Red Rain: Lightning Strikes: Red Rain Series #2 (12 page)

John knew it had, though he refused to face it. Something happened a long time ago, to someone else, someone he did his best to forget. It could happen again. He closed his eyes and what passed through his mind was the most terrifying thing he’d ever seen, something that hadn’t occurred, but something that could.

His wife and kids tied up to three chairs. Backs facing, so that they stared out in a circle. Their mouths gagged, and all of them crying. For their lives. Dark mascara dripped down Diane’s face, and snot ran from each of his boy’s noses and over their lips, because they couldn’t wipe it away.

John walked around in front of them, holding a gun, sweat dripping down his own head.

He stopped in front of Mark, turning so that he faced his son. He raised the gun, the muffled screams falling on deaf ears.

John opened his eyes and looked back across to Harry.

“Never. That would never happen.”

“John, never is a long, long time. Three weeks ago, did you think you’d kill the priest?”

John didn’t reply.

“Exactly. You need to get this out of your system, come back here and deal with whatever Detective Dick Face has cooked up. Or, leave, come back, and kill him—while you’re gone, the case will go cold and he’ll move on; when you come back, just make sure he doesn’t have anymore chances to arrest you.”

“What about Diane and the boys? What the hell do I tell them?”

“Look, man. Your company is big. I know you can find a reason to work somewhere else for a while.”

* * *

R
obert Vondi hadn’t been lying
when he said all these things were files. Scott supposed it made sense, given that Lori and John saw the doctor before computers were the next big thing. Still, three boxes full of papers wasn’t an easy load to carry.

He put the last box down, dropping it in his living room.

It had been a long day. A really long one.

Nine hours in the car. An hour talking with Robert and loading the car. He was finally home, though.

Scott collapsed on the couch. He flipped the light on, as the sun was going down outside.

“I don’t have any idea the order of the boxes,” Robert had said. “I took them when he died and never went through them. Just didn’t see any interest in his business. I thought more about the legality, and I imagine I could get in trouble if someone came asking. Just don't get me into any."

“Completely understand. I’m only looking into this for my family, no one else concerns me at all,” Scott said.

“I haven’t thought about Gerald in a while,” the man said, as if not hearing Scott at all. “He died almost twenty years ago and we were never that close. We liked each other well enough, we were just very different, I guess. He went to med-school and I worked in big oil.” Robert didn’t look at Scott as he spoke, just stared off the porch into the yard. “I wish he hadn’t gone like that, though. No one should go like that.”

“I’m sorry,” Scott said. “What happened, if you don’t mind talking about it?”

“To be honest, I’d rather not. It isn’t something I want to ever really think about again.”

Those words ran through Scott's mind the whole way home.

He knew that Vondi died, but not the details—he actively avoided reading anything on the man’s death when he was researching, though the pieces he saw showed it was tragic. He knew that Lori and John stopped seeing him because he died, and everyone was sort of stunned, but no one said anything about murder. He didn’t remember exactly how they said he died, but would have most certainly recalled if it had been something brutal.

Did John or Lori know?

And if so, why hadn’t they told him?

Now he sat with three boxes full of the late doctor’s notes, unsure if he wanted to start now. If he did, he imagined he’d be up all night, and while the older he got, the less he slept, he didn’t think an all-nighter was good for someone his age.

Yet, he now wanted to know what the folders said.

Scott pulled the first box over and lifted it from the floor to the seat on the couch next to him.

He started reading.

18
Present Day


Y
ou see them
?” Harry said.

“It’s nothing,” John said.

“If nothing is the cops, then that is most certainly what it is: nothing.”

John glanced back in his rearview mirror. Police were behind him, and had been for some time. A single cruiser that took every turn with him, remaining two cars back no matter what John did.

“They’re following us , that’s what you think?”

“That’s what I know,” Harry said. “For now, in a cruiser, because they want you to know they’re following, but when that disappears, there’s going to be other cars. You won’t see them but they’ll be watching us. All the time now, because Dick Face is sure you’re the one. He’s going to look at everything you do, and eventually—if you don’t listen to me—we’re going to slip up and he’s going to catch us. We have to get out of here, John.”

John's eyes went back to the road and he tried to ignore the cop car.

Harry was right. He could call the car nothing and think that these guys were just going the same way as him, but he knew if he started taking some crazy turns, that car would be right behind him. Same distance.

A flash of his family tied up flew through his mind, and he knew Harry was right about that, too. Things were slipping from his control. John should have stopped himself from harming Father Charles. A year ago? If something like that had come up—though he saw no possible reason for it—John would’ve simply subdued the old priest and then figured out what the hell was going on.

This week, though, he killed the man.

And Harry had already said that he wouldn’t stop. That he would keep going until he felt satisfied. And he wasn’t nearly there, yet.

So, that led to the inevitable question; should John leave? What happened if he did?

His mind went through the list as it would have a business plan.

The heat on him would eventually die down.

He could
maybe
satisfy Harry.

When he was ready to come back, he could finish Tremock without as much pressure surrounding the whole situation.

The negatives were simple: he left his wife at a time when she needed him, at a time when she was ready to walk out if he didn’t change.

If he stayed, though, everything fell apart.

* * *


I
might take a vacation
,” John said.

“What?”

John didn’t turn to look at Diane; he remained on his back looking up at the ceiling. Looking at her now would be disastrous, because he couldn’t take what he would find in her eyes. He knew pain waited once she fully understood what he was saying.

“I need to get away for a little while, from everything.”

“From me? From the kids?” she said, disbelief rising in her voice. “That’s what you mean?”

“Jesus, Diane. Don’t do this. I just need some space. From this goddamn cop, from my sister. I just need to get my head straight, and I think I can do that better if I’m alone for a little while.”

His wife was quiet for a few minutes, both of them listening to the night's silence.

“How long?”

“A month, maybe two.”

“Two months, John? You’re going to leave the kids and me for two months? Let’s just call this what it is, then—a trial separation.”

“That’s not what I’m saying at all, Diane. I don’t want to separate—”

“Except that’s exactly what you’re doing,” she said. “You’re separating yourself from us.”

“I just need some time to be alone. That’s all I’m saying. I’m not leaving you.” He paused for a second, wondering if the next sentence would come out positive or negative. “I’m thinking about working from our San Francisco office for a little while. I’m sure my boss would okay it … this isn’t me going off the deep end, I just think if I get away from everything for a bit, I’ll find some peace. I’ll be able to come back and live a normal life again.”

“And what about the cop?”

“I got a lawyer,” John said, having no other lie loaded in his chamber. “If the cop comes back here, just refer him to the lawyer. I’ll have him call you tomorrow.”

“What’s his name?” Diane said.

“Johnson, I think,” he said.

“You think?”

“Yeah, a buddy of mine at work recommended him.” John felt that he might start sweating blood, just dripping red liquid from the pores on his face.

“When are you planning on leaving?” she said.

“Maybe by the end of the week.”

“You’re going to tell the kids?”

He finally looked over to her, a spike of anger flooding his mind. “Are you kidding? You think I’m just going to leave without talking to them?”

“I’m just asking, John.”

He looked back up at the ceiling. “Yes, I’m going to talk to them. I’ll tell them it’s for work, and that I’ll be back soon … this is for the best, Diane. It’ll let me recharge, get rid of some of this pressure weighing on me. When I come back, I’ll be different. I’ll be who I used to be.”

19
A Portrait of a Young Man

L
ori had chosen
her words very carefully.

She spent time planning this conversation, because it might be one of the most important conversations of her entire life. She didn’t want their talk to sound overly planned, though. She needed it to sound fluid, as if Scott’s input helped shape the decision.

“What would you say to John finishing high school overseas?”

Scott laughed from the counter, holding it in because if he opened his mouth, he would spew coffee all over the kitchen.

“What?” he said, after swallowing, a smile across his face.

“I think it would be an amazing opportunity for him,” she said. “I’ve been thinking about it for a few weeks. I believe we could do it.”

“I mean, I know we could do it, Lori—but why? First, private schools are a lot of money.
A lot
of money. And the schools here are fine.”

“It’s not about whether they’re fine or not. I think that for him to go overseas for two years would be absolutely fabulous. When he applies to colleges, to put that on his application? That’s going to set him apart from everyone.”

Scott shrugged, conceding the argument. He took a sip of his coffee.

“Have you even talked to him about it?”

“Not yet. I wanted to see what you would say first.”

“Well, there’s a lot to discuss. When are applications due? It’s eight months until the next school year starts. What are the costs? What will he say?”

Lori nodded, a rush of happiness taking over as it appeared he was at least okay with discussing the possibility. “Yeah, I’ve been looking into it. It’s about twenty thousand a year. We have the college fund ready, so we’re not paying anything there. We could afford forty thousand.”

Scott’s lips tightened. “We could afford it, but it’s not something I want to do lightly. What’s he going to get being over there that he can’t get here?”

Lori smiled. She knew her husband well enough to know that if even a crack existed in the door to opportunity for his children, it would open no matter what.

* * *


I
want
to talk to you about something,” Lori said.

“About?” John answered.

Lori had waited until the two of them ordered lunch, and they would have some uninterrupted time together. He didn’t go into school today because of a dentist appointment, and now they sat in a small diner called The Grill.

“How are you liking school?” she said.

John smiled. “I don’t think you’ve ever asked me that before.”

“I know. Outside of the one incident when you were younger, you’ve never gotten in any trouble, and your grades are always fine, so I figured things are good. Are they?”

“They’re okay,” John said and took a sip of his Pepsi.

“Your father and I have been talking about something very important and we want to see what you think about it.”

“Okay, let’s hear it.”

“We wanted to see how you would feel finishing high school in London?” Lori laid the question gently across the table, like a feather floating from the sky.

“London, as in London, England?” John’s eyes widened.

“Yes, the same.”

“For two years?”

“Well, during the school year. Holidays and summers you’d be back with us. So it’s really only a year and a half or so.”

“You want me to go?” John asked. She couldn’t see all of the emotions on his face, but she knew his mind was turning. Trying to understand what this meant and why it was being offered.

“John, I’ve talked to Dr. Vondi….”

A pause. “What did he say?”

Lori sighed and leaned back in her chair. She knew it would come to this. Because she could tell Scott any number of reasons why John should go, but she couldn’t do it with John. She didn’t consider what she told Scott lies, because they were all true—just not the reason that mattered. John, though … he would know. Even if they never spoke about it, always using something as an intermediary, their connection was too strong for lies.

“He said he’s concerned about you.”

“Hasn’t he always been?” John asked.

“I think …,” she paused, wanting to make sure that he understood the gravity of what she said. “I think he’s more concerned now than he has been before.”

She looked at her son, pleading with him to understand what she was saying. To not make this difficult. To accept what she offered and get out of anyone’s reach who might harm him.

“How’s school?” she said, though not meaning school at all.

John’s eyes narrowed. God, she wanted him to just tell her the truth. To recognize what was happening and what
could
happen if they didn’t act.

“It’s tough,” he said.

He didn’t mean school, though—because school had never been tough for John.

“See, then there could be some benefit to you trying London out. If you don’t like it after a semester, we can always bring you back.” Lori saw tears in his eyes, not quite on the verge of spilling over, but close. “Honey, I love you, more than you’ll ever know, and that’s why I’m asking you if you’ll go. You don’t have to if you don’t want to. The choice is yours, but … I don’t know what will happen if you stay.”

He nodded.

“And, John, it’s not like you’re going to Haiti. London is one of the most historical cities in the world. Your American accent will have the girls swooning. You’re going to have fun over there, much more than you would here.”

“Okay,” he said.

Neither of them spoke much the rest of their meal. Lori felt relief that the conversation was finished. She knew this would be hard for John, but he couldn’t stay; if he did, she didn’t know what Vondi would do. She didn’t know what
John
would do.

A fresh start.

That’s what he needed.

* * *

S
even months had passed
since John sat in The Grill with his mother and was told he needed to fly across the world.

Now he looked at his room, a world that he started creating at ten years old. Six years of world building, and he had to decide what to take and what to leave.

The school year went by too fast. He hadn’t thought it would; next August had felt like a lifetime away. But now, next month, school started and he would be in another country, away from everyone he ever knew.

It’s for the best
, he told himself.

And he knew that to be true, though he didn’t want it to be. He wished that he could say his mother and father didn’t love him and they were sending him away because they didn’t want to be around him anymore. None of that was true, though.

If he stayed, something would happen. Something really, really bad. Even now, he wasn’t sure putting an ocean between him and whatever this was could stop it. But, staying, especially with Vondi in the picture, wasn’t an option anymore. John felt like he might break—and soon.

He didn’t know if his mother understood the seriousness, how close he was each day to doing something irrevocable. The only thing keeping him from it was the thought of leaving.

And now, the day was almost upon him. He had one more week in the States and then he—and all his possessions—would be put on a plane to London.

Get started
, he thought.

And so he did, picking through his clothes and putting them in suitcases. He wondered what kind of outfits they wore in England, if his wardrobe would be laughed at. Packing was good. It took his mind off the real reason for leaving, letting him imagine what life might be like if he quit contemplating murder.

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