken through a preconceived program. A good program, with a good end.

"I'll show you where the bathroom is. We might take a shower."

She let him go first and he went down again and dressed and sat near the fire, watching its glow hollow out the birch logs. Madelin returned a little later in a housecoat. She made coffee and they drank it on the settee.

"The sheriff tells me your father owns the shore strip on Cape Orca now."

"Did he check with the town clerk?"

"Yes."

"The records may not be up to date. When land is sold the title is transferred officially, but only when the new deed is registered. Land taxes have gone up lately. A new name on a deed usually alerts the assessor. It may be better to put off registration for a while."

"But what if the previous owner sells the land again?"

"That's a risk, but not when the previous and new owners are friends, or trust each other."

"So your father may have sold the land again and the town clerk doesn't know who the new owner is."

"That might have happened."

"Has it?"

She put a finger on his nose. "It might have and he may not have told me. I'm the
junior
partner. He's the head of a rival gang, the Blue Crustaceans. His ideas differ from mine."

"Do you like him?"

"I've fought him all my life."

"Another experiment," de Gier said. "I see."

She moved away from him. "Don't sneer at experiments, sergeant. It's the only way we have to find out, to really find out. The reason that you are here tonight is because I saw something in you, in the way you played your flute. The fox did too. He's considering you as an honorary member."

De Gier got up. "Are you serious?"

She smiled. "Yes. Are you leaving? Better be careful, it isn't safe outside. You can stay the night if you like."

"I'll be careful."

She caressed his arm and he waited patiently.

"Why are you a sergeant? Shouldn't you be an officer?"

"I didn't have the qualifications to go to the academy. I went to the police school. I'll probably be made an adjutant in due course."

"An adjutant is an officer?"

"No."

"Do you mind?"

"No. Officers spend most of their time behind desks. I prefer to experiment in the field; maybe you and I are alike in some ways. Goodbye, Madelin. Thank you."

She laughed. "Don't thank me. I'm a country girl. Foreign males don't come my way too often. I think I should thank you. You did very well."

She walked him to the door and melted into his arms when he reached for his coat. He kissed her in return, but he still felt that he hadn't been anywhere near her.

"Come again, sergeant."

"Yes, thank you."

When he pressed the microphone in the Dodge the sheriff's response was immediate.

'Ten three, sergeant."

"On my way home."

"I just had a call. I'm leaving the jailhouse now, coming your way. You should be hearing my siren in a minute. There's a man in the road and an overturned car. I'm alone. Bernie is watching the radio in the jailhouse. You can come with me if you like, or are you exhausted?"

The sergeant looked at the microphone.

"Ten three, sergeant."

"I'll come with you."

"Ten four, sergeant."

10

D
E GIER DIDN'T HEAR THE SIRENS WHEN HE PUSHED THE microphone back into its clip, but he heard them when he got the Dodge out of the Astrinsky driveway. The long, plaintive howl of the cruiser was activated by the yap of its barker, boring into the sergeant's eardrums with impatient, self-centered, aggressive barks. De Gier smiled. He liked the yapping. He thought he might try to buy one of the machines causing the weird sounds. A good gift for Grijpstra's next birthday. They could screw the gadget into the Volkswagen patrol car and split the peace of Amsterdam with it, say in the early hours of a Sunday. He waved when the cruiser's array of blue flashing lights came into view. The cruiser slowed and its passenger door swung open. De Gier jumped in and fell against the back of the seat as the sheriff accelerated. De Gier leaned over and watched the speedometer. It moved his way until it rested on eighty. Eighty, de Gier thought, and we are on a sheet of ice.

"There are snow tires on the cruiser," the sheriff said. "Studded. They'll hold. Should have chains really, but it's hard to have a chase when you're hampered by chains."

"But there is no chase. You said there was a man in the road, didn't you? And an overturned vehicle. They'll be waiting for us."

The sheriff's eyes shone. "Sure. But a little speed doesn't hurt, and die cruiser belongs to the state. We are the law, sergeant. We can move. Nobody else can these days. Why do you think we became police officers?"

De Gier held on as the cruiser skidded through a corner, slowed, and sped off again.

"Almost there now. Got the call from a man who lives in a trailer. Out-of-the-way part of the county. Nobody lives there except him. Old guy on welfare in a secondhand trailer. Looks like a cracker box that's been hit by a bulldozer, but it'll be invisible now, snowed over. Old guy doesn't like to use his shovel too much."

"What do you think happened?"

"Drunken driver, what else? Turned his car over, crawled out of it, sat down to think, and fell asleep. Old guy must have seen him and phoned us. Easy little job. All we have to do is wake up the man in the road, get him into the cruiser, and put him in jail for the night. A tow truck can take care of the wreck. Nothing to it, but I thought you could do with a bit of a change after your love affair. How did it go?"

"Yes."

"Did she say anything?"

"Perhaps. She may have been making conversation. But it could be that her father doesn't own the Cape Orca shore property. He may have been acting as a middleman and the real owner doesn't want his name to be known and hasn't had the deeds registered. The title is in Astrinsky's name, but only for the record."

"Hey," the sheriff said. "That's fine. Good. So she did say something."

De Gier was listening.

"Jim?"

"Yes?"

"Would you turn the wailer off? I'd like to hear the barker on its own."

The sheriff pushed a button. De Gier opened his window. With the wail gone the barker was very clear. De Gier grinned.

"You like that, sergeant?" The sheriff was grinning too.

"I have another sound for you. Hold on. I'm going to turn into that side lane there. It runs parallel to this road and joins it again further on."

The cruiser veered off the road and shot into the woods. A deep vibration filled the car from the rear. The sound was like a big drum being rapped by a vertical hand.

De Gier listened. His spine turned into a glowing rod and the glow eased into his entire body. The grin slid off his mouth.

"How's that?"

De Gier nodded. "Yes. What is it?"

"The radio's antennae, brushing past overhanging branches. Hold on, we're getting back into the road. Bump coming."

The bump came. De Gier was thrown out of his seat and his head hit the roof, but its insulation and his thick hair eased the contact. He bounced back.

"There!"

The cruiser stopped. A wrecked car lay on its roof, immobile in stupid helplessness. Another car was parked behind the wreck. The sheriff switched his siren and barker off, but the blue waving lights on the cruiser's roof kept on touching the trees, the shining road, and the two still cars.

"Open your window. I'll turn the radio on so that we can be reached even if we're out of the cruiser. Two cars, eh? The old guy should have put that in his message. There could be several of them, and there are only two of us. Take the shotgun, sergeant, and hang around. Don't let yourself be rushed into anything."

The shotgun jumped free and the sheriff broke it and pushed shells into its cavity. "Here you are. If you have to use the gun put one shell into the trees and the second into somebody's legs. Be easy with it. I've taken the safety off and the trigger is light."

De Gier took the shotgun and slid out of his seat. The sheriff ran to the overturned car, bent down, and played his flashlight into its interior. There was nobody inside. De Gier waited, holding the shotgun, his forefinger stretched parallel to its barrel. The flashlight lit up the interior of the second car.

"Out! OUT, you guys! OUT I SAY!"

Four men came out, rubbing their eyes, blinded by the strong flashlight, stumbling. De Gier recognized the last man. Leroux, all three hundred and fifty pounds of him. He seemed fairly sober. The others were reeling, holding on to each other like frightened monkeys.

"Who was driving the wreck?"

Only one man responded. "Don't know, sheriff."

"So what are you doing in the other car? I had a call that there was somebody lying in the road, somebody wounded maybe. Did he crawl into the bushes? Where is he?"

"Don't know, sheriff."

The sheriff's voice pleaded. "Tell me where he is or we'll have to search the woods. Maybe he's unconscious. He can freeze to death if he is. Was he hurt?"

"No, sheriff. Nobody was hurt. There were only four of us, in two cars, out visiting, on our way back. There's nobody in the woods."

"Okay, thanks. So move!
Move,
you hear! Get that car going and get out of here. I don't want any parked vehicles on the side of a dark road. The wreck'U have to go too."

Three men hesitated, but Leroux stepped forward. He took another, smaller step, and his heavy, bearded head came down and peered into the sheriff's eyes.

"We won't go. If we do you'll be after us for drunken driving. We lose whatever we do. We'll stay here and sleep it off."

"You won't. Get into that car, Leroux!" The sheriff's voice was a cold whisper.

"None of us can handle the car. We've been drinking."

"Your problem. You managed to get here. Now you get out of here again."

"No," Leroux said. "And
you
have a problem too, sheriff. I'm going to punch you in the face and walk over you when you're down. I'll keep on walking until you forget what happened here. You've got your rider again, but I don't want to fight him this time. I'll fight
you,
sheriff."

"He'll pull a gun on you, Leroux." The young man who had spoken before was standing next to Leroux, his hand on the giant's sleeve. Leroux pushed the man and the man stumbled and fell. His broad-rimmed leather hat rolled in the road.

The sheriff grinned. "I won't pull a gun on you, Leroux, but you'll be in real trouble afterward. Assault on an officer. The judge won't like that at all."

Leroux's bull neck came down and his long arms dangled. He took another small step. The sheriff straightened up.

"SHERIFF," boomed the cruiser's radio, "YOU THERE, SHERIFF?" The words thundered into the woods and echoed back.

"Excuse me."

The sheriff walked backward to the cruiser and de Gier's shotgun came up an inch and dropped down again. The sheriff reached into the cruiser's open window and came back clutching the microphone. "I'm here, Bert, ten three."

"Got the eggs, sheriff. Five dozen in a wicker basket, but I'm on the other side of the county and the roads are snowing in up here. Can I bring them in tomorrow?"

"No. Bring them in now."

"Jim! Please. The snow's so heavy I can't see a foot even when the wipers are on double speed. Let me bring them in tomorrow."

"No, Bert, right now. We need them for breakfast. Ten four, Bert."

He threw the microphone back into the cruiser and walked forward. De Gier's shotgun moved a little again, but it was still pointed at the road.

"Last chance, Leroux. I'm staying here. Think before you come."

Leroux growled. De Gier thought of interfering. A good punch from Leroux's double-size fist might snap the sheriff's head off. He would have interfered in an Amsterdam alley. Amsterdam suspects can be talked to, manipulated by gentle words, by a friendly touch. Even the leatherjacket ghouls can be talked to, the ghouls who lurk in alley comers, waiting for the weak. But ghouls don't want to fight. Perhaps this was a different situation. Leroux wasn't an evil force, but an individual, a workingman, a citizen intent on fighting the state that was trying to control his freedom, his rights. The sergeant studied Leroux's bulk; the leg muscles swelling under the tight jeans, the two-foot chest exposed by an open jacket, the man's vast shoulders. Perhaps he should be allowed to have his fight.

"Okay," the sheriff said softly.

Leroux lurched forward and swung. The sheriff ducked, jumped aside, and kicked his opponent's leg just above the top of his boot. The man turned and staggered, but the sheriff was in front of him again, kicking the other leg. The giant's reflexes were slow, and he ducked too late when the long, rubber-covered flashlight hit him on the side of the neck. The contact of flashlight and neck was marked by a thud. The three other men came close. De Gier's shotgun moved, but they weren't planning to join the fight. They wanted to pull their friend away. There was no need. Leroux's knees bent and he fell slowly. The sheriff let him fall.

"Right," the sheriff said and yanked an arm free and bent it back. The other arm followed. The polished metal of handcuffs shone blue in the cruiser's revolving lights and there was the small, ominous click of the handcuffs' lock.

Leroux tried to roll over but was stopped by de Gier's boot. De Gier stepped over the man.

"I don't believe it."

"What?"

"Help me up."

De Gier put out a hand. There was too much weight and the sheriff got behind his victim and pushed.

"I should have broken you into pieces, you little bastard," Leroux said, still in the same surprised voice.

"But you didn't. You guys, you all drunk?"

"Yes, sheriff."

"Got any money?"

"Some."

"Enough for a taxi? Which one of you lives nearest?"

The young man in the leather hat answered. "Me, sheriff. I'm from Jameson."

"Can you put your buddies up for the night?"

"Yes."

"Okay, all' of you get into the back of the cruiser. Sergeant, you drive that car across the road. Leave it in the clearing in front of the trailer. Never mind if it gets stuck in the snow. I want it off the road."

De Gier took the shotgun, released the chamber's spring latch, and made the shells jump into his hand.

"Right, you guys, who owns the wreck?"

Another man stepped forward. "Me, sheriff."

"Got forty bucks?"

"Got a check, sheriff."

"Write it out. I'll radio for a tow truck. Make the check payable to the sheriff's department and we'll pay the truck. Check better be good."

"It's good."

The man wrote the check, and the sheriff pocketed it. The sergeant came back.

"Let's go."

They drove back at a reasonable speed.

"You did well, Jim."

"Got him nicely, didn't I? But it wasn't a fair fight. Too much beer in the man. And I was all there, I didn't have to watch the others. Good thing you came along. I couldn't have taken them all, and Bernie would have taken too long to get here and Bob is home and Bert has his eggs to worry about. He was thirty miles out anyway. So tell me what else happened at Madelin's."

De Gier took the raccoon tail from his coat pocket and showed it. He told the story that went with the tail.

"Shit," the sheriff said. "So that's why the tail wasn't hanging in your face. I was wondering what had happened to it. But that's homicide, sergeant. You might have called me. You saw him get away you say?"

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