The Bone Tree: A Novel

Someone knocked three times, then slowly pushed open the door while a voice behind it said, “At ease, Cap’n. I know you’ve got a gun back there.”

 

 

Walt kept his derringer cocked and ready until Mackiever came in and locked the door behind him. One of the colonel’s hands was empty; the other carried a bottle of Macallan Fine Oak, which gladdened Walt’s heart. Mackiever’s hair had gone nearly white since Walt had last seen him, though his trimmed mustache still had a little pepper in it. His old eyes looked dazed, and he shook Walt’s hand like a man grasping at a life preserver.

 

“Damn, I’m glad to see you,” he said. “I was up to my ass in alligators before you ever called. But this time I think they’ve got me. Can I pour you a scotch? I need one bad.”

 

“I won’t turn it down.”

 

Mackiever went to the bathroom sink and unwrapped two water glasses. Walt watched him pour—both hands shaking—then took the proffered glass and drank the whisky neat. He savored the burn as it sank toward his stomach, then took a seat on the end of the bed while the colonel poured himself another.

 

“Dark days,” Mackiever said hoarsely.

 

Walt grimaced. “Let’s hear it, Mac.”

 

The colonel sat heavily in a chair by the table before the curtained window. As Walt raised his glass in a silent toast to his old friend, he realized he was looking at a man close to breaking.

 

“Forrest Knox just issued me an ultimatum,” Mackiever informed him. “Step down for health reasons, or he’ll ruin me. I’ve got forty-eight hours.”

 

“Ruin you? How?”

 

“The son of a bitch has had one of our tech experts—one of my own officers—planting kiddie porn in my computers, both at work and at home. If I don’t resign, he’ll go public with child pornography charges and drag me through the mud until I choke. You know how it goes with accusations like that. It’s almost impossible to prove a negative. You never shake ’em.”

 

“That’s bullshit, Mac. A man with your record? He’d never make that stick. You can prove that stuff was planted.”

 

“Not this time. Knox has been setting this up for months. Day by day, in real time. There’s an extensive search history, thousands of photographs of young kids, even online conversations. They’ve already printed out reams of computer logs and placed them secretly into evidence.”

 

“Jesus. I still think—”

 

Mackiever stopped him with a raised hand. “You haven’t heard the worst of it. Forrest’s got two underage prostitutes from New Orleans who’ll swear under oath that I paid them for sex. Male prostitutes.”

 

“What?”

 

The colonel nodded, his haunted eyes glancing at the floor. “He just paraded one of them in front of me in a New Orleans hotel room. The boy was no more than fifteen, if that. I’m screwed, partner. I’ve got no play.”

 

“I don’t know what to say.”

 

Mackiever took another sip of scotch and closed his eyes. “There isn’t anything.”

 

“Help me understand this. How the hell did a man like Knox climb so high in your outfit?”

 

The colonel shook a cigarette from a pack of Salems and lit it. “Forrest joined the force long before I came over from Texas. He worked his way up, making strong connections all along the way. Everybody knew he was Frank Knox’s son, but nobody in power gave a damn about that, not back then. Hell, most don’t care now. But I wasn’t any better. I initially sized Forrest up as a straight shooter. A hardass, sure, but fair—or so it seemed. And he appeared to have no relationship at all with his extended family.”

 

“What changed your mind about him?”

 

“That’s hard to say. After a while, the little man inside just started telling me something was wrong with him. For one thing, he used to keep a samurai sword hanging behind his desk. Like we used to see in Texas sheriffs’ offices, remember? Forrest claimed his daddy had taken it off a Japanese officer during World War Two. One day I asked him to tell me the story, and he did. But first he took a couple of photos out of his desk. They were in a frame he kept in his bottom drawer.”

 

“And?”

 

“The first one showed this Jap officer brandishing a samurai sword. The guy had two human heads tied to his belt. Caucasian heads. I kid you not, Walter.” Mackiever gulped some more scotch. “Why don’t you look surprised?”

 

“I was in Korea, remember? I know about shit like that.”

 

“That’s right. Well . . . according to Forrest, these two heads on the Jap’s belt belonged to American marines. But the second picture showed a U.S. Marine sergeant holding the same sword with a headless body at his feet. The dead man was the Jap officer from the first picture. The marine was a tough-looking bastard, a real leatherneck. He looked like Forrest, only twice as mean.”

 

“Was it Forrest’s old man?”

 

Mackiever nodded. “Frank Knox. In that photo, he’s holding the Jap officer’s head up for the camera. By the hair. Forrest said when his daddy found the first photo on that Jap officer after an island battle, he cut the guy’s head off with his own sword. Forrest kept the photo in his desk. He’d take it out and show it to people when they asked about the sword. And they loved the guy for it.”

 

“I’ve known guys like that,” Walt said, thinking of the photos of the beheaded family that had been shown to Carmelita to frighten her.

 

“Don’t be so sure. It’s easy to underestimate Forrest Knox. God knows I did. He’s a smooth character. I hear he’s done some sick stuff to hookers he’s arrested—blacks and Asians, mostly—and I’ve heard talk of even crazier things going on at a hunting camp his cousin Billy runs just over the Mississippi line. The official name is the Valhalla Exotic Hunting Reserve, but they call it ‘Fort Knox’ amongst themselves. But hell . . . that’s not what you’re here for.”

 

Greg Iles's books