Read Shotgun Lullaby (A Conway Sax Mystery) Online
Authors: Steve Ulfelder
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Hard-Boiled
“Listen up and do
all
this to the letter. Leave Rinn there. Don't tell her anything about anything. Grab Haley and the baby
now,
and make tracks for this address.” I said it.
He wrote it. “It'll take what, an hour and a half once I round up the gals?”
“Do it in an hour.”
“What?”
“Or as near as you can. Randall⦔
“Easy, amigo.”
“They've got Sophie.”
Half-beat pause. “Here I come.”
Click.
I dug Charlie Pundo's card from my wallet. Called his cell. Left voice mail.
It was a hell of a voice mail.
Now I had to hope he checked it. Guys his age, you never know.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
The beat-up mill sat on the eastern bank of the Connecticut River, with killer views of the Berkshires to the west. It had the grand shape, the red brick, the arched windows. Inside, it would have the high ceilings. In a better city, it would've been carved into half-million-dollar condos.
But this wasn't a better city. This was Chicopee. The arched windows were busted out, and the river stank.
I sat in my truck. Looked the place over, figured angles, tried to strip it back to a pure tactical problem of strengths and weaknesses and probabilities. The way Randall did when we watched shows on the Military Channel about famous battles.
A corner of my head knew I was tricking myself, forcing myself into cold-analysis mode to avoid thinking about what I'd done to Sophie.
Jesus Christ, what if I'd killed her?
Stop. If you need to trick yourself, trick yourself.
I breathed.
Didn't see any sign of Boxer, which was an edge. He thought I was hauling ass back to Sherborn for the shotgun he wanted so bad. He thought he had plenty of time.
Why's Boxer hot to trot over the shotgun?
Because he was the killer. Maybe Teddy was the idea manâthough even that doesn't seem likelyâbut face it, Boxer was on the trigger.
It was one of the first ideas Randall and I had tossed around. Boxer, the pro shooter, had gone steaming into Almost Home to prove you couldn't mess with Teddy Pundo, who was now the king-shit dealer in Springfield. But Boxer had never seen Gus Biletnikov, and he'd blown away poor Weller, who just happened to be in the wrong room.
That had to be embarrassing. Boxer had covered by cutting down Gus with the same shotgun, after stealing a pair of Donald Crump's boots and somehow squeezing his feet into them. Then he'd killed Crump, already the top suspect, and had planted the shotgun to wrap the package in a way no cop would ever question.
Two things had gone wrong, though. First, a teenager had decided to videotape his first handjob.
And second ⦠well, what? There was a screwup with the plant.
Which probably explained why Lima was hemming and hawing about the shotgun.
What was the screwup? I'd know soon enough.
It all worked. But it forced me to think about Teddy for the first time since ⦠since the Hi Hat. The world wouldn't miss Fat Teddy Pundo, but part of the reason I'd ⦠done what I'd done was because I pictured
him
cutting down Gus, pictured
him
blowing a hole in the kid who looked just like Roy.
I began to shake.
But not much, and not for long.
That's for later. For now: focus. Do what needs to be done. Get Sophie out of the jam you got her into.
I waited.
Text messages from Haley told me Randall was driving hard on the pike. She asked three times what the hell was going on and why I'd had them bring Emma.
Three times I ignored her. I didn't like thinking about Emma. About the way I was playing this. I shuffled approaches and scenarios, trying like hell to figure another move that could save Sophie.
I didn't find one.
News radio talked about a big fire in Springfield. They called the club the Hard Hat. They get everything wrong.
Checked my watch, decided to risk a little recon.
From Boxer's point of view, this was a good spot for a meet. The road was empty: frost-heaved and weed-cracked, it had serviced the mill and some related businesses, and had more or less died when they did. A miserable chain-link fence surrounded the mill and its parking lot, but the fence had long since been rendered useless by punks and thieves: I saw three gashes you could walk right through, and the main gate sagged open.
The big-ass parking lotâa couple acres easy, this place must have been something in its dayâserved as a moat for the mill itself. The joint had been built to last and built with pride, designed by men who couldn't picture anything ever topping hydropower. Squinting, I counted thirty-plus steps leading from the edge of the parking lot to the massive front entry. Place looked like the Supreme Damn Court, but with only four columns.
If I were Boxer, I'd get here soon. I'd walk those steps, sit Sophie down, and leanâhalf hidden in case anybody brought a long gun to the partyâon one of those giant stone columns. I might bring a pair of field glasses, and I might bring help.
Boxer thought he would wait up there and watch me bring his incriminating shotgun, hat in hand.
Boxer thought he would kill me, then Sophie. Then he would whistle a little tune and drive away.
He thought.
I worked things through in my head, and I'll be damned if I could figure a trump card. I would have my leverage, the leverage I could barely stand to think about. Other than that, all I had was a voice mail to Charlie Pundo.
And how many guys Pundo's age had I known who never checked their voice mail, who didn't even know
how
to check it?
Hell.
I called him again.
Voice mail again.
I sighed. Time to stash my truck. I'd scoped out a good place half a mile away in another dead parking lot, back of a Wise potato chips delivery truck with four flats. Boxer might take a quick recon run up and down the road. I was better off if he didn't know I was here.
The sun's drop toward the Berkshires was building steam when I returned to a decent vantage point across the way, behind an eight-foot stack of pallets.
I was just in time. Teddy Pundo's black SUV nudged the mill's gate open, slow-rolled a loop around the parking lot, and ended up where I'd guessed: the base of the steps.
So Boxer had skipped the recon run. That was good news for me. It meant he was a little sloppy, a little overconfident.
I watched him step out, open the door behind him, tug Sophie's arm. She stumbled from the SUV, then let Boxer speed walk her to the top of the steps. She wore her cheerleading outfit, of course. To me she vibed okay physically. But I was a long way off.
As I'd guessed he would, Boxer hustled her behind a stone column.
A black BMW X5 rounded the corner and idled to the gate, Randall knowing where to find me because I'd texted him the info. I flagged down the BMW, checking my watch as I neared Randall in the driver's seat.
“You flew,” I said. “Thanks.”
“Is that him?” Randall gestured toward Boxer.
I nodded.
“Where's Sophie?”
“She's with him. Stashed behind the column to our right.”
He nodded, looked, thought. “Tactically,” he said after a few seconds, “this couldn't be much worse.”
“I know.”
“What's our plan?”
“
Your
plan is wait here,” I said. “With Haley.”
His eyes went hard.
Maybe mine went harder, because he said nothing.
As I walked to the BMW's right rear door, my phone rang. Boxer. I picked up.
He said, “What kind of game you running over there, friend? Why the spectators?”
I turned and looked at him, a hundred yards off. “Do you want to get this swap done, or don't you?”
Pause. “I'm not sure how well you can see from there, Sax, but my favorite little nine millimeter is half a meter from the glitter on sweet Sophie's cheek.”
“I'll keep it in mind.”
“Do.” He clicked off.
I opened the door. I leaned over Emma's car seat.
She smiled up at me as I fumbled with straps.
Next to her, Haley sat. She'd been poleaxed by the sweep and pace of things, but she was coming out of it. “What are you doing?”
I said nothing.
“What exactly are you
doing
?”
I got the car-seat straps undone.
“Absolutely not!” Haley said, hurling herself across the bench seat, putting her torso between me and Emma.
Then she said it again.
And again, spittle-soaking my arms.
I was set to coldcock Haley to avoid losing time when Randall popped her door open, leaned in, got his hands beneath her armpits, and whipped her away like she was a rag doll.
“Shush,” he said. “Shush. It's going to happen. It has to happen. Let it happen. Come to me.”
She babbled and screamed and pounded his chest. I paid no attention: had by now lifted Emma up and out.
I didn't let myself feel, didn't let myself think about the way I planned to use the baby.
You know the part of the vision exam where you cover one eye with a plastic paddle and look at the chart? That strange feeling as the covered eye
wants
to help,
strains
to help?
The instant I'd settled on this plan, I'd forced my head into that mode. Couldn't let myself look at how awful, how unthinkable the plan was. At how rotten
I
was for putting it in play.
Emma was a lever. My only lever. She was my best chanceânot a great chance, not even a good one, but the best chance availableâto get Sophie back alive. Right now, she was nothing more.
I'd put a plastic paddle over the part of me that knew better. I
had
to.
Damn, but she was a good baby. Even with the craziness around her, she just cooed and looked at me and got a decent grip on my nose.
“You remind me of my cat Dale,” I told Emma. “He's a good cat.”
Before I was ten paces from the BMW, I heard Randall trot to me. He patted my shoulder. “You're a good man,” he said.
I thought it was weird of him to pull a war-movie stunt like that. Until I felt something slip into the back pocket of my jeans, felt Randall tug my T-shirt to cover it. I realized my torso was blocking Boxer's view of Randall. “It's a ridiculous ladies' gun,” he said. “A twenty-two with a pair of rounds. But it's all I could dig up at Casa Biletnikov.”
I remembered the pieceâhad spotted it when I tossed the house.
Good old Randall. He'd found that thing, or demanded that Haley produce it, in a
hurry
.
I walked west toward Boxer and Sophie.
Â
CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT
Jeez, this Emma was in a jolly mood. Must have napped most of the ride, then drained a bottle. Or done whatever makes babies happy.
As we crossed the parking lot, she smiled at me some more. I smiled back, dipped my nose for her to grab, kept my left arm high to block as much sun as I could.
When we were halfway across the lot, my phone rang.
I ignored it.
I looked left and right, head on a swivel. Had an icy feeling in my rib cage, wary that one of Boxer's boys was on sniper duty. And I was still hoping to spot Charlie Pundo.
That hope hadn't been much to start with, though, and it was fading fast.
When I reached the base of the steps, Sophie said,
“Ow.”
I looked up. Boxer had elbow-jerked her. He had her squeezed tight against his left side, had his 9mm shoved against her face in a way that forced her mouth open. A corner of my brain wondered why he wasn't toting the Desert Eagle he seemed so proud of.
But Boxer was paying Sophie no mind. He was staring at Emma, and his face looked like it was boiling.
“You clever motherfucker,” he said. “You clever, stupid motherfucker. You're now responsible for any bodies that drop today, friend. And drop they will.”
“Not going to argue that,” I said. Then to Sophie: “Sorry, hotshot. We'll just be a minute here.”
The sweet little trouper nodded as best she could with a gun in her cheek. I wondered if she knew how my heart felt, wondered if she knew how hard it was for me to play it calm, one pro to another, with Boxer.
She was smart. She likely knew.
“I see you know who I'm holding,” I said to Boxer. “So you know her history. You know what she means to your boss.”
He chuffed a mean little laugh. “That fairy hasn't been my boss for five years. Hasn't been
a
boss in five years, not by any real measure.”
It was a bluff. Boxer was scared of Charlie Pundo. I could hear it in his voice, see it in his body language.
“So you hooked up with Teddy to end-run him. To push him out.”
“New York and Providence tolerated Charlie's silly dalliances. Why wouldn't they? Less for him meant more for them. Fat Teddy decided to grow a pair of balls, get back in the game, show the others who really owns Springfield.”
“Teddy was dumb as a box of rocks. I'm guessing you helped him decide.”
“Could be.” Boxer made a crooked smile. “I owe you a debt of gratitude regarding Teddy's bad morning.”
We were quiet maybe twenty seconds.
“I need you to know something,” I said.
“What's that?”
Quick as I could, I shifted Emma to my left arm, reached behind me with my right, and brought the silly little pistol around.
I set its barrel against Emma's milk-white temple.
The baby cooed.
There was a wail behind me, far off. Haley.
“That one,” I said, nodding at Sophie, “means as much to me as this one means to Pundo.”
“Do you have the balls, Sax?”
“Do you?”
I watched him measure. I watched him think.