If I have my way, youll get your chance.
Necker glances out the window at the hospital as we descend. I won't keep you, then. I'm going to be on crutches for a while anyway. Go do what you have to do. Anybody asks, I'll say I think that shooting was some kids that got out of hand.
I appreciate it, Hans.
Would it help you to know where those shots came from?
It might.
I'll get somebody to truck that balloon over here, and I'll have a look at it. I know our altitude when we were shot. If the shots were through and through, I can figure the angle and probably where the shooter was standing. Approximately, anyway.
The chopper touches down on the roof like a butterfly alighting on a leaf. Necker smiles. A lot better than our last one, eh?
Paramedics yank open the side door and motion for me to exit the cabin. As I leave, Necker grabs my arm and says, I'll tell Danny to be on call for you.
Thanks.
Paul Labry is waiting for me on the helipad. I've never seen him this upset before. What the hell happened up there, Penn?
I told you on the phone. Somebody took a couple of shots at us. Necker had to set down hard.
Are you okay?
I'm fine. How many people know what happened?
Are you kidding? With cell phones? I'll bet most of the pilots know by now, and the town won't be far behind.
Caitlin?
I don't know. How do you want to handle this? Some people are already saying we should cancel the rest of the flights. Todays
and
tomorrows.
Pilots?
No. Couple of county supervisors.
I'm not surprised, but I'm not sure we should cancel. I think this was probably an isolated event. Necker agrees. The pilots are going to want input on the decision. We need to call a meetinga closed meetingpilots and the committee only. Lets give them long enough to get down and packed up. I look at my watch and give Paul a time.
He nods. Where? The Ramada convention room?
That's fine. I need you to handle the press on this, Paul. I'll be at the meeting, but youre the point man for now.
What? I don't know anything!
Necker can give you the details.
Labry looks more upset than when I first got out of the chopper. Where are you going to be?
You can reach me on my cell.
Labry groans as he follows me to the hospitals roof door.
Go on ahead, I tell him. I have to make a call.
Dont you need a ride back to your car?
My dads giving me a ride. Hes working downstairs. You go ahead.
Labry starts through the door, then stops and looks back at me. Hey, I almost forgot. I got those names you wanted.
I pause, momentarily confused. Names?
The Golden Parachute partners. That's where I was when you called. My garage. I didn't want to say anything on the cell, you were so cloak-and-dagger about it. I had to write the names down so I wouldn't forget. There are six partners sharing the five percent stake.
Are two of them Chinese?
Labry nods, then produces a scrap of paper that looks like part of a grocery bag. I shove it deep in the same pocket that holds Danny McDavitts number. Go on, Paul. Youre going to have a lot to deal with. Talk to Necker first.
As Labry shakes his head and walks into the hospital, I speed-dial 1. Seamus Quinn answers the phone with a note of amusement in his voice.
Seems like we spoke only this morning, he says, chuckling.
What the fuck are you trying to do?
I shout.
What would you be talking about?
You just tried to kill me!
How could I do that? I'm having a pint on the
Queen
as we speak. Quinn obviously assumes I'm taping the call.
Look, I don't get it. I told you, I'm going to do what you want. I'm going to find your disc. But I cant do it if I'm dead.
No idea what youre talking about, Quinn says airily. Unless its that balloon crash I just heard about.
What else?
Well, you must be exaggerating. If somebody really wanted to kill you, theyd have blown your fuel tank.
If you were trying to send me a message, I don't understand it.
No message. But now that I have you on the phone, I do recall someone saying you had other things to do this morning than go riding in a balloon.
So that was the message.
Quinn continues, I also recall telling you to leave your cell phone switched on.
A reporters been bugging me. I had to shut it off.
Not my problem. I like to know where my mates are, remember. Gives me a sense of security.
I cant even think of a response.
Got to run now, mate. Business is picking up, now the balloons have landed. You call back soon. I like to hear good news.
When the connection goes dead, something lets go in me, and I wobble on my feet. Delayed shock, probably. I grab the doorknob to steady myself, then back up and sit down on an air-conditioning unit. Hugging myself to stop the shakes, I wonder how I'm going to get downstairs to meet my father.
My cell phone is ringing in my pocket. I'm already wishing I hadn't switched it back on. This time its not Caitlin or Labry.
Penn, its Chief Logan. I heard you had some trouble.
A little bit.
Nobody hurt too bad, I understand. Lucky break.
Yeah.
I was wondering if you could swing by headquarters for a minute.
What for? Is it about the shooting?
No. I've had your girlfriend here threatening me with lawsuits till Judgment Day if I don't let her kid out of jail.
Chief, I cant deal with Libby Jensens problems right now.
Logan voice changes suddenly; all the official tone goes out of it. We need to talk, Penn. And not on a cell phone. I'm at headquarters for another half hour. Find a way.
I sigh in resignation. Okay. I'm on my way.
I'm only six feet from the roof door, but I feel its a mile away. The
thought of making my way to the ground floor of the hospital seems beyond me. I don't know if its sleep deprivation or the crash. I am gathering my last reserves of energy to stand when I look to my left.
Facing me like a giant blue dragonfly is the Athens Point helicopter, its rotors turning as though they could go on for eternity. Danny McDavitt sits at the controls like a waiting chauffeur, his eyes on me.
There is my ride.
CHAPTER
20
Police headquarters is on the north side of town, far from the most recent residential and commercial development, closer to the predominantly black part of town. The low-slung, one-story structure looks like a cross between a 1970s office suite and a federal prison minus the barbed wire. Wedged between a Pizza Hut and the Entergy building, its surrounded by car dealerships, auto parts shops, cheap motels, and a cash-for-your-car-title place. Across the street, amid this haphazard sprawl, stands Devereaux, one of the most beautiful Greek Revival mansions in the South, now dwarfed by the massive Baptist church that has become its neighbor, the only new construction on this side of town.
Inside the glass-walled entry area of the station, I announce myself to the officer behind her bulletproof glass window. After a show of finishing some paperwork, she buzzes me through the door and points to the chiefs door.