Read Comeback (Gun Pedersen Book 1) Online
Authors: L. L. Enger
32
“He’s a shyster in a pulpit, Gun. How much can you
afford to believe him?” Jack was speaking forcefully to
break through the noise of the truck, which was
barreling northward. When they’d departed Sunday evening, it had been a cool day in June, but the nearer
they came to the Canadian border, the more May
seemed to step back in. Gun rolled up his window,
quieting the cab a little.
“Enough to get me to British Columbia,” he said.
He looked at Jack, who was sitting straight-backed in
the Ford for a better view over the high dash. Jack’s
chin was tough rock, unconvinced. “I keep seeing that
look in Mazy’s eyes,” Gun added. He had shown the
tape to Jack before they left.
“Can’t blame you for that.”
“Don’t worry,” Gun said. “I know old Barr
could’ve been making it up, trying to get me out of
Stony until after the referendum. But I think he was
telling the truth. Look at this.” Gun pulled the flight
itinerary from the pocket of his flannel shirt and
shook it open.
It took Jack a moment to decipher the note’s
significance. He handed it back to Gun, wiped a palm
over his black-bristled scalp, and stared forward at the
highway. “Five round trips and a one-way,” he said.
“How’d you get hold of that?”
Gun rolled his shoulders and said nothing, looking
straight out over the wheel. He reopened his window
an inch and let the wind whistle in. He knew Jack was
watching him.
“I heard about half a story on the radio this
morning,” Jack said. “Early news report. Some gang
of vandals on the Hedman place. Didn’t steal any
thing, though.”
“Didn’t steal
much,
” said Gun.
He had made the drive from Stony to Winnepeg
before. Depending on the time of the year, it took
between three and four hours to traverse the north
west quarter of Minnesota, then another ninety min
utes from the border across the wavy fields and
willowy lowlands of lower Manitoba. He had made
the trip once in late December to pick up Mazy on a
Christmas flight from San Diego, and the snow beat
ing across the Canadian prairie had nearly frozen him
for a holiday funeral. He’d put the old Ford into
neutral three, four, five times while getting out to
heave at the back bumper. But this was June, backing
into May, and he was catching a flight, not meeting
one. Gun tapped the dash impatiently with the tips of his wide fingers.
The rattling of the truck and the growing spaces
between water towers in Minnesota’s extreme north-
west made both men thoughtful and anxious. Gun
was surprised once to look down and see the needle
quivering past the eighty mark. Jack cracked the
knuckles of both hands with a noise like the Fourth of
July.
“I think she’s okay,” Gun said. “The round
trippers aren’t due to come back until Wednesday.”
“When this is over, I want Hedman,” Jack said.
“I want Mazy first. Then we’ll talk about who gets
Lyle.”
They made the border about eleven at night. A tall,
square-shaped guard in a gray uniform stepped out of
the concrete customs office. He looked too big to fit
back in. Gun rolled down his window.
“Destination,” said the guard, shaking his legs one
at a time, as if to dispel cramps.
“Winnipeg,” said Gun.
“Any alcohol on board?”
“Nope.”
“Firearms?”
“Nope.”
“Length of stay,” said the guard. His feet were planted now, and his palms jammed to his hips. He
did a deep back arch, speaking to the sky. “I’m
supposed to ask that,” he said.
“Forty-eight hours,” said Gun. “At the most.”
The guard put both hands at the back of his neck
and did a round-the-world with his head. “Have a nice
night,” he said. Gun could hear the stiffness creak in
the guard’s neck even over the Ford’s idle.
“You too,” said Gun. He upshifted and nosed the
truck toward Winnipeg.
The airport was clean concrete and Sunday-night barren. Gun drove into the parking ramp and took a
pink ticket that poked like a tongue from the hum
ming metal box. “Two nights,” said Gun. “Twenty bucks Canadian.”
“They have such pretty money,” said Jack.
The woman at the airline desk smiled at Gun and told him about the delay. “They’re experiencing se
vere thunderstorm conditions over Alberta right
now,” she said. “Nobody’s flying in at all. There’s a
snack bar down the hall, to pass the time.”
“Nobody’s flying in? No charters, nothing?” said
Gun. He leaned down close to the woman’s orchard
cheeks.
“We’re in contact with the Calgary airport, sir. No
takeoffs, no landings.” The woman tilted her face up
to Gun’s. “And that’s it, sir, until further notice.
There is a snack bar, though, to help pass the time.”
Gun straightened and sighed and looked at Jack. He
said, “Coffee?”
The snack shop owned a dozen round white tables,
anchored to the floor by steel legs, and a self-serve
spigot that gave forth clear and ineffectual coffee. Jack
inhaled at the rim of his Styrofoam cup. “It doesn’t
have a smell,” he said.
The white-faced clock next to the Snack Shop sign
read 9:15. They should have been in the air by now. Gun watched the clouds through the high west win
dows. It would be three hours by plane, another two or
three to gather some necessities and search out
Hedman’s cabin. The actual work, getting in and
getting out, the cleanup job, fifteen minutes tops.
About six hours, Gun figured. It had better be enough.
He shut his eyes, imagining the storm over Calgary.
They each drank about a dozen cups of coffee
before a woman’s voice came out of the ceiling with
the news that flights to Alberta were getting ready to
board. Gun’s stride made Jack jog to keep pace as they
went to the concourse, through the metal-witching doorframe, down the canvas-topped tube to the 727.
First class meant breathing room for Gun’s knees.
“Guy could do aerobics in here,” said Jack. It was
one
p.m.
The flight began smoothly, the Boeing lifting itself
in a two-hundred-mile wedge to proper elevation, and
got lumpy over western Saskatchewan. Calgary’s
storm front was carrying east.
“We’re hitting some turbulence now,” inter-
commed the captain’s voice. “Please remain calm
and keep your seat belts fastened.”
“I’m calm,” said Jack. Arms crossed, he looked as
short and tight as a fifty-gallon drum in the contoured
seat. Jack’s eyes were at the window, a cloudy-milk
square. “Never flown before,” he said.
“First-time flyers,” said the captain, “think of this
as a bumpy road. Lots of potholes.”
The 727 hit a deep pothole and Gun felt himself lift
briefly from the seat. The belt held him down. He
thought, Is this what Amanda felt? The pressure was flat across his hips. He saw Jack’s fingers squeeze the
armrests. A baby back in coach hiccuped, then
howled.
“We’re thirty thousand feet above Moose Jaw,” said
the pilot. “These bad roads should be settling out real
soon.”
“They buried Jeremy Devitz today,” Gun said,
trying to see down through the clouds.
“I’ve been thinking about Bowser.”
“Me too.”
They landed in Calgary on a blacktop runway
slippery with rain. Gun’s thick flannel could not seal
out the chill, and he realized this trip could have been better planned. It was cool down here in the city, and Hedman’s retreat was across the border into a province known mainly for trees and altitude. It would be
cooler there. Much cooler.
“You know the way, right?” said Jack.
“About a hundred miles west,” said Gun, “and a mile or so straight up.”
The dapper young man at the Avis desk quoted
them a low, low price for the Jeep they wanted. “Some
places would charge you a third more than that,” he
said, his teeth white as slivered almonds. “And paying
that kind of money really Hertz. Heh, heh.”
“Thanks,” Gun said. He took the keys.
“Idiot,” Jack grumbled.
On the west edge of town they located a false-
fronted pawn shop with Oriental throwing stars in the
windows and a locked rack of guns behind the count
er. A woman Gun’s age with hair like an orange Lava
lamp undid the lock and handed them weapons for inspection.
“What you goin’ after?” the woman said. Her voice
was Lucille Ball’s, a tin scraper. “Moose, out of
season. Elk, out of season. Bear, out of season.
Hey?”
“Varmints,” said Jack. Lucy smiled and turned
back to the rack. Her hips hung on her like rucksacks
full of birdshot. One of them supported a leather-
holstered .357.
“We got plenty of those,” she said. “Good luck.”
The choice was limited. Gun picked an Ithaca
Model 37 twelve-gauge with a Deerslayer barrel, a goose gun modified for slugs. The ammo was heavy
and expensive. Jack chose a Savage over-and-under.
He bought a box each of twelve-gauge and 30-30
ammunition. “For close-range or far-away varmints,”
he explained.
Lucy grinned. “Or several varmints at once.”
They paid for the guns, leather gloves, and two
woolen parkas, black-and-green buffalo plaid. Lucy
called to them as they left the shop.
“You two are real cute,” she said, waving the bills
they’d stacked on the counter. “Now I never want to
hear from you again.”
As the Jeep left Calgary and began its ascent, the
time-and-temp billboard of a stucco-sided bank
showed fifty degrees and three-thirty
p.m.
“Jack,” Gun
said, “you got a watch.”
Jack read his wrist. “Four-thirty.”
Gun remembered. “The time change,” he said. “We
skipped a zone. We’ve got another hour.” Gun leaned back in the Jeep and stepped on the gas. A spray of
weighted raindrops snapped suddenly across the
windshield, like hand-flung pebbles.
33
Samuel Barr had fingered a highway leading west out
of Calgary some seventy miles before swinging north
into spiky pine hills. Gun drove the Jeep at hazardous
speeds, but the roads were so bad it was almost three hours before they saw the yellow crossroads sign the
minister had described. It had been mistreated with a
big-game rifle. “One whole corner of it’s been shot
away,” Barr had said, nursing his lump over Gun’s
atlas. “You gotta take a right.”
Gun took a right onto a road deep with sugar sand.
Jack flipped open the Jeep’s glove box and pulled
out a folded road map. He pressed it flat against his
knees. “Gee, this is handy,” he said. “Florida. With
a detail of Orlando on the back side.” He rustled
the map back into the glove box. “Gun,” he said,
“how come Barr knew about that blown-up road
sign?”
“Said he’d been out here before. With Hedman. Fishing trip.”
“I was thinking,” Jack said, “that I really hate being
put into the position of having to trust that guy.”
“Yup.”
“That’s the position Rutherford was in.”
“Rutherford didn’t know the size of the game he’d
got into. We do.”
The sugar sand subsided as the path led upward, as
if the road’s entire surface had crumbled loose one
rainy night and slipped down the grade to congregate as talus at the bottom. What remained was an adobe-hard trail with craters and black canals that slapped
and ground at the four-wheel drive. Gun flipped on
the headlights in the thickening dusk. Near the crest of
a steep climb a well-tended trail branched right.
“Kenya Drive,” said Gun. “Canada style.”
The Hedman cabin was nearly a mile through the
thick dark pines by foot. The trail would have been
easily passable by Jeep, but the engine’s loud growl
would announce them like a banner on a pole. If it
hadn’t already. Gun squeezed the Ithaca in his chilled
fingers and reminded himself that there were at least
five people in that cabin besides Mazy. The surprise
would have to be total.
The two of them separated on the walk in, each moving about thirty feet to one side of the trail. The
sun was below the rim now. Evergreens shaded to
gray. Some distance to his left Gun could catch the occasional glow of Jack’s Savage. The pine needles
were quiet as corn silk under Gun’s boots and sent up
the smell of fresh creation.
Another smell gave them their first alert. A slow
evening wind reached across Gun’s face and brought with it a swish of sweet tobacco. He stopped. Jack was
standing stone-silent. Gun’s twilight vision picked out
the blued Savage barrel, pulled to a ready forty-five
degrees. Neither one moved. The tobacco smell in
creased with the wind, then faded. They held position
for a thick quarter hour and eyed the trees, which grew
lighter the higher they looked. Straight overhead Gun
could see their tops still getting touched by sun. The smell arrived again on the breeze, and following its
direction back with his eyes, Gun saw the source.
A man in a dark spruce Army jacket perched on a stool in a tree stand at the head of the trail. The stand
was about nine feet high and constructed of two-by-
fours, which had gone gray with weather—a deer
stand, Gun thought. Deer were out of season.
It was still light enough to catch Jack’s eye. Jack
nodded and the stalk began again, slower now. The man in the stand was holding an open-sighted rifle across his knees. His head was helmeted in a bush of
rabbit fur. Puffs of smoke floated up from his face and
curled off on the wind. As they came nearer, Gun
and Jack began to converge, veeing in on the tree.
Gun was grateful for the man’s rabbit cap. It must
have blocked a measure of sound.
They reached the foot of the tree just as the moon
peeked up over the hills behind the cabin. The guard
looked up at it and shifted his butt on the little stool.
Gun reached high and gripped a two-by-four support.
The stand came down with less effort than Gun had
expected. The guard gave forth only the noise of an
amazed inhale before Jack knelt and put his compact
strength into a cheekbone punch.
“He sleeps,” Jack said, standing. He shook his
hand, fingers splayed. “Ow.”
“For how long?”
“Two, three hours,” said Jack. His Roman face
produced a short grin. “All that sneaking around kind
of wound up my spring.”
They emptied the guard’s 30-06 and tossed the
shells into the trees. The cabin was a Hedman-sized
structure of stripped logs standing off across a wild-
flower clearing. A yellow yardlight burned next to a
square-stacked woodpile. Someone had started a fire,
and the smell of smoke and coffee lifted from the
chimney.
“We’d better stay back,” Gun said. “Far enough in
so we can’t be seen from the yard. We’ll take the cabin
from the rear.”
“They might have another guard up somewhere.”
“Maybe. I don’t think they’d stick two guys up in trees.”
The low-profile hike kept the cabin in constant view
and took another thirty minutes. The moon was an
indistinct platter behind the haze when they reached a
set of red pines twenty yards off the back porch.
“Let’s go in like wild men,” Jack said softly. His
cheeks were ruddy as a child’s, and Gun thought he
could feel a schoolground heat come off him. “Butch
and Sundance,” Jack whispered. He was crouching, as
wide in that position as he was tall.
“You go around to the front door,” said Gun. “I’ll
get up on the back porch. We’ll meet in the middle.”
“See you in about five minutes,” Jack said, and he
went, the Savage looking mean but comfortable riding
in his hand. He reached the left rear corner of the
cabin, paused there, threw a grin back at the trees. It
made Gun wonder at their bravado. Three, four rifles
at least inside that cabin, and he and Jack outside,
talking like third graders about cutting down enemy
cornstalks. Butch and Sundance.
Now Jack was gone from sight, rolling up the left
side of the cabin, no doubt moving fast to reach the
door. Gun stooped only slightly—if anyone were
looking, six-and-a-half feet would be seen whether he
was bent over or not—and made the porch. Like
everything else Hedman owned, the cabin was well-
built. The porch boards didn’t creak under Gun’s
weight. He crept to a window, tilted a glance inside,
saw three heavy men at a knotty-pine table. They wore
buttoned underwear shirts and black suspenders. Real
lumberjacks. They were eating ham steaks. Gun won
dered where Lyle was, wondered if Lyle was even along, and then he heard the door.
It slammed at the front of the cabin, and at first
Gun thought Jack had gone in. But there was no noise
afterward. Gun moved across the window and stood
next to the porch door, his back against log siding. If
anyone had come out, he hadn’t seen Jack. There was
no disturbance. Gun gripped the door handle and set
himself. He pulled the Ithaca ready. He was taken by surprise when someone tall, not Jack, appeared in his
corner vision.
“Hey!” the guard yelled. He was evidently surprised
too, but recovered quickly enough to unholster the .44
at his hip.
“Drop it,” Gun said. The Ithaca was aimed. The
tall man did not register the action. He fired the pistol,
and Gun felt hot teeth tear at the flesh of his left ribs.
He stayed steady and shot the guard through the chest.
Gun’s shirt and jacket were drawing blood, and now
the air was soaked with noise. Dark roars as the
lumberjacks seized their guns, the steely snap of a rifle
from the front of the cabin, yells crowding each other
for help. Gun’s ears pulled Mazy’s voice from the
mob. He pumped a new slug into the chamber and put
his shoulder to the door.
The lock broke on the second blow and Gun swung
in off balance. A white-faced guard, braced before a
door on the right-hand wall, took hurried aim and
released a buckshot charge. The Ithaca snaked in Gun’s hand and came up with the stock blown off.
Gun flung the barrel at the guard and dove for the
nearest cover, a wide woodstove that stood out from the wall. The guard’s shotgun blasted again but the
stove was stern iron and sent buckshot rocketing. The stove still held fire, and Gun was grateful for his thick
woolen coat and gloves. Through the hell of shotgun
roar and lead fire Gun could feel the heavy shake of
cabin walls, as though a bear were belting the logs. He
heard a wild barking laugh outside. He heard, from
somewhere behind the panicked guard, a willful angry
scream from Mazy. The scream tore at a nerve of
memory and pain, and Gun stood without thinking and gripped the stove in his leathered hands.
The guard howled as Gun raised the stove from the floor. Rivets made peeling metal shrieks as the chim
ney flue came in two. An elbowed section of twelve-
inch pipe hung on the wall, dropping cinders. Gun
staggered forward, the stove out front. The guard fired
once more before Gun reached him, and this time several pellets entered Gun’s vulnerable legs. The
stove became impossibly heavy. His hands and chest smoked against the black iron. He felt himself come
near the guard, and the guard’s howl come from ahead
and meet behind him, and then the stove came down.
Gun’s nostrils jerked at a cannibal heat. His hands
were scorched like the lids of cutout pumpkins. The
guard was silent beneath the woodstove, which sat angled on its side and coughed up ashes through its
broken spout.
“Who’s out there?” quailed a voice. It came from
behind the door where the guard had stood. Gun
recognized it.
“Just me, Geoff,” he said. “Now get my girl out
here. Before this place burns.” Live sparks were
spattering from the stove. One flamed up in the sleeve
of the guard. Gun stamped it out.
“Dad?”
The lock clacked, the door inched open.
Gun heard Mazy’s voice, but Geoff’s face filled the
crack.
“She’s okay, Mr. Pedersen,” said Geoff.
Gun didn’t answer. He pushed through Geoff and saw Mazy sitting on an ill-made bed.
“Dad. You’re hurt.”
They heard the front door slam and Jack coughing
as he went past the smoldering stove. “Gettysburg,”
he said, beating the air before his face. “Mazy! You’re
okay?” He caught sight of Geoff, on his butt in shock, and looked at him as though considering a kick to the
crotch.
Geoff spoke slowly from the floor, head in his
hands. “You guys are nuts.”
“Shut up, Geoff,” said Gun, looking hard at Mazy.
“You aren’t here at all.”