Winterkill - C. J. Box [91]
Joe had been waiting for this moment. “I suppose you could even knock out the engine of an SUV driving down U.S. Highway 87 near Great Falls, Montana.”
Nate turned and leaned against his Jeep, folding his arms across his chest. His uncommonly sharp eyes bored into Joe.
“Theoretically, yes,” Nate said evenly. “That could happen. Now I really owe you.”
“No, you don’t, I told you that.”
“Do you want me to get your little girl back?”
Joe paused, and thought. He was torn. The question wasn’t unanticipated. Nate was well aware of the empty chair at the table, as they all were.
“We’ve got a lawyer working on it,” Joe said. “That’s our only recourse right now.”
Nate didn’t scoff, but his silence said enough.
“I worry about her, Nate. She’s been abandoned once already, then taken away from her school. If you go in and grab her, she might be even more messed up. We love her too much to put her through that right now. Plus the fact that we would be facing kidnapping charges. The law isn’t on our side in this.”
Nate nodded. “You’ve thought about it.”
“For days.”
“Something bad is going to happen up there in that compound. I think we both know that.”
Joe rubbed his eyes and sighed, and said nothing.
“Maybe something could happen to Melinda Strickland,” Nate said.
Joe looked up, shocked. Nate was deadly serious. He had also crossed a line by threatening Strickland in front of Joe, who had a duty and obligation to take some kind of action. Nate knew all of this.
“Don’t ever say anything like that to me again, Nate,” Joe said, his voice low and hard.
Nate didn’t react.
“Joe, thank you for dinner and the very nice evening. Your wife and daughter are wonderful. Sheridan is something special. I think she would make a good falconer.”
Joe nodded, half-hearing Nate. His head was swimming with situations and consequences.
“I’ll be available if you need me,” Nate said. “Do you hear me, Joe?”
It seemed to have gotten much colder in the past two minutes, Joe thought.
“Joe?”
“I hear you.”
Twenty-four
At the same time on Battle Mountain, a convoy of vehicles had driven up the road outside the Sovereign compound. As they approached the fence, their engines rumbling, Jeannie, Clem, and April had pulled back the curtain and watched through the trailer window. Clem doused all the lights so they could see out but not be seen.
There were either six or seven vehicles out there. As they came up the road, they turned toward the fence as if they were going to drive through it. But then four of the trucks stopped abreast of each other, their headlights flooding the snow between the road and the compound. The trailing vehicles parked behind the first row. Framed by the rising, glowing clouds of exhaust, the front row of trucks looked like they had risen from a cauldron. Their drivers were silhouetted: Jeannie could see Sheriff Barnum behind the wheel of his Blazer. A woman sat next to him holding a little dog in her arms. A bullhorn squawked, and someone asked for Wade Brockius.
Brockius had been outside his trailer, and he ambled toward the headlights.
“Stop where you are.”
Spotlights from two of the vehicles came to life and bathed him in light.
Brockius stopped.
“This is Dick Munker of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. We have reason to believe that you’re harboring a dangerous fugitive by the name of Spud Cargill, who is a murder suspect in an ongoing investigation. We would like your permission to conduct a thorough search of the premises.”
Brockius raised his arm to block the spotlights from his eyes. His deep voice rumbled through the icy night. He didn’t need a bullhorn.
“Permission denied. I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“We can show up with a court order tomorrow.”
“That won’t do you any good, Mr. Munker. There’s nothing to be found. Mr. Cargill is not here. There are people here who would consider your forced intrusion to be an armed attack.”
Wade Brockius paused, and