The Quiet Game. Greg Iles

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The Quiet Game - Greg  Iles

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Not while his killers walk free.”

      Maybe Ike the Spike is some kind of religious nut.

      “Now, here you come, thirty years later, and in one day you got more people talking about Del’s killing than they was the day he died.”

      “That wasn’t my intent.”

      “That don’t matter. Don’t you see? What goes around comes around! You just an instrument. An instrument of a higher power.”

      “I’m a guy with a big mouth. I’m not an instrument of anything.”

      Ransom shakes his head and laughs with eerie certainty. “You just sit tight. You gonna understand everything in a minute. You gonna thank old Ike for this one.”

      He turns right at the Ford dealership and crosses Lower Woodville Road near the paper mill, which glows fluorescent in the dark like a small city, churning white smoke into the night sky.

      “Where are we going? The river?”

      “Battery plant.”

      “The battery plant? What for?”

      “Privacy. They closed right now. Asian market’s down. They crank back up in thirty-six hours.”

      There are few lights on this road. Beneath the sulfurous odor of the paper mill drifts the thick, ripe smell of kudzu, sweetened by a breath of honeysuckle. The river is only six hundred yards away, and just a few feet below our present elevation.

      The dark skeleton of the Triton Battery plant materializes to our right as Ike turns onto Gate Street, then right again into a parking lot lightened by the pink glow of mercury vapor. The Triton Battery Company came to Natchez in 1936 to build batteries for Pullman rail cars. In 1940 they retooled the line to manufacture batteries for diesel submarines. After the war it was truck batteries, marine batteries, whatever fit the changing market. The last I heard, Triton was using its ancient equipment to produce motorcycle batteries for European manufacturers.

      Ike stops the cruiser on the far side of the parking lot. We’re sitting on an acre of gravel packed into dirt by years of hard use, bordered on three sides by trees and unkempt grass. The west side faces the main gate of the battery plant, with Gate Street running between. I used to bring girls out here in high school.

      “Is this where Del Payton died?”

      “This is it,” Ransom says. “Come on.”

      “Where?”

      He laughs harshly. “You a nervous son of a bitch, ain’t you? Come on.”

      I get out of the cruiser and follow him across the gravel. A massive old pecan tree grows out of a clump of grass at the center of the lot. The spaces in its shade are probably coveted by everyone who uses the lot.

      Ransom stops ten yards short of the tree, his back to me.

      “Thirty years,” he says. “Thirty years ago Del Payton parked his Fairlane right in this spot. When he came out of the plant, the bomb was in his car.” He half turns to me and spits on the gravel. “I seen car bombs go off, man. It’s a motherfucker. That fire burned forty minutes before they got it out. Del was sitting behind the wheel all that time.”

      I stand silent in the buzzing of the lights, wondering where Ike Ransom has seen car bombs go off. He squats on his haunches and picks up a piece of gravel.

      “A man’s soul left this earth right here.”

      I walk a few steps closer. “Look, Ike … I know what happened that night. And I’m damn sorry it did. But I don’t see any connection to me.”

      He stands and points at me, his black eyes smoldering. “I’m gonna say two words, college boy. After that you gonna be in this thing up to your neck.”

      “Okay.”

      “Leo Marston.”

      He watches me as though waiting for me to guess a riddle.

      “Leo Marston? I don’t get it. What—”

       “Judge … Leo … Marston.”

      My palms tingle. “Are you saying Marston was somehow involved in the Payton murder?”

      “Involved?” Ike the Spike laughs quietly in the dark. “Oh, yeah.”

      “That’s impossible. What could Leo Marston possibly have had to do with Del Payton?”

      “He was D.A. back then, wasn’t he?”

      My head is swimming. “Leo Marston was district attorney in 1968?”

      “You didn’t know that? It was in the article this morning.”

      I see my father jerking the paper from my hands and wadding it up. “I didn’t read the whole thing.”

      “That wasn’t too smart, was it?”

      “You’re saying Marston covered something up? Buried evidence while he was D.A.?”

      Ike fires his rock across the street like a major league outfielder. It flies over the cyclone fence bordering the plant and strikes something metal, silencing the crickets for a few seconds. “I’m saying all these years that motherfucker been handing out jail time and making millions, he should have been rotting at Parchman Farm.”

      A dark thrill ripples through my chest. “You’re saying Marston was involved in the actual crime?”

      “I done said all I got to say.”

      “You can’t drop a bomb like that and then shut up! How do you know any of this?”

      “You a cop in this town for twenty years, even a black cop, you get to know some things.”

      The hair on my arms is standing erect. I cannot interpret my emotions. Fear? Excitement? I walk the ten yards to the pecan tree, unzip my pants, and urinate on its trunk as I try to get my mind around what Ransom has told me.

      “Shook you up, huh?” he says, laughing.

      I zip up and turn back to him. “You’ve known for thirty years that Leo Marston was guilty of a felony and you’ve done nothing about it?”

      “Who says I knew for thirty years? I wasn’t on the job thirty years ago. What I’m gonna do anyway, man? A nigger cop on the bottle gonna go up against the judge? That’s why you here, man. Takes somebody like you to do it.”

      “Like me?”

      “You’re white, famous, and you make your money someplace else. They can’t hurt you much here.”

      “Who’s they?”

      “That’s what you got to find out.”

      “Christ. Just tell me what you know. I’ll take it and run with it.”

      Ike

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