The Never Game. Джеффри Дивер

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The Never Game - Джеффри Дивер


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not assault. So he could get away.”

      This gave the officer a moment’s pause.

      Carole blurted: “I looked it up online. Molotov secretly worked for Putin.”

      Both men looked at her quizzically. Then Shaw continued with the officer: “And to burn the evidence. Prints and DNA on the glass.”

      Addison remained thoughtful. He was the sort, common among police, whose lack of body language speaks volumes. He’d be processing why Shaw had considered forensics.

      The officer said, “If he wasn’t here to cause you any problem, ma’am, what was he here about, you think?”

      Before Carole answered, Shaw said, “That.” He pointed across the street to the vacant lot he’d noted earlier.

      The trio walked toward it.

      The trailer camp was in a scruffy commercial neighborhood, off Route 24, where tourists could stage before a trip to steep Grizzly Peak or neighboring Berkeley. This trash-filled, weedy lot was separated from the property behind it by an old wooden fence about eight feet tall. Local artists had used it as a canvas for some very talented artwork: portraits of Martin Luther King, Jr., Malcolm X and two other men Shaw didn’t recognize. As the three got closer, Shaw saw the names printed below the pictures: Bobby Seale and Huey P. Newton, who’d been connected with the Black Panther Party. Shaw remembered cold nights in his television-free childhood home. Ashton would read to Colter and his siblings, mostly American history. Much of it about alternative forms of governance. The Black Panthers had figured in several lectures.

      “So,” Carole said, her mouth twisted in distaste. “A hate crime. Terrible.” She added, with a nod to the paintings, “I called the city, told them they should preserve it somehow. They never called back.”

      Addison’s radio crackled. Shaw could hear the transmission: a unit had cruised the streets nearby and seen no one fitting the description of the arsonist.

      Shaw said, “I got a video.”

      “You did?”

      “After I called nine-one-one I put the phone in my pocket.” He touched the breast pocket, on the left side of his jacket. “It was recording the whole time.”

      “Is it recording now?”

      “It is.”

      “Would you shut it off?” Addison asked this in a way that really meant: Shut it off. Without a question mark.

      Shaw did. Then: “I’ll send you a screenshot.”

      “Okay.”

      Shaw clicked the shot, got Addison’s mobile number and sent the image his way. The men were four feet apart but Shaw imagined the electrons’ journey took them halfway around the world.

      The officer’s phone chimed; he didn’t bother to look at the screenshot. He gave Carole his card, one to Shaw as well. Shaw had quite the collection of cops’ cards; he thought it amusing that police had business cards like advertising executives and hedge fund managers.

      After Addison left, Carole said, “They’re not going to do winkety, are they?”

      “No.”

      “Well, thanks for looking into it, Mr. Shaw. I’d’ve felt purely horrid you’d gotten burned.”

      “Not a worry.”

      Carole returned to the cabin and Shaw to his Winnebago. He was reflecting on one aspect of the encounter he hadn’t shared with Officer Addison. After the exasperated “Really?” in reference to the 911 call, Rodent’s comment might have been “Why’d you do that shit?”

      It was also possible—more than fifty percent—that he’d said, “Why’d you do that, Shaw?”

      Which, if that had in fact happened, meant Rodent knew him or knew about him.

      And that, of course, would put a whole new spin on the matter.

       3.

      Inside the Winnebago, Shaw hung his sport coat on a hook and walked to a small cupboard in the kitchen. He opened it and removed two things. The first was his compact Glock .380 pistol, which he kept hidden behind a row of spices, largely McCormick brand. The weapon was in a gray plastic Blackhawk holster. This he clipped inside his belt.

      The second thing he removed was a thick 11-by-14-inch envelope, secreted on the shelf below where he kept the gun, behind condiment bottles. Worcestershire, teriyaki and a half dozen vinegars ranging from Heinz to the exotic.

      He glanced outside.

      No sign of Rodent. As he’d expected. Still, sometimes being armed never hurt.

      He walked to the stove and boiled water and brewed a ceramic mug of coffee with a single-cup filter cone. He’d selected one of his favorites. Daterra, from Brazil. He shocked the beverage with a splash of milk.

      Sitting at the banquette, he looked at the envelope, on which were the words Graded Exams 5/25, in perfect, scripty handwriting, smaller even than Shaw’s.

      The flap was not sealed, just affixed with a flexible metal flange, which he bent open, and then he extracted from the envelope a rubber band–bound stack of sheets, close to four hundred of them.

      Noting that his heart thudded from double time to triple as he stared at the pile.

      These pages were the spoils of the theft Shaw had committed yesterday.

      What he hoped they contained was the answer to the question that had dogged him for a decade and a half.

      A sip of coffee. He began to flip through the contents.

      The sheets seemed to be a random collection of musings historical, philosophical, medical and scientific, maps, photos, copies of receipts. The author’s script was the same as on the front of the envelope: precise and perfectly even, as if a ruler had been used as a guide. The words were formed in a delicate combination of cursive and block printing.

      Similar to how Colter Shaw wrote.

      He opened to a page at random. Began to read.

       Fifteen miles northwest of Macon on Squirrel Level Road, Holy Brethren Church. Should have a talk with minister. Good man. Rev. Harley Combs. Smart and keeps quiet when he should.

      Shaw read more passages, then stopped. A couple sips of coffee, thoughts of breakfast. Then: Go on, he chided himself. You started this, prepared to accept where it would lead. So keep going.

      His mobile hummed. He glanced at the caller ID, shamefully pleased that the distraction took him away from the stolen documents.

      “Teddy.”

      “Colt. Where am I finding you?” A baritone grumble.

      “Still the Bay Area.”

      “Any luck?”

      “Some. Maybe. Everything okay at home?” The Bruins were watching his property in Florida, which abutted theirs.

      “Peachy.” Not a word you hear often from a career Marine officer. Teddy Bruin and his wife, Velma, also a veteran, wore their contradictions proudly. He could picture them clearly, most likely sitting at that moment where they often sat, on the porch facing the hundred-acre lake in northern Florida. Teddy was six-two, two hundred and fifty pounds. His reddish hair was a darker version of his freckled, ruddy skin. He’d be in khaki slacks or shorts because he owned no other shade. The shirt would have flowers on it. Velma was less than half his weight, though tall herself. She’d be in jeans and work shirt, and of the two she had the cleverer tattoos.

      A dog barked in the background. That would be Chase, their Rottweiler. Shaw had spent many afternoons on hikes with the solid, good-natured animal.


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