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Dark of the Moon

Dark of the Moon

Titel: Dark of the Moon
Autoren: John Sandford
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fuckin’ Flowers.
     
    V IRGIL SAT at the corner of the hill, below a clump of plum trees, none more than about six feet high, and all of them armed with sharp spurs: not quite thorns, but they hurt like hell if you jabbed yourself.
    He was sitting on a crumbled pile of rock. He hadn’t had the eye to hit major-college pitching, but he had the arm to be a major-college third baseman. He sat and threw rocks into the dark, listening to them hit, listening for reaction.
     
    H EARD WHAT he thought might be a footfall, below, a hundred feet away. Threw a rock out in front of it: the quiet got quieter. Interesting. Threw another rock into the night, and picked up the rifle. Nothing. Threw another rock…
     
    W ILLIAMSON HAD the movement figured. Somebody moving to his right, kicking an occasional rock. He focused: he had three shells left. Had to be Flowers…didn’t it? He thought about firing, but didn’t. Instead, amazed at himself, he called, “Virgil? You there?”
     
    V IRGIL HEARD HIM clearly, below, to the right of the place he’d been throwing rocks. Eased himself flat, pushed the rifle out in front of him.
    “Todd? You okay?”
    Williamson: “I’m pretty fuckin’ scared, man.”
    Virgil: “We know you’ve got that shotgun. Margo’s gonna be okay; she’s got glass but she’s not going to die. Give it up.”
    Williamson: “You won’t shoot me?”
    Virgil: “You must’ve heard about the time I shot at somebody fourteen times, and missed. Everybody else in town has. I don’t want any goddamn gunfight.”
    Williamson: “Judd killed my mom.”
    Virgil: “I know. I got the same opinion from a medical examiner. Judd beat her with a pool cue. She was already dying when she went over the edge. You really were a miracle baby.”
     
    W ILLIAMSON HAD him spotted. Flowers was no more than thirty or forty feet away, he thought. He was invisible, but then, he must be invisible to Flowers, as well. He half stood, pointing the gun in the direction of the voice. “I quit,” he said. “What do you want me to do?”
    Virgil said, “Toss the shotgun…”
    Williamson pointed the shotgun and fired and pumped and then…
     
    H E WAS on his back, the shotgun clattering away, and he was looking up at the moon, almost full, and he heard Flowers shouting and then a bright light cut his eyes and Flowers was kneeling next to him.
    The pain cut in: everything below his waist was on fire. He said to Flowers, “I guess that wasn’t too bright.”
     
    “N O, IT WASN ’ T, ” Virgil said. He patted Williamson on the shoulder, not knowing what else to do. “Hang in there, we’ll have you on your way in a minute.” He stood up and circled the flash, “Over here, goddamnit, we need to carry him, we need a litter, something to carry him with. Let’s go, go…”
    People were running and Virgil sat down next to Williamson again. “That was you that shot at me and Joanie down in the dell?” Virgil said.
    “Ahh,” Williamson said. Pain and agreement. But of course, it had been. That’s why he hadn’t known about a better place to park, and a better approach to the dell: Williamson wasn’t a Bluestem native, had never taken his girl up to swim in the dell.
    “One more question, before everybody gets here…”
    Williamson was fading but he answered the question and then Jensen stumbled up, Stryker was there, and more people were yelling and they started moving Williamson.
    Too late.
    The hornet’s nest of .30-caliber slugs had taken out a chunk of his femoral artery, a chunk no bigger than a corn kernel. That was enough.
    Halfway down the hill, Todd Williamson bled out and died.

26
    V IRGIL AND J OAN took a picnic basket up to the top of the hill above Stryker’s Dell, spread a blanket, ate pastrami sandwiches, and found faces in the clouds. Virgil was disturbed. He’d never killed anyone before, though he’d once shot a woman in the foot.
    Joan knew that, and prattled on about other things, trying to pry his mind away from it. He knew what she was doing, and it wasn’t working.
    And she said, “…definitely in love. When Jim was married the first time, it was like, you know, they were obliged to get married. They dated in high school, and everybody else got taken, so they got married. But they never clicked. There wasn’t any heat.”
    “I hope it works out,” Virgil said. “Jesse’s a handful. I saw them this morning, and they seemed pretty happy.”
    “Well, at least Todd…it’s all done
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