Casey skidded to a halt beside them on pebbles and rocks.
Miah fisted Bean’s jacket at the shoulders, flipped him over, and slammed him against the ground so hard his head bounced back like whiplash. “Why?”
“I had to,” the guy gasped. His nose was bleeding from his first collision with the dirt, making his words gurgle. He looked about a breath from passing out, and not only on account of the flesh wound and the impact—his eyes were glazed and unfocused, chest rising and falling like mad, words slurred from more than a head injury, Casey bet. The guy was as fucking high as a kite.
“I had to,” Bean sputtered again. “They would’ve hurt my wife if I didn’t.”
“Who?”
“I don’t know, man. I don’t even know. They never gave me names. They gave—” His chest jerked and he coughed, eyes growing hazy, drool slicking his lips.
“They gave you what?” Casey demanded. They needed answers before this cocksucker went into shock.
“Gave me money,” he wheezed. “First just to tell them—tell them where to start a fire. Which building. What time. Then they—then they made me do it.”
“Who?” Miah gave him another violent shake.
“Calm the fuck down,” Casey said. “You’re gonna knock him out.”
“I don’t know,” Bean said, sobbing now. “I don’t know. Just some guy, who worked for somebody else. No names.”
“And you said yes?” Miah hissed. “After every goddamn thing my father did for you? Every fucking chance he gave you to clean your ass up?”
“I didn’t—I didn’t know it was him.”
Miah’s expression sharpened, tense body stilling by a degree. “What?”
“I didn’t know, until it was already burning. I thought—I thought it was you. When he came in, he had his back to me. It was dark. He was wearing a black hat—he always wore a white one, before.”
Miah sank back on his heels slowly, eyes wide, tanned skin going pale.
“It was you they wanted,” the man wailed, then turned over, curling up on his side, racked by sobs. “I thought it was you I talked to when I called about the tractor. It was your name on the ad.” But not Miah’s number, apparently— probably just the office line. “By the time I realized, it was too late.”
Casey could only stare at his friend, feeling struck.
“Why me?” Miah asked, the rage gone from his voice.
“They said you were in the way. That’s all they told me, I swear. They said, ‘We need him out of the way.’”
“Out of the way of what?”
“I don’t know, I don’t know. They just told me, ‘Get rid of him.’”
“What’d they give you? Fucking money?”
“I got busted for selling. They paid my bail. I was gonna get ten years, but they told me they’d get me off if I helped them out.”
That gave Casey pause. Who the fuck would have the power to make that promise? A crooked judge, a lawyer? Whoever’d brought the charges? What reason would anybody in such a position have to want Miah dead? Unless it had simply been an empty promise, used to manipulate this addled burnout . . .
“When they told me what they wanted in return,” Bean went on, “I said I couldn’t. I couldn’t do that. But then they threatened to hurt my wife.” He began gasping, the sounds of a panic attack closing in.
“Who? Fucking who?” Miah shouted.
When the man didn’t answer, Miah shot to his feet and kicked him square in the ribs. Casey scrambled to standing and pulled him back while Bean wheezed and clutched his middle. “You can’t kill him.”
“Why the fuck not?” Miah bellowed, his entire body thrashing in Casey’s arms. “He meant to do the same to me! He fucking killed my dad!”