“But it’d be tough to get and mix into his food or drink,” I say. “That’s why we’re looking in town for poisons—”
There’s a shout from outside. Then what sounds like . . .
“Is that the bell?” I say.
We installed a bell this winter. Another of my suggestions, after a fire burned down the lumber shed. Dalton resisted—there hadn’t been a problem alerting people for the fire, and I think he didn’t like the intimation that he needed a bell to make residents listen. A bell wouldn’t have saved the lumber shed, so I didn’t get one . . . until after Nicole was taken and rousting searchers five minutes faster might have helped.
“If that’s another goddamn prank . . .” Dalton says as he strides from the brewery.
Shortly after we installed the bell someone rang it in the middle of the night. Drunk, obviously. Rang it and ran . . . leaving boot prints in the snow, which I matched to a perpetrator, whom Dalton then sentenced to go to each and every person in town and say, “I’m the fucking idiot who rang the fucking bell at two in the fucking morning. I’m sorry.”
No one has touched the bell since.
As Dalton jogs out, I hear “Eric? Eric!” from several directions.
Jen races around the corner and sees us. “Finally. The lumber shed is on fire.”
Dalton stops so abruptly that I bash into him. I know exactly what he’s thinking. That the lumber shed cannot possibly be on fire nine months after we rebuilt it. Jen must be making a very bad joke. And yet one sniff of the air brings the smell of wood fire.
He shouts for everyone to “get to the goddamn fire,” infuriated that they went looking for him rather than tackling the actual problem.
As we run, Jen explains that Anders is already at the shed, with as many people as he could gather. He sent her to find Dalton and me.
People join us as we run. They hear the bell and smell smoke and see us running, and they fall into our wake. This is Dalton’s success as a leader. People don’t smell that smoke and retreat. They join the fight.
As we run, Dalton barks questions. How did the fire start? When did it start? Who saw it first? How bad is the damage?
Jen doesn’t know. She wasn’t first on the scene. Dalton keeps questioning; I retreat into my head, into my own questions.
There is no chance that the lumber shed accidentally caught ablaze. We are a town made of wood surrounded by a forest of the same. Whatever dangers lurk in the wilderness, none approaches that of fire.
On the drive up from Whitehorse, one of the most memorable sights I saw was the markers by the roadside, memorials to past blazes. Each was labeled with a year, and I hadn’t really understood the power of fire until I saw those signs and the forest they marked. Vast swaths of wasteland left by flames that had blazed before I was born. Dalton would point out the signs of rejuvenation in that seeming wasteland. He’d even say that fire served a purpose in the forest: rebirth. He saw hope and new life; I saw death and destruction.
The precautions we take against fire border on insane. Smoking is prohibited. Only a select few can use kerosene at night. Candles are restricted to certain areas, like the Lion and the Roc, where the staff can ensure they’re put out at night’s end. Fireplaces are inspected weekly. Bonfires are permitted only in the town square, only on designated days, and only with supervision and sand buckets. The list goes on. Before the lumber shed, the last fire had been years ago, when lightning struck a building.
This is arson, as it was before. That fire had been set to cover a crime. This time . . .
There is only one explanation.
“Eric,” I call as I jog up to him.
He looks over as if startled, having been too busy to notice that I’d fallen behind.
“I need to . . .” I trail off. “To check something.” Which is not an excuse at all, and any other time, he’d call me on it, but he’s focused on that burning shed.
“I’ll be right back.” I turn to Jen. “Make sure he watches his arm.”
A nod from her, and she will, if only because she’s one of the few who’ll tell him off. Whether he listens is a whole other matter, but the risk of him injuring his arm is minor compared to what I fear.
I’m running as fast as my bad leg will allow. I tear down the narrow passage between two buildings, and I fly out onto the street just as another figure heads the opposite way.
“Kenny?” I call.
He looks over but doesn’t stop. “There’s a fire.”
“I know, but you’re posted at the clinic.”
“Val’s there.” He keeps running. “Brady’s secure. She said I can go help . . .”
The rest is muffled as he runs into the passage between buildings.
“No!” I shout. “Get back to your post!”
He’s gone. I slow, torn between running after him and—
A bang comes to my right. From the direction of the clinic. My brain screams gunshot, but as I spin, I see it’s just a door slamming shut as Diana runs from her apartment.
She sees me. “Casey?”
Come with me. That’s what I want to say. I need you. Come with me.
I can’t, though. Both because I don’t trust her, and because I can’t put her in danger.
“I need someone at the clinic,” I say. “Get . . .” I trail off. Get who?
“Mathias,” I say. “Get Mathias for me.”
She nods, no question, presuming it’s a medical emergency. Also, she’s happy to avoid going near the fire. I don’t blame her for that—she nearly died in the last one.
I run for the clinic. I know what this is. A diversion. Everyone in town is dealing with that fire. No one is paying attention to Oliver Brady.
Even Kenny is gone, because Val wants to prove herself. As soon as Kenny asked Val what she wanted him to do, she would tell him to go help with the fire. Brady’s hands were secured. He was weak from the vomiting. He was no threat.
The possibility that he was under threat? I could not trust her to realize Brady had faced two assassination attempts, and Kenny wasn’t only there to make sure Brady didn’t escape.
As soon as I dash into the clinic, there’s a crash in the examination room. I already have my gun out. Now I put my back to the wall. The door is beside me. I watch the knob. When it turns, I aim, take a deep breath—
The door opens, and Val appears, stumbling through. A hand on her arm propels her forward. She sees me. “Case—”
She’s yanked back before she can finish. The door slams shut.
“Lay down your weapon, Detective,” a voice says. “Or I slit Valerie’s throat.”
21
When I hear that voice, my gut clenches.
“Put your weapon on the floor. Open the door. Kick the gun through. Then follow with your hands up. Otherwise, I’ll kill her. You don’t want to call my bluff.”
I glance at the exterior door. Hoping for what? Divine intervention? Even if Diana finds Mathias, he’s not going to get me out of this. There are exactly two solutions.
I do as I’m told.
Or Val dies.
And here is the terrible truth: I should stand my ground.
It is the coldly correct answer to this dilemma. The only way out of the clinic is the door behind me. When a suspect escaped through the back last winter, Dalton ordered that exit boarded up. I thought he was overreacting. Now I am glad of it. There’s one way out. I’m blocking it. If I do not respond to the threat, it ends here.
I should let it end here.
I cannot let it end here.
I put Val in that room. I need to get her out of it and stalling won’t help because there is no magical third solution.
“I want to trade,” I say. “Val and I will switch spots. You can take me hostage.”
“I don’t want you, Detective. Val here will do as I say. Won’t you, Val?”
“Casey?” Val’s voice quavers. “Just do what he wants. Please.”
I set my gun in front of the door. “My weapon is down.”