“It's a beast.” McNab trailed his fingers over the hood. “Man, this baby's gotta wing.”
“Bet your ass.”
But when she started to open the driver's-side door, he took her arm. “Wait. Who says you get to pilot?”
“My partner's primary.”
“Not good enough.”
“Her husband provided the transpo.”
“Not even,” he said with a shake of his head. “I've got a grade on you, Detective Baby.”
“I wanna.”
He laughed, and dug into one of the many red pockets on his baggy pants. “I say we flip for it.”
“Let me see that credit first.”
“This level of trust is sad,” he said, but handed it over.
She studied it, turning it over, and back.”Okay, you call, I flip.”
“Tails, due to how much I like yours.”
“Fine, I'll take heads due to the fact yours is so empty.” She tossed the credit, snatched it out of the air, and slapped it on the back of her hand. “Damn it!”
“Woo-wee! Strap it in, She-Body, 'cause we're going to orbit.”
She sulked as she walked around to settle in the passenger's side. Not that it wasn't bodacious, even in that position. The seat molded to the tail McNab admired, like a lover's hands, and the dash was a gleaming curve armed with enough gauges to make his claim of going into orbit not out of the realm.
Still pouting, she engaged the map, programmed the desired location. And was told in the computer's melodious male voice the most direct route, given an ETA of twenty minutes at posted speed limits.
Beside her, McNab put on black-framed sun shades with hot red lenses. “We gonna beat that down cold.”
He was right, she thought. The beast did wing. The thrill of it infected her enough to order the sky roof open.
“You pick the tunes,” McNab shouted over the roar of engine and wind. “And pump it up!”
She went for trash rock-it seemed to fit-and screamed along with the song as they tore south.
The insanity that was McNab cut the travel time nearly in half. She took a portion of the time saved to rake at what was now a bird's nest on her head, and tame it down to her usual ruler-straight bowl cut. McNab pulled a folding brush out of another pocket and whacked at his knotted ponytail.
“Nice place,” he commented, looking around the yard, the field of corn that ran alongside it. “If you go for rural.”
“I do. To visit anyway.” She studied the neatly painted red barn, the smaller, trimmer outbuilding, and the pasture where a few spotted cows grazed. “Somebody takes good care of this.”
She got out, looked at the narrow patch of lawn, the ordered beds of fading fall flowers that led to a two-story white house with a covered porch.
There were festive pumpkins, two with grinning faces carved out, on the steps, reminding her Halloween was only days away.
“Do some dairy,” she observed. “Some row crops. Probably got some chickens out back.”
“How do you know?”
“This stuff I know. My sister's farm's bigger than this, and she does okay. Hard work, you have to love it to do it, I think. Place like this is small, but well-run. Mostly they self-provide, sell some of the harvest and the by-products at a local market for transport. Maybe they got a hydro out back, too, so they can grow through the winter. But that costs.”
He was out of his element. “Okay.”
“She was an exec at one of the top communication companies in New York. Fast track. Husband was a producer-daytime drama. Individually they were pulling down double our combined salaries.”
“Now they're working a farm in Nebraska.” He nodded. “I get you.”
“Somebody already knows we're out here.”
“Yeah.” Behind the shades, his gaze tracked to the dot of yellow blinking above the front door. “They got motion and cams, bet it's a three-sixty scan. More on the fence lines, east and west. A lot of security for a little farm in West Bumfuck, Nebraska.”
They went to the door, knocked. Steel-reinforced, MacNab thought, and noted the shimmer on the windows. Lockdown alarms.
“Yes?” The voice through the intercom was female, and firm.
“Mrs. Turnbill? We're the police. Detectives Peabody and McNab with the New York City Police and Security Department.”
“That's not a police vehicle.”
“No, ma'am, it's private.” Peabody held up her badge. “We'd like to speak with you, and will wait until you verify our IDs.”
“I don't-”
“You spoke with my partner, Lieutenant Dallas, earlier today. I understand your caution under the circumstances, Mrs. Turnbill, but it's important we speak with you. If you refuse, we'll contact the local authorities and arrange for a warrant. I don't want to do that. We've gone to some trouble to keep this visit quiet, to insure your safety.”
“Wait.”
Like Peabody, McNab kept his badge up, and watched the thin red light shimmer out, scan both. Somebody, he thought, isn't just cautious, but scared. Right into the bowels.
The door opened. “I'll speak with you, but I can't tell you any more than I told Lieutenant Dallas.” As she spoke a man came down from the second floor. His face was grim, his eyes cold.
“Why can't you people leave us alone?”
“The kids?” his wife asked him.
“Fine. I told them to stay upstairs.”
He was stocky in the way that told Peabody he did manual labor routinely. His face was tanned, squint lines scoring out from his eyes, his hair bleached by the sun.
Six years, she thought, had made him more farmer than urbanite. And the way he kept one hand in the pocket of his work pants warned her he was carrying.
“Mr. Turnbill, we've come a long way, and not to harass you. Roger Kirkendall is wanted in connection with seven homicides.”
“Only seven.” His lips twisted. “You're way off.”
“That may be, but it's the seven that concern us at the moment.”
Taking his cue, McNab kept his voice as brittle as Turnbill's, and drew crime scene photos from his field bag. “Here's a couple to start.”
He'd gone straight to the kids, and saw by the way Roxanne paled, it had been the right move. “They were sleeping when he cut their throats. I guess that's a mercy.”
“Oh God.” Roxanne wrapped her arms around her belly. “Oh my God.”
“You've got no right to come in here and do this.”
“Oh yeah.” McNab's eyes were merciless as they met Turnbill's. “We do.”
“McNab.” Peabody murmured it, deliberately reached out and pulled back the photos. “I'm sorry. Sorry to disturb you, sorry to upset you. We need your help.”
“We don't know anything.” Turnbill put his arm around his wife's shoulders. “We just want to be left alone.”
“You left high-powered, high-paying jobs six years ago,” McNab began. “Why?”
“That's none of your-”
“Joshua.” Roxanne shook her head. “I need to sit down. Let's just sit down.”
She turned into a living room showing the chaotic debris of young children, the comfortable wear of family. Roxanne sat, gripped her husband's hand. “How do you know he did it? He's gotten away with so much for so long, how do you know?”
“We have evidence linking him to the crimes. Those children, their parents, and a domestic were all murdered in their beds. Grant Swisher was your sister's attorney in her divorce and custody case.”
“Six years ago,” she replied. “Yes, he could wait six years. He could wait sixty.”
“Do you have any idea where he is?”
“None. He leaves us alone now. He leaves us alone. We're not important anymore. We don't want to be.”
“Where's your sister?” McNab demanded, and Roxanne jerked.
“She's dead. He killed her.”
“We believe he's capable of doing so.” Peabody kept her eyes level on Roxanne's. “But he hasn't. Not yet. What if he finds her before we find him? What if you have some information and refuse to cooperate with us, impede our investigation long enough for him to hunt her down?”