Brodie said, “Goddamn it-”
“How do I figure two full days’ minimum?” Kubion said. “Well, we take a hostage or two not long before we go, and we tell the rest that the hostages are dead if anybody even puts his head out while we’re still in the valley, and they won’t have any way of knowing when we actually do leave. We tell them we’re going to take the hostages with us, too; we won’t do it, we’ll tie them up somewhere or off them, what the hell, but the others will believe what we say. They’ll keep right on sitting in the church until somebody comes and lets them out. Another thing we do is cut the telephone lines late tomorrow night; that isolates the valley completely and eliminates any threat of a phone call to the cops if anybody that isn’t in the church gets suspicious before we’ve got them all rounded up. So even if they did get out before the pass is open, what could they do?
“Now: once we reach this Coldville, we buy a used car-they’ve got a dealership there, it’s listed in the phone book, and shagging one is too risky-and then we head for Reno or maybe Tahoe. A little of the blister from Sacramento should be off by next Monday; we play it careful on the road, we’re okay. In Reno or Tahoe, we split up and take separate planes south or east or north. We get off the West Coast entirely, relocate somewhere else.”
Kubion moistened his smile again. “So there it is-all laid out. Simple, beautiful, a score like nobody ever pulled off before. Well? What do you think?”
“I think you been blowing too much weed,” Loxner said, trying to make a joke of it. “Man, that ain’t a score, it’s like plain fucking suicide.”
The smile vanished.
Loxner laughed nervously. “This is safe ground, you don’t pull a job on safe ground no matter how good it is. Christ, Brendikian would never stand for having this place blown that way. And he’s got Circle connections, Earl, you know that.”
“The Circle isn’t going to pick up on small-time crap like having an independent safe house blown, I don’t care what kind of connections Brendikian’s got. Screw Brendikian.”
“You don’t know him, man, he ain’t anybody to fool with.”
“Screw Brendikian,” Kubion said again.
Brodie leaned forward. “Earl, the people here know your face and mine; disguises or masks wouldn’t be worth a thing. The cops would have those Identikit drawings on every front page in the country once the ripoff was reported. Our cover identities would be blown, that’s one thing. And we’ve all taken falls; they’d come up with our names sooner or later, they’d have mug shots out in addition to the composites.”
“I thought of that, I told you I thought of everything. The hell with it. It’s not that hard to build a new cover somewhere. And the FBI’s been looking for Ben Hammel for eight years for the bank job he was in on in Texas. He’s still walking around.”
“I’m not Ben Hammel, and I don’t want my ass in that kind of sling. There’s a damned good chance the cops would connect us up with Greenfront, too-and the chance we’d run into trouble taking over here and people would get killed. Murder One heat, either way. We wouldn’t last a week anywhere in the country.”
“Oh, bullshit,” Kubion said. “How much play can a thing like this get in Connecticut? In Florida? In goddamn Puerto Rico? A few days and it dies off. Sure, the fuzz keeps right on looking. But you both know how simple it is to change what you look like. You grow a beard for a while; half the men in the nation wear beards these days, and how can some cop identify you when you’re wearing a face full of whiskers? You cut your hair or let it grow or dye it another color. You gain weight or you lose weight or you wear padding. You live quiet, don’t spread any money around. You know all the tricks as well as I do. And we’re split up, that’s another thing; three guys in three different parts of the country who don’t look anything like the ones who ripped off Hidden Valley, California.”
Brodie said, “Damn it, none of it makes sense. Even if we could stay on the loose, where are we? Say we could take as much as thirty grand out of here: that’s only ten thousand apiece. How long is ten bills going to last each of us? We’d have to look for a new score inside of three months, and with all the heat still on. How many pros are going to want one of us in on a job carrying that kind of blister?”
“So we play it solo for a while. We’ve all worked solo before. The heat will die, it always dies sooner or later.”
“For God’s sake, they’d have our names; they’d know exactly who did the job. That kind of heat doesn’t die.”
“Hell no, it don’t,” Loxner said.
“I’ll tell you a way the cops won’t get our names at all, a way to come out of it free and clear and to hell with this cabin,” Kubion said.
“What way?”
“Set fire to the church or blow it up before we go on the snowmobiles. Don’t leave any witnesses who can identify us, waste them all.”
Loxner gaped at him the way you would at something under a decaying log. Brodie’s shoulders jerked involuntarily. “Hey, hey, hey,” he said. His voice was incredulous. “What kind of freaky talk is that? Jesus, what do you think we are?”
“Okay, okay, then forget that. But listen-”
“We listened enough already,” Loxner said, “I don’t want to listen to no more. We don’t want no part of what you’re laying down here, no part of it.”
Brodie said, “Earl, what’s got into you? You’re all of a sudden after this valley like you got a hard-on for the place, you’re acting like a crazy amateur-”
Kubion was on his feet in one swift motion, upsetting his chair. His cheeks had suffused with dark blood, and his eyes were like a pair of live embers. He slapped the table with the flat of one palm, hard enough to topple Loxner’s empty ale bottle and send it clattering to the floor. “Call me a crazy amateur, you son of a bitch, call me a crazy amateur!”
Loxner and Brodie were standing now as well, backed off a couple of steps, muscles tensed.
“You stupid pricks, can’t you see the kind of thing this is? A whole valley, a whole valley, nobody ever did anything like it. Well? Well?”
Watching him, Brodie and Loxner remained silent.
Kubion took a breath, released it sibilantly-and as suddenly as it had come, the rage drained out of his face. “All right,” he said, quiet-voiced, “all right then, all right,” and turned and walked out of the kitchen.
Very softly Loxner said, “Oh man!” He went to the refrigerator and took out another ale and popped the cap and swallowed half of it without lowering the bottle. Then: “Things are bad enough without shit like that. The last thing we need is shit like that, Vic.”
Brodie did not say anything.
“He gave me the creeps with all that crazy talk,” Loxner said, “that funny look in his eyes. It was like he’s a different person all of a sudden, you know what I mean?”
Brodie’s mouth was pinched in at the corners, his eyes grimly reflective. “Yeah,” he said slowly. “Yeah, I know what you mean.”
Nineteen
Black-edged clouds began to drift over Hidden Valley Friday afternoon, obliterating the pale sun and giving the air a dry, ice-tinged quality; but it did not snow again until very early Saturday morning, and then nothing more than a light dusting which would not interfere with work on the slide. When Matt Hughes came down Lassen Drive a few minutes past 8 A.M., the village seemed bathed in a soft luminosity created by the snow’s whiteness reflecting light filtered through the low cloud ceiling. Under normal circumstances, such a view would have pleased him-the serene beauty of a mountain valley, his valley, in literally its best light-but he barely noticed it now; he had too many divergent things preying on his mind.
There was the slide, of course: all the problems it had caused, the extra work it made for him as mayor. There was Peggy Tyler, whom he had seen several times since their lovemaking in Whitewater Tuesday night but whom he had not spoken to for their mutual protection; whose lush and eager body glowed in his memory, exciting him with fresh and consuming desire and filling him with a sense of frustration because he could do nothing about it.