Greg Iles 3-Book Thriller Collection: The Quiet Game, Turning Angel, The Devil’s Punchbowl. Greg Iles

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Ike. Then he turns his head toward me, and the intensity in his eyes is frightening. “Tried to kill him how?”

      “Poison.”

      “Take more than poison to kill that bastard.”

      “I think Presley planted the bomb that killed Del Payton.”

      Ike rolls his tongue around his cheek, his eyes moving on and off me. “Why you think that?”

      “I’ve got reasons. What do you think?”

      “I think all the evidence in the world against Ray Presley ain’t gonna get you no closer to Marston.”

      “Why not?”

      “’Cause Presley don’t know shit about the reason. You got to find the why of it.”

      “Take me back to my car. You want me to fight your battles for you, but you don’t give me shit for help.”

      He spins the wheel and turns the cruiser back toward Wal-Mart, his anger making his knuckles pale. “Marston fucked up my family,” he says through clenched teeth. “Fucked up my whole life. That’s all I’m gonna tell you. It’s got nothing to do with Del Payton, but I knew you could bring Marston down behind the Payton thing. That’s why I went that way. I want that bastard destroyed. In public. That’s what’ll hurt him the most. If it wasn’t for that, I’d have killed his ass a long time ago.”

      I settle back on the seat and let my eyes go out of focus, which turns the oncoming headlights into slow white meteors. “Ike … I want you to swear on the soul of your mother that Marston ordered Del Payton’s death.”

      He doesn’t hesitate. “On the soul of my mother. If it wasn’t for Leo Marston, Del Payton would be alive today.”

      I guess that’s all the certainty I’m going to get.

      When I get home, Caitlin’s Miata is parked in the driveway. She is standing in the garage, talking to Officer Ervin.

      “What’s the matter?” I ask as she walks out to meet me.

      “Dwight Stone just called me at the newspaper. He thinks his phone is tapped. He gave me the number of a pay phone and told me to get you to call him back. He said you should use a pay phone too. One far from your house.”

      “Let’s go.”

      I drive us up to the bypass, then north to Highway 61. There’s a pay phone at a convenience store, but I go a little farther to a grocery store parking lot, where there won’t be so much noise. Caitlin stands beside me as I dial the number.

      “Yes?” Stone says in a gruff voice.

      “It’s Penn Cage.”

      “Listen to me, Cage. My phone is tapped. So are the phones at your father’s house and medical office. Probably the lines at the newspaper as well. You should also assume physical surveillance. I’m being watched right now.”

      “Jesus. Someone just tried to kill Ray Presley.”

      Caitlin tenses beside me, but I ignore her.

      “How?” asks Stone.

      “Poisoned his IV bag. He had a coronary, but he’s still ambulatory and mad as hell.”

      Stone says nothing, but I can sense the conflict raging within him. “I know you worked with Portman on the Payton case in sixty-eight,” I tell him. “Why did you lie about that?”

      “I was trying to protect people.”

      “Who?”

      “You, for one. Others too.”

      “Well, I took your advice. I talked to the eyewitnesses, and I’ve placed Presley at the crime scene.”

      “And?”

      “I want Leo Marston, not Presley.”

      “Squeeze Presley.”

      “That’s easier said than done.”

      Stone laughs softly. “Ray’s not very squeezable, is he? Son of a bitch tried to kill us on the highway to Jackson.”

      “You’re the agent who got shot at on Highway 61?”

      “Portman and me, if you can believe it. The world would be a lot nicer place if Presley had hit Portman that day.”

      “Why? Goddamn it, what’s the big secret? What was so terrible that Hoover had to bury it under a national security seal? What’s Portman hiding? What could still scare you after thirty years?”

      “Do you really expect me to answer that?”

      “You’re damn right I do. It’s time you listened to your conscience, Stone.”

      “Don’t preach to me, son. You haven’t earned the right.”

      “If Ray Presley shot at you, why didn’t he go to jail for it?”

      “He did.”

      “Presley went to Parchman for drug trafficking. That’s a state prison.”

      “Justice doesn’t always happen in a straight line. You should know that.”

      I grip the phone with exasperation. “I’ve thought of a way to go after Marston without Presley’s help, but it’s a gamble. A big one. I can’t afford to be wrong.”

      “What are you asking me, counselor?”

      “Am I wrong about Leo Marston being behind the murder of Del Payton?”

      Just as I decide Stone is not going to answer, he says, “You’re not wrong.”

      A wave of triumph surges through me.

      “But that doesn’t mean there’s evidence lying around waiting to be picked up,” he adds. “I don’t know how much I’d gamble on being able to prove it.”

      “Did you prove it in sixty-eight?”

      “Yes.”

      “Then why wasn’t the son of a bitch prosecuted?”

      “Oldest reason in the world. You just be damn sure about every step you take. This road doesn’t end where you think it does.”

      “Hold on. Why are you willing to warn me, but not to help me?”

      “I thought I just did. Good hunting, counselor.”

      When I hang up, Caitlin grabs my arm, her eyes furious. “Why didn’t you tell me someone tried to kill Presley?”

      “No one knew but my father, and he asked me not to tell.”

      She takes a deep breath and expels it slowly.

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