The Innocent: The New Ryan Lock Novel (14 page)

Read The Innocent: The New Ryan Lock Novel Online

Authors: Sean Black

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Crime, #Murder, #Serial Killers, #Vigilante Justice, #Spies & Politics, #Conspiracies, #Suspense

BOOK: The Innocent: The New Ryan Lock Novel
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Malik caught the bag and held it to his chest, the flames from the distant fire flickering in his eyes.

Ty watched as he opened the bag and dug through the clothes. ‘I had to guess your size.’

‘Ty?’

‘What is it?’

‘Thanks, man.’

Ty shrugged it off. ‘Ain’t nothing.’

‘You get caught helping me it will be.’

Ty gripped Malik’s shoulder with his right hand. ‘Look at me. We’re not going to get caught.’

Malik nodded. He scooted round in the passenger seat, and began to strip off his clothes, dank and fetid from his days on the run. Ty held them at arm’s length before jamming them into the bag. Malik pulled on a pair of black denim jeans and a grey sweatshirt. He switched his shoes for a brand new pair of sneakers.

Ty jammed the muddy pair into the bag, zipped it up and threw it onto the back seat. He walked round to the driver’s seat, got in, threw the car into drive and took off.

 

 

A little later, Ty pulled over to the side of the road. He killed the lights and switched off the engine. He and Malik sat in silence. The rain had slowed to a steady drumbeat.

Malik’s chin sank onto his chest. He closed his eyes and started to sob. His whole body shook with the force. Ty didn’t say anything. There was nothing to say. The man had lost his family and his home. Even if they could prove his innocence, and bring whoever had killed Kim and the kids to justice, his friend’s old life was over.

A car swept past them, its headlights flashing across their faces for the briefest of seconds. ‘I’m sorry this happened to you,’ Ty said eventually. The words were inadequate, but they were better said than left unspoken.

Malik didn’t reply. His head was buried in his hands. He was still weeping.

‘Malik?’

He rubbed at his face. Ty dug into his glove compartment, found a pack of tissues and handed them to him. There was a knock on the driver’s window. Malik started at the sound. Ty opened the door to reveal Lock standing there.

‘This is the guy I work with,’ he said to Malik. ‘He’s going to take you to the safe-house.’

Lock leaned into the car. ‘Two black guys in a car around here is asking for trouble. And I’m going to need you to sit in back.’

Malik nodded. He opened the passenger door and shifted to the back seat of the Audi.

‘How is he?’ Lock asked Ty.

‘Too early to say.’

‘That good, huh?’ said Lock.

‘That good,’ Ty repeated.

Forty-three

Eleanor Henshall stood at the end of the street in her slippers and robe, the Shaws’ dog next to her on a leash as a truck from the Harrisburg Fire Department doused the last burning embers of the house. The fire must have taken hold quickly: by the time she had been woken by the dog’s barking, it was already fully ablaze, the roof gone, the windows blown out from the pressure of the heat.

She had rushed outside with the dog. The fire department had arrived seconds later, but by then it was already too late to do much except secure the properties on either side. She had stood and watched as the flames tightened their grip, and thick, acrid smoke billowed from the upstairs windows.

A police officer from the college had come over and asked if she had seen anyone. She told him she hadn’t. She was suffering from a bad cold, had taken some Nyquil and gone to bed early.

The dog barked at the flames, straining at his leash. She wondered if the poor animal thought the family were still inside, if he understood the terrible tragedy that had befallen his owners. She reached down and scratched his head. He looked back at her with soft brown eyes, and she found herself tearing up.

‘Ma’am?’

One of the firefighters was walking toward her. He tilted back his helmet and she could see the soot and grime covering his face. ‘Ma’am, are you okay? It’s pretty cold out here.’

‘My house is that one there,’ she said, pointing it out. ‘Are you sure it’ll be safe?’

‘It’s fine.’

‘Do you know how it started?’ she asked him.

‘Kind of early to say, but we did smell gasoline.”

Forty-four

The cab pulled up two blocks short of the hotel entrance. Ty got out. He scanned the empty street as the cab took off. A patrol car was parked directly opposite the hotel, its headlights turned off, two cops sitting in front. Malik was safe with Lock and he felt as if a huge weight had been lifted from him. There was still a long way to go, but he had achieved a major part of his mission.

Ty crossed the street so that he was on the same side as the hotel entrance. He kept walking. He could feel the cops’ eyes on him as he took every step. As he reached the hotel entrance, he heard the patrol-car doors open, the two cops get out and the doors close again. The glass door into the hotel was locked. Ty tapped at the glass. He shielded his eyes and peered through as the night porter hauled himself up and started toward the door.

Behind him, Ty could hear the cops coming. He didn’t turn. He wasn’t going to resist, but he wasn’t about to make this easy for them either. The night porter peered at him. Ty held up his room key and waved it at him.

The door was buzzed open, and Ty stepped into the warm reception area. The night porter was about to lock the door again when he saw the cops. He held the door open for them. Now Ty turned round.

The first thing he noticed was that neither cop was in uniform. Even so, he recognized Tromso from the description Malik had given him – overweight, out of shape, full of his own importance. He recognized the second cop too.

Officer Kelly Svenson stepped forward, opened her wallet and flashed her creds.

‘Thought you were a reporter, Kelly?’ Ty said to her.

She unhooked a pair of cuffs from a utility belt. ‘No, you assumed I was, and I chose not to correct you. Now turn around, please, Mr Johnson. Hands behind your back. I’m arresting you for aiding an offender, pursuant to Minnesota statute six zero nine point four nine five subdivision one, as well as subdivision three of the same statute, obstructing an investigation.’

Ty did as she asked, moving slowly. ‘You been rehearsing that in front of a mirror, Officer?’ He could see from the look on Tromso’s face that he was itching to use his night stick. Ty wasn’t about to give him any excuses.

He felt cold metal against his wrists and heard the click of the cuffs as they closed on him. Female hands moved round to his holster, plucking out his SIG.

Meanwhile, the night porter was doing a bad impersonation of someone showing no interest in the proceedings. He had retreated behind the reception desk but kept looking up every few seconds.

Tromso moved in front of Ty and Ty got a better look at him. Three chins and a ratty excuse for a mustache that would have shamed a seventies porn flick. As soon as Ty looked at him, he backed off. It didn’t make Ty feel good: it made him nervous.

Ty twisted his head round to look at Kelly. ‘Y’know, you, me, a pair of handcuffs. Hey. Do you want to continue this up in my room?’

Kelly did not look amused.

‘I got cable,’ he said to her. ‘Did I mention that?’

‘Did I mention that you’re under arrest?’

‘You’re kind of killing the mood here, girl.’ Ty glanced at Tromso. ‘You ain’t helping either.’

‘Where’s Malik Shaw?’ said Tromso.

Ty made a show of looking around. ‘Don’t see him. Do you?’

Tromso poked a finger into Ty’s shoulder. He had to stretch up to do it. Ty’s eyes narrowed. He wasn’t going to show his hand that he’d seen Tromso pour gasoline all over a crime scene, but he wasn’t going to take the cop’s shit either.

‘Do that again and see what happens,’ Ty told him.

‘Tough guy, huh?’ Tromso sneered.

Ty didn’t reply. Tromso would face his moment of reckoning, along with anyone else who’d been involved. Ty would see to that.

Kelly pulled at the cuffs. ‘Okay, let’s go.’

He let her turn him around. She and Tromso perp-walked him out to the patrol car. He settled himself as the door closed. Ty was wondering if the fate they feared for Malik awaited him at the end of his ride.

Forty-five

Ryan Lock tapped at the earpiece nestled inside his left ear. A thin black cord ran from it to a multi-channel scanner mounted on the dashboard. Lock slowed down and flicked on the turn signal, zipping down the highway exit and doubling back on a surface road.

Malik’s head popped up in back. ‘What’s going on? Why are we leaving the highway?’

Lock glanced at him in the rear-view mirror. ‘State patrol have a roadblock set up on I-Eleven.’

Malik grabbed the back of the front seats and sat up. ‘I appreciate you doing this for me.

‘You’re welcome,’ said Lock, taking a sharp left turn. ‘How you holding up?’

There was a pause. ‘I’m still here.’

Lock wondered how any man would be able to come through what Malik had experienced. Then he remembered that he had – or, at least, close. A little over two years ago, Lock’s fiancée, Carrie, had been killed while fleeing two men who had abducted her. She had run into the road on a rainy evening in Topanga Canyon, just outside Los Angeles, and been hit by a car. She was killed instantly. Ty had been driving, with Lock in the passenger seat next to him. They had been out in the storm trying to find her when it happened.

‘That’s good,’ said Lock. He knew that right now all Malik could do was exist from moment to moment. That in itself was an achievement. Lock’s nightmare had been enough, but to lose two children at the same time as the woman you loved? It was horror beyond imagination.

Lock snuck another glance at Malik in the rear-view mirror. ‘When’d you last sleep?’

‘Don’t know. Last night. I mean, not tonight, the one before that.’

Lock didn’t say anything.

Malik went on, ‘Every time I close my eyes …’ His voice fell away. He cleared his throat. ‘It’s not good — y’know what I’m saying?’

Lock did know. ‘I have some Ambien on me. I figured you might need it. It’ll knock you out for a few hours.’

‘Thanks, but I’m okay for now. Maybe later.’

A moment of silence passed between them. Lock considered telling Malik about Carrie, and what had happened to him, but decided against it. It was way too early for it to do any good. After she had died, Lock had endured an endless procession of people who had shared their own experiences of losing a loved one. He had listened patiently out of respect. But someone else’s loss was just that – theirs.

After a few more minutes, Lock said, ‘You want to tell me what’s been going on?’

‘I can try. Where do you want me to start?’

‘At the beginning. When did you first suspect that there was something going on with Becker?’

‘I didn’t even know it was him at first,’ said Malik.

There was a crackle of static in Lock’s ear, and more chatter. The chatter picked up pace: he caught a mention of an Audi. In his rear-view mirror, he saw the headlights of a car behind them. Its speed was matched to the even sixty Lock was doing. The speed limit on this road, which ran broadly parallel to the interstate, was fifty-five. Doing fifty-five made cops suspicious, like you had something to hide, so he usually drove a little over. He narrowed his eyes, trying to make out its shape, see if it had a roll bar, but the vehicle’s headlights were too bright.

Lock put up his hand. 'Hold that thought. We have company. Stay down until I tell you otherwise.’

The road ahead was wide open. Lock slowed and pulled over, giving the car behind a chance to pass. It edged up behind him a little, but made no move to go around them. The radio chatter moved up a notch. A second later he saw flashing lights behind him. He eased off the gas pedal, and hit his turn signal to indicate he was pulling over to the side of the road.

He waited for the police cruiser to pull in behind him. He kept the Audi in drive, the engine running, and watched his mirrors.

The police cruiser stopped about twenty-five feet behind him. The driver’s door opened, and a lone patrol officer stood behind it, his service weapon drawn as he started to bark instructions.

‘Driver, turn off the engine.’

The cop sounded young and nervous. Lock tuned in more intently to the chatter in his ear. Other units were on the way, but their ETA was about seven minutes away. Decision-making became a little harder. A lot would depend on how the young patrol officer reacted. The situation was further complicated by the fact that Lock had no plans to shoot an innocent cop. If it came down to it, and his only option was to kill someone doing their job, then he and Malik would both have to take their chances in custody, leaving Ty on the outside to figure out what the hell was going on.

‘Turn off your engine.’

Lock raised his hands, but made no move to turn off the engine. It was still in drive, the only thing preventing it from moving his right foot on the brake pedal.

Now the cop had a decision to make. It was likely that he would have a dash cam fitted. That meant he was going to be unwilling to take a shot at a driver with his arms raised in plain sight. If he was bright, he would hold his position and wait for the cavalry. But Lock could already tell from the rising anger in his voice, as the young officer barked at him for a third time to switch off the engine, that he wasn’t going to wait. He didn’t want to be sitting here like a dummy when his colleagues arrived, even though that was the smart thing to do.

Lock kept watching in the rear-view as the cop shuffled around the lip of the open driver’s door, and started to move toward the back of the Audi. Lock kept his arms nice and high and still.

His service weapon punched out in front of him, the young patrol officer moved down the side of the Audi. He was too jumpy to notice the Malik-shaped bundle in back although, to be fair to him, all the windows in the Audi, apart from the windshield, were tinted.

The cop was next to Lock’s door now. The gun was pointed straight at Lock’s head.

‘Are you deaf? Turn off the engine.’

Slowly, Lock moved his neck so that he was looking straight at the cop. ‘Didn’t want to lower my hands with a gun pointed at me,’ he said. ‘I have a sidearm. Now why don’t we just sit here until you have some back-up?’

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