'No, sir, just making a suggestion based on my enforcement experience in Iraq. You'll make your own decisions.'
Randolph relaxed.'Okay, then. Okay' He looked down, frowning in thought. They all watched him notice his fly was still unzipped and take care of that little problem. Then he looked up again and said,'Julia, take Reverend Piper to the hospital. As for you, Mr Barbara, I don't care where you go but I want you out of here. I'll take statements from my officers tonight, and from Reverend Libby tomorrow.'
'Wait,' Thibodeau said. He extended his crooked fingers to Barbie. 'Can you do anything about these?'
'I don't know,' Barbie said - pleasantly enough, he hoped. The initial ugliness was over, and now came the political aftermath, which he remembered well from dealing with Iraqi cops who were not all that different from the man on the couch and the others crowding the doorway. What it came down to was making nice with people you wished you could spit on. 'Can you say wishbone?
10
Rusty had turned his cell phone off before knocking on Big Jim's door. Now Big Jim sat behind his desk, Rusty in the seat before it - the chair of supplicants and applicants.
The study (Rennie probably called it a home office on his tax returns) had a pleasant, piney smell, as if it had recently been given a good scrubbing, but Rusty still didn't like it. It wasn't just the picture of an aggressively Caucasian Jesus delivering the Sermon on the Mount, or the self-congratulatory plaques, or the hardwood floor that really should have had a rug to protect it; it was all those things and something else as well. Rusty Everett had very little use for or belief in the supernatural, but nevertheless, this room felt almost haunted.
It's because he scares you a little, he thought. That's all it is.
Hoping that how he felt didn't show in his voice or face, Rusty told Rennie about the hospital's missing propane tanks. About how he had found one of them in the supply shed behind the Town Hall, currently running the Town Halls generator. And how it was the only one.
'So I have two questions,' Rusty said. 'How did a tank from the hospital supply wander downtown? And where did the rest go?'
Big Jim rocked back in his chair, put his hands behind his neck, and looked up at the ceiling meditatively. Rusty found himself staring at the trophy baseball sitting on Rennie's desk. Propped in front of it was a note from Bill Lee, once of the Boston Red Sox. He could read the note because it was turned outward. Of course it was. It was for guests to see, and marvel over. Like the pictures on the wall, the baseball proclaimed that Big Jim Rennie had rubbed elbows with Famous People: Look on my autographs, ye mighty, and despair.To Rusty, the baseball and the note turned outward seemed to sum up his bad feelings about the room he was in. It was window-dressing, a tinny testimonial to smalltown prestige and smalltown power.
'I wasn't aware you had anyone's permission to go poking around in our supply shed,' Big Jim remarked to the ceiling. His hammy fingers were still laced together behind his head. 'Perhaps you're a town official, and I wasn't: aware of it? If so, my mistake - my bad, as Junior says. I thought you were basically a nurse with a prescription pad.'
Rusty thought this was mostly technique - Rennie trying to piss him off. To divert him.
'I'm not a town official,' he said, 'but I am a hospital employee. And a taxpayer.'
'So?'
Rusty could feel blood rushing to his face.
'So those things make it partly my supply shed.' He waited to see if Big Jim would respond to this, but the man behind the desk remained impassive. 'Besides, it was unlocked. Which is all beside the point, isn't it? I saw what I saw, and I'd like an explanation. As a hospital employee.'
'And a taxpayer. Don't forget that.'
Rusty sat looking at him, not even nodding.
'I can't give you one,' Rennie said.
Rusty raised his eyebrows. 'Really? I thought you had your fingers on the pulse of this town. Isn't that what you said the last time you ran for Selectman? And now you're telling me you can't explain where the town's propane went? I don't believe it.'
For the first time, Rennie looked nettled. 'I don't care if you believe it or not. This is news to me.' But his eyes darted fractionally to one side as he said it, as if to check that his autographed photo of Tiger Woods was still there; the classic liars' tell.
Rusty said, 'The hospital's almost out of LP. Without it, the few of us who are still on the job might as well be working in a Civil War battlefield surgery tent. Our current patients - including a post-coronary and a serious case of diabetes that may warrant amputation - will be in serious trouble if the power goes out. The possible amp is Jimmy Sirois. His car is in the parking lot. It's got a sticker on the bumper that says ELECT BIG JIM.'