"What you call it on the street. Himself, he'd take some Internet Blue. Viagra." To Maddox's scowl, Cullen said, "Yup. Bolt stresses it was 'only a few times,' as though he should be eligible for further sentence reduction for not doing it to hundreds or thousands of kids. Good Sergeant Pail found out about this somehow, and instead of taking him down, used it against him. Which raises the question of how did Bucky Pail know that veterinarians handled not only pseudoephedrine, the main ingredient in making meth, but the other government-restricted precursor, iodine?"
"Ibbits," said Maddox, seated across from him in a chair upholstered in brocaded rose blooms. The ticking came from a ceramic clock on the otherwise empty mantle behind him. Everything else was in open boxes, half packed, and probably had been for months. It was an old house with attendant aches and pains. Including the irregular wood creaks Cullen kept hearing upstairs.
"Ibbits indeed," said Cullen. "A fugitive from justice, a nomad with the epic misfortune of cutting through Black Falls on his way to nowhere. Of being pulled over in one of Bucky Pail's notorious speed traps. Hugo Ibbits was Patient Zero for meth here in Mitchum County. Like a spore floating on the air, who landed inside our throat. He did spend time in lockup, brother Eddie finally confirmed it. Bucky came and got him out on a Sunday night, though Eddie still insists his brother released him. He truly believes that Ibbits cracked up his own car and died in the fire. And he still backs his brother's innocence one hundred percent on the meth lab. When we showed him printouts from his brother's Internet searches, seeking property in Daytona Beach, Florida, Eddie actually broke down. Guy cried."
Maddox nodded but demonstrated no sympathy.
Cullen rounded it up quickly, tired of the details he had spent the last forty-eight hours assembling. "Wanda moved it through Sculp and others via a drop at the vet's. Sculp dealt to the other kids at his house, and the kids further seeded it around town. The supply chart was growing, doubling every eight to twelve weeks. The tipping point was approaching soon, where Bucky would have to turn it loose. Sculp dealt to Sinclair. Don't know how they connected originally, and unless Frankie gets a grip on himself after detox, we'll have to wait for Sinclair to get caught to find out."
Maddox sat forward. "They need help here for this. We have to go through town and figure out some way to deal with these people, reach out to them. They've had a taste of it now. We need to get in here and address this before it occurs to somebody that they can cook this shit themselves, in the trunk of their car."
"Well," said Cullen, "I'm with you on that, but let's be honest. That's the mopping up that never gets done. The message is always, 'Mission Accomplished,' through the press, and, yes, through my office. Drugs confiscated? Problem solved. That's the only story people want to hear. I just don't see us getting much support. Especially with the Sinclair hysteria ongoing. You following that?"
"Not really." Maddox had been out of action since Wanda Tedmond's arrest.
"Sightings all over town," said Cullen. "A twelve-year-old kid walking home from a friend's house yesterday saw Sinclair beckoning to him from some trees across the street. People've seen him cutting across their neighbors' backyards. Calls come in to nine-one-one saying he's down in the basement
"Police radio last night said something about coyotes—"
"Roaming the streets, it's true. A couple of them got shot and killed. The Air Wing helicopter with its thirty-million-candlepower searchlight rousted them all from the state forest. Or maybe they were drawn here by the scent of fear. Of course, having state police strike teams in full ninja tac skulking through your neighbor's pasture, clearing old barns and outbuildings—that doesn't exactly help calm things down. Doesn't ease much anxiety. My way over here, I passed people out on their front steps, hunting rifles across their laps. Guy shot out his own patio window last night, thought he saw a shadow. They're pulling down antique Winchesters from over the fireplace, riding around with loaded handguns on the passenger seat. Massachusetts has the most restrictive firearms laws in the country, but enforcing those statutes tonight would mean packing half the town into two small jail cells. This is a holiday for people, a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to lock and load in public, maybe even bag themselves a gen-u-ine child molester."
Maddox said, "Wonderful."