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Authors: Jack Kerley

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BOOK: A Garden of Vipers
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“They're not part of this group,
sassiety
types, as Harry calls them. Behind their façade, the Kincannons are coarse and crude. Pariahs. True society types go out of their way to avoid them.”

“I saw all manner of folks squirming after the Kincannons at the party, Clair. I didn't see much avoidance.”

“You saw politicians and sycophants, Carson. Old-line Mobile families wouldn't invite the Kincannons to a weenie roast, not that they have them. That may even be a part of the problem.”

“Not having weenie roasts?”

“The Kincannons are shunned. In a coldly civil way, but ostracized nonetheless. It's made them insular, self-absorbed. They pass out money hoping it buys respect and acceptance, but they're so heavy-handed and self-serving it only makes the insiders loathe them more. The public, of course, sees none of this.”

“Negative publicity isn't big with these folks.”

“The family employs the biggest PR agency in the state, the toniest law firm in town, the caterer du jour does all their events, a photographer documents their every turn…”

I held up my hand. “I don't care for the clan. But I have a hard time picturing them being as malicious as you're implying.”

“The Kincannons have been playing at being benevolent and likeable for so long that they may even believe that story themselves. They abide by social and legal compacts for the most part. Until something threatens their world. Then you see the dark side of their souls, the broken side.”

“You're saying they can be dangerous?”

“When threatened. Or denied something they want.”

“Clair, they're just rich, selfish shits. Maybe you're making too much of their power to—”

“Shhhh. Listen to me. This girlfriend. Do you still care for her?”

“I'm having a hard time telling her, but…I think so.”

A strange moment of sadness or resignation crossed Clair's face. “Warn her away from Buck Kincannon, Carson. From all the Kincannons.”

I sighed. “I'll do what I can, Clair.”

She studied me for a few seconds, then turned away. I pushed to my feet and walked toward the door. At the threshold, I turned, remembering the other day, wanting to thank Clair for holding me in my moment of desolation.

Her back was turned to me. She was looking out the window. I saw the reflection of her face against the night, like a white moon in a sky as lonely as a Hank Williams song. I started to speak but my heart jumped in the way.

CHAPTER 28

The next day was a day off rotation. I'd arisen at eight, late for me, and spent an hour in the kayak, cutting hard through a low surf. I'd followed the kayaking with a three-mile beach run. I had to force myself to sit at the dining room table and do a brief stint with Rudolnick's papers. I'd put in a boring fifteen minutes when Harry called.

“I'm thinking about running over to the Mississippi line, Carson, that little bass lake over there. You in?”

I'd given a lot of thought to Clair's warnings. I wasn't convinced Dani was in true personal danger unless rising so high and fast in the Clarity chain gave her a nosebleed. Still, Clair was not given to cry-wolfing, and I figured I could combine some lax time with some learn time.

“Thanks anyway, bro. I'm thinking about just getting out and driving. Maybe in the country. Roll down the windows and let the air blow my head clear, at least for a while.”

I heard suspicion in Harry's voice. “Where in the country? Not up by where Ms. Holtkamp was killed?”

“That was northeast,” I corrected. “I'm thinking more to the northwest side. Farm country.”

“You being straight?”

“What? You don't trust me to simply take a drive?”

Harry grunted and hung up.

 

Farmland lay as far as the eye could see, melons and cotton and groves of pecan trees. I passed piney woods, trees rising straight as arrows pointed at the heart of the sky. The green smell of pine perfused the heated air.

Then the landscape changed, the woods at my shoulder becoming meadow wrapped with whitewashed plank fences, the land studded with water oak and sycamore, here and there a slash pine looming like a spire. The land seemed cool with shade.

I had once passed through central Kentucky, the horse farms east of Paris and Cynthiana, where fences stretched to the horizon and thoroughbreds grazed in the lime-rich bluegrass. Only here, in north Mobile County, the champions were cattle, Brahmas, with minotaur-heavy shoulders and gray hides as sleek as seal pelts.

Kincannon raised prize Brahmas. I figured I was close.

I passed the hub of the husbandry operation, a half-dozen barnlike outbuildings, open doors revealing tractors and livestock trailers. There was a vehicle carrier with a small Bobcat-type 'dozer on its bed. I saw a feed silo, pens, food and water stations.

I drove on, crossing a rise. Below was a stone arch like a segment of Roman aqueduct, a massive iron
K
affixed to the keystone. A guardhouse stood behind one of the pillars, almost hidden. The main house was a good quarter mile from the road, white brick, massive, plantation-style. White fence bordered the lane to the house. In the center of the sprawling lawn was a larger-than-life sculpture of a Brahma bull, golden in color, an outsized Kincannon
K
branded on its flank. The bull held a forehoof aloft and glared toward the road like a challenge. The sculpture seemed an amazing exercise in hubris and I shook my head.

I looked again and noticed a second house on the property, as large as the closer house, tucked back in the trees a quarter mile distant.

I blew past the entrance, continued for several hundred feet, turned on a dirt road to the right. It appeared to be the western border of the property, white-fenced to the right, thick woods to the left. I lumbered to the side of the road and stared into the woods. The main structures would be on the far side of the trees, perhaps a quarter mile distant.

I pulled field glasses from the glove box. Ten seconds later I was over the white fence and moving into the woods. I wasn't sure of my motives, only that I had to see more, as if I could find a sign or symbol on the vast property explaining who these beings were. And why, having so much, they demanded still more. I pulled the glasses to my eyes and saw a snippet of the white house through the trees. I continued walking, then froze at a voice ahead, high and giggly.

“You can't find me.”

I slipped behind a slender oak, put the binoculars to my face, tried to isolate the direction of the voice.

“You're getting warmer,” the voice said.

A sound pulled my glasses to a large and chubby child crashing through the growth. He was perhaps two hundred feet away. I heard a small engine kick in.

Then an adult voice, male. “Where's Freddy at?”

“You can't find him! You're getting colder now.”

A game of hide-and-seek. The engine sputtered, moved nearer. “Where has Freddy gone?” said the adult voice, verging on anger, tired of the game.

A childish giggle. “Over here!”

The engine came closer. I dropped to the ground, wriggled beneath branches, flipped leaves over me as impromptu camouflage. The engine was loud and unmuffled and close enough for me to smell the exhaust.

The machine stopped two dozen feet away. I saw a tall and lean man on a four-wheel ATV. He wore a nondescript brown uniform, like that of a security guard. A semiautomatic pistol was holstered at his side. If he looked my direction, there was no way he'd miss me.

“You're real cold,” the child's voice giggled in the distance.

“Fucking moron,” the guy muttered. He cleared his throat, spat, put on a playful voice. “I'm coming to get you, Freddy.”

“You'll never find me.”

The guy cranked the throttle and tore away. I let my breath out, stood on shaky knees, and began my retreat. I was halfway to the road when I heard a burst of laughter and returned the glasses to my face. Through the leaves I saw the man on the ATV, the chubby child at his back, holding tight with stubby arms, laughing. They were moving slow, puttering along.

I focused the glasses tighter, saw a beard line on the child.
Not a child, an adult.
His face was small and round, his mouth wide with delight. I turned to the road and my foot caught a fallen limb. I crashed hard to the ground, a dry branch cracking like the report of a .22.

The ATV engine revved hard, clanked into gear, started my way. I ran the last leg, clambered over the fence, jumped into the car. I fishtailed away, looking in the rearview. No one at the fence line. But anyone caring to look would note the scrabbled-up leaves where I'd built my impromptu hidey-hole.

 

Three miles down the road from my escapade I pulled into a small grocery store, thirsty. The clerk was a heavyset black woman in her forties, hair bleached yellow. Her name tag said
SYLVIA
.

“You're pretty close to the Kincannons' place here,” I said, snapping a package of beef jerky from the rack.

“Yep,” she said. She shot me a wary glance. “You know them?”

“Heard of them's all. Hear they're big with charities, that kind of thing.”

“I guess.”

“They ever stop in here?”

“Some a the workers do. I saw a Kincannon onct, the one called Racey.”

“Racine?”

She nodded. “He come in wit' a bunch a his buddies. I think they'd been shootin' birds or somethin' by how they was talkin'. They'd been drinkin', I smelt it soon's the door came open. One says to the other, ‘I don't care. If my bag's empty after an hour, I gotta ground-shoot something.' Then they all took to laughin' and slappin' backs.”

“What'd they come in for?”

“Pick up a couple six packs, get rid of a couple others.” She nodded at doors toward the back,
RESTROOMS
hand-painted above.

“Good to know rich people use the john like the rest of us,” I said, walking to the counter with my purchases.

“Mebbe not like the rest of us,” Sylvia said.

“How's that, ma'am?”

“They pissed ever'where but in the commode. Floor, walls, in the sink, acrost the stack of paper towels. Cleared out they noses on the mirror, too.”

“Maybe really rich people think that's funny,” I said. “Ones like Racine Kincannon.”

Sylvia handed back my change. Her eyes were tired. “Devil puts his money where he gets the most back.”

When I got outside, a blue truck was sitting next to my truck, a dual-track monster idling like a diesel-powered dragster. A
K
in a circle was painted on the door, the same
K
I'd seen over the stone entranceway and on the sculpted bull's flank. The man at the wheel was on the far side, a big guy in a uniform. The guy in the passenger seat was the raw, bone-hard guy from the ATV.

I walked between the vehicles to get to my door. The rawboned guy stared at me with small hard eyes. The patch on a muscled shoulder said
PRIVATE SECURITY
. I nodded, just a guy loading up on snacks. The guy kept up the cold-eyed glare. He reminded me of a coiled rattlesnake.

He said, “I just see you on that single-lane dirt road a couple miles yonder?”

“Must have been someone else,” I said. “Why?”

“That's my bidness. Not yours.”

I tapped his door panel with my knuckle, said, “What's the
K
stand for?”

“Keep your fuckin' hands off the truck.”

“Have a nice day,” I responded, climbing behind the wheel.

 

My next stop in the Kincannon pilgrimage was an office park, a multiacred expanse of rolling, neatly tended grass with square brick office buildings every eighth of a mile or so. The buildings were auburn; from a 747 the campus would resemble red dice on green baize.

Every tributary from the central road held a brass sign pointing out address ranges and directions. I wound past two large ponds complete with high-spraying fountains in the center and white ducks on the shoreline, pulled beside a red box with coppery windows. A sign beside the entrance said
KEI
,
KINCANNON ENTERPRISES
,
INTERNATIONAL
.

There was a parking lot, but it was closer to park on the street, walk to the building. I pushed through a tinted glass door into a cool lobby smelling of plastic and rug shampoo. A building receptionist sat behind a U-shaped desk. A beefy security guard stood in the corner. He looked me over hard, hair to shoes, like he was expecting someone but wasn't quite sure who.

“I'm looking for the building directory,” I said to the receptionist, a young woman who thought it would be ultrasophisticated to combine a British and southern accent.

“May I awsk what firm y'all looking for?”

“Just a building directory.”

The security meat moved over quick. “Help you with something, sport?”

He didn't expect to be shown a gold badge by a guy in raggedy cutoffs and a shirt from a Key West fish joint.

“Directory?” I repeated.

“Why you need to know?”

“Am I hearing the beginnings of an obstruction charge here?” I said.

“The top floor is the KEI executive offices. The third floor is KEI administrative offices. Clarity Broadcasting is the second floor. The first is Magnolia Industrial Developments.” He said it like it hurt to move his mouth.

“There. Wasn't brain surgery, was it?” I said, heading out the door.

 

Lucas finished the last of the moo shu pork, tossed the carton in the trash bag. He rubbed his eyes, yawned, then stood and bent to the floor, relaxing his spine. He opened the window blinds an inch and peered at the building across the way, corner office, top floor, Buck Kincannon's office. Racine Kincannon's office was to the right of the corner, Nelson Kincannon's to the left.

A week ago his world was a bed and a room. Now he had his very own insecurities firm. Lucas leaned against the wall and struck a pose that had always amused him, arms crossed, head canted, mouth stern with decision-making. He started laughing, and the laughter brought a memory.

“Why are you laughing, Lucas?”

“Because it's all so funny, Dr. Rudolnick.”

“What's funny?”

“How much I scare them. How much
it
scares them.”

“What do you mean by
it,
Lucas?”

“Shall I do some calculations? Would you like a brief analysis of pork bellies?”

Lucas stepped from the wall, looked outside, saw nothing interesting. It was night when things got exciting, when the other people came and went, sometimes in a frenzy. Watching them was glorious to behold, jackets off, sleeves rolled, ties pulled loose. They spread maps on the conference room table. Vehicles came and went in the lot below. Sometimes a cop car floated past, stopped briefly.

The faces of the participants were always dark with worry. Even Crandell's. Everyone was playing a role in response to the roles played by the others. But behind the roles…I, Me, Mine.

BOOK: A Garden of Vipers
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