CHAPTER 71

Saturday
Blue Valley, California
‘I still can’t believe you did that,’ Rose said,
shaking her head angrily, ‘after all the care we’ve taken to keep
this to ourselves, to keep this story under our hats, and you go
and invite along some guy who might be the next President of the
United States!’
She swung the hire car left, onto the road leading
out of town and up into the woods. ‘Not only that, this guy’s a
media owner. He’s the God-squad version of Rupert Murdoch. And here
he is in Blue Valley, skulking around anonymously like some sort of
Howard Hughes. Doesn’t his keen interest in this strike you as odd
at all?’
Julian shrugged. ‘It’s understandable, given his
position. Think of it: in a country where a blob of semen in the
wrong place can get you impeached, don’t you think Shepherd is
going to be somewhat cautious about a potential ancestral skeleton
in the closet?’
‘He wants to stage-manage our story, that’s what he
wants, Jules. He wants to be sure it’s got a spin on it that makes
him look good.’
Julian shrugged. ‘Then there’s not a lot he needs
to do, is there? Benjamin Lambert seems to have behaved like a
gent.’
‘What if he wants to back-pedal the Mormon angle?
What if he wants us to gloss over Preston being a psychotic
nut?’
‘We won’t.’
Rose pursed her lips. ‘Yeah?’
She dropped a gear as the car wound its way slowly
around a hairpin turn, taking them up a steep single-lane road that
hugged the contours of a rock-strewn gulch.
‘I’ve got a question for you, Jules.’
‘What?’
‘What if we find something up there that turns
things around?’
‘Eh?’
‘What if we find something that points to Lambert
being responsible for those killings?’
The morning sun shone down through the tops of the
Douglas firs lining the side of the road, dappling the windscreen
with splashes of light and shade.
‘Oh, come on, Rose. You’re not still chewing over
the Rag Man angle, are you?’
‘I’m considering it. Lambert survived, we know
that. But he came out of those mountains a . . . a haunted
man.’
‘Of course he did. But I mean, wouldn’t you be
changed by that sort of an experience? Traumatised, even?’
‘I suppose. It’s just . . .’
‘What?’
Rose pursed her lips. ‘Well, what if the story was
very different?’
‘What do you mean?’
‘What if, I don’t know . . . what if Lambert killed
those people, but simply decided to leave a fictional account
behind?’
‘What? On the off chance it might be discovered a
hundred and fifty years later?’
‘Very funny, smart-arse. No, on the off chance he
might be rescued by some other settlers or trappers and need
something to corroborate his tale.’
Julian made a face. ‘Possibly.’
‘Come on, don’t you think it’s odd that Lambert
chose to write it all up in so much detail? Surely he would have
invested more of his effort in surviving, rather than writing?
Unless, of course, he had something to hide.’
‘He was a writer, Rose, remember; that’s what he
wanted to do.’ He squinted out of the passenger-side window at the
flickering sunlight. ‘In some ways, just like an embedded
journalist in Afghanistan. You don’t stop documenting what you’re
seeing, hearing, feeling when the bullets start flying . . . that’s
when you really start.’
She shrugged. ‘Maybe.’
They drove on in silence for a while, both of them
drinking in the splendour of the mountainside and the wooded valley
below - scenery that demanded their attention with every twist and
turn of the road. Ten minutes later the car rounded a corner and
the tarmac gave way to a potholed, gravel track that the bouncy
Japanese suspension began to struggle with. A roadside sign
announced the National Parks campsite was not much further.
‘But what if . . . ?’ She abandoned the thought
unfinished and unformed.
‘What if, what?’
The track curved to the right and a moment later a
wooden board above them welcomed them to Blue Valley Camp. Beyond
they saw the parking lot, two cars parked apart from each other.
One of them Rose recognised as Grace’s, and sitting in the front,
she spotted her reading a paper, smoking a cigarette and enjoying
the warmth of her car heater. The sound of tyres on gravel caught
her attention and she perked up, offering Rose a smile as she
parked their car snugly beside hers.
‘The unsinkable Molly Brown,’ Julian muttered under
his breath, waving at her as he unplugged his seat belt.
‘What?’
‘Never mind. It’s just a line from a movie.’
Rose snorted. ‘Geek,’ she replied, looking over her
shoulder at the other car. ‘Is that . . . ?’
Julian followed her gaze. It was a cream-coloured
Lincoln Navigator with shaded windows. ‘It looks like the kind of
car a President-in-waiting might drive. Hmm?’
They let themselves out and joined Grace on the
gravel as she opened the boot of her battered Jeep.
‘Morning, Grace,’ said Rose, savouring the crisp,
cool mountain air and exhaling a plume of steam.
Grace squinted up at the deep blue sky. It was
patched with a smattering of combed-out clouds painted a dazzling
vanilla by the rising sun. ‘Lovely mornin’ it is too.’ She sucked
in the air and blew it out. ‘Snow should’a come before the end of
the month. I reckon it’s more than due. That’s definitely a sky
readying for the winter.’
‘Hey, Grace.’ Julian waved at her.
‘Hey, Mr Cooke,’ the old woman replied with a
cordial nod and a wave, then shot a quick, questioning glance at
Rose. She shook her head almost imperceptibly.
Grace shrugged.
‘So, we set off now, we’ll be there mid-afternoon,’
she announced, pulling her backpack out of the boot of her Jeep.
‘You two tourists good to go?’
Julian pointed towards the Lincoln. ‘We’ve got
someone coming along with us.’
Grace turned to look as the driver and passenger
doors opened and a couple of men climbed out, both hauling
back-packs of camping equipment out after them.
‘I thought it was going to be just Shepherd,’ Rose
muttered.
Julian pulled a face. ‘As a matter of fact, so did
I.’
Their feet crunched across the gravel towards
them.
‘Mr Cooke,’ Shepherd called out, ‘I should have
mentioned that I’d have company with me.’ He closed the gap between
them. ‘This is Agent Barns. I recently qualified for a free Fed of
my own. Apparently, when you hit a certain poll rating, you
automatically trigger FBI protection.’ He grimaced at the man.
‘Barns has been my shadow for the last week.’
Agent Barns nodded politely to Julian, Rose and
Grace and automatically produced his ID for them. ‘You can call me
Agent Barns or Carl. I’m easy with either. I’ll try and keep out of
your way - just keeping an eye out for Mr Shepherd, is all,’ he
explained matter-of-factly.
Grace studied Shepherd with suspicion. ‘Anyone tell
you, you look a lot like that guy from Utah running for . . .’ Her
words trailed away quickly as her eyes widened with growing
recognition.
‘Yup.’ Julian nodded. ‘He’s exactly who you think
he is.’
Shepherd extended his hand. ‘Pleased to make your
acquaintance, ma’am.’
Her jaw fell open.
‘Mr Shepherd, Mr Barns,’ said Julian, ‘this is
Grace Simms, the National Parks ranger who’s going to take us out,
and this is Rose Whitely, my business partner and cameraman.’
A brief exchange of clumsy handshakes filled the
silence, and then Julian turned to Grace, still thrown by their
guest.
‘Shall we make a move then, Grace?’
She stirred. ‘Okay, yes . . . you folks all ready
to go?’
They nodded.
‘Mr Shepherd?’
He smiled warmly. ‘Ready when you are,
Grace.’
‘Right then,’ she said, her voice finding its
back-to-business gruffness, ‘it’s about a six- to eight-hour hike
up into the peaks from here. We’ll stop halfway for a brief rest,
and then press on. That should get us to where we want to go by
about three in the afternoon. That gives us a couple of hours of
daylight to set up camp.’ She turned around and pointed to a worn
footpath that led through the deserted camp site and up into the
lowest apron of trees running down to the edge of the camping
area.
‘We’re heading this-a-way,’ she barked, turning
round and setting off along the path at a brisk pace.
Julian looked up. It was a solid carpet of woodland
as far as the eye could see, topped by the purple and jagged,
slate-grey crowns of the nearest peaks. They looked deceptively
close, towering over them like a gathering of curious giants.
Shepherd broke into a brisk walk, swiftly catching
up with Grace. A few moments later he had her laughing loudly, the
bray of her coarse voice bouncing merrily off the hillside. The Fed
followed behind them, dutifully keeping close to Shepherd, but not
crowding him.
‘Rose, what was that little thing between you and
Grace?’
‘Uh? What?’
‘When we were getting out of the car. She gave you
a look.’
‘I don’t know what you’re talking about,’ she
replied.
‘Oh, there was definitely a look.’
‘You’re getting paranoid in your old age,
Jules.’
Julian shook his head. ‘Pffft.’