Bitterroot (Billy Bob Holland 3)
Page 108
He and the other agent got inside and closed the doors and ate the sandwich, bored, irritated with themselves, wondering if Amos was serious about Fargo.
High up on the ridge a man wearing cowboy boots with sharply defined heels worked his way through the tree trunks until he saw the stock car parked down below in the glade, the orange numerals in bold relief against the gray primer on the door. He stuffed rubber plugs in his ears and got down in a prone position and steadied a rifle on a collapsible tripod in the softness of the pine needles, then pulled back the bolt and chambered a round.
He sighted down the slope and waited, working his jaw comfortably against the stock. The moon was up now and he could see clearly into the glade. A shadow moved behind the steering wheel; a cigarette lighter flared on a face. Perfect.
The shooter squeezed back the trigger and burned the entire thirty-round magazine, swinging the barrel on the tripod, the copper-jacketed.223 rounds pocking the door panels and the roof, gashing the seats, blowing glass out of the dashboard, popping the horn button loose like a tiddlywink.
When the breech locked open, the shooter rose to his feet and removed the rubber plugs from his ears, dropping one into the pine needles, and walked back down the opposite slope to his vehicle.
Down in the glade the driver's door of Sue Lynn's car swung open and Jim fell out on the grass, his mouth blooming with uneaten sandwich bread. He clawed his way up the side of the car and found his cell phone where he had left it on the roof, then collapsed on the ground again, his clothes soaked with blood, and pushed the redial button.
But when Amos Rackley answered, Jim realized that the sucking chest wound he tried to close with his hand had stolen his voice. He lay on his back in the grass, one leg bent under him, and used his fingernail to tap out a last message on the mouthpiece to Amos Rackley.
Chapter 26
"You KNOW what he Morsed me? 'Sorry.' He was sorry," Amos Rackley said.
It was the next morning, and we were standing in front of Doc's porch. Rackley's face was drained of color, his eyes smoldering.
"Sue Lynn Big Medicine hasn't been here. I don't know where your vehicle is, either," I said.
"Is your son in his tent?"
"He took my truck to town. Leave him alone, Mr. Rackley. He's not in this."
"He just porks her on a regular basis when she's not getting federal agents killed?"
I looked at the fatigue and caffeinated tension in his face and knew it was only a matter of time before the anger in his eyes focused inward and Amos Rackley found himself locked up with his own thoughts for many years.
"Come inside, sir," I said.
"What?"
"Have you eaten? I have some coffee and pancakes on the stove."
He took a breath of air through his nose, looking off in
to the distance, as though he were choosing between one of several insults to hurl at me.
"I should have been with them," he said.
"They were doing their job. Why not give them credit for it?"
"I made a wisecrack to Jim about Fargo. That's the last thing I said to him."
"It wasn't anybody's fault except the bastards who did it. These are the guys you hang out to dry. Not yourself, not a kid like Sue Lynn Big Medicine."
He rubbed his face with his hand. He had shaved so closely there were pink scrape marks on his chin. He seemed to take my measure as though he didn't know who I was.
"I'll take a raincheck on the pancakes. Could I use your bathroom?" he said.
As Rackley drove through the field behind Doc's he passed Temple Carrol's Explorer. She parked in the yard and walked up on the porch, her backpack full of research materials slung from one hand.
"That guy looked like a fed," she said.
"He is. Two of his agents were killed on the Flathead Reservation last night."
"The ones who rousted you?"