It made a single, searching turn, dragging a cone of light, then dropped toward the parking lot with balletic precision, shoving a wave of shuddering air under its blades. A UH-60 Blackhawk with a full armament rack, rigged for night reconnaissance. It seemed like a lot, for one little girl. But that was the situation in which they now found themselves. They held their hands over their brows against the wind and noise and swirling snow.
As the chopper touched down, Sykes seized Richards’s elbow.
“She’s a kid!” he said over the din. “Do this right!”
Whatever that meant, Richards thought, and stepped briskly away, toward the opening door.
TEN
They were moving quickly now, Wolgast at the wheel, Doyle beside him, thumbing away furiously on his handheld. Calling in to let Sykes know who was in charge.
“No goddamn signal.” Doyle tossed his handheld onto the dash. They were fifteen miles outside of Homer, headed due west; the open fields slid endlessly away under a sky thick with stars.
“I could have told you that,” Wolgast said. “It’s the back side of the moon out here. And why don’t you watch your language?”
Doyle ignored him. Wolgast lifted his eyes quickly to the rearview to find Amy looking back at him. He knew she felt it too: they were joined together now. From the moment they’d stepped off the carousel, he’d cast his lot with her.
“How much do you know?” Wolgast asked. “I don’t suppose it matters now if you tell me.”
“As much as you do.” Doyle shrugged. “Maybe more. Richards thought you might have problems with this.”
When had they spoken? Wolgast wondered. While he and Amy were on the rides? That night in Huntsville, when Wolgast had gone back to the motel to call Lila? Or was it before?
“You should be careful. I mean it, Phil. A guy like that. Private security contractor. He’s little more than a mercenary.”
Doyle sighed irritably. “You know what your problem is, Brad? You don’t know who’s on your side here. I gave you the benefit of the doubt back there. All you had to do was bring her back to the car when you said you would. You’re not seeing the whole picture.”
“I’ve seen enough.”
A filling station appeared ahead of them, a glowing oasis in the gloom. As they approached, Wolgast eased off the gas.
“Christ. Don’t stop,” Doyle said. “Just drive.”
“We’re not going to get very far without gas. We’re down to a quarter tank. This could be the last station for a while.”
If Doyle wanted to be in charge, Wolgast thought, at least he would have to act like it.
“Fine. But just the gas. And both of you stay in the car.”
They pulled up to the pump. After Wolgast shut off the engine, Doyle reached across and withdrew the keys from the ignition. Then he opened the glove box and removed Wolgast’s weapon. He released the clip, buried it in the pocket of his jacket, and returned the empty gun to the glove box.
“Stay put.”
“You might want to check the oil too.”
Doyle exhaled sharply. “Jesus, anything else, Brad?”
“I’m just saying. We don’t want to break down.”
“Fine. I’ll check it. Just stay in the car.”
Doyle stepped around the back of the Tahoe and began to fill the tank. With Doyle out of the car, Wolgast had a moment to think, but unarmed and without the keys, there wasn’t much he could do. Part of him had decided not to take Doyle completely seriously, but for the moment, the situation was what it was. He pulled the lever under the dash; Doyle moved to the front of the Tahoe and lifted the hood, momentarily shielding the cabin from view.
Wolgast twisted around to face Amy.
“Are you okay?”
The girl nodded. She was holding her knapsack in her lap; the well-stroked ear of her stuffed rabbit was peeking through the opening. In the light of the filling area, Wolgast could see a bit of powdered sugar still on her cheeks, like flecks of snow.
“Are we still going to the doctor?”
“I don’t know. We’ll see.”
“He has a gun.”
“I know, honey. It’s all right.”
“My mother had a gun.”
Before Wolgast could assemble a response, the hood of the Tahoe slammed closed. Startled, he turned sharply in time to see three state police cruisers, lights on, tearing past the filling station in the opposite direction.
The passenger door of the Tahoe opened to a gust of damp air. “Shit.” Doyle handed Wolgast the keys and swiveled in his seat to look at the cruisers as they passed. “You think