“Get out of there and help our friend find his brother. I’ll call you when I get more information.”
When she switched off the phone, Boone glanced over his shoulder. “What did Hollis Wilson say?”
“There were three bodies in the hotel room.”
“Doyle is clever. It’s not going to be easy to kill him.”
“Keep driving,” Maya said. “I’ll think up a plan when we get there.”
They turned onto State Highway 14, a four-lane road that climbed a range of eroded hills covered with dry vegetation. Every ten miles or so, a commuter town appeared with the same chain restaurants placed between a Starbucks and a McDonalds. Maya studied each new road sign, but her eyes always returned to the man driving the car.
“You killed my father.”
“That is correct. I tried to get his cooperation, but it didn’t work. Thorn was a very stubborn man.”
“You would have killed him anyway.”
“Correct. There was no logical reason to keep him locked up somewhere.”
Boone glanced in the rearview view and changed lanes. His calm voice, his lack of emotion, reminded her of one particular person-her father.
“I am planning to kill you,” she said. “But in some ways you’re already dead. You’re a cardboard box with nothing inside. You don’t care about anyone, and no one cares about you.”
“I cared about my daughter.” For the first time, Boone’s voice was hesitant and filled with pain. “I would have died for her that day, but I lived. I don’t know why I lived.”
They came over the hills and saw the shops and street lights of the two adjacent communities of Palmdale and Lancaster. This was the farthest extension of the suburban sprawl-a daily commute from downtown Los Angeles to single family house with a hungry mortgage. But the moment they passed through this area, the Mojave Desert surrounded them. The only bright features in this region were illuminated billboards for Indian casinos and plastic surgeons.
Rosemond was a desert community for the pilots and military personnel who worked at Edwards Air Force Base. The population was so mobile, so impermanent, that they passed a lot where pre-built houses had been placed on trailers. They turned off the freeway, glided past a shopping center, and took a right turn near the local high school. Twisted Joshua trees lined the road and a mountain with three peaks was visible in the distance. The mountain was separate from everything else, so deliberate that it looked as if the earth had rejected something malignant and thrust it upward toward the sky.
Boone turned off the paved road and stopped at a cattle gate with a large sign.
“This road goes up the mountain to the mining site.”
“How far away is it?”
“Three or four miles.”
“Switch off the headlights and go slowly.”
Boone opened the gate, got back in the car, and drove up a dirt road that led to the mountain. Light came from the stars and moon, but the road was overgrown with weeds; it would be easy to get lost. After the first half mile, Maya rolled down a side window. She could hear cicadas and the crunch of their tires on patches of gravel.
Boone stopped at the entrance to the abandoned gold mine halfway up the mountain. A cyclone fence topped with strands of razor wire surrounded the mining claim and no “trespassing signs” were everywhere. Someone else had arrived earlier; a red sedan was parked in front of gates held together with a lock and chain.
They both got out of the car. Now that Boone had guided her to the gold mine, there was no longer any need for his existence. The shotgun was a noisy weapon. She should draw one of her knives and slit his throat.
“He’s here,” Boone said. “This is one of the rental cars driven by my employees. Doyle took the car after he killed the men at the hotel.”
Maya stepped away from the gate and looked up the slope. Outdoor lights marked a winding pathway to the top of the mountain.
“Who’s guarding the children?”
“I left two employees here. They’ll be suspicious if Doyle shows up alone.”
Boone returned to the red sedan, opened the door and inspected the garbage Doyle had left on the passenger seat. Maya touched the outline of the stiletto hidden beneath her jacket, but she hesitated and left the knife in its sheath.