1
Back again on terra firma, the first thing
Tom did was plunk some change into the phone by the Wanchese dock
and call home. They’d made good time coming back.
He watched the sun rise over the North
Carolina pines as he listened to the rings.
Finally a voice thick with sleep answered.
“Hello?”
“Terry? It’s me.”
Suddenly she came alive. “Tom! Oh, God! Where
are you?”
Something in her tone warned him against
answering that.
“In transit.”
“But where?”
Although he already knew the answer, Tom
said, “Something wrong?” Then held his breath.
“Wrong? Yes, damn it, something is very
wrong! I’ve been visited every day by a pair of federal marshals.
They know you’re gone and they’re watching the house. They follow
me wherever I go—probably think I’m sneaking off to meet you or
something. But how can I when I don’t know where you are? I wasn’t
even sure you were still alive until just now!”
Oh, shit. Oh, hell.
Sweat oozed onto Tom’s palms. He was
fucked.
“Wh-why did they come by?”
“To bring you down to the federal building to
ask you some questions about Bieber. I made excuses the first two
times, but then they got suspicious. They know you’ve left town,
Tom, but they don’t know for how long. If you come back now,
maybe…”
“Maybe what?”
“Maybe you can tie it in to your dad’s death.
You know, you just had to go see his grave or something like
that.”
… or something like
that…
Oh, sure. That’ll fly. Like a penguin.
“Come home, Tom. With your father’s death—I
mean, how it happened, and the national day of mourning and
all—maybe you can get them to give you another chance.”
Tom didn’t see that happening without putting
on a huge display of grief and throwing himself on the mercy of the
court. And even then it was iffy.
No, he wasn’t about to play the penitent bad
boy for those gonifs.
Then he realized the feds probably had his
line tapped. Shit! He should have thought of that. They’d probably
pinpointed this pay phone already.
But he had to say something. No sense in
lying about where he was… but he had to play dumb… ease into
it.
He licked his lips.
“Great idea, Terry. Next time they come
knocking, tell them you spoke to me. Tell them I’m like you said…
really upset about Dad’s death and hanging out at the
graveyard.”
“No way, Tom. I’m not lying for you. You’ve
dug one big lousy hole for yourself, but I’m not getting in there
with you.”
“Come on, Terry.”
“No! Look what you’ve done to my life! I
can’t go anywhere without people talking and pointing and
whispering behind my back! I’ve tried to get together with Lisa and
Susan for lunch but they both always seem to have something else to
do, and they can’t get off the phone fast enough. You’re the one
who’s under indictment but I’m the
prisoner. I’m stuck in this house because I’ve got nowhere I can
go!”
Tom gritted his teeth at the sound of her
sob.
So typical. I’m the one whose career is down
the toilet, I’m the one facing opprobrium and jail time, and she’s
all bent out of shape because her social life is on the
rocks.
Fuck. Her.
Okay. Time to send the feds in the wrong
direction.
“Terry, I’m sorry for the way things are
going but I’ll make them right. Just between you and me, I’m about
to leave for Bermuda and—”
She gasped. “Bermuda? But that means you’re…
you’re leaving the country?”
Give the virago a prize!
“Yes, but only temporarily.”
“They’ll hang you if they find out!”
“Don’t worry. I’ve just got an errand to run,
and when I come hack, we’ll be fixed up.”
“What do you mean?”
“You’ll see.”
“But how are you getting there?”
“By boat.”
“You don’t have a boat!”
“I’m borrowing one.”
“You can’t do this! You’ll only make things
worse. It’ll be in the papers and—”
Unable to weather another second of
objurgation, he hung up. Then he leaned against the side of the
booth and squeezed his eyes shut.
They’d loosed the hounds. What the hell was he going to do?
The feds would be sending someone to
Wanchese. When they didn’t find him here they’d assume he was
headed across to Bermuda. Would they go so far as an air-sea
search? He doubted it. But he’d bet they’d send marshals to Bermuda
to nab him when he showed up at the bank.
He had to get out of here mach schnell. But where to?
Philly was out of the question now. Show his
face and they’d toss him into their deepest dungeon.
New York…
Yes… bring the Lilitongue to New York.
Probably an even better place than Philly to learn about it, what
with Columbia University, NYU, the Museum of Natural History and
all.
But where to stay? He couldn’t use a credit
card…
He glanced over to where Jack was stowing the
last of their gear into the coffin-sized trunk of his Crown
Vic.
Jack’s place… a safe haven. Wherever it was,
a sure bet he had it listed under a phony name. Just like his
credit card.
Tom had almost burst out laughing when he’d
seen the name on the gas receipt. John Tyleski… the name from the
hotel. Tom hadn’t dreamed that was Jack.
Despite all the shit coming down, Tom had to
smile. Little Brother was soon going to be getting one mammoth
MasterCard bill.
The smile faded. The last thing Little
Brother wanted was him crashing for a week or two. If asked, Jack
would turn him down—no question. So he’d have to get in through the
back door. There had to be a way. After all, he had an eight-hour
drive to figure it out.
Yeah, like it or not, Jack was going to have
a houseguest. And once he got himself inside, there he’d stay until
he’d unlocked the mysteries of the Lilitongue.
Tom smiled. Call me Sheridan Whiteside.