The Investigator (Letty Davenport, #1) (53)
After a while, Kaiser said, “I’m gonna z-out.”
“Okay.” Letty cleared out her mind and sat.
* * *
At midnight, to the south, a set of headlights bounced and ricocheted along the road that led to the small building and within a minute or so was followed by a second set of lights. Letty nudged Kaiser, who yawned and asked, “We on?”
“We’re on,” Letty said.
The two trucks stopped at the corrugated metal building and a light came on inside it. Twenty minutes later, the light went out, and while they couldn’t see the men, they could see two brilliant flashlight beams as the men behind them crossed the distant road and then disappeared into the creek bed. Five minutes after that, the tanker truck rolled out of the creek bed, onto the road, and started out toward the interstate highway.
When all they could see were the tiny dots of the red running lights on the back of the tanker, Kaiser cranked up the Explorer and they went after it, running parallel to it and a mile north. Seven or eight minutes later, as the truck was approaching the interstate, Kaiser leaned on the gas and they closed in.
The tanker turned northeast toward Odessa. They followed it into the city, where it got off, turning right into the industrial section of town. Kaiser stayed well back, Letty tracking the three red lights on the back of the truck with the binoculars. A quarter-mile off the highway, the truck took a right onto a narrow street into a jumble of metal buildings. Kaiser turned off the Explorer’s headlights and followed, but pulled off the road when they saw taillights flare on the truck.
“What do you want to do?”
“How far are they from us, do you think?” Letty asked.
“Maybe . . . half a mile. Maybe not quite that,” Kaiser said.
“Let’s ditch the Explorer and hike down there. See what’s going on.”
“We could lose them coming out . . .” Kaiser said.
“If they’re stealing oil, we sorta know where they’re going,” Letty said.
* * *
They found a semicircular drive where they could park behind a pile of unidentifiable rusting machinery that appeared abandoned, probably oil field equipment. Kaiser got a flashlight from his gear bag, and they hurried out to the street, to find that the tanker had disappeared.
“I’m sure he stopped—they were doing something down there,” Kaiser said.
“Probably pulled off,” Letty said. “If they didn’t, we’ve lost them, so we might as well run down there and find out.”
The moon had come up, slightly fuller than the night before, and the track was so light-colored that they could jog along it. When they were close to the place they’d last seen the tanker, they heard some quiet rattling coming from a long, high shedlike metal building behind an eight-foot chain-link fence. They edged closer, up to the gate, and found a chain loosely wrapped around the gatepost and the leading edge of the gate, and an unlocked combination padlock holding the chain in place.
Kaiser carefully pulled the lock off the chain and whispered, “Need to use my cell phone flashlight.” He turned his back to the gate and holding the padlock against his chest, turned on his cell phone light, allowing a needle point of light to shine through his fingers and onto the padlock. The lock was of the type that required four letters to be aligned: they were currently reading POOH.
“Like Winnie,” Letty whispered.
Kaiser whispered back, “When people go into a place with a lock like this, they don’t scramble the letters until they go back out.”
“Good to know.”
They heard more mechanical noises from the shed, but muffled, as if people were moving carefully, on tiptoe. Kaiser unwrapped the chain and they slipped through the gate, rewrapped the chain, and walked in the dark to the end of the shed.
Both ends of the shed were open and the tanker was parked inside. They were looking at the back of the truck, and saw two men walking along the side of the truck, carrying something that resembled a scuba tank.
“What the hell is that?” Kaiser whispered.
“No idea.”
The men carried the object to the passenger-side door on the truck, and one of them stood on the external step, opened the door, and took out a plastic sack. They pulled the sack over the thing, whatever it was, then one of the men stood on the step and pulled the passenger seat back. The object was at least somewhat heavy, because it took both of them to get it into the truck and behind the seat.
“The thing had some kind of coupling coming out of the end,” Letty whispered. “See that?”
“Yup.”
When the object was in the truck, one man pulled the seat back and climbed inside, while the other man walked around the truck to the driver’s-side door. The truck started, pulled carefully out of the shed. The passenger got out at the gate, pulled it open, and the truck drove through. The passenger wrapped the chain around the gate, locked it, and got back in the tanker, which rolled away down the street.
“Let’s go see what we can see,” Kaiser said.
Using the flashlight, they walked into the shed. There they found an installation of heavy pipes, some of them a foot in diameter, coming out of the ground, running along for fifty feet or so, then disappearing back into the ground. There were several even larger pipes on top, and a number of smaller ones running into short vertical installations.