Page 127
Story: South of Nowhere
Which turned his attention to his aching shoulder and nose.
Prick…
Her coming on to the woman, through her brother, was yet another element of the plan, a way to misdirect them. To humanize the woman they thought was Sergeant Tam and to put any suspicions to bed—so to speak.
“I would’ve done it.”
He knew. She did everything he asked. She was making a lot of money. And, besides, he knew she was a switch-hitter. You had to be in the adult film industry.
At the thought of the Shaws—Colter in particular—he felt a sting of anger.
Would there be time to get even?
Maybe. More people would die today. If Shaw was one of them,fine, but Foley was too professional to deviate from one of his plans simply for revenge.
He took the cigarette from her long fingers and drew hard, then handed it back. “Update?”
“The cute little officer thinks that the farmer’s guilty. Her boss, the one playing police chief—”
“The mayor, right?”
“Yeah, Tolifson. He’s a bozo, but it’ll look good for him to get a collar—I think he wants to be chief when this is over with—so he’s drinking the Kool-Aid that Annie’s guilty. Shaw? No, he doesn’t believe it. He’s fucking smart. He might as well be a gold shield. He thinks she’s being set up.”
“Hm.”
When he took on the job, Foley had bolted together a plot that he was pretty sure would work, with a lot of moving parts. But damn elegant, he’d thought. They’d use two explosive charges—first to take the top off the levee and scare the asshole inhabitants out of town. Then Alisette and the fake corporals—from a criminal crew in Oakland—would show up to monitor everything. If it was going according to plan, the second charge would destroy the levee completely, and unleash the flood.
But there had to be a contingent plan—in case the responders learned the levee collapse was not natural.
Which they had.
Thanks to gold-shield Motorcycle Man…
And, apparently, a bunch of fucking honeybees.
The contingent plan was that the mine owner, Gerard Redding, had orchestrated the sabotage to destroy the town to mine lithium. But then the authorities would discover thatthatwas bogus, and Annie Coyne was the real guilty party. She had wanted to ruin Redding and his mine because of some feud between them and because she wanted his allocation of water.
He watched Alisette Lark stub out the cigarette on the top of asoda can and drop the butt in. She stretched and walked into the bathroom. She was completely nude but it was an unselfconscious walk, not surprising for someone who had had sex with probably a thousand men and women over the past decade.
They had met under odd circumstances. She herself had been running a scam to defraud a Boston businessman—some neat plot, involving crypto—when Foley had been on-site coincidentally to shoot the man in the head for some other infraction. He’d waited to kill him until she got her money. Professional courtesy. They started talking and he noted her intelligence and grit and blasé attitude about blood, and unquenchable lust for cash.
He hired her two, three times a year for front work. Sexy and smart. She did her homework. In her gym bag now were a half dozen books she’d devoured for the job, includingFlood Plain Managementby the University of Minnesota, theU.S. Army Manual of Dams and Waterwaysand the data sheet on Hydroseal by the manufacturer. The last she’d discovered on her own. That the goo was used on hard surfaces, not dirt like the levee, was a question that woman Dorion Shaw had raised. But, damn, Lark had finessed it, without raising any suspicions.
Now, in this unfortunate motel room, Foley too rose and, not bothering with the shower, dressed fast, reflecting that only two aspects of the job remained.
Destroying the levee with the remaining set of charges.
And the other, his immediate goal: to kill the farmer girl.
She would protest to the police firmly that she wasn’t guilty and she’d probably do a credible job. People might start to believe her, and do some serious investigating.
But if she was killed by the “mercenary” she’d hired, so she couldn’t dime him out?
Well, case closed.
56.
Time Elapsed from Initial Collapse: 28 Hours
Prick…
Her coming on to the woman, through her brother, was yet another element of the plan, a way to misdirect them. To humanize the woman they thought was Sergeant Tam and to put any suspicions to bed—so to speak.
“I would’ve done it.”
He knew. She did everything he asked. She was making a lot of money. And, besides, he knew she was a switch-hitter. You had to be in the adult film industry.
At the thought of the Shaws—Colter in particular—he felt a sting of anger.
Would there be time to get even?
Maybe. More people would die today. If Shaw was one of them,fine, but Foley was too professional to deviate from one of his plans simply for revenge.
He took the cigarette from her long fingers and drew hard, then handed it back. “Update?”
“The cute little officer thinks that the farmer’s guilty. Her boss, the one playing police chief—”
“The mayor, right?”
“Yeah, Tolifson. He’s a bozo, but it’ll look good for him to get a collar—I think he wants to be chief when this is over with—so he’s drinking the Kool-Aid that Annie’s guilty. Shaw? No, he doesn’t believe it. He’s fucking smart. He might as well be a gold shield. He thinks she’s being set up.”
“Hm.”
When he took on the job, Foley had bolted together a plot that he was pretty sure would work, with a lot of moving parts. But damn elegant, he’d thought. They’d use two explosive charges—first to take the top off the levee and scare the asshole inhabitants out of town. Then Alisette and the fake corporals—from a criminal crew in Oakland—would show up to monitor everything. If it was going according to plan, the second charge would destroy the levee completely, and unleash the flood.
But there had to be a contingent plan—in case the responders learned the levee collapse was not natural.
Which they had.
Thanks to gold-shield Motorcycle Man…
And, apparently, a bunch of fucking honeybees.
The contingent plan was that the mine owner, Gerard Redding, had orchestrated the sabotage to destroy the town to mine lithium. But then the authorities would discover thatthatwas bogus, and Annie Coyne was the real guilty party. She had wanted to ruin Redding and his mine because of some feud between them and because she wanted his allocation of water.
He watched Alisette Lark stub out the cigarette on the top of asoda can and drop the butt in. She stretched and walked into the bathroom. She was completely nude but it was an unselfconscious walk, not surprising for someone who had had sex with probably a thousand men and women over the past decade.
They had met under odd circumstances. She herself had been running a scam to defraud a Boston businessman—some neat plot, involving crypto—when Foley had been on-site coincidentally to shoot the man in the head for some other infraction. He’d waited to kill him until she got her money. Professional courtesy. They started talking and he noted her intelligence and grit and blasé attitude about blood, and unquenchable lust for cash.
He hired her two, three times a year for front work. Sexy and smart. She did her homework. In her gym bag now were a half dozen books she’d devoured for the job, includingFlood Plain Managementby the University of Minnesota, theU.S. Army Manual of Dams and Waterwaysand the data sheet on Hydroseal by the manufacturer. The last she’d discovered on her own. That the goo was used on hard surfaces, not dirt like the levee, was a question that woman Dorion Shaw had raised. But, damn, Lark had finessed it, without raising any suspicions.
Now, in this unfortunate motel room, Foley too rose and, not bothering with the shower, dressed fast, reflecting that only two aspects of the job remained.
Destroying the levee with the remaining set of charges.
And the other, his immediate goal: to kill the farmer girl.
She would protest to the police firmly that she wasn’t guilty and she’d probably do a credible job. People might start to believe her, and do some serious investigating.
But if she was killed by the “mercenary” she’d hired, so she couldn’t dime him out?
Well, case closed.
56.
Time Elapsed from Initial Collapse: 28 Hours
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