Winterkill - C. J. Box [134]
“GET OUT OF MY OFFICE!” she shrieked. “JUST GET OUT!”
Joe snatched the release and the letter before she could destroy them. Watching her carefully, he leaned back in his chair and shouted over his shoulder.
“Nate!”
He watched her eyes as they swung from him over his shoulder toward the door. He heard a shuffle behind him, and watched as her eyes widened and the blood drained from her face.
Joe glanced back. Nate Romanowski stood inside the office now. He cradled Bette in one arm and held the gaping muzzle of his .454 Casull to the head of the cocker spaniel.
“Sign your name,” Nate said, “or the little dog gets it.”
Despite the situation, Joe almost smiled.
“You’re monsters!” Strickland whispered. “My poor Bette.”
Joe turned back to her. Silently, he slid the documents back onto her desk. He took a pen from his shirt pocket and took its cap off. Handing her the pen, he said, “Let’s get this done.”
Relief surged through him as she absently reached out for the pen.
He turned the documents around and pointed to the blank signature lines. Strickland leaned forward and her hand hovered over the papers for a moment, but then he saw something dark and malevolent wash over her face angrily twist her features. Suddenly, she threw the pen aside.
“Go ahead and kill the dog,” she snarled. “I’m not signing anything. What’s in this for me? Huh? What do I get out of this? Nothing! Fucking nothing.”
Joe hoped she was bluffing. But when he looked into her eyes, into the cold fury of madness, he knew she wasn’t. He had horribly miscalculated.
Behind him, he heard the metallic click of the hammer being pulled back on the revolver.
But Nate cocking the revolver made no difference. When he looked at Melinda Strickland, he saw a grotesque shell filled with venom and bile. He did not see a glimmer of human feelings. Even the death of her dog, the only thing she appeared to have feelings for, could not break through the armor of her narcissism. He was outmatched, and felt utterly defeated. He knew he wasn’t capable of pushing this any further. To do so would be to join her in her malediction.
“Nate, let the dog go,” Joe said, sighing.
“What?” Nate’s voice was hard with anger. “What are you saying?”
“Let the dog go.”
“Joe, you’ve got to go through with . . .”
He rose and turned. “It’s not going to work.”
Nate narrowed his eyes as he studied the leering face of Melinda Strickland, then came to the same conclusion Joe had. The dog licked his hand.
Nate released the hammer and shoved his revolver back into his shoulder holster with indignation. He bent and freed the dog.
“Get out of my office,” Strickland said coldly, triumphantly. “Both of you.”
Then she called her dog.
Joe walked past Nate into the reception area. He was crushed, humiliated. Nate joined him a beat later. They stared at each other in the reception area, both confounded by what had just happened.
“Bette, damn you, come here!” Strickland shouted from inside her office.
Instead, the cocker spaniel tore through the door and leaped toward Nate. The dog wanted him to hold her again.
Thirty-six
Joe Pickett stood at the bar in the Stockman’s and ordered his third Jim Beam on the rocks. While darkness came and the snow fell outside and drinkers entered complaining about the weather, he stared at his face in the cracked mirror.
He felt impotent and defeated, and the slow warmth of the bourbon spreading through him didn’t assuage his humiliation. When the glass came he threw back his head and drained it, then signaled to the bartender. The man looked skeptically at Joe for a moment, but poured another drink.
It was probably dinnertime at home, but it didn’t register with him. Pool balls clicked in the back of the bar, but he barely heard them. He realized that somehow he had lost Nate as he walked the three blocks from the Forest Service office to the Stockman’s, and he hadn’t looked around for him until he was seated on the red leather stool. He didn