"Stewart, Mike - Tom McInnes 03 - Dog Island 1.0" - читать интересную книгу автора (Stewart Mike) dog island MIKE STEWART BERKLEY PRIME CRIME, NEW YORK This is a work of fiction. Names,
characters, places, and incidents either are
the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and
any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments,
events, or locales is entirely coincidental. DOG ISLAND A Berkley Prime Crime Book / published by
arrangement with G. P. Putnam's Sons, a division of Penguin
Putnam Inc. PRINTING HISTORY G. P. Putnam's Sons hardcover edition /
January 2001 Berkley Prime Crime mass-market edition / January 2002 All rights reserved. Copyright © 2000 by
Michael G. Stewart. Cover art by Craig White. This book, or parts thereof, may not be
reproduced in any form without permission. For information
address: G. P. Putnam's Sons, a division of Penguin Putnam Inc., 375
Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014. Visit our website at www.penguinputnam.com. ISBN: 0-425-18204-5 Berkley Prime Crime books are published by
The Berkley Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Putnam Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York
10014. The name BERKLEY PRIME CRIME and the
BERKLEY PRIME CRIME design are trademarks belonging to Penguin Putnam Inc. PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 For my parents
From the beach the child holding the hand
of her father, Those burial-clouds that lower victorious
soon to devour all, Watching, silently weeps. WALT WHITMAN On the Beach at
Night prologue The motor stopped. Cool rain glanced off
the windshield and side
windows in gray needles and disappeared into the dark sheet of water stretched
across the parking lot. Inside the car, a sinewy boy with sun-bleached hair
leaned across the center console and pushed his mouth against a teenage girl's
lips. She put her hand on the back of his head, and the boy began to fondle her
breasts with his left hand. Pulling away, the girl popped open the passenger
door and stepped out onto wet pavement where she spun in a circle, her arms
extended, her palms cupped to catch the rain. Even at night, her face glowed
from warm days of Florida sun. Thick black hair bounced against her shoulder
blades as she danced. The boy said something from inside the
car. The girl stopped and ran across the pavement and onto the sand toward the
surf, where she disappeared into the night. The boy muttered something; then he
stepped out and followed. He found her sitting on a scattered path
of gray and white shells at the high-tide mark, kicking at waves with her toes
as they lapped against her feet and calves. He sat down on the sand behind her,
encircled her hips with his legs, and reached around from behind to hold both
of her breasts in sunburned hands. She seemed not to notice. She sat and
watched whitecaps roll across the rain-splattered Gulf. Growing restless for a response, he pulled
her over backward and rolled on top of her. His hands met behind her neck, and
his legs intertwined with hers. Their mouths worked together while her hands
slowly kneaded the sand beside her hips. Without warning or finesse, the boy's
clumsy hands shoved her wind-breaker, shirt, and bra up to her neck, and the
sun-bleached head moved down to kiss her breasts. The girl lay still for
seconds while his mouth moved over her nipples. Her hands squeezed pockets of
sand. Tears filled the corners of closed lids and rolled down her cheekbones
and temples, mixing with the salt spray and cool raindrops in her hair. "Stop." The boy didn't respond, except to press
harder against her with his hips and to work more frantically with his tongue. "Stop, please." She pushed him
away and stood up. He watched her breasts until she had untangled her clothes
and pulled her shirtfront over the cotton bra. She looked out again at the
whitecaps. Behind her, the boy walked back up the beach and climbed into his
Mustang. The girl turned and walked away down the shoreline. In the distance,
she could hear the car drive away. She carried her sandals dangling from two
fingers and squeezed the sharp, cool sand with her toes as she walked. The
rhythms and the scents of the Gulf echoed the rhythms and scents of childhood;
they reminded her, in a softer, easier way, of the Atlantic shore. There was
still the throb of distant hurt in the waves, but she needed the sound. Maybe
she even needed the hurt. She hugged her windbreaker tight. All around her,
swirls of fog hugged the beach above rippled shadows in the sand. She had hoped the boy in the Mustang would
walk with her along the sand and softly kiss her and maybe tell her something
about the stars, but that wasn't life. She had known that when he asked her
out. Now, she had no way to get home. The girl walked until creosote pilings
marking the end of public access beaches materialized out of the night. Turning
her back to the water, she moved up the beach and found a lounge chair on the
patio of a pastel beach house. There was no car on the oyster-shell driveway
and no sign of life inside. She pressed her fist against the flesh between her
stomach and chest, closed her eyes, and tried to sleep. Voices floated out of the beach house, and
she sighed. Moving quietly out of the chair, she walked around the corner of the
house opposite the driveway and headed for the road. A few paces ahead, a
jagged rectangle of light fell from a window onto a tangle of sea grass,
cockleburs, and dirty sand. She turned toward the beach, but the sound of
something or someone falling brought her back. Crouching to the side of the window,
she peered through the slats of a bamboo blind that hung against the inside of
the glass. She saw four men in the room. One lay on the floor and seemed hurt.
The others were standing. Two wore tank tops, cutoffs, and caps. One of the two
had tattoos on one arm. The fourth man was larger than the others—over six feet and bulky, like a weight lifter or an ex-jock going
to fat. He wore tan dress pants and a red short-sleeved shirt. The big one seemed to say something, and
the other two picked up the injured man by his armpits. Someone was talking—a baritone hum floated into the night. She saw the big man pull a
pistol out of the back of his waistband and put it in the hurt man's mouth. A
loud thoump bounced against the glass in the window, and the hurt man's
cheeks flashed iridescent blood red like a kid shining a flashlight into his
mouth on a summer evening. At the same time, the man's head popped back and he
sagged between the two men in cutoffs. The next instant, all three men swiveled
their heads to look at the window. She may have tried to say "no,"
but what came out was shapeless and guttural—not something so
precise as a word. The big man started out of the room. The other two dropped
the dead man and followed. Within seconds, all three were outside searching the
beach. They found nothing to account for the
sound. chapter one Spring rains east of Baton Rouge had poured
fog across Mobile Bay. A cool
breeze, stirred up by warm days and cool nights, swept down the beach and
across the second-floor deck where it tugged at my robe. Inside, through French
doors, red dots hovered in the dark over the bedside table, showing that it was
a little after four in the morning. Glenfiddich scotch and Umbйrto Eco had
finally put me under a little after midnight—about three
hours before I woke and wandered out on the deck. I was getting used to it. You
can get a lot of thinking done if you aren't able to sleep. The bedroom phone was ringing. A
greenish-white glow pulsed next to the red dots on the clock. The answering
machine was off, and I watched the telephone ring for most of a minute before
walking into the bedroom. I picked up the handset and cleared my throat.
"Hello?" A woman's voice said, "Tom?" "Yeah, this is Tom." "Tom, this is Susan Fitzsimmons. I
apologize for calling in the middle of the night." I felt for the switch on the bedside lamp,
and yellow light jarred the backs of my eyes. "Are you all right?" Susan said, "I'm fine. Something bad
has happened though." "What do you mean by 'something
bad'?" "There's someone here with me who
needs to talk to you. We need some legal advice on how to handle
a disturbing situation." I had known Susan for six months. We met
in early October when fall was just starting to cool the Gulf Coast. She was
smart and graceful and striking, and I had almost gotten her killed. Or, at
least, I was one reason among many why Susan found herself limping through the
holidays recovering from knife wounds. One set of reasons was that her artist
husband had gotten greedy, crossed my little brother, and ended up with his
throat sliced open. Another was that I stuck my nose in and figured out what
happened and, along the way, managed to bring an impressively dangerous person
into Susan's life. Now she had only fading memories of her dead husband and,
apparently, a friend in trouble. I had a dead brother and a long line of
sleepless nights. And I was not blind to the possibility that, over the past
few months, I might have been wallowing in it a bit. I reached for the pen and pad on the bedside
table, I asked, "Where are you?" "We're at the beach house on St.
George. The girl who needs to talk to you is," she paused, "a friend
of mine here on the island. She thinks she may have seen someone get killed.
You know, murdered. Earlier tonight on the beach." I thought, damn. I said, "I'm
assuming she wasn't involved." "No. Well, only to the extent that
she saw it happen." "Then the advice is easy. Call the
cops." "She wasn't involved, but it's more
complicated than that." Susan sounded unsure of what to say. "I think
she needs to talk to a lawyer." "What's complicated about it?" Susan didn't answer. "It's okay to talk on the phone. No
one's listening." "You're right. I guess it's silly,
but I am uncomfortable talking this way. Part of the problem is, well, you know
how it is down here on the coast. Somebody disappears or you see somebody
flashing a wad of money or somebody looks like they're up to no good, first
thing that pops into your head is it's got something to do with drugs. And you
never know whose brother or cousin or friend might be involved, so you don't
know who's safe to talk to." "She thinks she saw some kind of drug
hit?" "Tom, she doesn't know what it was.
Just that somebody got killed right in front of her, and she's scared out of her
mind. And here's the complicated part. She's a runaway, and she's a minor.
She's absolutely terrified that her family's going to find out where she is and
come get her. You know, if she goes to the police and they check her out and
find out she's a runaway." "Susan, maybe her father or mother
coming to get her is the best thing that could come out of this." "I don't think so." "What do you mean, you don't think
so? You can't decide something like that on your own." "In this case, I can." "I guess there's something you're not
telling me." She didn't answer. I gave up. "When did it happen?" "When did what happen?" "The murder. When did this friend...
What's her name?" "Carli. Carli Monroe." "When did Carli see this
happen?" "About three hours ago, I
think." "Shit." "Yes, I know." Susan hesitated, then
said, "She needs to talk to a lawyer, Tom. I hate to ask, but could you
come down here?" "Susan, I know she's scared, but I'm
not a criminal attorney. Hell, I'm not even licensed in Florida. And I'm
supposed to be at a meeting in Tuscaloosa this afternoon. My advice is to find
a good local attorney, somebody who's down at the courthouse every week
drinking coffee with the prosecutors and bailiffs, and work through him or
her." Susan lowered her voice. "Tom, it's taken
me two hours to get her to let me make this call." She had cupped her hand
over the mouthpiece, and her muffled words buzzed around the edges. "Carli
doesn't know who to trust down here and neither do I. If you don't help, she's
just going to leave here and try to deal with it by herself. And she's not
really capable of doing that." I didn't respond. Seconds passed as faint
static filled the earpiece. Finally, Susan just repeated my name with what
sounded like a little shame sprinkled over it. My mouth tasted bitter and smoky from last
night's scotch and three hours sleep. I breathed deeply to clear my head and
looked out at the night. Light from the bedside lamp had washed out the view
through open French doors, merging sea and sky and clouds into one black sheet.
Susan waited some more while I decided to do the right thing. I said,
"I'll be there around mid-morning." "Thanks. I'm sorry to do this to
you." "Don't worry about it. I should have said yes right away."
Puffs of clean air rolled through the open door and across the bed. I walked
into the bathroom and splashed water against my face and neck before going back
to the phone and punching in a seven-digit number. A deep voice, wide awake,
answered on the second ring. chapter two "We've got to check out something on
St. George Island." The best investigator on the Gulf, maybe
one of the best anywhere, said, "You know what time it is?" "It's twenty till five." "I know what time it is."
Joey didn't call me a dipshit, but it was there in his tone. "What's on
St. George Island that's worth me hauling my ass out of bed this time of the
morning?" "Somebody's dead." "Anybody I know?" "Got no idea. That's what I need you
to find out. You got any contacts over around the Apalachicola-St. George
area?" "Nope. Hang on a second." I
heard some rustling and a few clicking sounds, and Joey came back on the line.
"Okay, go ahead." "I just got a call from Susan
Fitzsimmons." "She okay?" "Susan's fine. But she's got some
friend on St. George who thinks she saw some guy, or maybe some woman, get
killed tonight." "You're kidding." "No. I'm not." "For one hell of a good person,
Susan's got some bad karma or something junking up her life." I was thinking the same thing. I said,
"Yeah, well, she needs some help. So, I was hoping you could sniff around
the cops in Apalachicola and see if anything's been reported. I could do it,
but..." He interrupted. "But they aren't
going to tell some lawyer shit. You'd just start 'em beating the bushes."
Joey paused, then went on. "Yeah, I can do that. Don't know anybody down
there in the fucking boonies, but I got a couple of boys on the Panama City
force who'll fish around for me. Cost a couple of bills. That okay?" "Sure. Fine. Thanks." "Give me the details." I looked at the pad on my bedside table.
Exactly seven words were written on it: Susan, St. George Island, Carli
Monroe, and Murder. I said, "I don't know any." Joey sighed and hung up. Before stepping into the shower, I called
the office and left voice mail for my secretary, Kelly. I told her to call the
prospective client I was supposed to meet that afternoon and make something up. A few minutes later, as hot water began to
sting my chest and shoulders, I thought about the timber tycoon in Tuscaloosa
who—after receiving Kelly's call—would be seeking legal advice elsewhere. And I realized that it
was all part of my grand plan. A year ago, I had bailed from a fat six-figure
job to start a solo practice. And now, blowing off wealthy, paying clients was
the next logical step in my strategy to avoid worldly distractions like money
and success and solving legal problems for people who could actually afford to
pay me. I squirted shampoo into my palm and rubbed
my hands together. Maybe Carli would turn out to be a runaway
heiress. A few minutes after six-thirty, a blue
Ford Expedition crunched onto the white gravel drive. I stepped out onto the
porch. Heavy dew had darkened the tops of the weathered banisters. Smudged
swirls of orange and pink glowed in the east beneath a light gray sky. Joey stepped out of the car, and I said,
"Good morning." Joey said, "Morning," as he climbed the
front steps and turned sideways to navigate the entry hall on his way to the
kitchen. It was a tight fit. I'm six feet tall, and I could look Joey squarely
in the throat if I concentrated on my posture. He was about six six and two
hundred forty pounds of muscle and bone. He looked like a lost Viking: short
white-blonde hair, ruddy sun-creased skin, and hard gray eyes the color of a
new tin roof. That morning, the Viking wore pleated olive-green khakis, a
cream-colored rugby shirt, and Hush Puppies without socks. I followed and found Joey standing in
front of my open refrigerator drinking out of a half-gallon carton of Tropicana
Pure Premium orange juice. "Help yourself." "That's what I thought I was doing.
Been up half the frigging night looking for a dead guy who probably ain't even
dead. You got any of those sesame seed bagels you had last time I was out here?
Found 'em." "Want some breakfast?" Joey ignored the question. He found a
knife, cut two bagels in half, and popped them in the toaster oven. I poured
two cups of coffee and gave one to Joey. He smeared cream cheese on the four
toasted bagel halves and put all four on his plate. When he was seated at the kitchen table, I
said, "No dead guys. Is that the story?" Joey said, "That's the story." "Well, did you find out anything from
your Panama City contacts besides the fact that no murder has been
reported?" Joey talked over a mouthful of bagel.
"Like what?" "I don't know. I thought maybe you
got the lowdown on the cops in Apalachicola, or you fished around for some
general information about whether they've had any trouble down that way." "No cops. Just a sheriff's office.
Sheriff Todd Wilson." "Todd? They got a yuppie beach
sheriff?" "From what I could find out, Wilson
wouldn't know a yuppie if he ate one. Word is, though, he's a good enough guy. Probably
as honest as most small-town sheriffs along the coast." Joey paused to
drain the rest of the orange juice from the carton he had lifted from my
refrigerator. "What's that mean?" "What's what mean?" "What do you mean he's as honest as
most sheriffs along the coast?" "It means he keeps the peace. You
know, keeps the streets safe for old ladies and tourists. But the rumor is that
he also takes a little money every now and then to ignore the Bodines." "The what?" "Kind of a redneck mafia. The cops
down there call 'em 'the Bodines.' You know, like Jethro on The Beverly
Hillbillies. Lots of jokes about this bunch of rednecks 'ciphering' their
profits and that kinda shit. But they run the coast down there. And they're
organized—half of 'em are related to each
other." "And that's all you know right
now?" "That's it. No murders, no bodies,
nothing." I asked Joey to lock up and left him
sitting at my kitchen table drinking coffee and reading my morning Mobile
Register. By seven, I was in my Cherokee cruising down Scenic 98 toward
Apalachicola and the causeway to St. George Island. I flipped on the radio to
drown out the whine of mud grips on blacktop. National Public Radio out of
Mobile lasted through Foley and Pensacola, across Pensacola Bay, and into
Navarre. Outside Ft. Walton, static drowned out
NPR. An oldies station out of Panama City filled the Jeep with a different noise
as 98 wound next to Choctawhatchee Bay, past the new-money, Easter-egg villas
at Seaside and the old-money resort at Grayton Beach, and then cut through the
spring-break motels, neon signs, and giant water slides that pollute Panama
City Beach. East of Panama City, used car and mobile
home lots with hand-painted signs, boxy fast-food joints, and staccato
stoplights dissolved into pine forests that sporadically separated the pavement
from a clear view of the Gulf. After an hour of nothing, the road bumped into
the quick-mart-and-fast-food outskirts of Apalachicola and then eased into that
quaint seaside town's Victorian architecture and palm-lined streets. I killed the radio and tried to think
about what I would say to Susan and her friend about witnessing a crime and the
best way to handle involvement with the police. I couldn't think of anything. Without music, the mud grips whirred again
on the causeway that stretches from the east end of Apalachicola to the bay
side of St. George Island. I drove to the ocean side of the island, turned
right away from the state park, and cruised between rows of stilted,
hurricane-ready vacation homes. As the road moved away from the center of the
island, the houses grew generally newer and larger until I turned away from the
ocean and then left into The Plantation. An overstuffed guard's uniform shuffled
out of the gatehouse and asked my business. I asked for directions to Susan
Fitzsimmons' house. He found my name on a clipboard, handed me a green tag to
hang from my rearview mirror, and told me how to get where I was going. Back
over on the Gulf side of the island, I found a two-story
Caribbean-plantation-style beach house with the right numbers. Latticework and tropical plants
camouflaged the hurricane stilts. Above the crisscross pattern, weathered gray
siding contrasted with white trim work around windows and doors and highlighted
an oversized round window suspended beneath a gable's point above the back
entrance. A banistered crow's nest stretched twenty feet across the apex of a
green copper roof, providing what had to be one hell of a view of the water. I smiled. Sticking out of the carport
beneath the house was Susan's antique step-side pickup. I parked on
oyster-shell paving behind Susan's truck and climbed wooden steps to the main
door. I pressed the doorbell. Someone was moving inside the house. chapter three Susan Fitzsimmons opened the door and
smiled with perfect white
teeth and sun-crinkled eyes. She stepped out, gave me a quick but exuberant
hug, and stepped back to look at my face. I said, "You look great." And
she did. The last time I had seen Susan, she had
been lying in a hospital bed with clear plastic tubes looped into her arms and
nostrils. She had been pale and tired and frightened. Now Susan looked like
Susan again—sun-streaked blonde hair worn short and
shaggy, tanned cheeks, and intelligent blue eyes. Susan is from the Midwest and has never
had the penchant for small talk that Southerners think is part of good manners—or, as she describes it, talking until you can think of something
to say. Now, all Susan said was, "Come in. Carli's inside." The door opened into a cavernous room
featuring a large circular staircase made of polished aluminum that swirled
upward against the left wall. Twelve feet up, metal stairs connected to a
wooden catwalk that hung from the left and right walls, wrapped around the back
wall that held the door we had come through, and, apparently, provided access
to bedrooms on the second level. On the right wall, a six-foot oil painting of
nothing but dozens of beautifully detailed seashells flooded the room with
color. Glass stretched across the front of the room, showing huge rectangles of
ocean and sky framed by rough-cut beams. Susan's kitchen lay to the right and
against the back wall. It was separated from the main living area by a long,
antique butcher's table surrounded by brushed aluminum chairs that echoed the
staircase. Next to the table sat a striking teenage girl with blue-black hair,
dark brown eyes set in a pretty oval face, and suntanned legs that she
displayed beneath blue jean cutoffs with slits up the outside seams that ended
high enough to show just a hint of where her panties curved around her hips.
Above the jeans, four inches of skin and a very attractive navel were on
display beneath a green knit shirt designed to show off young navels. She sat
with her ankles crossed and her legs extended toward us as we entered. She wore
black sport sandals with blue Aztec designs on the straps, and her toenails
were painted pink. A yellow windbreaker hung across the back of her chair. "Tom. This is Carli. Carli, this is
the friend I told you about." She uncrossed her ankles, recrossed them
with the other foot on top, and smiled a strange, somehow inappropriate smile.
Her pelvis seemed to rise up in the chair as she moved her legs. She said,
"Nice to meet you." She had some kind of working-class Northern
accent. I was suddenly a little irritated. I said,
"Can your friend excuse us for a minute?" Carli stopped smiling. Susan
asked her to please step outside for a moment, and Carli stood and walked out
onto the deck. I said, "What was that about?" Susan said, "A brave front." "That didn't look like a brave front.
That looked like plain old come and get it, which I guess is fine and
maybe she's old enough to advertise if she wants to, but don't you think the
Lolita routine is a little out of place considering what she says happened to
her last night?" Susan studied my face. She was thinking,
and I was standing there waiting for her to do it. It's her way. Some time
ticked by, then Susan spoke softly. "Carli's a good person, and she's a
lot smarter than you'd think when you first meet her. She waits tables at the
Pelican's Roost. I eat there a good deal when I'm down here, and I've gotten to
know her. Carli doesn't know I know this, but she used to switch tables with
other waitresses so she could wait on me whenever I came in." "What's that, some kind of mother
complex?" "No. At least, I don't think that's
part of it. She wants to be an artist, and somebody told her Bird Fitzsimmons
had been my husband. We started talking, and she knew all about him. Carli was
kind of proud of the fact that she was once thrown out of the gallery in New
Orleans that handles Bird's paintings because she hung around there for half a
day just looking." "Why would they throw her out for
looking? I thought that was what you were supposed to do at galleries." Susan smiled. "You're innocent.
You're supposed to buy art at commercial galleries. Looking is only
foreplay for people who can afford to consummate. And, as Carli said, she had
'broke runaway' written all over her. I'm telling you, Tom, Carli's got a lot
going for her. But however smart or artistic or sensitive she can be, for some
reason, what you just saw seems to be the only way she knows how to act around
men." "Well, nothing has been reported to
the authorities that supports her story, which could just mean the killer is
either lucky or good. But, take it all together, and you have to wonder if we're
wasting our time here. You have to admit, she doesn't exactly look traumatized
and desperate for help." Susan said, "Go talk to her." I walked out onto the deck and closed the
glass door. Carli was leaning against a weathered railing, staring down the
beach to her left. I asked, "How old are you?" When I spoke, she turned to face me and
propped her left hip against the rail. Tears had drawn dark wet trails across
her cheeks down to her jawline, but I couldn't decide whether she was upset or
angry. She wasn't wearing makeup. She didn't need any. She said, "What difference does it
make?" "Susan says you're a minor." She repeated the same question. "Look, Carli. Susan asked me to help
you. And she says the reason you can't just go to the police and tell them what
happened is because you're a minor and you're a runaway. So, I'd like to know
how old you are. It could make a difference, a legal difference, as to whether
your family has any right to come get you. Also, if I'm going to help you,
you've got to trust me enough to answer some questions. And we don't have time
to argue about whether everything I ask you makes a difference." "Sixteen. I'm sixteen." "When's your birthday?" "What diff... It's in May, The
fifth." "So you're going to be seventeen in
May." "No. I mean. I guess I'm not really
sixteen yet. I'll be sixteen in May." "You look older than fifteen." "Yeah. They let me serve beer at the
restaurant. Nobody's said anything." She seemed to focus on the pupils in
my eyes. "I guess I'm more developed than most girls my age." As she
spoke, Carli began to stroke her bare stomach with her index finger in a
calculatedly absentminded way. She noticed that I noticed, and her expression
changed. She looked like maybe she knew a secret that I didn't. "What happened last night?" "I was down on the public beach with
this guy I met." "What's his name?" "Bobby. Anyway..." I interrupted. "Bobby what?" "Oh, uh, I don't think he told me.
He's a local. Works at the Chevron station in town. Anyway, he picked me up at
one after I got off at the Pelican and we drove down to the parking lot at the
public beach. After a few minutes, we got out and walked down to the beach. I
like it at night. Anyway, we stayed there awhile and Bobby left." "He just left you there on the beach when
you two were done?" Carli's face flushed red. "We weren't
done the way you say it. I don't just do it like that." "No offense, Carli. I'm not judging
you. It just sounds like the guy acted like a jerk." "He left 'cause I wouldn't do it. In
case you're wondering." It had been a long time since I'd talked
to a fifteen-year-old girl about her sex life. In fact, I had never talked to a
fifteen-year-old girl about her sex life. I said, "Let's talk about what
happened after Bobby left. How did you get from there to witnessing a
murder?" Carli told me she had walked on the beach,
tried to crash on the patio of a seemingly empty beach house, and ended up
witnessing a murder through a bedroom window. She described the men who came
out and searched the beach while she darted from one dark house to another,
finally making her way to Susan's door. By the time Carli finished her story,
tears had overfilled wide brown eyes and begun rolling down her cheeks. Susan
was right. As Carli talked, she had become the adolescent she was, and she
looked genuinely frightened. Carli rubbed the tears away with her palms while I
stood there feeling impotent and wishing I carried a handkerchief in my back
pocket the way my father always did. When she was composed, I asked, "What
is it you want to do here, Carli? I checked this morning, and nothing has been
reported to the police. They have no idea that a murder even happened. So I
want you to consider that the easiest thing—the safest
thing for you—would be for you to walk away and forget
the whole thing." Carli focused hard on my pupils again, but
this time the look wasn't seductive or affectionate. "You're telling me it
doesn't matter if somebody got the back of his head shot off?" "Hell, no, Carli. But I'm here to
look after your interests, and I'm telling you the safest thing for you
to do. If you want me to report the crime, I think I can protect your
identity from the police. But if you step into the middle of something like
this, there's always a chance somebody's going to find out who you are. And, if
they do, you've got to realize that being a witness in a murder trial is
dangerous under any circumstances. Plus, if you're that scared of being sent
home... Well, that's one more reason to just walk away." Carli turned to look out over the water.
"Mr. McInnes, would you run away and hide if it were you?" "It's not me." It was a lawyer's
answer. Seconds passed as my young client scanned
the curving blue horizon where ocean met sky. "I want you to tell the
police about the murder and get them to ... to investigate it. Just don't tell
them who I am. Can you do that?" Tough kid. I said, "Yeah, Carli. I
can definitely do that." While we were outside, Susan had piled
brunch on the long butcher's table next to her kitchen. We all ate and made
polite conversation. Afterward, Susan walked me to the Jeep. We were back on
the driveway, well away from Carli, when Susan simply said, "Well?" "I'm pretty sure something happened,"
I said. "I don't think she's just looking for attention, but, if she is,
she's got me fooled. Maybe she's that good. Who knows? Anyone who claims they
can tell if a truly dishonest person is lying is full of it. You just
can't." Now it was Susan's turn to sound
irritated. "Carli's got some problems, but I told you she's basically a
good kid." "I'm not calling her a liar. Like I
said, I think she saw something, and I think whatever it was scared the hell
out of her. It's exactly what she saw that's in question." Susan started
to argue, and I held up a hand to stop her. "Just hang on. I'm only saying
eye-witness testimony is the most unreliable evidence you can have,
particularly in a murder trial. Emotions take over and color and distort
perceptions and memories. Jurors love to hear somebody say they saw what
happened, but lawyers and judges know how shaky that kind of testimony usually
is." I scratched at the oyster-shell paving with my shoe. "Look, you
and I don't know for certain what happened last night. Only Carli knows, and
she wants me to go to the cops. So, that's what I'm going to do." Susan just looked at me. "Let's say I stop by the sheriff's
office in town and tell him I have a client who saw some shady-looking guys up
to no good last night at this particular beach house, and we're just concerned
that someone may have gotten hurt. If the sheriff checks it out and it's
nothing, then Carli probably need never come forward." Susan said, "That's fine if it works
out that way, but what if it's not nothing?" "Well, if we find blood splattered
all over the walls then we'll negotiate some kind of deal to keep her identity
secret. She's a minor, so that's possible. Maybe we could also get you
appointed Carli's guardian ad litem until this mess is over." "Is that the best you can come up
with?" I smiled. "No. There are other things
we can do, including just telling them that my client refuses to testify. The
DA can't compel her testimony if he doesn't know who she is. And, as her
attorney, I don't have to tell them. But first we need to find out if..."
Susan raised an eyebrow. "Okay, first we need to find out what actually
happened last night. Don't worry. If the cops find blood all over the place,
then I'll either negotiate a deal to keep Carli's name out of it, or we just
won't let her talk to them." Susan told me the name of the house in
question—in resort towns every little hovel has a
desperately cute name—and I prepared to dance my jig for the
sheriff. chapter four I drove into Apalachicola and found the sheriff's office—a squatty yellow-brick building wedged between two Victorian homes
that had been converted into offices for a few lawyers and accountants and a
couple of real estate agents. Inside at the front desk, a pleasant young
woman wearing a telephone operator's headset and an overbite asked if she could
help. I said I was hoping to see a deputy. She pushed a button, waited, and
spoke into her headset. A few seconds later, a friendly red-headed guy came
through the door. He looked like he smiled a lot, and that's what he did as he
introduced himself as Deputy Mickey Burns. He looked strong, and he had a
scattering of faded-blue, Marine Corp tattoos competing for space among a few
hundred freckles and a carpet of reddish-blonde hair on his forearms. I told my
rehearsed story. He smiled some more and said, "Let's go have a
look." Twenty minutes later, we pulled onto the
driveway of "See Shore Cottage" in the deputy's patrol car and parked
behind a white truck with a chrome toolbox installed behind the cab. Two
five-gallon, plastic paint buckets lay on their sides in the sand and clover
that made up the front yard. The deputy said, "Looks like they're having
some work done." I agreed that it looked just like that. He thought for a
few seconds, and asked, "You think maybe your client saw some construction
workers horsing around and got the wrong idea?" "I guess you never know, but I don't
think so. That really doesn't fit what my client told me." Deputy Mickey Burns exhaled through his
nose, looked out at the water, and said, "Well, let's go look
around." We both stepped out of the car into a bright spring day. The cottage was a classic Florida beach
bunker—concrete block, aqua-blue exterior, white
asphalt roof, and, running along one side, a privacy wall constructed of
decorative cement blocks turned on edge so that you could see through the
inside pattern. A pair of mirror-image, oversized plaster casts of seahorses
flanked the front door. The cottage sat at ground level and would violate every
high wind and water damage construction spec on the books if it were built today. Local law enforcement took the lead, and I
followed. After banging on the aluminum doorjamb, the deputy pulled open the
screen door and walked inside. "Yo! Who's here?" No one answered, but I could hear what
sounded like an old Lynyrd Skynyrd song bouncing around some other part of the
house. We walked down a short hall and into what seemed to be a bedroom. Drop
cloths were draped over the furniture, the carpet had been pulled up, and two
guys in shorts and sandals and not much else were working hard at brushing
white paint onto white walls. The deputy said, "Can't y'all hear back
here?" At least that's what I think he said. All
I heard was, "Can't y'all he...," before one of the painters yelled,
"Shit," and spun around, slinging a thick streak of white across his
buddy's shoulder. The deputy held up both palms and said, "Whoa. Nothing
to get excited about here. We're just looking around." The jumpy painter smiled now and said,
"You scared the hell out of us." The deputy said, "Sorry about that.
We knocked, and then I yelled for you in the front room there. I guess you
couldn't hear over the music." The painter with a new white stripe on his
shoulder didn't smile. He did walk over and flip off a paint-speckled boom box.
The talkative one said, "What can we do for you?" The deputy introduced me to the two
painters by name, which, even then, seemed like a bad idea. The one who was
doing all the talking said "Hey," and gave their names: Tim and Sonny.
My escort then explained that someone on the island had called me the night
before and reported that they had seen some guys up to no good at See Shore
Cottage. Tim, who was apparently the only one of the two with the gift of
speech, laughed and said, "Me and old Sonny here are generally up to no
good alright." We all laughed a little, everybody except
Sonny. Tim laughed because he thought he was funny, and the deputy and I
laughed to be polite. The bare-chested, paint-spattered Sonny glanced furtively
around the room while paint dribbled from the brush in his hand onto the bare
concrete floor. Deputy Mickey said, "I don't know if anything happened
around here last night or not. And I don't think Mr. McInnes really knows
either. He just had somebody..." The deputy turned to look at me.
"Was it a man or a woman? I don't even know whether to call 'em him or
her, here." I stared at him for a couple of seconds
while trying to decide why he would ask that in front of Tim and Sonny, whether
it really made any difference that he had, and, finally, how much of a schmuck
I would look like if I refused to answer. I said, "A man. The client is a
man." And I said it after just enough pause and with just the right
emphasis to look like I was completely full of shit The deputy looked a little
confused, said, "okay," and went on talking to Tim and Sonny.
"Mr. McInnes' client says he saw three guys hauling a fourth guy around
who looked like he was hurt. Said it was late last night sometime." Tim fixed his face into a look of concern,
Sonny glanced around the room some more, and I was beginning to regret giving
too many details to Deputy Mickey. Tim said, "Me and Sonny worked here
pretty late last night. We had to get the carpet up and out before we could
start painting this morning. So we just kept at it until it was done." I asked why. Tim said, "Whatcha mean?" "Why pull up the carpet? I mean, if
the owner's going to keep it, you could just cover it with drop cloths like you
did the furniture. And if you're planning to throw it out and put in new
carpeting, why not just use the old carpet for a drop cloth and tear it up
later?" Tim looked theatrically puzzled. The
deputy scrunched up his face in thought and said, "Yeah. I don't know why
we're that worried about the carpet. But what he says makes sense, if you
wanted..." Sonny, the mute painter, blurted out,
"It stunk." We all looked at him. He had stopped glancing around the
room and focused his eyes on mine. I liked it better when he couldn't focus. He
looked a little nuts. "We got it outta here 'cause it stunk. The roof
musta leaked or something and got it wet. All I know is it smelled like ... it
stunk when we come in to do the job. I told 'em I wasn't going to paint nothing
until that rug was gone." Tim joined in, "That's a fact, buddy.
First thing we did was rip it up and get it out of here." Sonny continued to stare into my eyes. I
asked, "What happened to it?" Tim said, "Took it to the dump. Probably
buried under a few tons of garbage by now. Don't know why you'd care,
though." The deputy said, "We're getting off
the point here. All I want to know is if either of y'all saw anything last
night or this morning that didn't look right, and if anybody else came with you
or stopped by yesterday." Sonny resumed his wandering eyes act, and
Tim said, "Nope and nope. Just another job, Sheriff." "Deputy Sheriff." "Sorry. Nobody got hurt around here
that we know about, Deputy." Deputy Mickey thanked them and then, as if
it were an afterthought, asked, "Have you two got a contract or a work
order or something like that from the owner for this work?" Tim said, "Yessir, we sure do. Out in
the truck." The deputy asked if he could see it, and
the rest of our little group left Sonny alone to continue his eye exercises.
Outside, Tim lifted a metal clipboard off the truck seat, flipped open the
cover, and handed it to Deputy Mickey. I read it over his shoulder. The only
page in the clip was a work order from Dolphin Rentals, authorizing carpet
replacement and new paint in the bedroom of one See Shore Cottage. The work
order was dated two weeks earlier and signed by Billie Timmons, Agent. Back at the sheriff's office, Deputy
Mickey walked me to my car. I got in and rolled down the front two windows. He
bent down, leaned two furry, tattooed forearms in the driver's window, and
peered inside the Jeep. He smelled faintly of sweat and citrus aftershave.
He said, "Well, that looked like a wild-goose chase, but chasing wild
geese is mostly what the job is about. You happy?" I wasn't a damned bit happy, but I just
shrugged and said, "Sure. At least I can report back to my client. I'm
sure he'll be relieved no one was hurt." Deputy Mickey said, "Yeah, we can all
be happy about that. Anyway, I was glad to help." He fixed a reassuring
smile on his face and turned to walk away. I asked, "Does your department keep
ownership records on the houses on St. George?" Burns stopped and turned back. "We
probably got that information around somewhere. But, if you're a lawyer, you
can find it as easy as I can by going by the courthouse." "I just thought you might be able to
save me some time." Deputy Burns smiled again. Very nice. Very
friendly. But we both knew he was done with me. Then he turned and walked
inside the sheriff's building. I backed out and, once again, turned southeast
toward St. George Island. Back at the beach house, I discovered that
Carli was gone. Susan had given her a ride to the restaurant so she would be
there to help set up for the lunch crowd. In light of my unsettling encounter
with Tim and Sonny, I wasn't happy about my new client running around the island
unescorted. But Susan assured me that she had impressed on Carli the need to
keep her mouth shut. Susan added, "It's hard anyway to get Carli to say
much of anything except just making small talk or, if she's really comfortable,
maybe talking about being an artist one day. I think you learn early to keep
secrets when you grow up in a family like hers." I asked, "What kind of a family does
she have? You've mentioned a couple of times that she's terrified about
going home, but you've never said why." "I really don't know exactly. And I
don't know why I tried to sound dramatic and sage about 'keeping secrets.' The
whole thing sounds a little Barbara Walters, doesn't it?" "It sounds like you're making it up
as you go. If that's what you mean." Susan gave me a look. "I just know
that Carli's scared to death of having to go back. And I know it's not
just some high school angst thing. And I know that she won't talk about
it." Susan paused and said, "What did you find out at the sheriff's
office?" I told her. I recited my morning adventure
and jotted down notes while the whole mess was fresh in my mind. Later, I would
transfer the notes to my laptop, just as I did with every case, so they would
be available for word searches and for preparing a chronology of the facts.
While I was writing out a summary of my meetings with Deputy Mickey Burns and
the painting duo of Tim and Sonny, Susan pulled out her yellow pages and looked
up Dolphin Rentals, which turned out to be a small real estate company in
Apalachicola. She punched in the number and asked for Billie Timmons. Ms.
Timmons was not in the office and would not be back for another four days, but
she did handle See Shore Cottage and had full authority to authorize normal
repairs to the property. Susan and I sat in her living room and
looked at each other for a while. She was thinking. Finally, she said,
"Okay, what about the paint? They can't just slap some paint on the walls
and cover up all traces of blood. I mean, I know real life isn't like cop shows
on TV. But the police are more sophisticated than that, aren't they?" "Sure they are. The cops could
probably peel the walls and find some bloodstains between the paint layers. But
they'd need sufficient probable cause to get a search warrant that would allow
them not only to search the cottage but to also strip the walls looking for
bloodstains. Which sounds like a good idea, except that a warrant that allows
destruction of property is pretty hard to get. At a minimum, any judge would
want an eyewitness before he allowed something like that to happen." I
stood and stretched out my back. "I'm afraid something like that would
take Carli coming forward and making a sworn statement." Susan started to
speak, and I said, "And, even if Carli did that, we couldn't be certain the
cops would find enough evidence to do anything. A little blood on the wall
doesn't mean much without a body." Susan looked disappointed. "We should
be able to do something." I said, "We will. We just don't know
what it is yet." A few quiet seconds passed before Susan's
head snapped up from the impact of a sudden thought. "Tom! Shouldn't we be
over there to follow those painter-guys when they leave?" "Nope." "Why not? They've got to be connected
some way with the murder. If we followed them..." I sat up and put my elbows on my knees and
looked at Susan. "If we followed them, they'd probably spot us a mile down
the road. Neither of us is qualified to do that kind of thing well. And, if Tim
and Sonny did spot us tagging along behind their pickup, we could count on one
of two things happening. One, they would know we were on to them, which
would cause them to take off down some swamp road to the middle of nowhere and
hide. Or, two, they would know we were on to them, which would cause
them to turn around and attempt to do us bodily harm. In either case, we've
announced that I didn't buy their good-old-boy routine at the cottage. And, in
one case, we could end up hurt or worse." "You're sure about this?" "I've got the tag number and make of
the truck, their descriptions, and the names they gave us. This is a small
place. If we need to find them again, I imagine Joey can do it in an hour or
two." Susan and I wandered out onto the deck.
Frustration and feelings of impotency seemed to be working on her, and I felt pretty
much the same way. Maybe I was handling it better because, for a lot of
reasons, the feelings were less foreign to me. Finally, we decided to load into
my Jeep to go have another look at See Shore Cottage. We made a reconnaissance trip past the
cottage and saw that Tim's truck had departed taking Tim and Sonny and the
plastic paint buckets with it. I turned around in a driveway three doors down,
backtracked, and pulled onto the now-familiar parking pad of Carli's nightmare
house. We got out. For the second time that day, I approached the
giant-seahorse-guarded door of See Shore Cottage with the intention of
conducting some sort of investigation. Through the front bedroom window, we
could see that the paint job was lousy but finished, the drop cloths had
vanished, and the bed and other furniture had been shoved back into place.
Susan said, "Poof." "Yeah. Like magic." I walked
around to the side window to peer inside the way Carli had the night before. Susan said, "Look at the floor."
I cupped my hand against the glass to block the sun's glare and looked down at
bare, paint-splattered concrete. "You think they're coming back later to
put down new carpet?" She was being sarcastic. I said, "I
wouldn't count on it." I drove Susan to her beach house. Along
the way, a running debate streamed through my mind—should I stay on St. George with Susan and the girl or head back
to Mobile? On the one hand, I didn't much like the idea of leaving Susan and
Carli alone on the island. Emotionally, it felt like I was deserting them. On
the other hand, my surprise meeting with Tim and Sonny had turned my presence
into a liability. As we turned into Susan's driveway, I decided that putting
some distance between my clients and myself seemed the smartest way to go. I explained my reasoning to Susan. She
agreed and promised to keep an eye on Carli. I promised to try to think of
something useful to do. It had not been a successful day, and the
drive home seemed endless. Back at my place, I checked in with Kelly, my
secretary, and made a few business calls before wandering down the beach to the
Grand Hotel for dinner. I thought a good meal might make me feel better. It
usually does. It didn't. Back snug in my living room, I checked my answering
machine, turned the recording volume and the ringer all the way down, and spent
a couple of unfocused hours with Umbйrto Eco. The hell with it. I
started getting ready for bed. Maybe I'd wake up smarter in the morning. Twenty minutes later, I heard a fist
banging on my front door. I trotted downstairs, flipped on the porch light, and
peeked outside through a narrow column of windows. Joey stood there glaring at
the door, looking angry and excited all at once. I opened the door. "Where the hell have you been? We
called Susan. She said you left there hours ago." "I've been here. I just turned the
sound off on my machine. What's wrong?" In the half second before he could
answer, I had a sickening thought. "Is Carli okay?" "Carli's fine. Everybody's fine. But
Kelly's been trying to get you for over an hour. Somebody broke in your office.
Kelly says the security company called her. She's down there now with the cops,
and they need you to come down." I said, "Hang on," and went
inside to get my shoes. Two minutes later, I was seated in Joey's huge four-wheel-drive,
and he was speeding toward Mobile. I looked out the window and watched pine
trees and underbrush spin by in the dark. Joey asked about my trip to St.
George, and I filled him in. As we entered the city's neon outskirts,
talk turned to the break-in, and Joey said, "One more crummy thing in a
crummy day, huh?" "Maybe not." "You like having somebody break in
your office?" "Not much. But at least something's
happening. I sat around all day down at Susan's drinking coffee and wondering
what to do next. I did learn a few things from the painters. But now, at least,
the coincidences are starting to pile up, and we can begin trying to make some
sense out of it." "That all sounds real good. But
somebody still busted in your office tonight and probably took some of your
favorite lawyer stuff." "Lawyer stuff?" Joey didn't elaborate. We were on city streets now, close to the
Oswyn Israel Building where my violated office and, I hoped, some answers
awaited. I said, "I'm going to call Susan and tell her to get hold of
Carli, maybe bring her to the beach house and lock everything up tight until we
can think this out." "Probably a good idea. Susan got a
gun?" "I have no idea." I used Joey's cell phone to get Susan. She
promised to pick up Carli from work and keep her at the beach house. Susan
reminded me of the guard at the gate to The Plantation and said she also had a
.38 revolver. I hung up as Joey turned into my parking lot. Upstairs, Kelly was waiting in the
reception area. She said, "Looks like they got scared off." A pair of blue uniforms lounged on the
sofa drinking coffee that I guessed Kelly had brewed for them in my new Krups
machine. One of the officers started to stand. I said, "Let me look around
first, okay?" He nodded and sat back down. His was not a controlling
personality. As I walked back to my office, I asked Kelly, "Nothing's
missing?" Kelly followed. "Almost
nothing." I made a quick inventory of the desk
drawers, the small wall safe, and the few expensive odds and ends on my walls
and shelves. I sat down behind my desk to think. Joey strolled in holding a mug
of steaming coffee in each giant paw and put one down in front of me. Then he
plopped into a leather guest chair and sipped his coffee. Kelly sat in a chair
that matched the one Joey was overflowing, looked across the desk, and said,
"The policemen want you to sign some kind of report. They couldn't find
any fingerprints or anything like that, by the way." I said, "What do you mean 'almost
nothing' is missing?" "What? Oh. It's creepy. Right now, it
looks like whoever broke in just grabbed the appointment calendar off my desk
and took off." "Your appointment calendar? Are you
sure that's all?" "I've got to look around some more,
but, like I said, right now that looks like it." A shapeless, but vaguely disturbing,
thought was worming around the back of my mind. I let it work through, and my
stomach began to squeeze into a knot. "Kelly, did you put Susan
Fitzsimmons' name in the appointment book today?" "Sure. I put all your appointments in
there." Joey cussed as he and I jumped up and ran
out of the office. As we rushed through the waiting room, the two cops looked
surprised. They didn't move, but they did appear to consider the option. chapter five Joey was a former shore patrolman, former Navy Intelligence officer, former Alabama
state trooper, and former Alabama Bureau of Investigation agent. In fact, former
would serve as a pretty accurate one-word description of his career in law
enforcement, all of which sounds worse in some ways than it is. Joey was never
unreliable, unless you were counting on him to follow orders or to treat an
employee handbook like the Word of God. And, when things get serious, attitude
and obstinance and confidence are what I want. Boy Scouts scare the shit out of
me. Now, on the highway east of Mobile, Joey
was driving like the cop he used to be, going ninety-plus on two-lane roads.
And, like a cop, he seemed to be in complete control behind the wheel as trees,
houses, shops, and other traffic whirled by as varying shapes and colors in the
night. "She's not there." It was the
fourth time I had punched in Susan's St. George number. "Shit. Can you call that deputy from
Apalachicola?" "What am I supposed to say? Hello
Officer. Somebody kicked in the door of my office in Mobile tonight, and now my
secretary can't find her appointment book. So, I was wondering if you'd mind
driving back out on the island there and checking on a female client who I told
you earlier today was a man. And, by the way, I know I wouldn't tell you the
client's name today and I'm still trying to keep it a secret because it might
put her in danger, but..." "You got a better idea?" I didn't like it, but I dialed up North
Florida information and then the sheriff's office in Apalachicola. Deputy Mickey
Burns was off duty. "We have a deputy on patrol. Is this an
emergency?" "I don't know. Probably not. I just
asked for Deputy Burns because he helped me earlier today. I'm a lawyer in
Mobile. I've got a client on the island who may be in trouble. It'd be a big
help if your patrolman could just ride by and check on her." The operator
agreed to have a deputy do just that. I gave her the address and said goodbye. Joey said, "You know if you don't say
it's an emergency they'll take fucking forever to get there." "Yeah, I know. But I'd have to do a
lot of explaining to call in an emergency on St. George from a car phone in
Alabama." "We're in Florida now." "Thanks for the update. But to make
it an emergency you usually have to say someone's inside your house or you're
in some kind of imminent danger." "I know all that. I used to be a
cop." "Then what are you bitching
about?" "I just don't like it." The truth was that we were both worried
and irritated and feeling impotent and, in general, acting pretty graceless
under pressure. I asked, "How much longer?" "If we don't run into any blue
lights, we'll be there in less than two hours." I glanced at the digital clock on the
dash. 10:33. Yellow-tinged high beams swept gray pavement ahead of the
Expedition as it lunged and swayed and rocked along Highway 98 northwest of
Panama City. Every ten or twenty miles, bright eyes stared and fixed on the
headlights as whitetails froze along the roadside. "It'd be hard to miss a
deer at this speed if it was in the road." Joey said, "Fuck 'em." More road. Joey turned on the radio and
played with the search button until he found a soft rock station. I put up with
Mariah Carey for a while, then reached over and turned it off when an old
Journey song came on. Joey didn't complain. I don't think he realized I had
done it. We had been outside of cellular range for
some time. As we neared Panama City, the in-service light flashed on, and I
tried Susan again. She answered on the third ring. "Where have you been? Are you
okay?" Susan sounded surprised. "I'm fine.
You knew I was going to pick up Carli from work." "You've been gone a long time." "She didn't get off till after ten. I
had to wait. What's wrong? Has something else happened?" "I don't want to scare you." "Then that's not a good way to
start." "Sorry. Look, somebody broke into my
office about three hours ago. All they took was Kelly's appointment book. It
probably doesn't mean anything, but the book had your name in it. And, you
know, after everything that happened today." "We're fine, Tom. Carli's here. We're
locked up in the house, there's a guard at the gate, and I put the .38 in my
purse. Go back to sleep. We can figure all this out in the morning." I said something like, "Uh." "Is there more to it?" "Kind of. Joey and I got worried when
we couldn't get you. And, we're most of the way there. We'll probably be
knocking on your door in about an hour." "Tom, that's sweet." Now she
sounded amused. "Like I told you, we're fine. But you're almost here now,
so you may as well come on. I'll put some coffee on." "It was Joey's idea." After I ended the connection, Joey said,
"Everything okay?" "Yeah." "What was that about something being
my idea?" "She was thanking me for
coming." I looked over at Joey's face in the glow
from the dash. He looked like he was thinking about that. "Want to turn
around and go home?" "No. We've come this far. I'll feel
better if we go have a look around." The dash clock glowed 12:18 as we
pulled onto Susan's driveway and a motion detector light popped on. Susan met
us at the door. We were sitting at the butcher block table
drinking decaffeinated coffee when Carli descended the dark staircase and
walked into the downstairs light. She wore a maroon Florida State football
jersey for a nightgown, and a huge white towel wound around and covered her
head like a turban. Wet black curls peeked out from beneath the towel. Susan
said, "Feel better?" Carli just smiled and sat down next to
Joey. Susan introduced them. I said, "Did you tell Carli why we're
here?" "I told her about your break-in. I
also told her there's no reason for her to get worked up over it. Right? We
don't have any reason to think the break-in was connected to Carli in any way, do
we?" As she spoke the last two words, Susan gave me a meaningful look. I'm not stupid, or, if I am, I can at
least take a hint. I looked at Carli and said, "No reason at all. Joey and
I are only here because we tried to call Susan to tell her about the burglary,
and we couldn't get her. If we had known she was just out picking you up from
work, we would have stayed in Mobile." I wasn't the only nonstupid person at the
table. Carli said, "But your office got broken into after I talked with
you today about those guys on the beach. And Susan told me what happened with
those painters at the beach house where it happened." "Carli, it's easy to tie unrelated
problems together when you're scared, but, like Susan says..." Carli kept going. "You called here
right after you figured out Susan's name was in that book they stole. And you
drove all the way here at midnight when we didn't answer the phone."
Silence hung in the air above the table. "Isn't that right, Mr.
McInnes?" "You can call me Tom." Carli
sighed and lowered her eyes to stare at gnawed, glitter-pink fingernails.
"Carli, you really don't need to worry. Not about my office
break-in, anyhow. You have to understand my and Joey's history with Susan. I
got her into a pretty nasty mess about six months ago, and she ended up getting
hurt pretty badly." Susan interrupted with surprising force.
"That was not your fault." She held my eyes for a few beats and then
turned to face Carli. "My husband was killed last summer. They found Tom's
younger brother a couple of months later on the bottom of the Alabama River. It
wasn't easy and it cost him, but Tom found out what happened. While he was
doing it, I got attacked by someone involved in both deaths, but that
wasn't because Tom did anything wrong or messed anything up." I opened my
mouth to interrupt without really knowing what I wanted to say, but Susan kept
talking. She was still looking at Carli. "I just want you to understand
that Tom feels some misplaced sense of duty to me because of what happened.
That's why he and Joey drove down here in the middle of the night, and, as much
as I hate to admit it, even to myself, that's how I knew he would drop
everything and help you if I asked him to." Carli looked up at me for a moment. The
towel on her hair had tilted to one side, and the insides of her eyelids, the
part just inside her lashes, had turned red. I tried to smile reassuringly. Carli's brown irises seemed to have grown
larger, and, when she spoke, her voice was soft and unsure. "I was up all
night last night. I gotta go to bed." And she got up and climbed the
stairs. I looked at Susan. "You're right.
She's not stupid." Susan nodded slowly. "More there than
meets the eye." "Yeah, but well-adjusted she's
not." Susan shrugged. "Who is?" It was past one in the morning, and
suddenly I was bone tired. "It's been a long day. We better go and let you
get to bed too." Joey said, "I don't know where you're
going, hoss. But I'm tired, and I'm staying right here if it's okay with
Susan." Susan said, "It's perfect. If you're
as bushed as I am, you don't have any business driving anyhow. I was up most of
the night last night with Carli. And I know Tom's wiped out, because I called
and woke him before sunrise." "And he woke me up to tell me about
it," Joey said. "Well then," Susan said, "I
suggest we all hit the sack and think this through in the morning." The house had exactly four bedrooms, which
was exactly how many we needed. Upstairs, Susan showed us past Carli's closed
door to the empty rooms. Joey said good night and walked down the hall to find
the bathroom. Susan walked me to my room, clicked on the bedside lamp, and
turned to look at me. She sounded tired and a little hoarse when
she spoke. All she said was, "Thanks." I looked down into her
upturned face. Missed sleep and tension showed around her eyes, but they were
still beautiful eyes. Very quickly, Susan rocked forward onto her toes, kissed
me lightly on the lips, and left the room, closing the door behind her. I
stripped down to boxers, switched the light off, and stretched out on top of
the covers. I smiled up at the ceiling. My mouth still tingled where her lips
had brushed against mine. I didn't think I had been asleep when Joey
shook me awake. He was whispering. "Wake up, bubba. Wake up. We need to
look around." I rubbed my eyes and looked at my watch. I
was too groggy to focus on the glowing dots and lines that were supposed to
show me what time it was. "Whatsa matter?" "I thought I heard something a couple
of times, then the bedroom clock went out." I was too tired for this. "What're
you talking about?" He sounded exasperated. "The power's
out. You understand that?" I sat up. He went on. "The phone's dead,
too. Something's going on, and I'm gonna go look around a little. I need you to
keep an eye on Susan and Carli." I swung my feet onto the floor and felt
for my pants. I said, "Go," and Joey moved silently through the door
and down the hallway. I managed to pull on pants and loafers. My shirt and
socks had disappeared on the dark carpet, and I left the room bare-chested. Out in the hall, I found Carli's door and
stuck my head inside. A shadowy shape, surprisingly small and childlike,
breathed beneath the covers. I eased the door shut and moved to Susan's door,
which swung open without a sound. On the wall opposite her bed, open double
windows welcomed moonlight and a cool breeze into the room. I crept over and
looked outside, wondering who might be out there in the dark with Joey. When I
turned to look at Susan, she was looking back. She still sounded tired but wide awake.
"You scared me." I walked over and stood by the bed. As I
approached, Susan sat up, holding the sheet against her breasts. She appeared
to be naked beneath the covers. I held my index finger against my lips and then
leaned down to whisper. "The power and phones are out. Joey's outside
checking on it." To her benefit, Susan hesitated only a few
seconds before saying, "Turn around. I need to get dressed." I walked
back over and looked out through the open window. Night air flowed into the
room, sprinkling chill bumps across my chest and shoulders and making me wish I
had been able to find my shirt. I scanned the shore and the sand dunes and
listened for strange voices or the sound of feet on the wooden deck or...
something. Everything just looked and sounded and smelled like a spring night
at the beach. Behind me, I could hear Susan walk barefoot across the carpet and
open dresser drawers. She asked, "Have you checked on Carli?" "Yeah. She's fine, but I wanted to
get you first." I heard Susan slipping her legs into jeans. "Afraid you'd scare her?" "I though it'd be better if you woke
her. But we need to hurry. If somebody's out there, she needs to be up and
ready to move." Susan told me I could turn back around.
When I did, she was sitting on the bed in jeans and a dark T-shirt, pulling on
running shoes. She made loops and knots in the laces and stood up. We moved
down the hall. Carli's door was closed. Inside, the delicate shape I had seen
breathing under the covers was gone. chapter six Fine lines of moonlight angled through
miniblinds and faintly streaked Carli's empty bed with light. Visibly
shocked, Susan said, a little too loudly, "Where is she?" I shushed her and made a quick search of
the closet and the floor beneath the bed, thinking, hoping the girl had heard
something and tried to hide. I looked at Susan and said, "I don't know.
Come on." The hall was preternaturally dark—no
windows, no electricity, just black. I ducked into my bedroom and Joey's and
then checked the bathroom. Back in the hallway, I leaned in close to Susan.
"She probably heard something and got up to look around. I think we would
have heard some kind of scuffle if something worse than that had
happened." "Maybe she heard Joey." "Where's that thirty-eight you told
me about?" "In my purse. I think it's on the
kitchen table." I looked at her. She said, "You know,
downstairs." I wasn't that sleepy. I knew damn well
where the kitchen table was. I just wasn't happy about it. I thought about
asking Susan to stay upstairs, but decided I didn't want to take a chance on
losing someone else. I also realized that, with Carli missing and probably in
trouble, Susan wasn't likely to take instructions from me and hide in the
closet while I ran around doing manly things. I said, "Stay with me, okay,"
and led the way to the circular aluminum staircase. Three steps down, I heard a
soft hiss and froze. Susan heard it too. She stopped as still as death. A sharp whisper from the kitchen,
"Tom!" The glass wall along the front of the living area allowed a
diffused fog of gray light into the room. Joey stepped out from a shadow and
whispered, "Carli's here." Thank God. I started down the stairs and was quickly
stopped by another hiss. I looked down and back toward the kitchen where Joey
stood in the shadows. He appeared to be holding up three fingers, waving them
back and forth like a kid saying bye-bye. Then he pointed at the glass door
leading out onto the deck. I looked but saw nothing. I looked back toward Joey
and still saw nothing. He had disappeared. I glanced at Susan. She was looking
past me toward the deck. I whispered, "What?" She held up an index finger, telling me to
wait. I watched her pale eyes scan back and forth and stop. She tapped my
shoulder and pointed. The glass wall overlooking the Gulf was made of ten-foot
squares of tempered glass separated by thick cypress beams. Silhouetted against
the outside of one of the vertical beams was a very human shape. I held up one
finger. Susan nodded. She shook her head when I held up two. I pointed to where
Joey had been and held up three fingers. She nodded and raised her palms in the
air. We agreed. Joey said three. We saw one. Another
hiss. Joey's hand and arm materialized out of
kitchen shadows and motioned us back upstairs. We watched the silhouette
outside run from one beam to the next. He held a long, thick gun at an angle
across his midsection. Maybe a shotgun. When he flattened against the second
beam, Susan and I tiptoed back up to the hallway. She asked, "Has Joey got a gun?" "Joey's always got a gun. But one
pistol against three rifles or shotguns is a real bad idea. And Joey's got a
scared fifteen-year-old girl to take care of." "Can't we help him?" I tried to slow my breathing and think. She was scared and talking fast.
"What do you think he wants us to do?" "Joey waved us up here, so it's
probably safe in the house for now. But if there are three of them with guns
and they come inside, there won't be much we can do but
hide. Look, everybody but you and me and Carli has a gun, and Carli's with
Joey. We've got to trust Joey to look after her. He's going to expect me to do
the same for you." "I'm not fifteen, Tom." In fact, Susan was a few years older than
I was, even if she didn't look it. I said, "We can get politically correct
later. Right now, we need to figure out how we're going to get out of here if
that guy on the deck comes inside." "The stairs are the only way down,
but we can go up." A lightbulb went off. "The crow's
nest?" "Yep. But there's no way down from
there either, unless..." "Can we..." A shotgun blast
shattered the quiet. Glass exploded downstairs, and footsteps crunched across
broken windows. Susan gasped and yanked my arm by the
elbow. I turned to look, and she was hauling ass. I caught her as she hooked a
left and charged up a short flight of steps that dead-ended into the ceiling.
She twisted some little knob I couldn't even see and pushed open a hatch. Stars
filled a three-by-four foot hole in the roof. Susan shot through, and I
followed. Up on the catwalk, I quietly fitted the hatch back into place. We crouched on narrow strips of teak that
made the banistered catwalk look like a miniaturized deck. We had a space about
six feet wide and twenty feet long and nowhere to hide. Susan breathed hard.
She said, "Do you think we'll be able to stay here?" I looked around. "Do we have a
choice?" "There's a palm over there at the
back corner. The roof's steep, but if we could figure out how to slide down at
an angle somehow, we could get hold of it and climb down to the driveway." "What?" She started to explain
again, and I stopped her. "Listen." The house was quiet. "What
the hell? Susan, come on. Stay low. Get over here. We better sit on the
hatch." "They might shoot through it." "And they might just try it and move
on. It's better than leaving it open so they can pop through and shoot at
us." As Susan started to edge over, she glanced
through the banisters toward the shoreline. She said, "Look," and
pointed down at the beach. We saw a figure in dark clothes kneeling on the
sand. And he saw us. A black shape moved in his
hands, and a sharp rap sounded a split second before something small and hard
and deadly hit the copper roof below us. I said, "Let's do it. Stay low, and
go through the banisters. Don't go over them." Susan wiggled through a
repeating diamond shape in the banister and began inching down the side of the
steep metal roof opposite the beach. Easing my head to the far edge of the
catwalk, I looked for the gunman. He was motioning to someone in the house. He
was motioning at the roof. Shit. Belly crawling to the other side, I
found Susan flat on her back, butt against the roof with both feet wedged in
the rain gutter. She was eight feet away from the palm fronds and inching her
way there not nearly fast enough. Just in case, I tried to fit my shoulders
through the banister. It wasn't even close. Taking a deep breath, I came off my
knees at a full run and hand sprinted over the railing. I expected to hear, or
maybe even feel, another gunshot. The guy on the beach just stood there. He
probably couldn't believe his eyes. For all the world, it had to look like I
was leaping into a full gainer over the driveway. It felt that way too. I hit the copper
roof on my right hip and bare shoulder blade and started sliding like a downed
skier on a patch of ice. I managed to get my butt under me and my head up in time
to nail the gutter with my heels. The jolt jammed my knees and ankles, knocked
a section of gutter loose, and flipped me forward into a face full of palm
tree. It hurt like hell. I hurt everywhere, but I managed to grab fists full of
spiky fronds and hold on. The world scrambled for a second. When it
fell back into place, I looked around for Susan. She had fallen sideways trying
to grab me before I flipped off the roof, and she was almost gone. Her feet
were on the roof's edge. Her right hand had a death grip on the piece of gutter
I had slammed loose, and her left hand was reaching out for me. Clenching a
thick frond with my right fist, I bent my knees, swung to the left using the
frond as a pivot, and grabbed Susan's hand. Her grip on the gutter came loose,
and I swung her into the tree trunk with a painful thud. She held on. "Go, Susan. They know we're back
here." She started down the trunk and, with me
shinnying behind her, had made it to within six feet of the ground when three
gunshots snapped the night air. Susan dropped. Joey yelled, "Move. They're coming. Move!" Susan scrambled to her feet and ran. I
dropped ten feet, executed an unplanned and painful backward somersault, and
sprinted down the driveway. Up ahead, Susan veered left into underbrush and I
followed her. Out of nowhere, a hand grabbed my wrist and spun me into the
ground. As I landed in sea grass, Joey said, "Stay down." I did. Joey
sat crouched in a shooter's stance with his .45 automatic leveled at the house.
Susan lay on the ground next to him. "Susan? Susan, did you get hit?" Joey said, "Nobody got hit—none of us anyhow. That was me shooting. One of 'em came around
the corner while you two were monkeying around that tree, so I fired three
rounds. Think I hit him." Susan reached over and squeezed my hand to let
me know she was okay. Joey said, "Here they come. We better go." Tearing through sea grass, cockleburs,
wild azaleas, yucca plants, and a thousand species of lowland brier bushes,
Joey ran full out ahead of us for what seemed like a couple hundred yards. Next
to a wooden walkway that stretched from the road to the beach so normal people
could avoid the brush and thorns we had just run through, Joey stopped,
motioned with his head and said, "See that big, funny-looking bush?" I looked, and it was kind of funny
looking. "Yeah." "Carli's over there. I'll be back. If
I'm not, stay away from the house and figure out some way to get Susan and the
girl out of here." I started to say something, to tell him
I'd come with him. But he was gone. Susan walked toward Joey's bush. I
followed. We found Carli sitting in a fetal position on the dark side of the
bush away from the moonlight. She didn't cry. She didn't speak. She hugged her
knees and rocked and looked impossibly small. Susan sat on the sand and put an arm
around Carli's shoulders. I found some shadow nearby where a big, funny-looking
bush wasn't blocking half the world from view. I peered into the dark and
watched for nameless, faceless men who had come to murder two women in a house on
the beach. Minutes crept by. In the distance, sirens
swirled through the night air. Two shots popped almost quaintly farther down
the coastline. More time passed. The sirens grew louder as Joey emerged out of
the underbrush. I met him at his bush next to Susan and Carli. I asked, "What happened? I heard a
couple more shots." Joey said, "That was me. When I got
back to the house, they were loading one of 'em into a pontoon boat on the
sand. So I did hit him. Anyway, when he was in, one stayed with him and
the other one jumped out and looked like he might come back for more. I took a
couple of shots, and he jumped behind the boat and pulled it in the water. They
took off." Susan said, "Did you shoot to scare
them off?" "Hell no. I shot to kill the
sonofabitch. He was just too far away for me to hit him with a pistol. They
were getting ready to haul ass, anyhow. One of 'em was shot, and you could hear
the cops coming." I asked, "Are the police there
now?" "Probably are. I didn't stay around
to find out." He wedged his .45 in the back of his waistband, looked at
me, and said, "So, Counselor. That's what I do. Now do what you do. What's
the plan?" Susan and Carli were silent. The teenager
was still now, but she still hugged her knees tightly against her breasts. Susan
stroked her hair. I said, "You got a license for that
gun in Florida?" Joey said, "Nope. Licensed in
Alabama. Not here." "Okay. Susan and I are going back.
You look after Carli. Take her wherever you need to to keep out of sight,
but," I pointed at the street end of the wooden walkway, "be on the
path next to the road in, let's see, it's about two-twenty now, be there at
three-thirty." "What are you gonna say?" "Don't worry about it. You and Carli
were never there. See you at three-thirty. Susan? You ready?" Susan hugged Carli and whispered something
I couldn't hear. On the way back, I briefed Susan, telling
her to stay as close as possible to the facts with only the changes we
specifically discussed. Twenty yards from the house, I led her out onto the pavement
so we could approach along the driveway. Jumping out of the bushes at a bunch
of nervous, heavily armed deputies seemed like a bad idea. As we neared her drive, a deputy stationed
to keep people out said, "What the hell?" Susan's now filthy T-shirt was ripped
across her stomach where she had snagged it on the palm. Cuts and scratches
covered her arms, and dirt smudged her face. I was worse, having scrambled down
a palm tree, rolled around the driveway, and torn through Br'er Rabbit's
playground without a shirt. A grapefruit-sized strawberry covered my left
nipple. From the waist up, I was pretty much one big stinging scrape. I said, "I'm Tom McInnes, and this is
Susan Fitzsimmons. This is her house." The deputy seemed to think about
that for a second before he pulled out a nickel-plated revolver with a six-inch
barrel and pointed it at us. He said," "Walk up to the
house," and that's what we did. chapter seven We had rolled into Mobile as the sun rose
in our rearview mirror. Now
it was dark again, and the faint sounds and peculiar aromas of breakfast
cooking pulled me out of a hard dreamless sleep and into a tangle of covers. It was an old house and elegant, but
nothing seemed to fit quite right. Warm light from the hall shone through an
inch-high crack under the door, spotlighting ball-and-claw feet on an antique
dresser and softly illuminating the room like a night-light. Without thinking I
rolled to the right, found the floor with bare feet, and straightened up.
Pockets of pain erupted in every joint and muscle, prodding me with memories of
sliding down roofs, jumping from trees, somersaulting on oyster shells, and
running through picturesque coastal thickets. I stood there for a while and hurt.
Eventually the pain subsided, and I was able to walk over and switch on the
overhead light. When we arrived, we had taken turns with
the shower and the Bactine. Now I was surprised that the sandy-headed,
scratched-up guy in the mirror looked better than I felt. Beneath the mirror,
neatly folded squares of someone else's clothes were set out on the dresser. I
put them on and went in search of fellow victims. The place was a maze of oak floors and
crown molding. After visiting an empty living room and wandering twice through
the same study, I found the kitchen by locating the dining room and then
following the sound of voices through the butler's pantry. "Good morning." An ex-stripper named Loutie Blue, who was
our hostess, said, "It's seven o'clock." "Oh." "At night." "Oh." She handed me a cup of
coffee, and I sat in a chair at one end of a table with food on it. Joey sat at
the other end eating thick Belgian waffles. Susan perched on a bar stool next
to the center island where Loutie was working. "Where's Carli?" Susan said, "She's still
sleeping." I said, "Oh," and drank some
coffee. Loutie said, "With everybody just
waking up, I decided to make breakfast for dinner. You hungry?" I realized it had been twenty-four hours
since I had eaten. I told her I was starving, and she poured batter into a
waffle iron from a stainless steel pitcher. Loutie Blue was tall, exceptionally tall
for a woman, which, I thought, might be one reason Joey felt so comfortable
around her. Standing next to Loutie, he would have looked almost normal. She
had shoulder-length chestnut hair and greenish-brown eyes that grew harder the
longer you looked at them. She wore black jeans, white tennis shoes, and an
oversized blue polo shirt with the tail out. And, even in that domestic outfit,
standing over a steaming waffle iron chatting with Susan, you could see how she
had retired from stripping in her twenties with enough money to buy that house.
Loutie Blue was beautiful—in a thoroughly intimidating kind of way. She and Susan seemed to enjoy each other's
company. They weren't really saying much. They just looked comfortable
together. I looked at Susan, "How long have you
been up?" "I don't know. I guess I've been up
and down." Joey said, "Checking on Carli." I said, "Oh." It was becoming my
trademark. I looked at Loutie. "I hope it's not out of line to ask, but
would it be all right if Susan and Carli stayed here with you for a couple of
days? I need to get back to the office in the morning and try to figure out what
to do about all this. And, in the meantime, you know, after what happened at my
office and at Susan's beach house, I'm not sure yet where else they'll be
safe." Loutie said, "Joey already asked.
Glad to have them." Loutie Blue was resourceful and
intelligent and, under the right circumstances, a disturbingly dangerous woman.
I knew from past experience that, as far as the statuesque woman cooking
waffles was concerned, if Joey wanted something, he got it. She felt an
extraordinary and intense devotion to my giant friend. I turned to Joey. "I don't know what
you're working on right now, but I could use your help on this." Joey said, "You mean more help,
don't you? In case you missed it, I've been buried ass deep in this case since
about two this morning when I started shooting people." "I didn't miss it. But, unless you've
got a better idea, we need someone—you—who can hang around St. George and Apalachicola and bang on doors
or bang on heads, or whatever it is you do, to get a lead on who might be
trying to kill our client. And I'm guessing it's going to take more than a day
or two to do it." "So you're not really asking if I can
do it. You're asking if I can do it for free." "More or less. I can cover expenses,
but Carli's going to have trouble coming up with seventy-five an hour for your
time." Susan interrupted. "I'll pay." Joey looked embarrassed. "Shit,
Susan. I was just jerking Tom's chain. I damn sure wasn't trying to get you to
pay. You know if you're in trouble, I'm gonna help you." Susan stepped down from the bar stool and
pulled up a chair at the table. She said, "Thank you. But I asked you and
Tom for help." Joey said, "You asked Tom for help. I
just showed up." Susan said, "That's right. You showed
up last night and saved our lives. You don't need to be noble here. A lot of
things have been hard for me since Bird died, but with our investments and
Bird's life insurance and a studio full of finished canvases, my crazy artist
husband left me pretty well off." Loutie walked over and poured fresh coffee
in Joey's cup. He watched steam curl off the surface. "Okay. I'm
hired," Joey said. "But, look, we're gonna be dealing with a bunch of
crooks. And crooks, if they're making a living at it and they got any sense,
generally keep a wad of cash stashed away for emergencies. So, let's say you're
paying the tab for now, but we can renegotiate if I stumble across any free
money along the way." I said, "I didn't hear that." Joey said, "Kinda late in life to be
turning into a Boy Scout." And I agreed that it probably was. Whether she was sleeping the whole time, I
don't know. But when Joey and I left around ten, we hadn't laid eyes on Carli. After Joey had departed for his place,
Susan loaned me her snub-nose .38. I drove home to Point Clear where I half
expected to find my burglar alarm blaring. Everything was fine. Maybe an
unlisted number had spared my house the same fate as my office, or maybe the
burglars had already stolen everything they needed. I managed a few more hours'
sleep in my own bed, then drummed sore muscles under a hot shower before
dressing and driving in to the office. Building maintenance had nailed a square
of unfinished plywood over my broken window. It was not a look designed to
impress clients. Inside, Kelly was in her office, and a
fresh pot of coffee wanned the kitchen. Kelly heard me rattling around for a
mug and came in as I was adding sugar to my coffee. She looked anxious,
"Is Susan okay?" Oh hell. I had forgotten all about Kelly. I said,
"I'm sorry. Susan's fine. Three men with guns did come after her and the
teenager last night when we were there, though." She asked what happened, and I told her.
When I was through, she said, "Loutie, huh? I should have thought of that.
I called Susan's after the police left and I got back home, but by that time
her phone was out. I guess I called you and Joey about twenty times this
morning." "Kelly, I'm really sorry. You
shouldn't have had to think of calling Loutie Blue's house. I should have
called you." "You were busy." She paused. "I
thought of something. You said when you and Susan went back in the house after
the cops, or I guess the sheriff, got there that that deputy who took you to
meet those painters was there." I said she was right. She nodded and went
on. "And you said the sheriff was the only one out of uniform, which means
that that deputy..." "Mickey Burns." "It means that this Deputy Burns was
in uniform, but when you called earlier the operator told you he was off
duty." "And the other deputy, the one who
met us in the driveway, was on duty that night because he got the call about
checking on Susan. Even though he never got around to doing it." "So, the sheriff and Deputy Burns are
both off duty. It's two in the morning, and Burns shows up in full uniform.
Isn't that strange?" "Yeah, it is." "Do you think it means
anything?" "I have no idea." Four uneventful days passed. I made some
calls, practiced a little law, and learned that See Shore Cottage was owned by
ProAm Holdings Corp. Apparently, the same company owned a number of beach
properties scattered along the Panhandle, in addition to substantial real estate
investments in one of the agricultural regions located in the north-central
part of the state. Also, finally, on Tuesday morning I spoke with Billie
Timmons at Dolphin Rentals about the painting duo of Tim and Sonny. She refused
to "divulge information" about the property, but did offer to let me
rent the place for a nice vacation with my wife and children. I told her I
didn't have anyone who fit into those particular categories but that I knew a
private cop with an ex-stripper girlfriend who might be interested, and she
thanked me for calling. On Wednesday, I received a fax of two
clippings from the weekly Appalachicola Times. One described an
attempted burglary on St. George Island that Sheriff Todd Wilson said had
resulted in no harm to anyone and no theft of property. (No need to scare the
tourists.) He did mention that a window had been broken. The second clipping
was a short notice placed by the management of the Pelican's Roost restaurant.
It requested help in locating a missing employee named Carli Monroe. Scribbled on the bottom of the fax was a
note from Joey. Tom, I had a little trouble the first night
here. Tied up with a couple of locals in a bar parking lot. Have their ID, etc.
Will be in Mobile late this afternoon. Meet me at L.B.'s place around 4:00. We
need to discuss my progress and this stuff from the local paper. Joey A few minutes before four, I turned down
Loutie Blue's historic, tree-lined street and parked next to the curb. Joey's
Expedition was in the driveway. chapter eight Shipping merchants settled along Monterey Street in the late 1700s, building
rambling clapboard houses with impossibly high ceilings and wavy glass in their
tall windows. Like most historic districts, the place went to seed in the
fifties and sixties when prosperous World War II veterans were making
everything newer and, they thought, better; and, like some of the lucky places
that dodged new lives as parking lots or turnpikes, the neighborhood around
Monterey Street started a gradual comeback in the seventies. Joey once told me
that Loutie bought her place about ten years ago for eighty grand. Now she
could sell it for four times that. The house was built when friends actually
walked to see each other. So, instead of a modern-America concrete strip curving
from the driveway to the front steps, a wide herringbone-pattern brick walk
started on the shaded sidewalk and led visitors through twin rows of impatiens
and up the steps to a covered porch. I bumped a brass knocker against the door.
Loutie appeared and led me back to the kitchen. It was a replay of my last
visit to that room. Loutie leaned against her counter, and Susan and Joey sat
at the table. No coffee this time. They were all sipping Abita wheat beer. At
least Susan and Loutie were sipping theirs; Joey was taking his in mouthfuls. I asked, "Is there some reason
Carli's not here?" "She's just outside. My flowers are
the only thing she's shown any interest in since she got here. So I put her to
work this afternoon planting bulbs I've had in the refrigerator. Unless there's
something she shouldn't hear, I can call her in." I said, "Nothing from me. Joey?" He shook his head and took in a swallow of
Abita. Loutie stepped into the mudroom and called out for Carli. We heard Carli
say, "Just a minute." I asked, "How's she doing?" Susan said, "I'm not sure. She seems
fine on the surface." "She's a long way from fine,"
Loutie said. "She just doesn't show it."" I asked, "How can you tell?"
But, before the conversation could go any further, a screen door slammed, and
Carli walked into the kitchen. She was barefoot and wearing the same blue jean
cutoffs I had seen before. This time, though, her shirt was one of those flimsy
tank-top undershirts that everybody's grandfather wore. And it was soaked
through, concealing nothing, clinging like a second skin, and plainly
displaying an exceptional pair of gravity-defying teenage breasts with tan,
erect nipples. She looked sweaty from yard work, but the shirt seemed a little
wetter than the rest of her. While Joey and I sat there looking and
trying not to look at our young client's knockers, Loutie said, "Carli, go
put on a decent shirt." Carli said, "I'm fine," and
started to pull out a chair at the table. Loutie caught Carli's eye and gave her
what was, for me anyway, a sphincter-tightening look. When Loutie spoke again,
her voice was an octave lower. She said, "Do it." Carli dropped her eyes to the floor and
walked quickly out of the room. I said, "What's wrong with her?
That's the second time she's pulled something like that. And it's not like
she's just your basic high school tease driving the boys crazy. To her, Joey
and I have got to look like a couple of old men." Joey looked up and said, "Speak for yourself." While we were talking, Loutie had moved to
the doorway to make sure Carli wasn't within earshot. She turned toward us and
said, "It's probably more pronounced because you're older. I think some
older man taught her early, probably in ways you can't imagine, that her only
value to men is sexual. She's been abused, and she's scared. And she's acting
out when you're around because she wants your help and probably your
approval." Susan said, "I knew she was afraid of
her father, but that's all. Did she tell you about this?" "No, I've just been watching her.
That child has been sexually abused by someone. Probably her father from what
you're saying." Loutie turned to me. "Tom, I think it also explains
why Carli insisted on reporting the murder on St. George to begin with.
If Carli's father was the abuser, he's already killed that child inside a
hundred times over. Carli didn't want to walk away from this murder the way her
mother or her family or friends walked away from her abuse without
helping." I said, "How can you be so sure? The
way you explain it, it seems to make sense. But people are screwed up for a lot
of different reasons." Joey piped in. "This isn't a
deposition, Tom. Just take her word for it." He sounded angry. I was taken aback. "What's wrong with
you?" Loutie put a hand on Joey's shoulder and
squeezed to quiet him. She said, "Joey knows my history." I thought for a second and said,
"Oh." Loutie said, "You know I used to
strip. I'm not ashamed of it. It's how I got this house, in a roundabout way.
And it set me up so I can work with Joey to make ends meet, and I don't have to
go to some office every day and blow the boss to keep my job." Joey interrupted to tell her she didn't
owe anybody any excuses. She said, not unkindly, "Hush Joey.
I'm not making excuses. I'm explaining how I know something." Loutie faced
me again. "A therapist told me once that ninety percent of exotic dancers
have been sexually abused, and, from the girls I knew in the business, that
seems low. "I grew up mostly in foster homes.
Some of them were okay. Some were bad, and some were awful. At thirteen, I
looked eighteen, the way Carli looks twenty at fifteen. Anyway..." Loutie
turned away to look out the window as she continued. "I was thirteen when
I started having problems with a forty-year-old asshole who was suppose to be
taking care of me. No one believed me, and no one helped. And I ended up
probably more screwed up, for a few years, than Carli is now." Loutie's eyes looked soft and tired when
she turned away from the window to face us. She took a long pull from her beer. I said, "Sorry." "There's nothing for you to be sorry
about. You didn't do anything wrong. Neither did I, and neither did Carli. The
only difference between me and Carli is that she doesn't understand that
yet." Her voice sounded husky. She took another long swallow of beer and
cleared her throat. Then we watched as Loutie pushed more hurt than most people
ever deal with back down where it had been for twenty years. In the space of a
few seconds, her eyes turned as hard and cool as glass, and, through pure force
of will, she became the old Loutie Blue again. The level of self-control we had
witnessed was amazing and sad and a little frightening. We were quiet until Carli came back into
the room wearing a washed face and her Florida State football jersey. Carli looked at Loutie and said, "You
happy?" "Thrilled," Loutie said and
turned to look at me. "Who's got something to report?" I pointed a finger at Joey. "He's
done all the work, but before he gets started, I want to talk about this fax
Joey sent me this morning." I reached inside a leather folder, pulled out
the fax, and put it in front of Carli. "This is a problem. The newspaper
story about the break-in is pretty weak and doesn't present any problems on its
own. The problem is that it appeared in today's paper. And the notice that you
are missing was in the same edition. Now Carli, I may be giving these people
too much credit, but it wouldn't be impossible for someone to connect the
timing of your disappearance with the break-in at Susan's house. Particularly,
if they ask around a little and find out you and Susan are friends."
Loutie put a Coke in front of Carli. She ignored it. Her lips had turned pale.
I went on. "This is not something to freak out over. It's a stretch to
think they'll put this together. Even if they did, no one outside this room
knows you're here with Loutie. You are completely safe, Carli. But, I wouldn't
be doing my job if I didn't tell you about this and tell you that we can no
longer assume that no one has figured out that you were the witness on the
beach." I turned to look at Susan. "That's the long shot—that somebody has put all this together and decided the witness
was Carli. The reality, the thing we know, is that they found your name in my
appointment book, and three men came to your house with guns. "I know none of this is a news flash.
But I want you to go on taking it seriously. Stay here, stay out of sight, and,
for goodness sake, don't call anybody. And that goes for you too, Carli. With
caller ID and star-sixty-nine, calling somebody these days is like announcing
your address." I tried to sound more confident than I
felt. "Joey and I will get you through this, but we can't do it if we're
having to worry every minute of the day about whether you're safe."
Carli's lips had returned to their natural color, and she was sipping her Coke.
Good. "Carli. We're working for you. Do you have any questions?" Carli drank some more Coke and studied the
table in front of her. She said, "What happened at the house the other
night? You know, when you and Susan went back to talk with the cops, and me and
Joey waited for you by the road. What did you tell them?" "First Carli, let me explain
something I should have told you already. Everything we're talking about here
is privileged. That means you don't ever have to tell anyone on earth about
anything we say here, and I'll never tell anyone any of this. I would go to
jail before I would tell anyone anything you tell me as your attorney. "Do you understand all this?" She nodded her head. I said, "Carli, please look at me and
answer me out loud. This is important. I don't want to hear later that you
weren't really sure what I was talking about. Do you understand everything I've
told you?" She said, "I understand what you
said, but..." "But what, Carli?" "That stuff about going to jail to
protect me. Is that true? Would you really do that?" I smiled. "Don't worry, nobody's
going to throw me in jail for doing my job. But yes Carli, if it came to it, I
would definitely go to jail to protect you and what you tell me." Our fifteen-year-old exhibitionist client
actually blushed. She said, "What about the other night at Susan's beach
house? You still haven't answered my question about that." "I'm getting to that. I wanted you to
understand privilege before I got into it with you. "After Susan and I left you and Joey
on the beach, we talked about how to handle the sheriff. I told her to tell the
truth about everything except you and Joey being at the house that night.
Normally, I would never lie to the police." Joey cleared his throat. I
ignored him. "But the sheriff and his people were just treating it as an
attempted burglary anyway, so I didn't see any reason to argue with them. "When we got back to the house, the
sheriff and two deputies were there. We explained who we were, and Susan asked
to go upstairs to take an aspirin. No one had been up there yet, so Susan
quickly made up your and Joey's beds and came back down. "The only sticky part was explaining
about multiple gunshots that had been reported to the sheriff's office. But,
with glass blown all over the living room, it wasn't hard to convince the
sheriff that the intruders shot up the house for fun." Joey said, "And that wouldn't be
unusual. Teenagers who break into a house are usually drunk or stoned and spend
more time trashing the place than looking for stuff to steal. And Sheriff
Wilson would know that. Also, while I was down there this week, a couple of
people I talked to said something about 'all the trouble we've been having with
these young guys,' or something close to that. I'm guessing that the break-in
at Susan's wasn't the first local crime glossed over so they wouldn't upset the
tourists." I asked Carli, "Is that it? Do you
have any other questions about anything?" Carli shook her head. I looked
at Joey. Joey reached down, lifted a brown paper
shopping bag off the floor, and dumped its contents on the kitchen table. Most
of it looked like stuff you'd find on someone's dresser: keys, cash and change,
one billfold, and three Churchill-sized cigars. A couple of less routine items
rounded out the collection: a switchblade with a yellow handle and a
half-smoked joint. He looked at me. "You see my note on
the fax about getting jumped by a couple of locals the first night down
there?" I nodded. "Well, this is what they had on 'em. "The first night there, I'm driving
around, getting the feel of the place, and stopping in any bars I come up on to
have a drink and ask a few questions. Around eleven, I stop in a place called
the Shrimp Boat, buy a glass of whatever's on tap, and tell the bartender I'm
looking into the break-in the night before on St. George Island." Joey
stopped to drain his beer. "Somebody my size doesn't get told to fuck off
as much as your normal, run-of-the-mill loudmouth. But this bartender—who must have weighed about a hundred forty soaking wet—gave me that instruction. So, I take a couple more sips of
lukewarm beer and move on, figuring, you know, that the Shrimp Boat had future
possibilities. "Outside, I get in the car and, two
hundred yards down the road, I know somebody's following me. I keep going. Looking
for somewhere with lights and people. Over across the bridge, I see a place
called Mother's Milk." Susan laughed and said, "That's
impressive, Joey. Between the Shrimp Boat and Mother's Milk, you managed to hit
the two sleaziest places in Franklin County, Florida, in one night." Joey smiled and said, "Thank you. I
didn't think I was gonna find three killers at the yacht club or at one of
those yuppie restaurants they got stuffed into the storefronts there. Damnedest
thing I ever saw. Places that used to be diners and feed stores, they got
filled with pasta restaurants, cappuccino shops, shit like that. "Anyway, getting back to my story, I
pull into the parking lot of Mother's Milk, figuring whoever's tailing me will
probably hang back and maybe follow me if I go inside. But I park, and these
two assholes in a red pickup pull in behind me and block me in. To make a long
story short, they ask me why I'm asking questions about the burglary. I decline
to provide information, and they come after me with that little yellow knife
there and a baseball bat. I took the bat and tapped them with the small
end." I said, "Tapped them, huh?" "Yeah, I tapped 'em. It ain't what
you saw on the Rodney King tape, but it's the way cops are supposed to
use a nightstick. You don't wail on somebody with one, unless you want 'em
dead. You just pop 'em on the knees and shins and shoulders and maybe across
the nose. Hurts like hell." Joey stood and retrieved another Abita from
the refrigerator. He leaned against the counter next to Loutie and twisted off
the cap. "They were a couple of tough boys. Prison tattoos and one of 'em
with three or four teeth missing from other fights. They weren't talking. "I thought about calling the sheriff,
but any cop would have just thrown us all in jail for brawling outside a bar.
So, I emptied their pockets, went through the truck, got the tag number, that
kinda stuff. Before I left, I popped the hood and yanked a few wires off the
distributor so they'd stay put." "What have you found out from the
things you took out of their pockets?" I asked him. Joey told us that the only one with ID—Thomas Bobby Haycock—also owned the
truck. Mr. Haycock had a record going back twenty years and featuring drug
dealing, battery, and attempted murder. Haycock's friend had no ID and wouldn't
talk, but he had a dagger tattoo on his left forearm with R.I.P. over it and
the initials R.E.T. under it. The two had almost seven hundred dollars between
them, not to mention a bat, a knife, a joint, and three cigars. Susan picked up one of the huge cigars,
looked at the label, and rolled it between her fingers. She said, "Mr.
Haycock has pretty good taste for someone with prison tattoos. This is a Cuban,
handmade Cohiba. Legally, you can't get them in this country. But every now and
then Bird used to get a few from his gallery in New Orleans. The gallery owner
picked them up in Canada when he was up there schmoozing some wildlife artist.
These things cost about thirty-five, forty dollars each even up there." I said, "Where'd some Franklin County
hard-ass come up with three forty-dollar, imported, contraband Cuban
cigars?" Joey said, "Interesting, ain't
it?" I nodded. "Yes, it is. You had this
Haycock's name and tag, his criminal record, and some kind of address. What
happened when you checked out his address? He wasn't there, was he?" "You think you're smart, don't
you?" I just looked at him. It was a rhetorical
question. "No. He wasn't there, and he didn't
come home for two more days. I found a comfortable place in the brush nearby,
and caught up on my reading. He showed up Sunday night at his little house,
stayed inside until just before daybreak, and came out with a stuffed sports
bag and a half-full, brown grocery bag like this one." Joey held up the
bag he had used to hold his attackers' possessions. "I followed him down
the coast to a marina in Carrabelle. He waited around there until seven and got
on the ferry to Dog Island." "How close is that to St.
George?" I asked. Susan said, "It's just northeast of
St. George. Less than a mile. It's about half as big, and it doesn't have a
causeway. You've got to either take the ferry or take a plane. They've got a
little landing strip in the middle of the island. Or, of course, you could always
go by boat if the chop's not too bad and you watch out for oyster beds. "It's a lot less developed than St.
George, too, because it's harder to get to. The last couple of years, though, a
few people with big money have started building some major houses out there.
Still, for the most part, it's pretty undeveloped. There's just one small motel
and mostly a lot of old-fashioned, wooden beach houses." "And our friend Tommy Bobby Haycock
is in one of 'em." Joey added, "This ferry he got on ain't exactly
the Staten Island Ferry. It's a little pissant boat, where everybody sees
everybody else. So I waited for the next one and went over. Like Susan says,
there's not much on Dog Island, so I was able to find him pretty quick. "Last night, I tailed Haycock when he
went out on a little adventure. And, Tom, if you got a few days to kill, I
think I can show you where those Cuban cigars come from." chapter nine Seasons never change smoothly along the
coast. By Thursday morning, winter had stuttered
forward again into March and dropped the temperature on the Panhandle from high
seventies to low fifties. A steady rain fell from gray cloud cover, drenching
the morning in melancholy tones. I reached over and clicked off the high
beams as a scattering of weekend houses began to transition into boat shops and
real estate offices. Joey directed me through downtown Carrabelle, over a
curving bridge, and into a marina that looked like a transplant from Buzzard's
Bay in Massachusetts. Row upon row of oversized yachts lined a maze of concrete
docks, and, everywhere, gray-haired couples roamed about, sipping coffee and
talking boats. We were expected at the marina office,
and, after dropping ten twenties on the counter, my Jeep got the one vehicle
slot on the seven-o'clock ferry. Back out in the morning drizzle, I drove
around a bunker and down a concrete incline to the ferry. One of the less
promising delegates from Generation X stood on deck and waved us forward. I
rolled onto the boat and stopped next to a guy with three gold hoops piercing
one eyebrow and a large blue dot tattooed across the bridge of his nose. Joey said, "You don't see that every
day." I smiled and poured some coffee from a
steel thermos into a plastic cup. And we waited. The FSU station out of
Tallahassee was rerunning a segment from "Car Talk." Joey and I
listened to middle-age guys in New England act silly until the ferry left the
dock and moved toward the mouth of the harbor; then Joey reached over and
turned off the radio. Enough was enough. The view began to open up, and smooth
water turned choppy as the ferry beneath us moved out of the harbor and into
Apalachicola Bay. I flipped up the hood on my windbreaker and stepped out into
the morning mist to get a feel for the place. I guess Joey got out because I
did. Bumpy, steel-gray water reflected the
rain-filled sky. Diesel fumes swirled in the air, raising whispers of nausea in
my stomach and making me wish I had eaten breakfast. We climbed back in the
Jeep. An hour later we chugged into a wide,
sandy inlet on the bay side of Dog Island. The ferry ploughed a straight line
through a jumble of anchored sailing yachts and docked alongside one of two
wooden docks. According to a carefully painted sign on shore, we had arrived at
the Dog Island Yacht Club. There was no building or facilities; just the
sign. Near the docks, a collection of plywood
rectangles on two-by-four stakes held a laminated assortment of maps and charts
and set out a list of island rules. Joey poked me and pointed to one. Do not
clean fish on the dock. Alligator Hazard Area. I turned the key in the ignition and
looked for the off-ramp. There wasn't one. Cost or environmental concerns, or
maybe ambivalence, had kept the shoreline unblemished by concrete or asphalt.
If you wanted a car on Dog Island, you drove it off the ferry, down into a foot
or two of salt water, and up onto the beach. I guess it kept out the riffraff.
It also seemed to have a startling effect on the kind of vehicles people
brought over. The sandy ruts leading away from the ephemeral Dog Island Yacht
Club led us between rows of junkyard Americana. On each side, thirty or forty
decrepit, rusted-out vehicles formed precise queues of mobile scrap metal.
Ancient VW vans sat next to geriatric Jeeps with winches bolted to their front
bumpers, and those sat beside Brady-Bunch station wagons with
faded-plastic wood grain peeling from their doors. A dozen boxy Fords and about
as many tail-finned Plymouths were mixed in. Several had been hand painted with
rainbows and flowers. I said, "Looks like the parking lot
of a Grateful Dead concert from 1978." Joey nodded at a shiny new Range Rover
parked in among the rust buckets. "That's embarrassing." "What is all this?" "Most folks with houses out here
bring over old clunkers to use while they're on the island. They'll keep a heap
here until the salt air turns it into a block of rust; then they'll haul it
away and bring over another one. With the ferry just carrying one car at a time
and at two hundred a pop, I guess it's easier and cheaper than trying to bring
over the family car every time you wanna come out." "Looks like hell." "Yeah. Supposed to be some big
controversy. The old residents think it's ... I don't know." "Droll?" "Yeah, I guess. Kind of atmospheric.
Some of the new ones who came out here in the last couple of years and built
mansions think it looks like shit. That's probably what the Range Rover's doing
here. Somebody trying to make a point." "Or just somebody with more money
than sense." "It happens." I lowered my window and put my hand out
with the palm up to feel the rain. "How do you know all this?" Joey sighed. "I been talking to
people. You know, investigating. That's what I do." I pulled my hand back inside. It was wet.
"I thought you just beat up people and shot holes in them, that sort of
thing." "That too." Up past the rows of rusted junkers, the
sandy road dead-ended into the main island highway, which was nothing but a
couple of slightly deeper ruts in the sand. Joey told me to turn left, and we
followed the tracks of countless tires past Captain Casey's Inn and along the
backbone of the island before turning off onto an even fainter roadway. Finally, we parked; we found a spot near
our prey; and we waited. Hours passed. Thomas Bobby Haycock sat
warm and dry inside his island bungalow. Not far away, Joey and I sat, wet and
cold and miserable, huddled under a few scrawny pine trees and drinking coffee
from a steel thermos. My Jeep waited nearby on an undeveloped piece of beach
hidden from view by a half dozen sand dunes topped with undulating tufts of sea
grass. ' "Tell me again why we're sitting in
the rain, staring at his house." Joey had a pair of binoculars trained on
Haycock's bungalow. He said, "In case he goes somewhere." "And the reason we can't just wait
down the road in my Jeep—with a heater, out of the rain, maybe
listening to a little jazz on the CD player—and wait for
his pickup to drive by is... ?" "We're on an island. All he's gotta
do is take a walk on the beach and not come back. In twenty minutes, he could
be at the ferry or climbing into a buddy's boat or just be somewhere on the
island where we aren't." "That explains why you're doing it.
Why does a highly trained attorney like myself have to sit out here with
you?" "The bonds of friendship." "I knew there was a good
reason." "And Susan and Carli." "Even better." Joey leaned back against the trunk of a
wind-tortured pine and squirmed his butt in the sand to try to get comfortable.
"That little girl's got herself fixated on you, you know? All that wet
undershirt stuff and waving her tits around." "Fixated?" "Fuck you. You know what I mean. It's
just something to watch out for is all. Loutie says it's kinda sweet. Says
she's glad it's you and not some asshole who'd take advantage of her." I lay on my back, closed my eyes, and let
the light rain sting my face. I said, "I'll say one thing. You can't
bullshit her. She's going to need some counseling or something when this is
over, but she's not stupid. If we can give her the chance, she's going to be
okay. And Susan says she's got some talent. Draws and paints a little. Knows
the difference in good art and bad." "Something there worth saving." I said, "Everybody's worth
saving," but thought better of it and added, "Almost everybody." "You know what I mean." "Yeah," I said, "I
know." A little after noon, I hiked over dune and
dale to fetch Cokes, sandwiches, and Oreos from a cooler in the Jeep. Around
six, I made the same trip. These were the highlights of my day. At ten that night, I found a slab of my
left buttock and thigh with no feeling in it. Nothing, not even needles. Two
hours later, our quarry emerged from his house in darkness. We saw him when he
opened the driver's door on his pickup and stepped inside. Joey said, "Let's go," and my
dead hindquarters and I humped along behind Joey as he sprinted to the Jeep. I
unlocked the doors with the remote, jumped in, and got the thing cranked and
turned around in time to see Haycock's truck zoom by on the dirt roadway. Joey
had pulled the fuse responsible for lighting the Jeep's interior. It was my job
to remember not to turn on the headlights and, of course, to drive that way
down a curving dirt road at midnight without crashing and without losing sight
of Haycock. All of which I somehow did. Haycock led us to a deserted stretch of
beach, where he drove across the sand, pointed his front bumper at the water,
and killed the headlights. I hid the Jeep in a pine thicket diagonally across
the road, and we circled around to the beach on foot. My reward for my first
successful tail was another forty minutes cramped against a rain-soaked dune,
watching Haycock's motionless pickup. Finally, Joey tapped my back with a
knuckle, pointed out at the ocean, and said, "Look." "What?" "Straight out from here. Don't look
at the horizon. It's about halfway between the horizon and the beach." I still hadn't seen anything when Haycock
flashed his low beams three times. Almost immediately, a single blue light
flashed three times on the water. If we hadn't been looking for the signal and
we had noticed it at all, it would have looked like nothing more than a
reflected star. I whispered, "You saw this
before?" "Yeah. It's what we came down here to
see. Now watch. If it's like the other night, a boat's gonna pull up here in a
few minutes with a couple of men and some boxes." I moved up on the dune
for a better look. Joey said, "Keep your head down. The men on the boat
the other night were carrying what looked like AK-47s." I put my head down. An outboard motor rumbled in the distance.
Minutes passed. Twice there was a triple flash on the water that Haycock
answered with his headlights. I said, "The guy in the boat is checking his
course on the way in." Joey said, "Looks like it." Thirteen minutes after the first set of
blue flashes, an arrowhead-shaped pontoon boat puttered onto the sand. A figure
in the bow jumped out to pull the boat up onto the beach. Haycock stepped out
of the truck's cab and walked down the beach to help. Joey whispered, "I count three left
in the boat. And two on the beach, including Haycock." "Four and two. There's a kid in the
boat." "I'll be damned." With a quarter moon and cloud cover, the
passengers' features were impossible to see. But we could plainly make out the
dark outlines of Haycock, two armed men, a plump, unarmed man, a woman, and a
small child. Voices floated on the night air. The plump man helped the woman
and child out of the boat, and the woman led the child to Haycock's pickup and
climbed inside, placing the child on her lap. When the interior light came on,
we could see them both plainly. She had straight dark hair and black eyes. The
child had her coloring and his father's pudgy build—assuming the unarmed man was his father. While this was going on, the armed man in
the stern sat still with a rifle across his lap. When mother and child were
safe inside the truck, he stepped over the gunwale and stationed himself
halfway between the truck and boat, holding a serious-looking firearm at the
ready. The other three men formed a fire line. Pudgy Poppa knelt inside the
boat and handed large cardboard boxes and small wooden crates to the second,
formerly armed man, who, in turn, stacked the cargo above the high-tide mark
and out of the surf's reach. Haycock carried the boxes and crates to his truck
and stacked them in the bed. This was not the first time Haycock and friends
had done this. In less than fifteen minutes and with minimal communication,
they had filled the truck bed with cargo and the two armed men had departed in
the pontoon boat. Haycock secured a tarp over his truckload
as Poppa climbed in the cab with his family. Illuminated by the overhead bulb,
Poppa's coloring was, if anything, darker than his wife's. The kid hadn't
gotten anything from Mom. He was a curly-headed clone of his father. Joey tapped my leg and started to move
away. I closed a hand on his arm to stop him. "Wait." I motioned for
Joey to stay put and then crawled to a point ten yards behind and a few paces
to the left of Haycock's pickup. Something was going on inside the cab. Haycock
had a highway map unfolded and propped against the steering wheel. Poppa craned
his neck and leaned across his wife and child to see. Haycock held a metal
cigarette lighter to illuminate and trace a path across the map. The lighter snapped shut. Haycock flashed
his low beams twice and then twice more. The same pattern repeated in blue on
the water, and he turned the ignition key. Tires spun in the sand, and the back
bumper arced backward, thumping into the small dune I was hiding behind. Haycock
changed gears and dusted me with a cloud of sand as he drove off the beach and
turned left onto the dirt road. Scrambling to my feet, I sprinted to the
Jeep. Joey met me there. By the time we were back on the road. Haycock was out
of sight. I pointed the Jeep in his direction, flipped on the headlights, and
floored it. Joey sounded a tad judgmental. "That
was interesting." "Yeah, it was." "He's gone." "Maybe." Parallel white ruts stretched out in
front. Sand and dark thickets and an occasional vacation home whirred by in the
night. Joey said, "We lost him." "You said that." "Where are we going?" "The motel." "Why?" "Haycock's got to do something with
that family. The ferry doesn't run at night, and he's headed away from his
house. And I'm guessing they're not going to another boat. If they had planned
to reach the mainland tonight by water, they would have just landed there to
start with. It doesn't make sense to risk two landings when one would do. So,
that leaves two possible destinations—a private home
or the only motel on the island. And I think it's going to be the motel." "How do you figure that?" "Because," I said, "if
they're going to a private home, I lost them." Vapor lights bathed the roadside ahead in
ugly light. I slowed and cruised past Captain Casey's Inn. There in the parking
lot, big as life and butt ugly, was Thomas Bobby Haycock striding toward his
truck. Mom, Poppa, and junior were gone. We cruised on past and, a hundred
yards down, hung a "U." I waited for Haycock's red taillights to
disappear around a curve so we would be out of view and switched off my
headlights. We were able to tail him back to his bungalow, unnoticed. I turned to Joey. "Is that it?" "That's pretty much it. In the
morning—if he does the same thing he did a few
days ago—he's gonna catch the early ferry and
transport his truck to the mainland. Where he goes from there, I have no
idea." "And even if we could get on the same
ferry without being noticed, the Dog Island Ferry only hauls one car at a
time." Joey nodded. "Yep." "So, there's not much else we can do
for now." "Not much. If you think it's worth
it, I'll hang around a few more days and try to catch him coming off the ferry
one morning with a truckload of stuff. He knows my Expedition, but I can rent a
car and follow him. Try to see where he's taking it." "Yeah. I think it's worth it. I'll
double-check with Susan to make sure she thinks it's worth the money, but it
looks like the next step to me." My mind wandered over what we had seen
and formed a picture of a chubby little boy crossing the Gulf at night in an
open boat. I asked, "What was the deal with the kid in the boat? You told
me Haycock was involved in what looks like a smuggling operation. You didn't
say anything about smuggling people." "That's cause I didn't know it. The
other night, it was just "On. Okay. What now?" Joey said, "We go get some sleep.
I've got a room at Captain Casey's." I turned the Jeep around and, a quarter
mile down the road, clicked the headlights back on. I said, "How did you
know Haycock was going to meet that boat tonight? Don't tell me he does that
every night." "Nope. That's just the second time in
a week. We got lucky." My backside hurt. I had been drenched, chilled to
the bone, and nearly run over. I said, "Yeah. I guess we were." Captain Casey had thoughtfully placed a
clock radio on the chipped Formica nightstand in lieu of providing wake-up
service. I set the alarm, and Joey clicked off the lamp at 2:56 a.m. Having caught up on missed sleep at
Loutie's, I was back to my usual three hours. I woke Joey a few minutes after
six, stumbling to the bathroom to brush my teeth and rinse with motel
mouthwash. The first ferry from the island to the mainland was at eight. Joey
turned over. I pulled on yesterday's damp jeans and a windbreaker and went out
for a walk on the beach. As I've said before, you can get a lot of
thinking done if you aren't able to sleep. You also get to see things that
people without night demons never get to see. That morning, I saw a bleary-eyed
but exuberant Hispanic family watching the sun rise over the Gulf of Mexico.
Plump Poppa sat on the sand, presiding over mother and son as they fashioned a
drip castle from handfuls of sopping sand. As I approached, the mother seemed
to have tears in her tired eyes. I said, "Buenos dias." The little boy, who looked to be about six
years old, smiled up at me, and said, "Buenos dias." Mom froze with her pretty profile outlined
against the pale, early morning beach; then she turned to her husband. Poppa
gave me a hard look and said, "Good morning," in cultivated English
that, despite its precision, had an alien, equatorial inflection. And for the
first time—maybe because he had spoken or because
anger had flashed across his delicate, puffy features—I seemed to recognize him from some half-remembered news story,
from a faded newspaper photo or one of the hundreds of video clips that wash
across the television screen every day. And the faint gray-tone memory cast a
brief but unsettling shadow over my thoughts. As I walked away, the mother gathered up
Junior in her arms and the two parents walked quickly toward the motel. I could
hear the little boy start to cry and to beg his parents for something. My only
Spanish is what I remember from high school. But even I knew that the sweet
child who had smiled and wished me a good morning only wanted to stay on the
beautiful beach and finish building his castle in the sand. And I knew I was
the asshole who ruined it for him. chapter ten Outside the office window, tender new
growth flecked the dark ivy
that framed my view of the docks. Sinking deep into my chair, I sipped
coffee-flavored milk foam. It beat the hell out of crouching in the rain for
sixteen hours. Kelly had brewed cappuccino, in her words, to celebrate my
presence in the office. There seemed, I thought, to be a work-ethic message or
reprimand in there somewhere. I was thinking about that and about Carli and
about sand castles. Kelly sat in a client chair blowing gently
to make a hole in her foam. She asked, "How's the coffee?" "It's wonderful. It does, however,
seem to be encouraging sloth on my part." Kelly smiled, and, like every time she
smiled, I remembered how much I liked her. Kelly stood about five foot two and
weighed in at maybe a hundred pounds after Thanksgiving dinner. She wore her
black hair short, too short in my unsolicited and unexpressed opinion, and she
looked out at the world through bright blue eyes. For years, she had run five
miles a day, and she looked it. She said, "What happened to the
little boy on the beach?" "The whole family got on the eight
o'clock ferry with Tommy Bobby Haycock and his loaded pickup. Joey and I had to
wait for the next ferry, and, by the time we got to the landing, Haycock and
the family had cleared out." Kelly blew her foam some more. I said,
"Are you going to drink any of that or did you just make it so you could
play with the suds?" Kelly smiled, and a thought occurred to me. "Who
do we know at the state docks?" She looked out the window and wrinkled her
forehead with thought. "No one. We've got a couple of clients whose
families were in the shipping business a hundred years ago, but no one at the
state docks. And really no one who's in shipping now." "I need to find out what ships or
boats were in Apalachicola Bay on two specific dates. And, if there's any way
we can find out, I'd like to know if any of those boats arrived recently from
South or Central America." "Good luck." "Thank you." Kelly thought some more and said, "I
go out sometimes with a guy in the Coast Guard. I don't think he'd break any
rules for me. We're not that close. But if it's public knowledge, he should
either know how to dig it out or how to find someone else who can." "Do you mind asking him?" "Nah. What're the dates?" "Yesterday and last Tuesday. The
twentieth and twenty-second." She said, "Gotcha," and walked
out of the office. Ten minutes later, she was back. "Looks like he's out
guarding the coast. I left a message with the operator, or whatever they call
people who take messages at the Coast Guard. And I left a message on his
answering machine at home." "Thank you very much." "You're welcome very much." I turned once again to look out the
window. Over Mobile Bay, the sun lasered yellow beams through white clouds. I
did not feel like dictating or drafting or planning legal strategies. And, for
better or worse, my workload was such that there wasn't all that much of that
sort of thing to do. I swiveled my chair around to look at Kelly. "It's
Friday. Why don't you take off early?" "Because I've got work to do." "Can it wait until Monday?" "Probably." "Then you can probably go home. Take
off. I'll see you next week." A few minutes later, I heard her leave by
the front door. I flipped through pink message slips on my desk and tried to
return a few calls from fellow members of the bar. No luck. Mobile may be a
bustling international seaport, but then it's also a seaport. People don't kill
themselves with work and worry. And most lawyers play golf on Friday
afternoons. It's one of the things I always admired most about the city. I had finished off my coffee and was
ransacking the kitchen for a lost bag of double-chocolate Milano cookies when a
thought occurred to me. Back behind my desk, I flipped on my laptop and
searched Lotus Organizer for the phrase, "natural resource." Elmore
Puppet popped up. Elmore was one of my father's contacts at the Alabama
Department of Natural Resources and Conservation. My father owns a small
sawmill, and Puppet had helped him solve minor political problems over the
years. And, a few years ago, he had helped me find a job for an out-of-work
client with a forestry degree and a bad attitude. It was a few minutes past three—a problematic time to find a state employee in his office on a
Friday afternoon. I called. After getting passed around by a succession of
pleasant female voices, I heard Puppet pick up. "Mr. Puppet. This is Tom McInnes in
Mobile. Sam McInnes in Coopers Bend is my father." I had forgotten how unreasonably happy the
guy was. "I'll be damned. Sure. It's Sam's hot-shit lawyer son. How you
doin'?" "I'm fine, Mr. Puppet." "Call me Elmore, Tom. I may be old as
hell, but your old man is family." To Elmore, everyone he ever met was
family. I said, "I've got a problem. I remember seeing some aerial photos
of the sawmill and some timberland on Sam's desk." "You call your daddy Sam? My old man
would have kicked my ass." I turned to look out again at the bay. The
truth was that I didn't much care for the man who begat me, and I sure as hell
wasn't going to call him Daddy. Even as an adult, I never could figure out why
so many people seemed to like him. The closest I could come is that my old man
had made a lot of money over the course of his life, and too many people seem
to like saying some old rich guy is their friend. And it occurred to me that
that cynical conclusion probably said something about how nice a guy I was too. I took a deep breath. "Elmore, I've
lost track of everyone who wants to kick my ass." He laughed too hard, and
I resumed my effort to elicit useful information. "Anyway, I know Sam got
the aerials from you, and I need some photos of the Panhandle." "Oh. Okay. Well, you see, we don't
take the pictures ourselves. We get 'em from the federal government. Either the
Air Force or the Interior Department or NASA. There's several places that do
that." "Are they detailed enough to see a
particular boat anchored off the Panhandle and identify it?" Elmore paused to think about that. He
said, "Let me put it this way. No. But, if you knew the exact location of
the boat, you could hire a guy I know in Marengo County to fly over and get any
kind of pictures you want." "All I know is that the boat's
probably in Apalachicola Bay, but it could be anywhere within a dozen miles of
Apalachicola." Elmore laughed. "Well then, get out
your checkbook. To get the detail you want, you'd have to hire the pilot to fly
up and down the coast all day taking a series of overlapping photographs." What I had really wanted were photos from
the day before. I had gone ahead and asked about the pilot because there was
some possibility that Joey could let me know the next time the smugglers made a
nighttime landing, and I could take that opportunity to call the aerial
photographer. Which was a pretty stupid idea, since, if I were going to do
that, I could just hire a pilot or even a power boat and make the rounds
myself. I said, "What about NASA? I heard they had close-ups of Saddam
Hussein having breakfast before the Gulf War." Elmore laughed some more. He was one happy
guy. "Saddam Hussein ain't hanging out on the Panhandle, Tom. Most of the
time, NASA has their satellites shut down when they're not over something
they're interested in. I mean, I don't mean to make you feel stupid. I just
know 'cause I've been doing this for forty years." "Any suggestions?" "Check with the Coast Guard." "It's in the works. Thanks,
Elmore." "Any time. Any time at all. And tell
your father I said howdy." I said I would and hung up. State
employees. Some hold on to their jobs through shifting administrations by
digging up dirt, some by never being noticed, and some, like Elmore Puppet,
stayed put for forty years by liking every miserable s.o.b. they ever met. I couldn't think of anything else useful
to do, and the thought—or more precisely the absence of thought—was making me antsy. I called Susan and invited myself over for
dinner at Loutie's house. Susan said, "Joey's already coming
over to see Loutie tonight. Why don't you pick up some pizza, and we'll make a
party of it?" I agreed that that sounded like one hell of an idea. I called
ahead for two deep dish pizzas with everything, then drove to Blockbuster and
picked up Rear Window and Get Shorty, figuring that between
Hitchcock and Elmore Leonard there would be something for everyone. On the way
to the pizza place, I reached Joey on his cell phone. He said, "I hear we're having a
party." "Looks like it." I asked,
"Why aren't you on Dog Island watching Haycock?" "I thought I'd come home and talk
with Susan and Carli about what happened and go back down on Monday with a
fresh perspective." I said, "Wanted the weekend off,
huh?" "Basically." I told him to bring beer and soft drinks
and pushed the end button on my flip phone. When Get Shorty ended, Carli popped
in Hitchcock and made an effort to get into Jimmy Stewart and Grace Kelly. Susan
asked me to give her a hand with the leftovers, and we carried cardboard pizza
boxes, tomato-pasted plates, and sticky glasses into the kitchen. Susan scraped
cold crust into the disposal and loaded the dishwasher while I searched out
trash bags and stuffed one with boxes and napkins and other trash from the
plastic receptacle under Loutie's sink. I finished with the trash and walked
through the mudroom and out the back door with the intention of finding an
outside garbage can. The flat lawn reached back to a brick wall that separated
it from the service alley. The cans hunkered against the wall on the alley
side. I reached over the brick wall, stuffed my black plastic bag in an empty
Rubbermaid can, and pressed the lid back into place. When I turned around,
Susan stood in the doorway framed by light from the kitchen. I started walking
back, and she came out to meet me, carrying a fresh beer in each hand. She handed one to me, and I thanked her.
She said, "It's nice out, isn't it?" "Yeah. It is. It's funny. Joey and I
nearly froze in the rain yesterday on Dog Island." Susan walked away from the house and
leaned against a slender magnolia tree that looked like a relatively recent
addition to the two-hundred-year-old yard. I followed and stood in the shadows
looking at her. She asked, "How much longer before Carli and I get our
lives back?" "I don't know, Susan. We know a lot.
We might be able to go to the cops now and get Haycock arrested, but I don't
think it would stick. It's just our word against his. I guess we could report
the beach rendezvous and shut them down on Dog Island for a while, but they'd
just pick back up somewhere else. And then we wouldn't be able to keep an eye
on them. Right now, I think it's better to know where the Bodines are and what
they're doing. And, as far as I can see, shutting down one little smuggling
operation wouldn't do much to keep Carli safe." Susan's features had disappeared into a
dark silhouette, but I could feel her eyes moving over my face like fingertips
as I talked. My thoughts turned liquid, and I had to concentrate to bring my
mind back on point. "I'm ... I'm open to suggestions. But it looks like
we've just got to stick it out until we can figure out enough about what's
going on to completely shut down whoever's after you and Carli." Susan
shifted her weight from one foot to the other. With only a sliver of moon in
the night sky, she was nearly invisible beneath the tree's shadow. I said,
"I'm going back down there tomorrow to see if I can find out who was
anchored offshore last night." Susan's voice dropped to just above a
whisper. "I really appreciate everything you and Joey are doing." I
tried to say something about the others wondering where we were, but she kept
speaking quietly. "After the comments you made to Carli about getting me
hurt last fall, which you didn't, I want to make sure you're not doing all this
because you still feel guilty about something." "I don't think I feel guilty. It's
more like I feel responsible. It was my brother who..." Susan interrupted. "There's plenty of
blame in what happened, but none of it is yours. You helped me through a very
hard time. I am nothing but grateful for that and for what you're doing for me
and Carli now." As Susan spoke, she leaned forward and hooked her finger in
the front of my shirt and bumped me gently on the chest for emphasis. When she tilted forward, she came out of
the magnolia's shadow, and I could see her face in the moonlight. Her small
hand felt warm against my chest, and my mind filled with the image and
sensations of our brief kiss at her beach house. Without really thinking, I
leaned forward and kissed her lips. I stepped back, and she smiled. I took a
sip of beer, because I wasn't sure what else to do right then, and felt her
hand on my shirt pulling me toward her. I put my arms around her waist, and her
hand slid up my chest and neck to the back of my head as our lips met again.
Her lips parted and our tongues touched. Slowly, I found myself pushing deeper into
her mouth and pulling her body close against mine. Minutes later, when we
stepped apart, the night air held too little oxygen. Susan said, "I haven't made out like
that in years. Jeez. High school at the drive-in." I was glad she couldn't see my face.
"Is that good or bad?" "Ohhh. That's good." As she
pulled me to her, she said, "I liked high school." We kissed again, and I pulled back to look
at her eyes. The pupils were dilated, which could have meant she was interested
or even aroused if we hadn't been standing in the dark. But, interested or not,
I thought I saw a few too many emotions playing across her face. I realized it
had been years since she had kissed anyone but her husband, and, if my guess
was right, it had been eight or nine months with no one to kiss or hold since
he had died. I turned and led her across the moonlit
yard to the back door. When we entered the kitchen, Susan said,
"Come on. I want to show you something," and led me away from the
living room and toward the back of the house. "What is it?" "Just follow me." Susan led me down the hall to a bedroom
door. She pushed it open and reached inside to flick on the light. I asked, "Why are we going into a
bedroom?" Susan gave me a look and said, "You
wish." She stepped inside. "I want you to see something Carli
did." I followed Susan into the room and looked
around. Taped to the vanity mirror, scattered on the bed, and stacked on the
bedside table were a total of maybe twenty drawings. I walked over to the
vanity and looked. My charcoal image looked back from a piece of lined notebook
paper taped there. I said, "This isn't a stalker thing,
is it?" Susan shook her head. "We really do
think a lot of ourselves tonight, don't we? No. She's done drawings of all of
us. And some of the house. And some of Loutie's flowers. I wanted you to see
how good they are." I walked over to the bed and picked up a
pencil drawing of one of the trees in Loutie's backyard. "They look good
to me. But I'm not much of a judge. How good are they?" Susan had walked over to squint at Carli's
picture of me. "Well, they're not professional. She's not the next Picasso
or anything. But they're good. Probably on the level of an undergraduate art
student." Suddenly I felt uncomfortable.
"Should we be in here? This is her private stuff." Susan looked around. "Probably not. I
just wanted you to see what your client can do. That she's not just some little
tramp in a wet T-shirt." "I never thought anything like that.
Or, if I did, I understand why she's the way she is." Susan just said, "Well, you're
probably right that we're invading her privacy here. Let's go," and we
left Carli's bedroom. Back in the den, Jimmy Stewart spied on
Miss Lonely Hearts as she served dinner and made conversation with a
make-believe date. Joey sat on the sofa massaging Loutie's feet. Carli sat cross-legged
six feet from the television screen. She said, "This is a good movie. It's
got Princess Grace in it. She was like the first Princess Di." Joey grinned at us and said, "Did you
two get the dishes cleaned up?" I said, "Yeah. Susan did." He kept grinning. "Take the trash out
to the alley?" I said, "Uh-huh." "Mmmm. You find anything else
interesting to do out there in the yard? Under the stars, moonlight bouncing
off the flowers, soft spring breezes blowing through your hair..." Loutie said, "Shut up, Joey." He was chuckling. "Yeah, I was
gettin' a little misty myself. And I gotta go anyway. It's been four or
five days without much sleep. I need to get home and hit the hay." Everyone but Carli was tired, so Joey and
I thanked Loutie for having us and wandered out into the night. As we walked
between rows of purple flowers toward the street, I said, "You're a real
asshole. You know that?" Joey was still laughing to himself when he
climbed into his Expedition and shut the door. chapter eleven Bright sunshine poured through French doors
and tilted a warm rectangle
of light across the white sheet where it covered my legs. I squinted at the
alarm clock, rubbed my eyes like the fat kid in "The Little Rascals,"
and squinted some more. It read 7:78. For the first time in months, I had slept
for six straight hours, and I felt like kissing someone. Again. Since late fall, the red-dotted numbers
over my bedside table had become more of a gauge than a reminder to get up and
face the day. They were a gauge of how long I had dented sheets and tossed
covers without sleeping. Then they were a gauge of how long I had slept before
waking up more tired than when I went to bed. More than anything, they had
become a gauge of how screwed up my life had become since my difficult—some might say criminal—younger brother
caught a thirty-aught-six round in the neck one September night on the Alabama
River. I had been too busy to deal with Hall's bullshit when he was alive,
which meant that—for the past six months—I'd been lying awake every night feeling like a jerk for failing
to salvage a life that was ultimately unsalvageable. But something had happened now. And I
guessed it had a lot to do with the widow Fitzsimmons and even more to do with
some sort of absolution that my subconscious seemed to have tied to Susan's
playful intimacy. Whatever the reason, for the first time in six months, the
sun was up on that bright Saturday morning before Tom McInnes was. I decided to lie there and think about
making out under a magnolia tree and smile. Around nine, Kelly called to let me know
her Coast Guard captain had phoned. She got a date out of it. I got bupkus.
According to the boyfriend, all vessels leaving foreign ports must go through
customs when arriving back in the United States. But, between ports, they can
pretty much wander around the Gulf of Mexico—or anywhere
else they want—without telling a soul. The young captain
explained that a private yacht, for example, could have left Brazil, sailed
along the Central American coast, and cut over to Apalachicola Bay without
filing a report or leaving any record of its route. Also, that same yacht could
pull into Tampa two days later and no one would ever know where it had been—only that it left Brazil and then entered the United States a
certain number of days later. After saying good-bye to Kelly, I padded
downstairs and scrambled three eggs, which tasted better than I remembered eggs
tasting. Later, as I swirled orange juice in my mouth like wine, I punched in
Joey's number on the kitchen phone. We spoke briefly before I hung up and
called Loutie's. Carli answered. I said good morning, made polite conversation
about Hitchcock and Grace Kelly, and asked for Susan. When Susan picked up, I said, "Good
morning." Susan, I thought, sounded pleased. She
said, "Good morning to you. Is this call one of those Southern things that
Midwestern girls like me don't know about?" "What are you talking about?" "You know. Calling your conquest the
next day to let her know you still respect her." "Cute. Unfortunately, it wasn't much
of a conquest, which is not to say that I will not always think fondly of
emptying the trash." Susan laughed. I said, "The reason I called is
that I've tried every way I can think of—short of going
to Apalachicola and renting a boat—to find out who
may be cruising from South America to Dog Island with merchandise and refugees
on board. Monday morning, Kelly's going to start checking customs in Panama
City, Mobile, and Tampa to see if anything jumps out at her, but that's really
a hope-we-get-lucky tactic. I think I'm going to have to head down to the
islands and ask a few questions and maybe rent a boat or a plane." "Yes. Last night, you said you might
do something like that. Do you want to stay at my house while you're down there?
It's a little shot up at the moment, but I've already had the real estate
company—you know, the people who handle renting
out the place when I'm not there—I've already
had them clean up the mess and nail plywood over broken windows and that kind
of thing. So, if you're interested, you're welcome to it." I said, "I think I'd rather stay
someplace where the Bodines haven't already tried to kill us." "Good point." "I think I'll try to rent something
on one of the islands. Probably on St. George, since Joey already has Dog
Island covered. He's going to keep watching Haycock and let me know when he
goes out to meet another boat. That way, I can check around with some of the
local fishermen or maybe rent a boat the next morning. If I can get out there
before our smugglers weigh anchor, I should be able to get a name or a
registration number off the boat." Susan was laughing again. "Weigh
anchor, huh?" I didn't answer. She gave me the name of her agent so I'd
have someone to help me find a rental, and asked, "Are you going to come
by before you leave?" "No. I hadn't planned to. Do you
think I should see Carli and explain what I'm doing?" There was a brief silence. "No. No,
that's okay. I think she's fine." Now there was a short silence on my end as
my sad little brain kicked in. "I slept like a baby last night." She said, "Okay," but what she
meant was, Why are you telling me this? "Since my brother died last fall, I
haven't been able to sleep a whole lot. Hell, I see the sunrise so much I've
gotten tired of looking at it." I said, "I just wanted you to know
that last night, for the first time in months, I slept through the night and
didn't wake up until after seven." "If you're this happy about sleeping
in till seven on Saturday morning, you must have been having problems.
So, I'm glad. Whatever the reason." She hesitated and said, "For
whatever it's worth, last night had the opposite effect on me. I tossed and
turned for an hour before finally drifting off." I thought of how I had pulled her against
me in the moonlight, and I recalled the emotion in her eyes. I decided I had
gone too far. She obviously missed her husband and wasn't ready for another
relationship. "I'm sorry, Susan. I know it must be
hard." She giggled, which was something I had
never heard her do. I had heard her laugh, chuckle, and even guffaw on one
occasion, but I had never heard Susan Fitzsimmons giggle. She said, "Tom?
You really don't get it, do you? For me, the only hard thing about kissing you
was stopping. And, oh yeah, then trying to go to sleep in what I can
only politely describe as a thoroughly unsatisfied condition." "Oh." Susan repeated back, "Oh." I promised to call from the beach and to
come by the minute I got back in town. I put the receiver in its cradle and
found myself sitting at the breakfast table, smiling idiotically at an empty
glass of orange juice. The house Susan's agent found for me was
not in The Plantation. Based on past experience, I decided that the fat guy at
the gate was not an insurmountable obstacle to people who wanted to kill me.
And there was always the consideration that Susan was footing the bill. Unless
I stayed in Susan's house, which seemed like a monumentally bad idea, I would
be looking at a couple-thousand-plus a week for a rental house inside that gated
community. But just a few hundred yards away, on the low-rent side of The
Plantation's guarded gate, I found a beachfront Jim Walter home on hurricane
stilts for a mere eight hundred. Inside the little house, pastel
upholstery, pastel curtains and blinds, and pastel prints filled the house with
faded ocean motifs. There was a "master bedroom," which meant, if you
were careful, you could actually walk around the bed without bumping into the
wall or the dresser, and there was a "guest bedroom," which meant, in
there, you couldn't. The kitchen occupied a back corner of the living room,
which boasted two double sliding glass doors that provided the requisite Gulf
view and led out onto a weathered deck. I threw my canvas duffle on the guest bed
and rummaged around until I came up with running shorts and shoes and a Grand
Hotel T-shirt with a faded nautilus shell on the front. After stuffing my new
house key and two fifty-dollar bills into the inside pocket of my shorts, I
left through the roadside door, circled back under the house, and walked out
onto the beach. Small whitecaps lapped the sand ten feet
below a wavering line of gray and white shells that marked high tide. A hundred
yards offshore, a striped-sail catamaran skidded across blue-green swells.
Seagulls hovered over my head like graceful beggars, and, as far as I could see
in each direction, no more than a dozen bodies interrupted the soft flow of
sandy beach. The island was between seasons. The end of
spring break had emptied the beaches of young, nubile bodies; winter had fled
New England and the Midwest, pulling hoards of not-so-young and not-so-nubile
snowbirds back to their native climes; and the summer vacation trade had not
yet begun to flood the beaches with sun-blistered families. I turned toward the
center of the island, in the direction of a cluster of buildings that serves as
the island's downtown, and began walking. With every step, pockets of powdery
sand squeaked like baby seals beneath my feet. I could feel the muscles in my
thighs and calves and a thousand tiny fibers in my ankles and knees stretch and
work and warm. I started to run. Twenty minutes and a little more than two
miles later, the mustard walls of the island's only motel jogged by on my left.
I slowed to a walk and turned toward the restaurant-slash-bar just east of the
motel. A wooden walkway stretched over grassy dunes and connected to an outside
dining area furnished with plastic tables and chairs and a freestanding bar
roofed with palm fronds and surrounded by four huge Tiki masks. I tried to
imagine why Hawaiian kitsch had been used to decorate a bar in North Florida.
If nothing else, the Seminoles should complain. I ordered iced tea and fried crab claws
and struck up a conversation with my blonde, nut-brown waitress. Summer sun had
bleached her as white and burned her as brown as a person can bleach and burn
in the tropical sun. A yellow metal button on her left breast told me her name
was Lauren. In fifteen years, when Lauren turned forty, she would look fifty.
But, for now, she looked pretty damn good. It was midafternoon, and the restaurant
was as deserted as the beach. Lauren took my order, and we talked. After she
put a basket of steaming crab claws on the table, I asked her to sit. Lauren told me about life on the island
and about the fishermen and about the pleasure boats that anchored and dropped
speedboats full of yachtsmen who dined and drank and tipped like nobody's
business. And, most interesting of all, she told me about an old fishmonger—a local legend named Peety Boy who had known everything and
everyone on the island since the dawn of time. Lauren went back to work, and I trotted
over the walkway and down the beach to the waterline, where I pulled off my
shoes and shirt and dropped them in the sand. Cold surf swirled over my toes
and ankles and then my legs. A deep breath, and I dove into a wave. I didn't
wait thirty minutes after eating, but then I didn't plan on deep-water
swimming. I just needed cold water on my face. I needed to think. A few laps back and forth parallel with
the shoreline, and I staggered out covered in chill bumps. I donned shirt and
shoes and walked back up along the wooden walkway and past the restaurant. As I
passed, Lauren waved and flashed a friendly smile. It was time to find Peety Boy. According
to my new friend Lauren, every day of the week the old man parked his wagon
next to the public basketball court near the center of the island. She said I
couldn't miss it, particularly since Peety Boy's rolling store bore the logical
name of "Peety Boy's Seafood." I was assured that word on the island
was: If Peety Boy didn't know about it, it didn't happen. I hung a right on Gorrie Drive, the main
road along the Gulf side of the island. The public beaches' parking lot where
Carli had parked with her date that fateful night came up on the right. Across
the road, a basketball hoop protruded at a downward angle from a dejected
backboard. The goalpost sprouted from a slab of sand-powdered pavement that sat
in the middle of a small grassy field. On the far back corner of the grass sat
Peety Boy's Seafood. The boxy trailer looked homemade but well built. It was
the size of one of those pop-up things that retired people haul from state to
state, but this one was square and white, with a long service window cut into
the side. Painted plywood hung down by chains to form a counter that, come
nightfall, would swing back into place and close the window. Above the opening,
Peety Boy had stretched a striped awning. Above the awning, he had painted the
name of his business. As I approached, an elderly man with thick
white hair, sun-wrinkled skin, and a paucity of teeth, said, "Good day to
be alive!" I said, "Yep. This is a beautiful
place." Peety Boy turned to toss a couple of fresh
fillets in the icebox and stepped back up to the window. The store sat on truck
tires, so he looked down at me. "Most beautiful place on God's earth. Been
here my whole life. Never moved an inch, 'cept for World War II. Helped whip
the Germans in France. Then came on home and thanked God for gettin' back and
bein' back." I said, "They trained around here
somewhere for D-Day, didn't they?" Peety Boy looked pleased but, probably
because of his missing teeth, smiled more with his eyes than his lips.
"Not many folks know that nowadays. Yessir. Down close to Carrabelle, at
Lanark Village, six divisions, 'bout forty thousand troops, got what they
called amphibious trainin'. A couple dozen drowned tryin' to learn it. Walter
Winchell, he called Carrabelle 'Hell by the Sea.' But it ain't. Everywhere is
hell when you're trainin' to fight a war." Peety Boy wiped fish blood on
his white apron, and changed to a businesslike tone. "So. What can I do
for you today? Got some beautiful jumbo shrimp. Got the prettiest oysters you
ever saw. Come right out of Apalachicola Bay. Just got 'em in this
mornin'." "I'm trying to get some
information." Some of the openness faded, and Peety Boy
looked doubtful. He said, "Well, I guess that's all right." "I'm trying to locate someone who
would know whether the boat of a friend of mine has been around here recently.
I don't think my friend came ashore. But I'm pretty sure he laid up off Dog
Island for a few days last week." Peety Boy put his hands on the counter and
leaned forward. Fish blood stained his thick nails and work-scarred fingers,
and, as he put weight on his hands, hard cords of muscle jumped and strained
beneath thin parched skin on his forearms. He said, "You say this is a
friend of yours?" Peety Boy's watery black eyes drilled
through my face and into my thoughts. Country isn't stupid. Uneducated isn't
stupid. Peety Boy had my number. I said, "No. It's just easier to say a
friend than to tell everything I know to everyone I ask. I'm looking
for a large boat, probably a yacht, that was in the area last week. It's for a
real friend. A young girl who's in trouble." The old man's face relaxed. He
straightened up and reached over to pull a wooden stool up to the counter. He
perched his thin rump on the stool, poked a Camel non-filter between a pair of
dry chapped lips, and lit the end with a Zippo. Through a cloud of gray smoke,
he said, "That's fine. How long you been lookin'?" "A few days. But this is my first day
here on the island." He chuckled, but there wasn't much
pleasure in it. "You go around askin' questions like that 'un, and it'll
probably be your last day here too." He paused and looked out across the
basketball court and the parking lot at the Gulf of Mexico. "Tell you
what. I'm gonna fill you in, and I'm mostly doin' it 'cause you're gonna get
messed up if I don't. And, the way I see it, if you're lookin' after a friend,
that's the right way to go. So listen up. Don't ask nobody else about this
stuff, and don't tell nobody you talked to me. If you promise that, I'll tell
you who I think can help you out." "I can do that. I'm not looking for
trouble." Peety Boy looked out at the water some
more, then he said, "Get in your car and drive over to Eastpoint. You just
go back across the causeway and take the first right. There's a line of little
seafood houses over there. Places where they buy the catch off the boats and
sell it to tourists. Same thing I do, only they ain't as particular about how
old some of it is. You go to a place called Teeter's and ask to talk to Billy
Teeter. Tell him I sent you. Don't tell nobody else. Just tell Billy. If he
ain't there, you ask when he'll be back. You got that?" I told him I had
it and thanked him. He said, "Well, that's all right." I pushed two fingers inside my waistband
and fished out a wet fifty from the inside pocket. As I looked up, I noticed a
bumper sticker over Peety Boy's cutting board for the first time. It read, God
is love. I said, "Can I pay you? Believe me, it's worth it to
me." He looked down at my wet money and said,
"No, sir." I thought for a few seconds and said,
"Can I buy fifty dollars' worth of shrimp from you?" Peety Boy looked doubtful. "Yessir.
You can do that. How you gonna get it home?" "I'll come back for it." He
didn't look like he believed me. I said, "I'm going to be on the island
for a few days. If there's any way possible, I'll stop on the way home and pick
up the shrimp. If I ran into trouble or I have to return home in a hurry, then
next weekend I want you to give fifty dollars' worth of seafood to the next
young couple who comes by. Is that a deal?" Peety Boy thought a bit and said,
"Yessir. That's all right." And I felt good—for about ten seconds. chapter twelve As I stood there trying to convince Peety
Boy to take my money, I had
unrolled the soaked fifty and pressed it against my T-shirt with my palm. I had
squeezed a rectangle of water into my shirt and managed to flatten the bill
back into shape before pressing it into Peety Boy's hard palm. That felt good.
Seeing Deputy Mickey Burns cruise by when I turned to leave did not. Burns' cruiser moved at that intimidating
snail-pace cops use to make you feel like you're under surveillance and like
you've done something wrong, if only you could remember what it was. I waved
and got the universal cop nod in response. I decided to jog back to my pastel
palace along Gorrie Drive where I would be in plain view of the island traffic,
which, as it turned out, consisted of one four-wheel-drive convertible with two
dark-suited, Hispanic-looking businessmen inside, what appeared to be an old lady
trudging along deep inside a straw hat, dark glasses, and a flowing dashiki,
and three dogs. Two of the dogs barked and growled and chased me for a few feet
to spice up their day. Otherwise, the trip was uneventful. I had reached the top of the wooden steps
and was fishing inside my waistband for my rented key when I saw him step out
from the tall space under the house. Sonny, the almost mute, eye-jumping
painter walked up the stairs behind me. When he was four steps away, he hung
back like someone who had been kicked down stairs before. "Go on inside.
It ain't locked." As Sonny spoke, he swiveled his right hip
toward me and showed me the butt of a handgun sticking out of his pocket. The
movement looked a little effeminate. I decided not to tell him. I pushed open the door and stepped inside
my own little pastel hell. A familiar-looking man sat in a rattan chair padded
with green and peach puffs of printed seashells. Carli had given me a pretty
good description. He did in fact look like a weight lifter or an ex-jock going
to fat. My young client didn't know it, but she had seen a pretty famous guy
shoot another man in the mouth. Leroy Purcell, former All-American running back
for the University of Florida, used gridiron-scarred, oversized hands to push
out of the chair. If I hadn't known he'd taken out a knee his last year with
the Cowboys, I don't think I would have noticed that he favored it getting up. Purcell seemed to be trying for a Florida
resort look. He wore a blond crew cut—waxed straight
up in front—and an expensive set of golfer's duds. His
problem was that the wardrobe didn't much go with the scarred gash across his
chin, or his twenty-inch neck, or the overwhelming sense of controlled violence
that seemed to radiate from every pore. He rose to his full height and said my
least favorite sentence in the English language. "Do you know who I
am?" I said, "You used to be some kind of
jock, didn't you?" Purcell looked disgusted. "My name is
Leroy Purcell. And, yeah, I was some kind of jock. I was the kind who played
tailback for Florida and spent five seasons with the Dallas Cowboys." I really did not like this guy.
"Congratulations. What can I do for you?" He turned deep red. "I'm not used to
being talked to that way." And, I thought, I'm not used to entertaining
murderers. I said, "I didn't invite you here. You and Harpo broke in
because you wanted to see me, and you think I'm supposed to be impressed by who
you are. Fine. I'm impressed. Now tell me what you want." This, I thought, is not going well. Over the past week, I
had been shot at; Susan had been shot at; her house had been vandalized; my
life, Susan's life, and Carli's life had been turned upside down; and a
frightened, abused teenage girl had been traumatized beyond description. It all
came pouring in on me. I breathed deeply and tried to regain control. I repeated, "What do you want?" I was not the only one starting to lose
it. Leroy Purcell said, "You're not exactly impressing the shit out of me
either, McInnes." I looked at him. "I came here to talk
business." "So, talk." "Are you this big an asshole with
everyone, or do you think you know something about me in particular?" "I'm this big of an asshole with
everyone." "Well, asshole, we're going for a
little ride." "I don't think so. You want to shoot me, then shoot me.
But I'm not going to get in a car and go anywhere with you two." "I could have Sonny make you." I turned and looked at Sonny. His eyes
were bouncing around the room, never really looking at me but keeping me in
view somehow. I said, "I doubt it," and Sonny's eyes stopped
ricocheting and focused. Purcell said, "I know about you,
McInnes. I've taken the time to know about you. I hear you're some kinda minor
league hard-ass. But old Sonny here is major league. You might say he's a professional."
I shrugged. Purcell smiled, but it wasn't pretty. "You need to come with
us. If you do, you'll be fine. We're just going up to The Plantation. If you
won't come, Sonny's gonna put a bullet in your ass." "I guess I'll come then." Purcell said, "I thought you
would." "In case you're wondering, it was
that 'bullet in the ass' line that did the trick. That sounds like it would
hurt." No one thought I was funny. Purcell drove my Jeep—he already had the keys—while Sonny and
I sat in back. The back windows on a Jeep Cherokee are tinted dark. Sonny had
drawn his hip gun and was keeping it leveled at my rib cage. As we approached
the gate, Sonny took off his cap and placed it on the seat. Then he used his
free hand to pull an old-fashioned switchblade out of his left hip pocket. He
pressed the point of the blade deep enough into my side to just break the skin
and then put the gun away and placed his cap over his knife hand. Behind tinted
windows, no one outside would be able to tell I was a flick of Sonny's hand
away from a punctured lung. Purcell was right. Sonny seemed pretty
professional. The guardhouse came up on the left, and
Sonny said, "Don't say nothin'." The overstuffed guard's uniform shuffled
to the car, was visibly and loudly impressed with Leroy Purcell's presence, and
waved us through. I assumed Purcell or one of his capos had a house on the
island and that was where we were going. I was wrong. We went to Susan's beach
house, and I was relieved not to see an old Ford pickup sticking out of the
carport. We trudged up the wooden steps single
file, and Sonny kicked in Susan's front door while Purcell and I watched. When
the door splintered and swung open, Sonny limped to one side, and Purcell
strutted in ahead of us like an African chieftain at a war council. Sonny said, "Inside." He had his
gun out again, and it was pointed at me. I sighed and followed Purcell. Purcell said, "This is more like it.
Where does she keep the liquor?" I didn't answer, which seemed to upset
Sonny because he rapped me on the shoulder with the butt of his revolver. That
was enough. I turned and hit Sonny on the bridge of his nose with a straight
right that had six months of anger and frustration and wanting to hit someone
behind it. Sonny went down. Then he came up again with blood pouring from both
nostrils and every intention of killing me where I stood. Purcell yelled,
"Stop!" Sonny looked pleadingly at Purcell, who
said, "Did I tell you to hit him?" Sonny shook his bloody face and
dripped red on the carpet. "I told you I wanted to talk to this man, and I
wanted to impress him that we are serious. When I need your help impressing
him, I'll tell you. You got that?" Sonny nodded this time and dripped more
blood on Susan's rug. I said, "Can he sit up and beg?" Purcell looked pissed. "Shut the fuck
up, McInnes." "It's your party." Leroy Purcell walked over to the kitchen,
snatched a roll of paper towels out of its holder over the sink, and tossed it
to Sonny. While Sonny put pressure on his flowing red nose, Purcell located a bottle
of bourbon and mixed it with ice and Coke from the refrigerator. He walked over
and sat in a chair with its back to Susan's bright view of the Gulf. He said,
"Sit down." I didn't see any reason not to, so I sat on
the sofa and looked out at the beach. Purcell said, "Now, this is more
like it. That fucking place you're staying is for shit." He gestured at
the room. "These people got some goddamn taste." He sipped his
sweetened bourbon. "Tell me, McInnes, what do you think you know about me
that makes you so pissed off?" I looked at him. "What does Susan
Fitzsimmons tell you about me?" I said, "Who is Susan
Fitzpatrick?" "Funny." He said, "Susan Fitzsimmons
owns this house, and she's a client of yours. And I think that you think
she and that white trash waitress from the Pelican's Roost may have seen
something last Wednesday night at a house down the beach from here." He
stopped for me to agree with him. I picked up a throw pillow and put it behind
my head. He said, "I'm here to work something out. I really don't know
what your clients saw or didn't see. I'm just here for some friends who don't
want any trouble. What I want is to meet with Fitzsimmons and the girl and
straighten this out." "Explain the problem to me. What are
you going to straighten out?" "Then she is your client." I repeated, "What are you going to
straighten out?" He didn't answer. I said, "You know what I think? I
think you're scared shitless because you think someone saw you up to no good,
and you don't know how to find them. Look, I admit Susan Fitzsimmons has been
both my client and my friend for a long time. If you've got half a brain, you
could find that out in an hour anyway. But she's never laid eyes on you, and,
if I have anything to say about it, she never will." "So you're not going to let me meet
with her?" "Nope." Purcell rose up out of the chair.
"Maybe I should convince you." "Maybe you should kiss my ass." He walked toward me. I sat still. The
former football hero stopped a foot from the sofa and took in a deep breath.
"McInnes, all I want is a meeting. And all you gotta do is say yes. It'll
save your client a load of grief down the road. And it'll save you an ass
whipping right now. Think about it." He smiled. The man was thinking about
hurting me, and it seemed to put him in a better mood. "Hell, McInnes, I
can see you're a pretty good-sized guy. Probably push around the Nautilus machines
pretty good. Probably in a spinning class down at the fags-are-us sportsplex.
But you caught Sonny by surprise. If I hadn't stopped him, you'd be dead now.
And you need to understand that, even if you think you're tough, I got fifty
pounds of muscle on you and Sonny." I said, "You've got fifty pounds
hanging over your belt," and, as soon as I got the words out, I realized I
might have gone too far. I could feel the violence arcing like
static electricity between Purcell and Sonny over my head. I could see him
breathing hard, trying to regain control. Purcell raised his glass and downed what
was left of his drink in one swallow; then he turned and threw the empty glass
at the kitchen sink from across the room. The crystal tumbler hit dead center
on the stainless steel sink and exploded on impact. Purcell's eyes moved around the room and
over Susan's things. He was thinking; he was breathing deeply and thinking.
Finally, he said, "You don't understand what the fuck you're in, McInnes.
You may not believe it, but me and Sonny are about the most reasonable people
you're gonna meet on this thing." "Yeah." I said, "You and
Sonny got reasonable written all over you." Purcell huffed and shook his head.
"Boy, there's tough and there's bad and there's just plain evil. Old Sonny
there is tough. I'm tougher, and I got a Super Bowl ring to prove it. But we
can bring somebody into this thing who—believe me—would scare the living shit out of the toughest sonofabitch I ever
saw on a football field. I make a phone call and say it's out of my hands,
you're gonna get to meet a mean-ass spic who'll slice you open and play with
your guts while you're still alive and watching. Crazy fuck'll do the same and
worse—perverted sex stuff with knives and
spikes, shit like that—to the Fitzsimmons woman and that
trailer-trash girl." He paused before he said, "This is your last
chance to settle this normal." Purcell paused again to let me think about
that. And I did, but the whole thing sounded like a lame horror story concocted
to scare me into bad judgment—not to mention my concerns with Leroy
Purcell's definition of "normal." The threats were over the top. They
were ridiculous. But... Purcell said this alleged boogeyman was Hispanic, and
the cold puffy stare of the fat guy on Dog Island kept haunting me. I shook it off. "Bedtime
stories." Purcell looked surprised. "Huh?" I explained. "You're full of
shit." Leroy Purcell pulled a nickel-plated Colt
.45 out of his waistband and chopped at my face with the barrel. I ducked and
he missed, and it occurred to me that maybe I should have let him hit me. Maybe
it would have been better to let him vent some violence without pulling a trigger. Purcell raised the .45 again but not to
swing it. He pointed the muzzle at my face and cocked the hammer. The room grew
still. Purcell breathed hard against an adrenaline rush, and in the short
eternity between his breaths—when I waited for the bullet aimed at my
eyes—the only other sound was the soft hum of
Susan's refrigerator. The room faded. I was focused on the gun
in Purcell's giant hand, and my only conscious thought was to wonder why I
hadn't noticed the refrigerator noise before. The moment passed, and a dark mist seemed
to lift. The battle-scared ex-jock rolled his shoulders to relax the muscles in
his thick neck. He said, "Sonny?" "Yessir." Sonny sounded excited
now. "You got the lighter fluid?" "Yessir." "Use it." Sonny appeared in the corner of my eye. I
kept looking at the volcanic muzzle of Purcell's .45. Sonny moved to the wall
opposite Susan's circular stairs and stopped in front of Bird Fitzsimmons'
wall-sized painting of seashells. Now I looked. Sonny pulled a yellow and blue
squeeze can of lighter fluid from his back pocket. "That painting's worth a fortune. The
artist is dead." It was a stupid thing to say, but it was what I said. I
looked up at Purcell. He had backed off a step and lowered the muzzle to point
at my chest. The Saturday cookout smell of charcoal lighter fluid filled the
room, and I looked over to see Sonny squirting the painting in big dripping
circles. Purcell said, "We're done here. You
can leave if you want to." I sat still. He walked over to the painting and
pulled a Zippo from his pocket like the one Peety Boy had used to light his
Camel. "Just remember, all you got to do is set up a meeting with the
Fitzsimmons woman and the waitress. We'll work everything out, and they'll be
safe." He spun the little black wheel on the lighter with his thumb and
turned the flame all the way up. "You tell 'em. Nobody's safe. Nothing
they got is safe until we work this out." And Leroy Purcell, former All-American
tailback for the University of Florida, set fire to Susan's most cherished
remnant of her dead husband's talented life. I shot off the sofa and ran toward the
deck, and they let me. Sonny and Purcell were already on their way out the back
when I got the double doors open. Behind me, flames shot eight feet in the
air, scorching the walls and threatening the house. The painting was engulfed
in fire. Unable to grasp it bare-handed, I grabbed a lamp and swung it in a
hard upward arc against the lower edge of the painting. The flaming square flew
off the wall and crashed onto the carpeted floor as I jumped out of the way.
The top left corner was untouched. I gripped it and ran across the carpet and
through the doors and swung a double handful of flames over the railing and
onto the sand below. Back inside, the carpet smoked, and the
wall was too hot to touch. I splashed pans of water on everything and called
the fire department. Then I called Susan. chapter thirteen The flirtation was gone. Susan sounded dead
inside. "I know it's
just a painting, Tom. And I'm so thankful that you're okay. But... oh God, Tom.
What do we do now?" "Well, we damn sure don't agree to
let you and Carli meet with him. I'm going to put Joey on it. We'll bug
Purcell's house and where he works and every other damn thing we can think of
to find out what he's up to. And, if he even gets close to hurting you or
Carli, we'll kill the sonofabitch." Susan didn't respond. I was mad and
getting carried away, and Susan understood and let me do it. It's what angry,
overwhelmed males do instead of crying. I took a few breaths. "Susan, I
know and you know you're reacting to more than a ruined painting. Even if it
was one of Bird's best. So go ahead and feel bad for a while, and let me take
care of this. I know it doesn't look like I'm doing much of a job so far. But
every time I stumble into a mess, we know a little more." I stopped and
tried to focus. "I'm going to get off and call Joey now. Take care of
yourself and take care of Carli. I'll see you in a few days. And, by the way,
I'm going to take you up on your offer to stay in your house here on the
island. I don't seem to be especially invisible in my little house down the
beach, and it'll save us eight hundred a week for me to stay here." She
agreed, and we said good-bye. It was past five, so I decided it was okay
to locate a bottle of scotch and pour some in a glass. I sat on the sofa and
waited for the Apalachicola Volunteer Fire Department. Thirty-two minutes after
I dialed 911, half a dozen barbers, merchants, and mechanics came rushing
through Susan's kicked-in door in full fireproof regalia. We talked. A couple
of them felt the wall. One checked out the electrical system, as best he could.
We talked some more, and I almost told them about Leroy Purcell. But I realized
it would be my word against his. And it occurred to me that the worst he'd face
was financial responsibility for what he would almost certainly claim was an
accidental fire. Whether it made sense or not, I decided to
hold off inserting the law into my relationship with Purcell. So I told the part-time
firemen of Apalachicola that I'd been trying to remove a smudge from the frame
around the painting with some cleaning fluid I had found under the kitchen
sink. I said I'd stopped to light a cigar and the whole thing went up in
flames. That seemed to satisfy them. They got to give me a lecture, and I got
to keep my run-in with Purcell private. After the firemen departed, I sat and
sipped my scotch and realized that maybe I didn't want anyone to know that I
wanted Leroy Purcell dead. Right then—at that moment—I wanted and expected something terrible to happen to Purcell in
the future, and. when it did, I didn't want anyone looking too closely at me. Joey answered his cell phone on the second
ring. "Yeah?" I said, "It's me." "What's wrong?" "How'd you know something was
wrong?" An edge had crept into Joey's voice. It
was as close as he ever got to sounding panicked. "Are the women
okay?" "Oh. Yeah. Yeah, Loutie and her
guests are fine. I'm over on St. George at Susan's house. I had some
trouble." "You sound like your puppy died. And
I thought you were gonna stay away from Susan's house. Hell, you should've
known they'd be looking there, Tom. I mean, shit, I'm guessing you're okay, or
I wouldn't be running off at the mouth. You are okay, aren't you?" "Yeah, Joey. I'm fine. I'm about as
pissed off as I've ever been in my life, but I'm fine." "As pissed as you've ever been is
pretty pissed." I didn't say anything. "What do you need?" "Is our boy Haycock in his
cottage?" "He's there, and he's got a little
stringy-haired woman in there with him. I sneaked up to the house and checked
on 'em a little while ago and was sorry I did. The two of 'em were buck naked
and tangled up, banging away like a couple of stray dogs. I'm telling you,
after seeing that, I need to go watch some hogs humping to put the romance back
in my life." "So it looks like he's staying put
for a while?" "Yeah," Joey said. "I don't
think he's going anywhere tonight." "Come over, then. We've got a lot to
talk about." I hadn't thought about the ferry and
whether Joey could even get off the island. More than an hour after Purcell's
and Sonny's exit, I was still pumping too much adrenaline to think about much
but murder. So I wasn't surprised when Joey walked into Susan's charred living
room. I was sitting in the chair Purcell had
used. Joey stopped in the middle of the room and surveyed the black mess where
Bird Fitzsimmons' painting had hung. "What the hell happened?" I
raised a glass of scotch, tipped it at him, and took a swallow. "Damn.
When you told me you had some trouble, I figured you got your ass whipped or
something. What'd they do? Try to burn the place down?" "You ever hear of a prick named Leroy
Purcell? Used to play for the Cowboys." "Yeah. He's a scumbag." My giant
friend paused and looked stunned. "Purcell was here? He did that?" "Yeah. He was here, and he set fire
to Susan's favorite painting by her dead husband. And came real close to
burning the whole place down. It's supposed to be a lesson about what he'll do
to everything Susan owns if she and Carli don't meet with him to discuss the
guy he murdered in front of Carli." Joey stood and walked to the kitchen. When
he came back he had a glass full of ice cubes, which he covered with amber
whiskey from my half-empty bottle. "Shit, Tom. I've been hearing rumors
about Leroy Purcell ever since he left the pros. It's pretty much common
knowledge he likes to hang out with hoods and gamblers and that he's gotten ass
deep in a lot of shady deals down here in Florida." Joey stopped to turn
up his glass. He was not a sipper. Joey drank scotch the way he drank beer and
orange juice and everything else. He swallowed a mouthful of whiskey and said,
"The guy had about a million opportunities to make an honest living when
he came back from the pros. They love the bastard down here. But, word is, he
likes the action. Likes the dangerous reputation." Joey clinked the ice in
his glass and looked out at the night. "So it was Purcell who Carli saw
shoot that guy in the beach house?" "Yep." Joey cussed, and shook his head, and drank
more scotch. I asked, "Can you let go of watching
Haycock for a few days?" "I can do whatever you need me to
do." "I want to know what Purcell's doing.
I want to know who he talks to, where he goes, and who he's sleeping with. I want
to know everything I can about what he's up to. Because we've got to know if
he's getting close to finding Susan and Carli." "I'll bury him in bugs. Get his house
and his car. Tap his phones. But I'm gonna need to pull Loutie off guard duty
to help with this if you want me to keep covering Haycock. I can put another
man on Susan and Carli if you want." "Yeah. Do that. The whole point is to
keep them safe. In the meantime, we've got to find a way to stop Purcell for
good." Joey looked up. "Short of killing
him." I didn't say anything, and Joey noticed. He seemed to think about
that, then he asked, "Did you report him setting the fire?" "No." Joey thought a little while longer.
"Does anyone know you two had this run-in?" I said, "Just the guy who helped him
set it," and Joey slowly nodded his head. Joey knew that Susan didn't need
or deserve any more pain in her life. If it came to it, Joey would snap
Purcell's neck without thought or regret. Now, though, as the idea of
murderous revenge turned real, I began to hope it wouldn't come to that. Joey shook his head. "Ain't this some
shit?" Joey was eloquent, and he was right. This
was indeed some shit. I said, "You think your buddies on the Panama City
force could tell us whether Purcell is mixed up with the Bodines?" Joey stood and walked to the kitchen
phone. He punched in a number and spoke quietly into the mouthpiece. A fresh whiskey and I walked out on the
deck. Bird's seashells were ash, but their charcoal frame drew a black square in
the sand where it had landed and burned. Small flaps of charred canvas ruffled
and skitted down the beach ahead of the breeze and disappeared into the dusk.
Leaving my drink untouched on the railing, I wandered back inside as Joey was
thanking Detective Coosa for his help. I looked at him. "Well?" "The rumor is Purcell runs the
Bodines up there around Panama City. Coosa didn't know anything about
Apalachicola." "Okay, then see if you can find out
who runs the Bodines down here. We need to know whether Purcell is the King
of the Jethros or just one of several. I want to know if he's messing around in
somebody else's backyard. Can you do that?" "Probably. One way or another."
Joey sat back on the sofa. "Look, I got something else to tell you. I got
a name on the fat guy Haycock smuggled in." He paused to drain his drink.
"It took a few tries to get to the desk at Captain Casey's Inn without
somebody around, but last night I checked out the card file—they ain't even got a computer. It's gonna turn out to be some
kinda alias, but the guy's name on the card was 'L. Carpintero.'" Joey
spelled the last name. "Mean anything to you?" "Nope. But I'll make a note. It may
fit in somewhere if we find out something else." Joey got up to leave, and I walked with
him to the door. He asked why he hadn't seen my Jeep outside when he drove up.
I told him about Purcell commandeering the vehicle, and he offered to get me a
car. I shook my head. I could have one brought over in the morning. At the door, Joey hesitated. "It
never would've entered my head that Leroy Purcell would be blowing people away.
I thought he just liked hanging out with hoods. Trying to look tough." "Murder and arson with Sonny the
Psycho to back him up. Not to mention him threatening teenage girls. Not
exactly what I'd call tough." I said, "A real All-American,
huh?" Joey said, "Yeah, a real All-American
asshole." Susan had abandoned her house in a hurry.
The bathrooms were ready for the morning shower she took instead at Loutie's
house after fleeing killers in her own home. I lay on Susan's bed and breathed
in the smell of her and tried to think. Outside, through the windows I had
stood before while Susan slept, the sunset splashed the horizon with oranges
and pinks and purples and streaked the ocean with jagged ripples of molten silver
and gold. I rolled off the bed, stripped, walked into the bathroom, and turned
on the shower. As the water began to heat and steam clouded the ceiling, I
looked at the guy in the mirror. I wasn't impressed. The shower felt good, and it kept on
feeling good until Susan's water heater was drained and tepid. I found a box
with some of Bird's old clothes in it and put them on. My stuff was back on the
guest room bed at pastel hell, and I didn't feel like hiking. Back downstairs, I found my unfinished
drink and poured it over the weathered banister and into the sand below. Sharp
white pricks dotted the eastern sky above a smudged black horizon, and the
approaching night washed the sky with charcoals that faded overhead to the soft
gray tones of summer flannel. In the west, the last thin blue tint of daylight
hung in a crescent-shaped curtain above the horizon. I went in search of a hammer and nails,
which I found in a combination laundry and storage room under the stilted
house. After nailing Sonny's kicked-in door shut, I went to bed. Susan's pillow
held the soft feminine scents of her shampoo and cologne and makeup and some
other girl smell I couldn't identify. An overwhelming loneliness enveloped me
like a physical presence, and I fell asleep. I was up before the sun with more than
four hours sleep, but less than I'd had the night before. It was as if my mind
were signaling that my level of screwed-upness had digressed, but not to the
depths I had occupied before finding some sort of redemption in helping Susan
and Carli. I washed my face, ate a few bites of a
hard aged croissant from Susan's refrigerator, and stuck out along the bright
morning beach in the direction of my pastel palace. Purcell had returned my
Jeep to the parking space beneath the house. Inside, I half expected the place
to be stained somehow with Purcell's intrusion, but everything was the way it
had been since I arrived. I changed out of Bird's clothes and into a pair of
jeans and a faded red pullover. I traded sandy running shoes for New Balance
cross trainers, packed up, and left. My plan was to drive over to East-point
and look for Peety Boy's friend Billy Teeter. I tossed my duffel in the backseat. The
keys were in the ignition, and an envelope had been snapped under the windshield
wiper like a parking ticket I was inside the Jeep when I saw it. Stepping out,
I pulled up the wiper and lifted out a white business envelope gone floppy with
salt spray from a night facing the waves. The moist envelope tore easily and
unevenly. It held a single sheet of copy paper. Report on Carli Monroe (alias) Name: Carli Poultrez Age: 15 Hair: Black Eyes: Brown Approx: 5'4", 110 lbs. Poultrez is a runaway minor from
Gloucester, Massachusetts. (Address: 2128 Cleaverhead Road.) She has a record
going back three years as a repeat runaway. Her father, Russell (Rus) Poultrez,
owns and operates a fishing vessel out of Gloucester. Rus Poultrez Contact Report That was it. Before making the copy,
someone had placed two large Post-it notes over the rest of the page,
including, I guessed, the name and signature of the investigator. Also, I could
see the outline of a smaller Post-it at the top covering a letterhead. I removed my keys from the ignition and
went back inside to call Susan with more bad news. When she answered, she
sounded a little better than she had the night before. I asked, "How's Carli?" Susan said, "She seems fine. But
then, she always does. This has to be wearing on her, though." "How are you?" "A lot better. Thanks. I'd kind of
like to see you, even though I know that's not really in the cards right now.
But I wanted you to know that I want to. Losing 'Scattered Shells' was
difficult for me because I'll always love Bird. But that doesn't mean I'm not
ready to see you and enjoy being with you." She hesitated. "Unless
I'm taking too much for granted." "You're not." And she wasn't,
but, for some reason, she was making me uncomfortable. I retreated into the
business at hand. "I'm sorry to do this to you, but I'm afraid I have some
more disturbing news. Purcell knows who Carli is." "Yes, you told me that last night.
You said he's looking for both of us." "No. You don't understand. He knows
who Carli really is." I told her what the report said. I also
suggested that I'd rather deliver the news to Carli in person, so I could
advise her on how to proceed. "Are you coming back then?" "Probably tomorrow. Today, I've got
to go find an old shrimper named Billy Teeter." "There's a seafood shack over in
Eastpoint called Teeter's." "That's the guy." "You may as well go get some
breakfast then. The places over there that open on Sunday don't open until one.
You know. Church." I told Susan again I'd see her Monday or
Tuesday, and hung up. The island had five restaurant-slash-bars,
and they all had signs advertising Sunday brunch. I chose the Pelican's Roost,
where Carli had worked. Susan said it was good, and I thought that I probably
needed to look around the place sooner or later anyway. So I turned in and
parked in the gravel lot and stepped back out into the warm morning air. A pair of plateglass windows stared
blankly out at the parking lot from either side of the front door. I turned the
knob and stepped inside. The waiting area was the bar, but there was no wait.
Another nut-brown waitress—this one with long brown hair and crow's
feet—led me up narrow steps to the second
floor, which was furnished with a dozen or so round tables and two long picnic
benches hidden beneath plastic, red-and-white-checked tablecloths. Wide,
crank-out windows lined both long walls, and a door in the short front wall led
out onto a small balcony or deck overlooking the parking lot and a crowded
queue of beach houses across the way. Ocean breeze wafted in through open
windows on one wall and out through matching windows on the opposite wall. All in all, the place was simple and more
pleasant than it sounds. Seven or eight people were scattered among
the tables. My suntanned waitress smiled and patted my back in a mildly
flirtatious way and suggested that I might want to eat out on the deck. I said
okay, and she led me out and deposited me near the right front corner where I
had a narrow view of the water between two rows of anorectic, architecturally
strident sliver-houses. After she left, I looked out at the distant
wedge of water for a while. I moved on to an examination of the skinny vacation
houses and the mostly deserted street. I watched a bouncing, tube-topped jogger
until she was out of sight. Finally, I glanced down at the parking lot. This was not going to be an enjoyable
meal. There, in the driver's seat of a Cobra convertible, sat gun-toting,
knife-poking, paint-dribbling Sonny. And he was watching me with those jittery,
psychotic eyes of his. chapter fourteen Either Sonny was scaling new heights of incompetency, or I was supposed to know he was following me. The Cobra's top
was down, and he had parked only ten or twelve feet from my Jeep in an
otherwise empty section of the lot. So, considering how rattled I guessed I was
supposed to be by Sonny's blatant disrespect for my privacy, I had three
obvious alternatives. One, I could get mad and beat him about the head and
shoulders, which would net me either an arrest or an ass whipping. Two, I could
respect his wishes and panic, which was what Purcell was counting on. Or,
three, I could decide to mess with him. Sonny may have been a professional thug,
but he still looked like a dumbass to me. When my waitress returned, I ordered steak
and eggs with an English muffin and a double order of cheese grits on the side.
Contrary to popular belief outside the South, if properly prepared and eaten
while steaming hot, cheese grits are actually pretty damn good and almost
identical to polenta, which every pseudo-sophisticate in the country likes to
see piled next to grilled medallions of veal. But in this instance, I didn't
much care whether the grits were well made, and I purposely let them chill into
a thick glutenous mass while I forked beef and eggs into my mouth. I was full. Time to make grit bombs. I
pulled four paper napkins from the dispenser on my table and put
three large dollops of cheese grits on each napkin. My waitress came out and
gave me a concerned look. I said, "Saving them for later." She smiled
the way people smile at paranoid schizophrenics in Central Park and went back
inside. As I pulled the napkins' four corners up
and around each grit wad and twisted the ends together, Sonny looked up and
gave me a self-satisfied grin, and, for the first time, I noticed the blurry
prison tattoo Joey had described. On Sonny's left arm was a large, deep-blue
dagger with three letters above its handle and three more beneath its point. I
couldn't make out the initials, but they had to be the R.I.P. and R.E.T.
Joey had seen on Haycock's partner that violent night in the parking lot of
Mother's Milk in Apalachicola. I smiled back at him. Good to see you
too, asshole. Something seemed to catch the corner of Sonny's eye, and he
turned toward the bike path running next to the street to check out a plump
blonde in a thong. As he turned away, I completed my first package by dunking
it in ice water just before I stood, took aim, and literally creamed him behind
his left ear. The man said some really bad words. While he screamed, I dunked the second
grit ball. He ducked. This, I thought, is fun. I let him duck.
This sticky handful was headed for the center of his shiny black hood. It hit
with a deeply satisfying thud and splattered like a baseball-sized wad of
pelican droppings. Sonny jumped up from behind the dash to see what had
happened. I was waiting. Damn. I missed him and sent a thick schmear of
cheese grits across his leather seats. Sonny went nuts. The car door flew open,
and he jumped out onto the gravel parking lot, screaming, flailing his arms,
and generally cussing a lot. His sentences were liberally sprinkled, I noticed,
with the words "kill" and "dead" and seemed to be directed
at me and those I hold dear. I dunked the last grit ball and let it fly. He
tried to catch it—no doubt intending to send it back my way—but you can't really catch a wet paper napkin full of grit paste.
It exploded in his hand, splattering a nicely formed pattern of cheese grits
across his face, neck, and chest. That just about did it. Sonny charged the
restaurant through the front door downstairs. I had already dropped twenty dollars on
the table. No reason to stick around now. I picked up my steak knife, stepped
over the railing, and carefully dropped eight or nine feet to the ground. My
knees would pay later, but now I was too pumped to care. Pulling keys from my pocket, I sprinted
over to Sonny's forty-thousand-dollar Mustang, plunged the serrated steak knife
into the side of his tire, twisted with all my strength, and left it there. I
had turned back toward the Jeep and had just shot the doors open with the
remote when I heard a murderous yell from the restaurant deck. I caught a blur
of Sonny jumping as I scrambled into the Jeep and jammed the key in the
ignition. Good Jeep. It cranked and, flooring the gas even before I
found reverse, I spewed a dusty semicircle of bleached gravel and broken shells
across the parking lot. As I dropped the transmission into drive, I hazarded a
glance at what I was sure would be Sonny crouched in a shooter's stance,
unloading a full clip in my direction. What I saw instead was Sonny rolling on
his back in sand and gravel, holding his left knee in the air and gripping it
with both hands. His mouth gaped open, his face burned red, and tendons
strained beneath the thin skin on his neck. He seemed to be screaming, but by
then I was gone. I was looking at maybe forty-five minutes
to an hour before Sonny reported my escape to Purcell. First, the pain and the
anger would have to subside to a point that would allow rational thought, or
whatever Sonny used instead. Then Sonny would have to think of a way to explain
to his boss that I got away by attacking him with an arsenal of cheese grits. Hell, it might take more than an hour. Only a hundred yards down, I swerved right
onto the causeway and backed off on the gas. I didn't think Sonny would or even
could follow, but, whether he could or not, a two-lane road with deep, choppy
water on each side is no place to play chase. Better to be caught, I thought,
than wind up breathing salt water with my headlights buried in the sandy
bottom. But he didn't catch me or, as far as I
could see, even try, and after four miles of glancing back and forth from the
wide pavement ahead to the narrow strip of blacktop in my rearview mirror, I
rolled onto the mainland—tailless. Less than a quarter mile in, a
county road angled off to the right. I followed it through stands of scruffy
coastal pines into the quintessential shrimping village of Eastpoint. The right side of the road was perfect—jumbled, rusting, ramshackle, and everything a seafaring town
should be. Tinroofed seafood shacks and shrimp-processing
plants fronted the street and backed up to long, concrete docks that reached
out into Apalachicola Bay like gray fingers separated by oily water and a
scattering of white shrimp boats with red and blue trim. Unfortunately, across the road from the
local shrimp entrepreneurs, the place got ugly fast. A plastic orange Citgo
station squatted next to a new brick-and-plateglass Piggly Wiggly, which led to
a blue plastic gas station that offered a free car wash with each fill-up. I
decided Peety Boy's friend Billy Teeter would have a place on the water—as much because that's the direction I wanted to look as anything—so that's where I concentrated my search. Although, considering
that one can drive completely through Eastpoint in less than five minutes,
"search" may be a more impressive description than the process
warranted. Maybe two minutes after leaving the
causeway, Teeter's came up on the right. I wasn't much worried now about Sonny.
Even if he had recovered from his hurt knee and stabbed tire, he would assume I
had turned west toward Apalachicola, Panama City, and Mobile. Just to be sure,
though, I checked the mirror once more for his psychotic presence before
pulling up onto a sandy parking area just deep enough to hold the Jeep without
donating a bumper to passing traffic. Teeter's seafood shack was just that—unpainted, weathered boards beneath a rusted tin roof and a
sagging front porch made for sitting. Two aluminum patio chairs flanked the
door. A youngish woman sat in one. An old man suitable for casting in Captains
Courageous lounged in the other. With miles of sapphire waters, distant
islands, and endless blue skies stretched out behind them, these locals spent
their days watching traffic pass in front of a Citgo station. I cut the engine, stepped out onto the
sandy yard, and walked two steps to the bottom of Teeter's three wooden steps.
The woman spoke. "How you doin' today?" I told her I was just fine, and that
seemed to genuinely please her. I said, "Peety Boy sent me over
here." The old man perked up. "Me and Peety
Boy grew up together." He smiled, and a mouthful of tobacco-stained teeth
peeked out shyly from the thick brown and gray brush that obscured his face
from the nostrils and cheekbones down. I asked, "Are you Billy Teeter?" "Yessir, that I am." The young woman said, "You got the
right place. Peety Boy sends folks over all the time when he ain't got
something they want. You just come on inside, we got fresh shrimp off the boat this
morning. Fresh oysters. Crabs. Crab legs. And we got some frozen crab cakes
that taste like something you got off the menu at a restaurant." I smiled. The old man looked happy to sit
and talk, but this young one was looking for a sale. I said, "I might be
interested in looking at that in a minute, but Peety Boy sent me over here
because I need some information about who might have been out on the bay the
other night. He said Billy Teeter would be able to help if anyone could." The old man looked at the younger woman
and said, "Go on in and shuck some of them oysters. We're gonna have
plenty of folks coming by after church." But, before he had even spoken,
the woman was on her feet and headed inside. I couldn't decide whether she
intended to confer privately or just didn't want to be part of what we were
going to talk about. The old man said, "What'd Peety Boy volunteer me
for?" As he spoke, Billy Teeter sat forward in his chipped metal chair,
pulled off his Bubba Gump Shrimp cap, slicked a few long strands of gray
hair back over his spotted bald pate, and resettled the cap. "Mr. Teeter, Peety Boy didn't
volunteer you. He just said you were somebody I could ask about boats in
Apalachicola Bay without getting into trouble for asking. "My name is Tom McInnes, and I'm from
Mobile. I'm trying to find out if any boats just up from Central or South
America might have been laying off Dog Island one night last week." Teeter
harrumphed. I've always read about people harrumphing, but never knew exactly
what that was until that old shrimper did it. I was losing him. When I had
become nothing but a memory for the old man, he would have to go on living
there on the Gulf. He would have to keep living among men and women who might
work in a little contraband when the fishing got slow and who wouldn't
appreciate Teeter discussing that embarrassing sideline with an outsider. From
his viewpoint, there was no reason on earth to tell some rich-looking city guy
about things that weren't anybody's business. I decided to get very honest.
"Peety Boy sent me because I'm trying to help a young girl in trouble.
Leroy Purcell's mixed up in it, and he's got some crazy-looking sonofabitch
named Sonny following me around. Now, I know all that sounds like a really good
reason to go inside your place there and leave me alone, but I need help. I can
take care of myself, but there's a teenage girl in a world of trouble, and I
don't know how else to get her out of it but to figure out what's going on down
here." Billy Teeter leaned back in his chair and
studied me. I shut up and let him. Teeter shifted his weight to one hip and
fished a mashed pack of Kools out of the back pocket of his khakis. He shook
two brown filters out of the pack with a practiced flip of his wrist and
extracted one with small nicotined teeth. Then he winked at me and motioned
with his hand at the door the young woman had gone through. "Julie don't
like me to smoke these." Teeter paused to fire the end with an
old-fashioned chrome flip lighter. As he clicked the lighter shut and pushed it
down inside his hip pocket, I glanced at a worn brass Marine Corps
globe-and-eagle insignia on its side. He said, "What she don't know ain't
gonna hurt her, is it?" I thought about the absurdity of a still
hard-as-nails World War II marine having to sneak a smoke on his porch, and,
without really wanting to, I thought some about getting old in America. Oddly,
I thought about it quite a lot in one of those autopilot flashes of connected
thoughts that race through the brain in the midst of doing other things. I agreed with him. "It won't hurt her
a bit." He asked, "What night?" "Last Thursday." "Off Dog Island, you say?" I
nodded, and he thought some. "No way to know where somebody's coming from.
See a fancy yacht anchored out there, you don't know if it's coming from Tampa
or Timbuktu. So, there ain't no way to know if a vessel that might've been out
there come in from where you're talking about." Teeter put the soles of
his salt-crusted work boots up on the two-by-four railing and rocked up onto
the back legs of his chair. He was killing the flattened Kool a quarter inch at
a time, pulling thick lung-fulls of menthol smoke down into his chest and
shooting them out through his mouth and nostrils. "Yessir, I was out on
Thursday, and there was one of them fancy fiberglass motor yachts out off Dog
Island. Couldn't tell you where it come from, and it didn't have no name that
you could see." I was quickly becoming a big Billy Teeter
fan. I motioned at the empty chair on the porch and said, "Mind if I sit
down?" "Don't mind a bit. Take a load
off." Teeter lowered his voice to a conspiratorial level. "Want a
cigarette?" I smiled. "No. Thank you." Then
I asked, "How can you remember so much about a no-name yacht you just
happened to see one night last week?" " 'Cause of just what you said. It
didn't have no name. My grandboy, Willie, named for me, he seen this hellacious
big motor yacht laying up off Dog Island when we was out last Thursday. We had
pretty much called it a night. So me and Willie made up our minds to cut over
close to the thing and get a good look at it. You don't see many like that
around here. Down around Tampa and Miami, sure. Hell yeah, you see 'em all the
time. But not too many up this way, if you see what I'm saying. Anyway, we
cruise over thinking maybe we'll look her over, maybe see some rich guy
drinking champagne and lookin' at the stars." Lowering his voice again,
now. "Willie, he's only nineteen, he thinks he might see some little rich
girls in bikinis, you know. I told him it was too cold, but hope springs
eternal, as they say." Now, Teeter raised his voice back to its normal
level. "Anyhow, me and Willie pull up pretty close alongside, and, once
Willie figures out there ain't no half-naked girls running around the deck, he
sees that the vessel ain't got no name painted on it. I look, and he's almost
right. Now, what it was was that somebody had taped a sheet of white plastic or
something over the name." Billy Teeter flipped the butt of his Kool
out into the sand. Then he looked back over his shoulder at the door, and
whispered, "Reckon I'll smoke one more." I waited while he got it going. "You
said the yacht had its name covered?" "Yep. That's right. Had it covered
right up. So, you know, we figure they're up to no good, and Willie says we
better get out of there. So, I take a turn around the thing and head
home." I was thinking this was all a little too
neat. I said, "I guess Peety Boy sent me to the right place." Teeter pulled hard at his Kool and let the
heavy smoke puff out of his mouth and nose as he spoke. "Peety Boy already
knew all this. Him and me talked about it last week the morning I got in. I
reckon he just didn't figure it was his business to be telling you about it. He
done the right thing by sending you over here, though." "Mr. Teeter, I appreciate your
telling me this. I don't know how it'll help my young friend yet, but every
little bit helps." I stopped to think and said, "Can you describe the
boat to me? I know it'd be a long shot, but I need to try to identify it if I
can." He smiled. "Sure. I can do that, but
it ain't really necessary. What with the name covered up and all, I copied the
registration number off the hull." He motioned inside. "I got it in
the back there with the records of the catch that night." I said, "You're kidding." "No, sir." I asked, "Why on God's green earth
would someone cover a boat's name and not its registration numbers?" " 'Cause of the Coast Guard."
Teeter said, "Everybody names boats, but you don't have to. It ain't a
law. People just do it. But you gotta register a boat, and you gotta have its
registration numbers prominently displayed, as they say, on the hull. That's
the law. So, a fella could get by with covering over the name, if that's what
he wanted to do. But you cover over the registration numbers, and you're pretty
much gonna get yourself boarded by the Coast Guard, if the ATF or the
immigration folks don't get to you first." "Will you give me the number?" "I reckon. But listen, I know you say
you're helping a little girl, and I believe you and all. But it wouldn't hurt
my feelings none if you thought that number was worth a few dollars." Strange. Peety Boy wouldn't take money
when I offered it, and Billy Teeter had come right out and asked for it. But,
if pressed, I couldn't tell you which was the better man. Different people have
different rules and different needs. I pulled out my wallet and found a
fifty-dollar bill. Teeter put his calloused hand out, and I pressed it into his
palm. He said, "I appreciate it." Then he stood and walked inside.
When he came back, he handed me a scrap of brown wrapping paper with a dozen
numbers and letters written on it in ballpoint pen. He said, "I copied it
off for you. I need to hold on to the paper I wrote it on the other night. Got
other stuff on it I need." "How much money do you make in a good
night on the water?" Teeter looked guarded, but not offended.
All he said was, "Depends." I said, "If I paid you, say, two
hundred dollars, would that be enough to get you to lay off shrimping for a night
and take me out?" "It'd be enough, depending on what
you wanted to do when you got out there." "Same thing you did last week. Just
get a look at whoever's out there." Teeter's eyes narrowed. "Two
fifty." I laughed out loud and walked over to
shake his hand. "It's a deal. I'll give you as much notice as I can, but
it may be a last-minute thing." Teeter took the brown paper from my hand,
pulled a ballpoint out of his shirt pocket, and jotted down a phone number. He
said, "Just call me. If I'm here, I'll do it. If I ain't, that means I'm
probably out working, and you'll have to get up with me when I get back
in." I thanked him again and trotted down the
three wooden steps to my Jeep. As I pulled open the door, Teeter called out.
"Mr. McInnes!" I stopped and looked at him. "You said a couple
of names when you first got here." "Leroy Purcell and Sonny?" He nodded. "I don't mean to be
talking out of school. But you be careful of them two. You hear me? You're
messing around with people who'll cut your throat for looking at 'em wrong. And
if you're getting in their business, you're asking for a heap of trouble." "Why are you helping me then? Aren't
you scared of them?" Billy Teeter—seventy-something
ex-Marine and secret menthol cigarette smoker—smiled
the smile of the toughest kid in the Franklin County class of '42 and made two
knowing syllables of one short word. "She-it." The drive to Mobile was excruciatingly,
perhaps unnecessarily, long. Visions of Sonny lying in wait along the
Panhandle's famous Highway 98, holding—in my
imagination—a scoped sniper's rifle, encouraged me to
find my way home along a network of interconnected county and state roads until
I was out of Florida. Pelting Sonny with grit bombs had been stupid, but fun. This scurrying along back country roads to
avoid his wrath was even dumber, no fun at all, and more than a little
humiliating. It was nearly nine when I finally parked
beneath a thick-branched water oak on Monterey Street next to Loutie's brick
walkway. Stepping out into the spring night, I breathed in the old neighborhood
smells of azaleas, bougainvillaea, wisteria, and the first grass clippings of
the season. Aromatherapy. All thoughts of Leroy Purcell and psychotic Sonny
dissolved and floated away on the soft mix of nostalgic scents as I walked
across the bricks to the front door and rang the bell. I felt wonderful, right
up until I felt the metallic press of a gun barrel in the small of my back. chapter fifteen "Put your hands behind your head,
please." It wasn't Sonny. It wasn't Purcell. I did
as instructed. A hard hand clamped my fingers together
behind my neck as another hand moved quickly and expertly down my sides, over
my pants, and inside my waistband. The hand lifted my wallet. Five seconds
later, my fingers were released, and the voice said, "Sorry, Mr. McInnes.
Joey described you, but he also told me not to take any chances." I turned
around. "Here's your billfold." The man who had pressed a gun into my
back was little more than twenty. He stood about five six and had the spare
muscular build and close-cropped hair of a military man. I asked, "Who are you?" "Randy Whittles. I work for Joey when
he needs somebody protected. I do some investigating sometimes if he needs me,
but I'm mostly just protection." I smiled at the idea of this mighty mouse
working as hired muscle. But I knew that if Joey thought someone was tough,
they were by God tough. I asked, "Can I go inside now?" "Yes, sir. Sorry, sir. Here." He
slipped a key in the door and opened it. I stepped inside. Randy called out,
"It's okay ma'am," closed the door from the outside and, I guessed,
went back to his hidey-hole. Susan and Carli walked into the living
room. I looked at them and said, "That was interesting." Susan said, "Loutie says he's a Navy
SEAL. Our Mr. Whittles is one very serious young man." Carli said, "I call him G.I.
Joe." "Good. That he's serious, I mean. Not
that you call him G.I. Joe." I said, "Joey says he needs Loutie to
handle some, uh, surveillance I asked him to do." Susan said, "Carli knows Purcell paid
you a visit." I asked, "Does she know about the
investigator's note?" Susan shook her head. I said, "Come on. Let's
go back to the kitchen where we can get comfortable and talk." Carli asked, "What's going on?" I said, "We've got a lot more
information now. A lot of it's helpful, and some of it's disturbing. Come on. I
need to fill you in." We sat at the table, and I talked. Susan
had steeled Carli for the involvement of Leroy Purcell, and my young client
had, it seemed, come to terms with Purcell knowing about Carli Monroe. She was
less prepared to hear that Purcell knew about Carli Poultrez. As I
described finding the investigator's report under my windshield wiper, blood
drained from Carli's lips. When I placed the report on the cream tablecloth in
front of her, the rest of her face lost color. Her small ears, visible because
she had swept her dark hair back in a ponytail, turned fiery red and made her
face look even paler. She said, "What's this mean at the
bottom? 'Rus Poultrez—Contact Report.' There's nothing after
it." Carli's voice caught in her throat. "It means they found my
father and talked with him, doesn't it. Isn't that what it means?" "I think it means Purcell wants us to
believe his investigator met with your father. It could be nothing. Just
something to make us nervous. To make you do something stupid." She shook her head from side to side as I
spoke. "The name's right. The address is right." I couldn't think of
anything useful or comforting to say about that, so I pushed on and reported my
dialogue with Billy Teeter. It didn't help. Carli's eyes grew larger, and the edges of
her eyelids turned bright red. "What's that stuff got to do with me? I
don't care if Leroy Purcell is smuggling drugs or people or anything else. I
just want him to leave me alone." Tears were streaming down her cheeks
now. Her voice cracked as she spoke. "Tell him. Tell him I don't care
about what he does. Tell him to just leave me alone. I'll go away. I'll go out
west somewhere and forget I ever heard of him." Susan put her hand on Carli's back to
console her, and Carli pushed it away. My young client thought we had failed
her. And, at least for the moment, punishing Leroy Purcell—doing the right thing—became far less
important to her than staying alive. We were quiet for a while. I tried to
think. Carli's movements grew less frenetic. Her shoulders relaxed. She wiped
away the tears. The central air cycled off, and the quiet hum fell away to
reveal a chorus of crickets beneath the kitchen window. When the tears had stopped, I said,
"The reason you can't just tell Purcell you'll leave him alone is that—the way he looks at it—he never knows
when you'll show up and blackmail him to keep quiet. And, Carli, the fact that
you'd never blackmail him is irrelevant. He'd do it, so he figures you would
too." Carli looked down at the tablecloth, but
her eyes were focused a thousand miles away. I glanced up at Susan and went on.
"Carli, even if we somehow got Purcell to say he'd leave you alone, you
couldn't trust him. He's the kind of man who'll make a deal, and then stick a
knife in your stomach while you're shaking on it." Carli began to cry
again, and Susan gave me an angry look. "I'm sorry, Carli. I'm sorry to
say it that way. But you have to understand who you're dealing with. You cannot
convince yourself that you can end this with a phone call or a meeting. And,
right now, we don't have enough evidence to get Purcell convicted of the murder
you witnessed. We could get him arrested. Maybe. But he'd never go to jail based
on what we've got. Now, under normal circumstances, we could report the crime,
put it on the record that you witnessed the murder, and make it hard for
Purcell to retaliate without getting in more trouble. But Carli, these aren't
normal circumstances. I'm afraid Purcell would worry about getting rid of
witnesses first and how to deal with your obvious disappearance down the road
somewhere. "Remember, Purcell is a violent,
explosive man. He's where he is because he's crazy enough to do things that
even other criminals won't do. Sooner or later, it'll catch up with him. A man
can't go on forever killing and setting fires to settle disputes. But for now,
he's kind of bullet proof because he is so damn crazy." Carli had stopped crying. Tears had drawn
dark trails down her cheeks to her jawline, just as they had the first time I
spoke with her. She said, "You said he's bullet proof, but he's not. I
know what you mean, but he's not. A bullet would kill him." I looked at Susan, who raised her eyebrows
as if to say, Who can blame her? I let the subject drop. Carli left to wash her face. I found bread
in Loutie's wormwood cupboard and roast beef, mayonnaise, mustard, and farmer's
cheese in the stainless steel refrigerator. Susan said that she and Carli had
eaten. I built two sandwiches for myself and had eaten one and started on the
second by the time Carli came back in the room. It was a few minutes after ten
now. Carli said, "I'm tired. This is a
lot. I mean, it's a lot to think about. I'm just gonna go to bed." And she
left Susan and me alone in the kitchen as the air conditioner cycled on again,
deadening the mating calls of the crickets in Loutie's shrubbery. "She does that a lot." "What?" Susan said. "When things get bad, she goes to
bed. Nothing wrong with it I just noticed it. People in prison do that." "Go to bed early?" "No. Not just that. They sleep all
the time because they can't stand where they are. It's like temporary suicide.
If you're not conscious, you don't have to feel bad. I read about it for the first
time after Watergate. Ehrlichman, I think it was, commented in an interview
that all these white-collar crooks in minimum security slept their time
away." I asked, "Has Carli been sleeping much during the day?" "Some. Well, come to think of it, she
takes a nap every afternoon. I just thought she was bored." "Maybe she is. I'm just armchair
shrinking to avoid some unpleasant thoughts of my own." I motioned at the
door Carli had gone through on her way to bed. "It must be tough for
her." Susan said, "It's been a tough couple
of days for you too. What do you say we go veg out in front of the TV? We won't
even watch Nightline. We'll watch Leno or Letterman." "It's Sunday." Susan grabbed my hand and pulled me up and
toward the living room. "Then we'll find a great old movie and forget the
real world is even out there." Rear Window and Get Shorty were still on top of
the VCR from two nights earlier. Susan said, "Loutie was saying
the other night when you rented Rear Window that she already had it.
Apparently, she's a Hitchcock nut." Susan opened a narrow painted-pine
cabinet next to the converted antique chifforobe that held Loutie's TV and
said, "Look." Every Hitchcock I had ever seen, along with a few I
didn't know existed, was lined up on rows of shallow shelves. Hitch had his own
ordered space on the top three racks. Loutie's other videos were there, but
they were out of order and clearly subservient to Sir Alfred's body of work.
Susan said, "What about Dial M for Murder?" I said, "Pop it in," and she
did. Instead of previews, the tape started with
a film lesson on Alfred Hitchcock and his penchant for upper-crust-looking
blondes. Susan disappeared. I watched Janet Leigh, Tippi Hendren, Grace Kelly,
Doris Day, and Kim Novak take turns looking horrified. Three or four minutes of
that went by, and Susan reappeared holding a cold bottle of Chardonnay, two
tulip-shaped glasses, and a corkscrew. She said, "All part of the program.
Watch what's-his-name, um, Robert Cummings, and Grace Kelly smooch, drink a little
wine, and see where it leads." "You do know that there's kind of a
grisly murder in the movie too?" She said, "I can take it if you
can," and sat on the sofa next to me. I performed the oddly satisfying job
of cutting and peeling foil from the bottle's neck. The cork came out in one
piece, and the slightly greenish spirits flowed into both expectant glasses
with minimal mess. We settled back and sipped some of the buttery Chardonnay.
I'm not much of a white wine drinker, but you don't tell a woman who has surprised
you with a romantic gesture that you'd just as soon have red wine, or maybe
even a little scotch if she has it. We settled into the cushions as an
oversized finger began to dial an old-fashioned rotary phone. Hitch showed the
mechanical telephone machinery jump and shudder in response to the movements of
the finger. And there she was. Grace Kelly. And she was kissing Robert Cummings
of all people. I said, "Now, explain this to me. She's got this dashing
former-international-tennis-star husband at home, who's a prick, but she
doesn't know that—not to mention that she could get pretty
much any other man she wants—and she decides to go after Bob Cummings.
What the hell is that about?" Susan cleared her throat, and I turned to
look at her. She gave me a sidelong look that said, you're ruining the mood,
dummy, and took in a small sip of wine. I turned back to the movie, and,
for the first time, noticed the warmth of Susan's thigh and knee against my leg
where she had turned ever so slightly my way and ever so casually rested her
leg on mine. Oh. And she had been resting her empty hand on my shoulder
in what I thought was a friendly and comfortable way. Oh, again. I can
take a hint, so long as it's sufficiently obvious and prolonged. Susan was wearing a simple white pullover
with short sleeves, a crew neck, and a squared shirttail that hung untucked
over blue shorts that sort of looked like a miniskirt until you realized they
were shorts. I shifted the glass to my right hand and casually, I hoped, placed
my left hand on Susan's leg in what I also hoped was an intimate, as opposed to
a blatantly horny, gesture. When I did, she lifted her hand from my shoulder
and began to stroke my hair. It felt wonderful. It felt relaxing. And I felt
sleepy. Yawn now and you're a dead man. Instead, I leaned toward Susan,
and she took away any chance of awkwardness by folding into me so that our lips
met perfectly and softly. I wasn't sleepy anymore. Time floated as we kissed
gently. We parted, and I looked for any caution or concern on her face. She
looked happy. Susan hummed. "Mmmm." I put my glass on the coffee table and
smiled. "You're pretty vocal, aren't you?" As Susan leaned her face in close to mine,
she said, "You have no idea." This time our mouths and tongues melted together.
We pulled closer, and I moved my hand over her thigh just to feel the silkiness
of her legs. As I did, Susan reached down and placed her hand over mine. I said, "Sorry." Susan smiled. She pulled my hand up and
inside her shirt and cupped it over her left breast. I caressed her through a thin layer of
cotton and, as we kissed again, slid my hand down and then back up inside her
sports bra. Her breast felt hot and firm, and I could feel the tiny, rhythmic
thuds of her heart beating. I desperately wanted, even needed, to move my mouth
down and across her neck and collarbone and shoulders, to kiss her breasts and
hold her nipples inside my mouth. I kissed her throat, and she pulled away just
enough to click off the lamp on the end table, pull her shirt and bra over her
head, and toss them aside. She lay back against the pillows and pulled me on
top of her. I pushed into her mouth and moved my hands over her breasts. Susan shoved gently against my chest and
tugged at my shirt and dropped it on the floor. Skin to skin now, I kissed her
mouth and her nipples and every inch of skin in between. We lay there on the
sofa with Dial M for Murder playing in the background and made out and
touched and breathed in each other like teenage sweethearts with no bed to go to. Susan guided my hand again, this time to
her legs and over her impossibly warm smooth inner thigh and inside the blue
cotton shorts. As I pushed her panties aside and my fingers found the silky
places where she wanted to be touched and I wanted to touch, Susan began to
unbutton my jeans. Suddenly, she pushed away. "Come on." I sat up,
and whispered, "Is something wrong?" Standing now next to the sofa in
nothing but a pair of miniskirt-looking shorts and framed by Hitchcock's glow, she
said, "Let's go to the bedroom." My brain's usual blood supply was
otherwise engaged, and I was a little dazed by the past half hour and by the
sudden interruption. I looked at her and blinked. She said, "Hurry." And I did. Then I didn't. Someone, somewhere out there, rapped on a
door. It went away, and then started again. This time, the rapping pushed sleep
away and grew louder. Susan called out. "Carli?" Randy Whittles' voice said, "It's me,
Mrs. Fitzsimmons." "Yes. What is it, Randy?" "I gotta go home and catch a few hours'
sleep. Loutie's supposed to be back around eleven. And, with Mr. McInnes in the
house, I thought it'd be okay." He hesitated and said, "You guys must
have had a late night. Nobody's up yet." I looked at my watch. 10:24.I smiled and
showed it to Susan. She moved her eyebrows up and down like a lascivious
Groucho Marx, and spoke to Randy. "Go ahead. We'll be fine." Randy yes-ma'amed her and departed. I said, "Wow. I haven't slept this
late in six months." Susan said, "I haven't slept this
well in longer than that. This is delicious. Lying in bed on a Monday morning,
enjoying the... the what, maybe the afterglow if that doesn't sound
ridiculous." "Sounds perfect to me." Susan leaned over and kissed my lips.
Then, as she turned and reached to click on the bedside lamp, she said,
"Nowhere to be and nothing I have to do. And you absolutely deserve a day
off." When she had leaned over to turn on the
light, the sheet had fallen to her waist, and I was conducting a thorough and
thoroughly satisfying study of her breasts. I said, "You know what we
could do?" Susan gave me a look. "We could go
check on Carli to make sure she's all right." "Yeah. That's what I was going to
say." Susan laughed and rolled off the bed and, from my perspective, made
a very nice job of walking to the bathroom. I sat up, swung my feet to the
floor, and pushed up. My jeans were in a tangle against a baseboard ten feet
from the bed. I pulled them on and went to the living room with the intention
of retrieving my shirt and Susan's bra and shirt before Carli found them. Randy said she wasn't up yet. I still had
a chance to be discreet. The faint hum of Susan's shower dissipated
as I moved down the hallway. On through the hall and the study and then into
the living room, I found nothing but quiet. I had gathered up our clothes and
started back when, for some reason, I stopped in the study and listened. And
there was nothing. Almost too much nothing, and I was overwhelmed by the
feeling that Susan and I were in the house alone. I trotted across the study floor, turned
away from Susan's room, and hung a left down a second hallway. Carli's paneled
door was on the right. I knocked. Nothing. I knocked again and called her name.
Still nothing. "Carli? Carli! Answer me! I'm coming
in now. So, cover yourself up or whatever you need to do." The knob twisted in my hand, but the door
stood immobile. I called out again and remembered my own pseudo-shrink comment
that constant napping and sleeping like Carli had been doing was a form of
temporary suicide. I thought about kicking the door in but decided that might
be an overreaction. And I wasn't even sure I could do it. That was two inches
of antique oak between me and Carli. I ran to get Susan. Thank God, the bathroom door was unlocked.
Inside, Susan sloshed in the shower, and I could barely see through all the
billowing steam stuffed into the small tiled room. I said, "I need the key to Carli's
room. She's not answering." Through fogged glass, I could just make
out Susan scrubbing suds out of her hair and rinsing foam off her face. Two
beats passed while she washed away soap and shampoo, and she said, "Maybe
she's just sleeping hard." But, even as she spoke, Susan stepped out of
the shower and grabbed a terry cloth robe off a hook on the door. I am ashamed
to say that, even then and even under those circumstances, I was struck and
aroused by all that beautiful wet skin. I am pleased to say that I did not
pause to enjoy either the view or the fantasy. Susan wasn't running, but she was moving
fast. She said, "Go back and try again. Loutie keeps all the keys on hooks
in the kitchen. I'll be right there." I didn't have Susan's self-control. I
sprinted, as much as anyone can sprint in an old house full of antiques, back
to Carli's door. Still, nothing but quiet. I banged and called and banged some more.
And, out of nowhere, Susan was beside me, pushing an antique skeleton key into
the lock. She swung the door wide, and we stepped into the room The bed was
made. The window was open. And Carli was gone. chapter sixteen We stood, stunned. When we moved, Susan ran
to the window, and I
performed the same lame searches I had the last time Carli's bed had been
unexpectedly empty. She wasn't in the closet or under the bed this time either,
and neither were any of her things. But there was a penciled note on the
vanity. I called Susan over, and when she turned to face me, white showed all
around her bright blue irises. The note was on the same notebook paper
Carli had been using for all her drawings. On the top half of the page, Carli
had sketched a picture of Susan's antique step-side pickup with tall grass all
around and what looked like a rosebush covering the front wheel. On the bottom
half, she had simply written, Thanks—Sorry—Carli. When Susan spoke, her voice fluttered just
above a whisper. "It looks like she took off last night after she left us
in the kitchen." "Probably. But after Randy left this
morning would've been the best time to get away unnoticed, and she could've
gotten up and made her bed before slipping out." In contrast to Susan's
strained syllables, my voice sounded loud and uncouth in the abandoned bedroom.
I self-consciously lowered and calmed my voice. "It had to take some time
to draw this, assuming she drew it at the same time she wrote the note. She may
have just picked up an old drawing and written on it." I said, "Go
out front and check the sidewalks. I'll check in back." Susan turned and flew through the bedroom
door. I pushed the note inside my hip pocket, put my feet through the bottom
half of the tall, open window, and sat on the sill. Turning and sliding, I
caught the sill with both hands and dropped the last few feet to the ground. A
teenage girl could easily have done the same thing. And she had. The mud-grip
tread of Carli's sport sandals was pressed neatly into the soft earth of a
flower bed. She had barely missed stomping the freshly planted tulip bulbs
Loutie had assigned to her care when she first arrived. Textured footprints moved off the bed at
an angle. The few, diluted drops of Creek blood flowing through my veins didn't
help me track her steps. I followed the angle but, after that, couldn't really
tell what she had done. It seemed likely, though, that Carli had moved parallel
with Monterey Street, crossing three contiguous back lawns, before being forced
by a tall privacy fence to turn back toward the street and hit the sidewalk. If
Randy had been focused on the street and alley, he never would have seen her
scurry away. Following my guesswork route, I circled
around to the street and met Susan trotting down the sidewalk. She halted in
front of me. Her wide eyes had narrowed with focus. I asked, "Have you got
your pickup around here somewhere?" Susan's voice was clear now. "It's
parked around off the alley out of sight." "You'd better get it. She's probably
long gone, but it'd be stupid not to split up and cover the streets around
here." We turned and walked hurriedly toward the house. Inside, Susan got
dressed in less than a minute, shedding her robe, pulling on panties, jeans, and
running shoes, and sliding a green T-shirt over wet hair which she didn't
bother to brush. I put on last night's clothes, grabbed a mouthful of Scope,
sloshed a little, and spit in the sink. As Susan turned the key in Loutie's front
door, I said, "Just drive up and down the streets looking. And take a good
look at any parks you come across. I'll cover the bus stops and work my way
toward downtown." I asked, "What's the code on Loutie's answering
machine?" "I don't know. Why?" "I'm trying to figure out how one of
us can let the other one know if we find her." I handed her my cell phone.
"Here. I'll find a phone and call you in an hour. If one of us hasn't come
across her by then, it'll be time to get Joey on it." Susan said, "Tell me his number. I'll
call him now." And she was right, of course. I told her Joey's office and
cell phone numbers. As I climbed into my Jeep, Susan strode through Loutie's
side yard toward the alley. Her face was pale and concentrated as she punched
buttons on the tiny gray flip phone. An hour later, I called. We agreed to keep
going. An hour after that, even over cell phone static, I could hear defeat in
Susan's voice. Randy Whittles and Joey were inside
Loutie's house when I arrived. The air crackled with tension, and Randy's ears
burned as red as Joey's face. I could have sworn there had been yelling in that
room. I sat and explained everything I knew
about Carli's disappearance. Randy added nothing. He hadn't seen anything. After Susan arrived and joined us in the
living room, Joey leaned forward in his chair and propped his elbows on his
knees. He looked at the piece of hardwood floor between his Hush Puppies for a
few seconds and then up at me. "Letting a teenage girl slip out of
here under our ... under my nose is ... shit. Anyway, after I got
Susan's call this morning, I called Randy and then got a few men out looking. I
told Randy here to fix his fucking mess. But, hell, it's my fault. I should
have been here myself." Susan scrunched up her eyebrows. She
looked at me and then at Joey and then back at me again. I rolled my eyes and
said, "It's nobody's fault, Joey. And nobody—not even
you—can be everywhere. "Now, about little Randy here."
I noticed that Randy Whittles sat up a little straighter and glared at me when
I called him "little." Any man who has gone through what it takes to
become a SEAL deserves not to be insulted. I said, "No offense, Randy.
It's just that you look like a kid to an old man in his thirties." Randy's
chest unswelled a little, and he turned the bass down on his glare. "Joey,
Randy was assigned to keep people out of this house, not keep them in. And you
know as well as I do that those are different things. And, on top of that,
Carli may have taken off this morning after Randy was gone." Joey said, "Except that Randy had no
business leaving here without my okay." I said, "Well, Randy works for you,
not me." And Joey nodded, as if to say, Damn right he does. "But
I'm not blaming you for anything, and I'm sure Susan isn't either." Susan piped in on cue. "You're the best.
Anyone else would be making excuses or covering up, but you're here pointing
out nonexistent mistakes and taking full blame." She walked over and
squeezed his huge hand. Joey said, "This turned touchy-feely
all of a sudden, didn't it?" Susan laughed and slapped him lightly on the
top of his head. I said, "Now that everything's cuddly
again, we need to figure out where our client is." Joey said, "I've got somebody at the
bus station. And I've got someone at the airport, even though I doubt Carli's
got the money to take a plane to the nearest hub. By the way, how much money does
she have?" Susan knitted her eyebrows again and shook
her head. "I don't know. Carli probably had some tips from her last night
at the Pelican's Roost, but I never asked her. Loutie gave her some clothes and
bought her a few more." Joey asked, "Have you checked your
purse?" Susan said, "I don't think Carli
would ever..." "I'm not saying she's a crook, Susan.
The girl was scared. Scared shitless of Leroy Purcell from what Tom tells me.
Just go check your purse." Susan pointed at an antique sideboard
against the back wall and said, "It's right there on the table." She
walked over and looked inside. "My whole wallet's gone." She sounded
tired. I said, "Call MasterCard and American
Express and whatever other cards you've got. Check on recent purchases. Tell
them your daughter sneaked off with your cards. Say you don't want the police
involved, but you want to know if someone tries to charge anything." "Will they do that?" Joey said, "Sometimes. Not always.
How much money is missing?" "I don't know. Somewhere between two
and three hundred dollars." Joey stood. "I'm gonna go call my man
at the airport. On Southwest Airlines, that little girl could fly just about
any-damnwhere Southwest goes for three hundred bucks." As he
stood, he added, "Randy. Go fix this mess." Joey walked out, and, in
quick order, Randy stood and marched out the front door without uttering a
word. Susan said, "Testosterone
poisoning." "That's more than a little insulting,
you know." Susan looked taken aback. I said, "If a man, every time a
woman acted stupid or vain, said she was suffering from estrogen poisoning,
he'd be drawn and quartered by every woman and half the men in the room." Susan said, "Okay. You're right. But
why are we arguing about this?" I said, "Because I'm ticked off about
Carli and Sonny and Leroy Purcell, and I want to argue with someone." "Feel better?" "Yeah." "Good. What now?" "I think I'm going to go mess with
Leroy Purcell." "Why on earth would you do
that?" "Because it seems like the only time
we learn anything in this case is when things get stirred up. And I'm tired of
the other guy doing all the stirring. This is something I've been giving
serious thought to. I want to give Purcell something to think about besides
looking for you and Carli. So, I'm going to try to mess with his mind a little
and see if I can split his attention and maybe even get him to make a
mistake." Susan said, "Can I help?" I said, "Yeah. I think you probably
can." chapter seventeen I awoke Tuesday morning in a strange room
in Seaside, Florida. A pale
blue ceiling floated over the bed. Two sandy yellow walls angled together and
formed a square with another right angle of walls painted the blue-green color
of shallow Gulf water on a summer morning. The bed's driftwood headboard
swirled with hand-painted shells and fish and mermaids. Found-object sculptures
decorated only one sand-colored wall. All other walls were left blank to catch
the sunshine and the changing shadows of outside vegetation projected through
oversized windows. The room, in short, was horribly and expensively whimsical. A soft tangle of brunette hair lay on the
pillow next to my own sandy head. The covers had fallen away to reveal one
perfect female shoulder and a strong, firm rib cage that flowed into that
wonderful woman place where narrow waist meets the beginning swell of hips. I
ran my hand over the exposed, cool curve of her hip and circled her waist with
my arm. My hand moved over the dimple of her navel and stopped at her ribs to
pull her warm back against my chest and stomach and her rounded bottom against
my thighs. I kissed her shoulder. She stirred and yawned, and Susan turned on
her back to look at me. I propped up on my left elbow, rested my
head in my hand, and said, "Good morning." Susan said, "Morning." Her voice
came out soft and husky with sleep. I studied her. A friend of Loutie's had
visited the house on Monterey Street Monday afternoon and dyed Susan's hair a
surprisingly realistic dark brown. The petite, frizzy-haired magician had even
tinted Susan's eyebrows to match. Susan pulled the sheet up to her neck and
laced her fingers behind her head. She smiled. "What are you looking
at?" I've never quite known what to say when a
woman asks that. So, I just said, "You." Susan said, "I think you're enjoying
this." "You're right." "No. I mean sleeping with a blonde
one night and a brunette the next." I sat up and put my feet on the floor.
Smiling, I said, "Yeah, I knew that's what you meant." I heard her
weight shift on the bed, and I should have gotten out of the way. Susan swung a
playful but solid fist into my right shoulder blade. I yelled, "Ow,"
more from surprise than pain and jumped up. Susan was laughing and looking
inordinately proud of herself. She said, "Watch it." I said, "Jeez. Consider it
watched." Susan sat up, hooking the sheet under her
arms, and looked at me. "Most people over thirty look better with clothes
than without them. But you happen to look very, very nice naked." As I walked toward the bathroom to take a
shower, I said, "Then I guess you'd better watch it too. It'd be a shame
to have to deny you all this." Susan smiled, it seemed, with more
indulgence than amusement. Twenty minutes later, I was showered and
outfitted in clean jeans and shirt. After finding my way down an open teak
staircase, over nubby carpet and Mexican tile, and through an oversized
hexagonal doorway into the kitchen, I found Loutie sipping tomato juice and
fiddling the knobs on an impressive array of electronic equipment that had been
spread out on an artistically chipped slab of granite the owners had intended
to be the breakfast table. "Good morning." Loutie frowned at a graphic readout and
held a black foam rubber knob attached to one side of a tiny headset to her
ear. She said, "Hey," and tossed the
headset on top of a graphite-colored box. I asked, "What's Purcell up to this
morning?" "Sleeping." Loutie motioned at
the refrigerator with her thumb. "There's muffins. Orange juice and tomato
juice. Coffee's still okay. Been on the burner a while, though." She wasn't exactly testy. But Loutie had
become very ... focused. I asked, "Is anything wrong? I mean, anything I
don't know about?" "No. I'm just keeping tabs on
Purcell. Joey's back on Dog Island watching Haycock." I said, "And Carli's out there alone
somewhere, and Joey's pushing everyone because he thinks he's supposed to be
perfect." Loutie shrugged and sat in an awkward, designer dining chair
made of four sticks of chrome and two swatches of mauve leather. Susan walked in, running her hands through
damp hair. New, dark mascara made her eyes appear bigger and an even lighter
blue than usual; earth tones powdered her eyelids; and dark lip gloss and blush
gave her tanned complexion a decidedly olive cast. Together with her new dark
brown hair and eyebrows, it was a pretty amazing disguise. I said, "Who the hell are you?"
And Susan smiled. Loutie told her about the muffins and
juice. Susan found a glass in the cabinet next to the sink and poured some
orange juice in it. Loutie turned to me. "Joey said to tell you he's still
working on who runs the Bodines down around the islands." I asked, "Does that mean it's not
Purcell?" "No. I think it just means he still
hasn't found out who runs what. Could be Purcell. Could be somebody else. All
the cops could find out is there's a rumor that the young Turks, as Joey put
it, may be trying to take over from the old guard. But Joey says that's not
exactly earth-shattering news since somebody's always trying to edge out
somebody else when business is good. You know, criminal business." "And that's all?" "That's all." So much for that. I came back to the task
at hand. "Anybody else in Purcell's place?" Loutie shook her head. I
asked her how to find it, and she told me. I gave her my cell phone number. As
I tapped a series of four buttons on the tiny gray keypad, I said, "I'm
turning off the ringer and setting the phone on vibrate. If Purcell wakes up or
somebody else shows up, give me a call. I won't answer unless I'm clear of the
house, though. So don't worry if you can't get me." Susan frowned. "You sure you know
what you're doing?" I said, "Nope. But, I'll be careful." I
lifted my shirttail to show her the butt of a Browning 9mm automatic I had
gotten from my father in the aftermath of my brother's death the previous fall.
The sight seemed to scare her more, not less. I found a khaki cap with a blue
visor and Seaside, Florida stitched across the front, and put that on
along with a pair of overpriced, purple-mirrored, Revo sunglasses a client had
given me. Quaint pathways passed beneath bright sky
and beside white picket fences, perfect pastel vacation homes, and decorator
bird-houses that seemed to be the object of some kind of cuteness competition.
If my Jim Walter house on St. George had been pastel hell, then Seaside,
Florida certainly was pastel heaven—if banal,
architecturally angular homogeneity is your idea of heaven. Seaside is, in the
best and worst senses, a planned community. Mostly, it was planned to provide
new-rich Chardonnay-Southerners a tidy—some might say
sterile—place to vacation far from the unwashed
throngs who sunned and sloshed and guzzled Budweiser along the rest of the
Redneck Riviera. The place looks so unreal and unlikely
that Hollywood used Seaside as the fantasy town that could only exist on
television in the Jim Carrey film The Truman Show. It's a small place. Nothing in Seaside is
very far from anything else. And no more than a hundred yards from our modestly
ostentatious rental, Leroy Purcell's beach palace occupied a sandy, picketed
lot just one left and two rights from our own canary-yellow front door. I was
not surprised to see that our ail-American hero owned one of the larger chunks
of aqua blue siding in Seaside, which is saying something. Neither was I
surprised that parked behind his house was one of the longest, reddest
Cadillacs I have ever encountered. Spring break revelers had trudged back to
class, and the arthritic flocks of sun-browned snowbirds who took up winter
residence on the Gulf had pointedly migrated north even before the spring break
crowd had arrived. So, as I moved among the clapboard canyons of Seaside, I had
encountered only a few lonely, sandy-bottomed souls. Now, standing outside
Purcell's million-dollar beachfront, I saw no one. I waved and jogged across Purcell's lot as
if attempting to catch up with a friend. Acting 101. As I came up on his
fiery Caddy, I stumbled and knelt down to retie a perfectly tied Reebok. More
acting. From inside my hip pocket, I pulled out a small black box with a
tracking device on the inside and magnets on the outside. Following Joey's
earlier instructions, I reached under Purcell's Caddy, felt for the steel
frame, and clicked the box into place. I stood and squinted into the western sky
before jogging out to look longingly down the beach at my departed, imaginary
buddy, whoever he might be. Turning away from the surf, I had started
up the beach on the way back to Susan and Loutie when my flip phone vibrated,
not unpleasantly, in the hip pocket of my jeans. I hesitated before realizing I
would look suspiciously out of place on the beach at Seaside only if I didn't
occasionally confer with unseen minions by cell phone. I pulled up the tiny
antenna and opened the phone. Loutie said, "Joey called. He needs
you in Apalachicola." "Is he all right?" Loutie sounded surprised. "Joey's
fine. He has somebody he wants you to meet." "Who is it?" "He just said somebody with
information about Purcell. Call him, okay?" I said, "okay," and ended the
call. A recorded female voice full of misplaced
emphasis told me the cellular customer I was calling was unavailable. I looked
around some and tried Joey's number again with the same result. I walked back
along manicured, sandy paths to Susan and Loutie and the rented house with the
canary door. Long morning. Loutie listened to Purcell
listen to ESPN; Susan read the complimentary copy of USA Today she had
found on our steps that morning; and, between unsuccessful attempts to return
Joey's call, I glanced at whatever pages Susan wasn't reading. I was
absentmindedly looking at a four-color pie chart with a line of Zorro masks
next to it—something about crime going down—when the phone rang. Joey sounded excited. He had been tailing
the guy he wanted me to meet, trying to decide whether the man really wanted to
talk or maybe just wanted to do us bodily harm. I asked, "So, what do you
think?" I could hear Joey's radio playing softly
as he spoke. "I think we ought to meet with him. Coosa—the cop in Panama City I've been working with—says he's okay. I mean, he's a fucking snitch, which means he's
basically human shit, but, for a snitch, he's okay." "How'd you find out about him?" "Like I said. Coosa. I guess he
figured we weren't getting much for our money, so he just called me up and gave
me the guy's name and address and stuff." Joey was happier about this than I was. I
asked, "Does that seem strange to you?" "Yeah, a little." "But you still want to meet with
him?" "Sure. It's better than sitting
around waiting. And the only trap I'm worried about is one I don't see coming.
I figure we're gonna learn something whatever happens. The boy's either gonna
tell us something useful 'cause he wants to or 'cause we make him. Doesn't make
much difference to me." I said, "You do know that you're not actually
immortal?" "Mother's Milk at ten tonight." "Mother's Milk?" He repeated, "Mother's Milk,"
and hung up. chapter eighteen Mother's Milk was a cinder-block edifice deposited on a stretch of stunted
timberland north of Apalachicola. A mercury light hanging from a tall creosote
post cast an ugly bluish illumination across the parking lot where, days
before, Joey had relieved Haycock and his accomplice of the tools of their
trade. Halfway down the light post, the proprietor had suspended a Coca-Cola
sign—the kind country stores get for free—with the bar's name painted in green across a lighted white panel.
I pulled into the lot and found a place among the pickups, Z-28's, and
Firebirds. As I clicked off the headlights on my newly
rented Bonneville, Joey startled me by tapping loudly on the passenger window.
I jumped hard enough to bang my knee on the steering wheel. I popped the locks, and Joey climbed into
the passenger seat. He said, "You're early." "Wasn't sure I'd be
able to find it." Joey nodded at Mother's Milk. "Pretty, isn't
it?" The rusted metal roof drooped, and once-white paint had flaked off
the concrete exterior in irregular patches, revealing a soiled pea-soup color.
In addition to the lighted Cola-Cola sign hanging from the light post, the
bar's name had been painted in red script across the front wall, which bore the
pockmarks of a hundred rifle and pistol shots fired over the years from passing
cars. I said, "It looks like a good place
to get killed." Joey looked thoughtful. "I don't
guess we'd be the first." "You think that's a
possibility?" "Hell, it's always a possibility.
It's a possibility you're gonna get creamed crossing the road. It's a
possibility you're gonna catch a cramp one of these days while you're out
swimming in Mobile Bay." "Yeah." I said, "That's
just what I wanted. I wasn't worried about somebody sticking a knife in me
tonight. I wanted to have a philosophical discussion about life's inherent
uncertainties." "Just trying to put things in perspective."
He looked over at me. "You ready to go?" "Yeah. But, before we go in, mind if
I ask why you chose this particular establishment?" "I didn't. The snitch—Squirley McCall—he picked it." I smiled. "Squirley?" "And Detective Coosa says it fits him
like his momma knew he was gonna grow up to be a snitch. Anyway, he wanted to
meet here. I guess it's his usual watering hole." "So I guess he'll have some buddies
around in case something goes wrong." Joey shook his head. "Snitching ain't
a team sport. Boy's taking his life in his hands every time he sells some
information. So I don't think we gotta worry about him having backup. He
probably just wants lots of people around." Joey reached over and put his
hand on his door release. "You ready?" I stepped out onto the dirt parking lot.
Joey led the way as we mounted the small porch and walked in through the open
front door. At six foot six and two hundred forty
pounds, Joey is used to other men getting out of his way, and that's what they
did as we entered the bar. Unfortunately, I'm not quite so intimidating a
presence. And, as I stepped inside, a patron with a black, mountain-man beard,
a yellow Caterpillar cap, and rolls of cellulite hanging from his exposed
underarms put a hand across the little entry hall, blocking my way. "You haven't paid the cover
charge." I looked at him. "My friend didn't
pay either. Neither did the two people ahead of us." The cellulite mountain man smiled and
looked around to make sure his buddies were watching. "Shit. I guess they
snuck in when I wasn't looking." He tried to mock my voice. "Let's
see that's two people ahead of you, your friend, and you." He cut his eyes
back to check out the appreciative laughter of his friends. "I guess
you're gonna have to pay for all of 'em. Let's see. It's a ten-dollar cover.
Ain't that right, Louis?" One of his buddies laughed and said,
"Hell, Jimbo, I believe it was twenty." Jimbo said, "Naw. That'd be greedy.
Tell you what. You just make it a even twenty for you and your boyfriend
there." I could see Joey over Jimbo's shoulder. He
caught my eye, and I shook my head. I said, "Excuse me," and pushed
Jimbo's arm out of the way. Jimbo didn't know when to quit. He grabbed
the front of my shirt and said, "Goddamnit, boy. Don't put your fucking
hands on me." I brought my right hand up fast, clamped
his trachea between my thumb and fingers, and shoved him hard into the wall.
Jimbo hit with a thud and lost balance. I pinned him to the wall by jamming my
fingers into his chubby neck and squeezing hard enough to make him wheeze and
squeak trying to breathe. I heard cussing and caught movement out of the corner
of my eye as his friends started to move forward. Joey stepped in front of them, and cussing
turned to mumbling. I looked into Jimbo's eyes. He let go of my
shirt and aimed his right fist at my head. I blocked the punch by spearing his
forearm with my left elbow and slapped him hard across his ear in the same
motion. A high-pitched squeal came through his pinched throat. I said, "You want some more of
this?" He shook his head, and I let go. Jimbo
staggered out onto the small porch holding his throat. I stepped outside and
spoke quietly to him, then came inside and walked with Joey to a small table
covered in plastic with wood grain printed on it. When we were seated, Joey said,
"What'd you tell him outside?" "That he asked for it, and
embarrassed is better than dead." "You be a dangerous man, huh?" "Actually, I'm pretty much full of
shit. But Jimbo doesn't know it. Or, at least, I don't think he does—choking makes you feel pretty helpless. Anyway, I was just trying
to keep him from waiting for me out in the parking lot with a gun." "He may do it anyhow." I said, "Yeah, well, you can get
killed crossing the street." "Wish I'd said that." Joey said,
"You know why he messed with you, don't you?" "Yeah." "You got on a diving watch costs more
than most of these boys make in a month. Polo shirt and L. L. Bean khakis. You
were asking for it." "I believe I told you that I knew why
he did it." "Just making sure." We were sitting in the back right corner,
well away from the plywood bar that ran half the length of the wall on the left
side of the room. A spring training game out of South Florida flickered bright
green across the televison behind the bartender. Next to the TV, a Playboy
centerfold that someone had blown up into a poster stretched four feet across
the pressed-paneling wall. As our eyes adjusted, we could see a sampling of
thirty or forty other centerfolds from the past thirty years taped to the
walls, and, on the backs of the draft beer taps, the owner had glued a series
of life-sized plastic breasts. I pointed at the plastic boobs and said,
"Mother's Milk." Joey said, "Lot of thought went into
that." I nodded. Joey looked around the room.
"Something else I was thinking about. There aren't a hell of a lot of bars
where you can half choke a man to death at the front door and nobody seems to
notice." "Probably happens too much to worry
about." "Probably." A dishwater blonde came over and asked
what we wanted. We said we wanted beer, and she went away. I said, "I guess you don't see
Squirley." "Nope. Told him to look for me." "You stand out in a crowd." Joey nodded. I had been studying the centerfold for
March '77, trying to decide what she probably looked like twenty years later.
The waitress brought our beer, and I drank some. Joey said, "You notice on these
centerfolds how the old ones were photographed without any nookie showing. Then
they started showing it. Then they started shaving the stuff they started showing.
It's like we thought we wanted to see it, but we really didn't." I closed my eyes and rubbed the bridge of
my nose. I heard a new voice. "Joey?" I looked up at a man standing next to our
table. Joey said, "Squirley. Sit down and
have a beer." The man nodded his head by repeating a
birdlike ducking motion, like someone trying to swallow peanut butter. I noticed that Squirley wobbled a little
as he sat. I also noted that he hadn't been squandering his hard-earned snitch
income on soap or razor blades. Joey looked irritated. "You already
drunk?" "Working on it." He held up his
hand and snapped his fingers at the waitress. She flipped him a bird and walked
to the bar. Squirley jerked his thumb at me. "Who's zis?" "I'm Tom." "You buying, Tom?" I said, "Sure," and motioned to
the waitress. She came over with a fresh beer balanced
on her tray. "Somebody gonna pay for this? I ain't giving it to him till
somebody pays for it." I put three ones on her tray, and she put
the glass in front of Squirley. He drank half of it and said, "I don't
usually do business here." Joey said, "You picked it." Squirley nodded gravely and drank the rest
of his beer. "Gimme another three. I'll just get me one more beer, and
we'll go outside and talk." I looked at Joey. He nodded, and I counted
out three ones. Squirley McCall gathered them up and wove his way to the bar,
where he pushed his way roughly through a small group of Latino men. Squirley
waved at the bartender, who pretended not to see him. Squirley almost shouted.
"I got the goddamn money. Gimme a beer, Leonard. I say I got your goddamn
money." Joey sighed. When Squirley finally got his draft, he
turned his back to the bar and leaned one elbow on the edge while he took in
the first gulp. He looked around at the small band of Latino patrons and said,
"Lucy, you got some splaining to do," and began to laugh uncontrollably.
One of the men said something I couldn't hear. Squirley grinned and said,
"How do you get 148 Cubans in a shoe box? Tell 'em it floats." And he
laughed so hard he gave himself hiccups. I decided to go fetch our snitch while
there was still enough left of him to snitch with. As I stepped through the men
Squirley had just insulted, I said, "Excuse me," and grabbed one of
his arms. One of the men stepped in front of
Squirley. "We are not Cuban. We are Peruvian. Not everyone who lives south
of this country is from the same place." Squirley smiled. "Who gives a
fuck?" The man turned to me. "Does your
friend want to have his heart cut out?" "He's not my friend." "He should leave." I said, "Sounds about right." Joey had wandered over in case my rescue
of Squirley turned into a war. Now he grabbed the snitch's other arm and we
started for the front door. Squirley said, "Other way. Other way.
Go out back and talk." Joey looked at me. I said, "Guess
he's got his reasons," and gently steered him as he staggered to a doorway
in the back wall and then led us through a filthy kitchen and out a back door.
Once outside, Squirley walked over and leaned against a particularly foul-smelling
Dumpster. Joey looked disgusted. I said, "You really think this idiot
knows something?" Joey shook his head. "You never know.
Almost every snitch is a drunk or a junkie or both. You pretty much gotta find
somebody who'll sell out his friends for fifty bucks if you want information,
and that usually means somebody who needs a bottle or a fix." He motioned
at Squirley with his hand. "That, unfortunately, is your basic
professional snitch." "But who would tell that dumb-ass
anything?" Joey said, "I don't know. But Coosa
says he's pretty reliable." Squirley perked up. "I can hear you
talkin'. You don't want help? Fine. Fuck off. I got better stuff to do."
Joey and I walked over and stood in front of Squirley. He was still mad about
being hauled out of the bar in front of the Peruvians. "Bunch of fucking
Ricky Ricardo spic assholes. Buying up the whole fucking coast. Motherfuckers
coming up here outta South Florida. Already ruined it down there for real
Americans, and, much as I care, they're welcome to it. Fucking Margaritaville.
We don't need that shit up here." I said, "Who's buying up the
coast?" Squirley seemed to sober up a little. He
shifted his eyes from side to side, checking for spies, signaling that he was
about to impart confidential information. He said, "I'm gonna tell you,
just to let you know that old Squirley knows what he's talkin' about, you know,
that old Squirley got his finger on the place." His breath fogged the air between us,
competing with the Dumpster's aroma—stench layered
on stench. I nodded encouragingly. "There's a buncha rich cigar spics,
call themselves 'Pro-Am,' like that golf show. They own all kinda shit around
here. Houses, boats, some of the businesses in town. Most people don't know
that shit." Joey said, "They got a leader?" "I guess they do. Don't know many
names, though." Joey just looked at him. Squirley seemed to shrink a little inside
his skin. His husky, alcoholic voice cracked when he said, "I thought you
was bringin' some money." Joey handed him a twenty. Squirley turned it
over in his fingers, examining both sides like he wasn't used to dealing in
such small denominations. "Not much." I said, "That's just for starters. To
see if you know anything worth paying for." Squirley raised his eyebrows, dropped open
his mouth, and held his palms in the air with the twenty protruding from
trembling fingertips. He tried to look hurt, to look put-upon. The snitch said,
"You called me. So you know..." Joey said, "Give us the fucking
name." Squirley stopped to think. As he did, he
popped the knuckles of his right hand, one at a time, snatching them with his
thumb. "Martillo is one." He pronounced it Marr-til-oh. "And
another one I heard is something like Carpet Hero, but I think that one's a
nickname." Joey sounded disgusted. "Yeah. I bet
that's it." Squirley looked at us and blinked puffy,
bloodshot eyes. I said, "What's Leroy Purcell doing
down here?" He grinned. "You know a little
somethin', don't you? I'll tell you what Leroy's doin'. He's pissin' in the
wrong pond. That's what he's doin'. And I reckon you know he's the one brought
the spics in here." I asked, "Whose pond is this down
here?" "Well, you see, that ain't exactly
clear." Joey said, "What's that mean?" "Could mean lotsa things, couldn't
it? I reckon it mostly means I wanna see some more green before I tell you what
it means." I said, "A hundred. If we don't
already know what you know." "I don't do business like that. You
hand over the goddamn money..." Joey stepped forward and hit Squirley with
an open right, and the putrid little bigot spun and hit the wall behind him
face first. He hung there a moment, as if hurt or dazed. Joey's .45 auto
appeared, and my giant friend pressed the muzzle behind Squirley's left ear. I jumped. "Whoa, Joey..." Joey kept looking at our drunken snitch.
"Drop the knife." Squirley hesitated, and Joey cocked the hammer on
his Colt. Slowly, the drunk's right hand moved out
from the space between his stomach and the wall. It held a hunting knife with a
six-inch blade. Squirley lifted his blade to the side and dropped it in the
gravel. Joey said, "Put your hands on the
wall and spread 'em. That's right. You've done it before." Joey patted him down and told him to turn
around. Squirley looked scared. He said, "Do
I still get the hundred?" Joey shook his head and laughed. I said, "Tell us what you know." Squirley licked dry, cracked lips, then
snorted hard down deep in his throat and spit on the gravel. He was getting
ready to talk. "There's a hell of a mess goin' on.
On the one side, you got old men been running things down here—some of 'em since after Korea. On the other side you got a buncha
mean-ass kids tryin' to take over. Startin' to get bad, too. These young 'uns,
they don't give a shit about nothin'. Kill you for nothin', for fun. Don't give
a shit about jail. Nothin'." I said, "Where's Purcell come
in?" "Old Leroy thinks he's gonna come in
and take over while there's a war goin' on. But he's fuckin' up. Shoulda picked
a side and cut some kinda deal. But, hell no, fuckin' football hero wants it
all. Word is he wants to set up one of them cartels like they got down in
Spicland. Old Leroy wants to be king shit of smugglers. Kinda do for guns and
military stuff what the spics did with coke." He paused to turn his head
and spit into the gravel. "Shit. You ask me, Leroy's fuckin' up big time.
Now, he's got the old boys pissed—and they been
doin' this shit a long time—and he's got the young 'uns pissed—and, like I said, they just don't give a shit. Kill your momma for
a dollar." I said, "We need names." "You're asking shit that's gonna get
me killed if anybody finds out I talked." Joey said, "How about if we give you
our word that we'll be as careful with your reputation as you are?" "You tryin' to be a smart-ass?"
Joey shrugged, and Squirley flinched. He turned to me. "Your boy here
don't know how to do business. Now, you look smart." I said, "Uh-huh." "All I'm saying is, if you want
names, I gotta see that hundred." I pulled some folded bills from my hip
pocket, peeled one off, and handed it to Squirley. He smiled. He beamed. It wasn't pretty. Our inebriated informer pushed the bill
deep inside his pocket, and a dark shape hit him flush in the mouth. Squirley
McCall fell back onto the wall and slid to the ground. I spun around. Joey already had his .45 trained on a
group of three men. The one in the middle was casually tossing half a brick
into the air and catching it. Joey said, "Put it down." The man caught the brick, turned his hand
upside down, and let it drop. The same man looked up and said, "Time for
you two to get on out of here." Joey said, "I was just gonna say the
same thing to you. Seeing how I'm the one with the gun and all." The brick thrower smiled and walked away
followed by the other two. Joey said, "Let's go." I grabbed Squirley's elbow and said,
"Get the other arm." "Why?" "Because they're going to kill him if
we leave him here." Joey said, "They're gonna kill him
anyhow for talking to us," but he grabbed the other arm and helped me get
Squirley to my car. After dropping Squirley at the emergency
room, I took a few minutes to talk over the night with Joey. Then I headed back
to Seaside. I needed to spend some time in front of a laptop while my little
adventure at Mother's Milk was fresh in my mind. For the first time, the loose ends were
beginning to weave themselves into an indistinct but vaguely recognizable
fabric. chapter nineteen I shut down my new Dell laptop a little
after one, trudged up the
rented teak stairs of our Seaside cottage, and climbed under the covers beside
Susan, who stirred and murmured half words whispered low and found sleep again.
I lay there listening to the widow Fitzsimmons' rhythmic breathing and let
panic take hold the way it does when it finds you exhausted and unsettled and
uncomfortably awake in the hours between midnight and dawn. I got up and drank some water. Got back in
bed. Got out again and straightened the covers. Again Susan stirred, and I lay
still. Much less time went by than it felt like, and I drifted into a fitful
sleep. That morning, I slept late but not well. Downstairs, Loutie was manning the
listening equipment. Susan was on the phone; she put her hand over the
mouthpiece and said, "It's Joey. He needs to talk to you." I took the phone, and said, "Kind of
an interesting night." "Yeah. That's one thing you could
call it. Might've been more interesting if Squirley had turned loose of a
couple more names before eating a brick." I walked over to the cabinet and found a
glass. "Go see him in the hospital. We left him the hundred. He still owes
us the names." As I spoke, I filled the glass with ice and water. Joey said, "Too late. Squirley
McCall's a goner." "He died from getting hit in the
mouth with a brick? That doesn't make sense." "Hell no. He just hauled ass. The
orderly took in his breakfast, and old Squirley had taken a powder. And his
clothes were gone. So it looked like Squirley just got dressed and slipped out.
I wouldn't put it past him to just be trying to stiff the hospital, but,
considering last night, I'm guessing he's hiding out somewhere for a while. You
want me to try to find him?" "No, I don't think so. Tell me if I'm
wrong, but I think you need to watch Haycock, and I need to keep an eye on
Purcell." Joey agreed and got off the phone. I made
a detour upstairs for a quick shower and clean clothes and, after donning my
cap-and-sunglasses disguise, strolled over and loitered on the beach outside
Purcell's pastel mansion. Everything looked the way it had the day
before. The sky was blue and the Cadillac was red. I had just gotten there when my phone
vibrated. It was Susan. "He's up. Get out of there." "I didn't know he was down." "Yes. He was still in bed." "I'm on the beach. I can see the
house, but I'm nowhere near it." I waited, feeling a little silly, while
Susan conveyed my position to Loutie. Susan repeated, "He's up. He just
got a call from a man who didn't identify himself. And Tom, the guy said he
was, quote, 'bringing in Poultrez.'" "Shit!" "They've got her, Tom. The only good
thing is they're bringing Carli here, to Purcell's house." "That's strange. I've been operating
on the assumption that Purcell would want to maintain a veneer of
respectability around here." I thought. "Another good thing is that
if they're bringing her here she's probably okay. I don't think they'll let her
come in kicking and screaming, but I don't think they'll want to unload any
unconscious teenage girls in broad daylight either." I heard Loutie speaking in the background,
and Susan said, "Loutie's coming over. She says stay on the beach side of
the house. She'll hang around in front. She says if you see her move, to come
running and to have that gun of yours ready." I said, "Let me talk to her." Loutie came on. "Tom. Just stay where
you are. The man who phoned Purcell said he'd be pulling into Seaside in
fifteen or twenty minutes. Like Susan said, I'll stay on the side of the house
away from the beach. If a car comes up, I'll be in sight. Just follow my
lead." "You're kidding. You want to have a
shoot-out in the middle of Seaside at nine in the morning?" Loutie's voice was tense with the strained
patience of an older sister explaining life to her none-too-bright sibling.
"No, Tom. I don't want that, and neither will Purcell. He lives here. But
if we want any chance of getting her back, we better do it now. They won't be
expecting an ambush outside Purcell's driveway. And we'll all be in the open
and in clear view of the neighbors, and they won't want to shoot. No. This is
as good as it's going to get, Tom." She paused and said, "Are you
with me?" I didn't like it, but I said, "I'm
with you." "Good." "Have you talked with Joey?" "Yeah. I called while Susan was on
with you. Looks like something's happening with Haycock, and he couldn't get
here in time to do anything anyway. He said to handle it." I said, "Then I guess that's what
we'll do," and pressed end. I walked down to the surf's edge and
looked both ways. The closest humans were little more than distant dots on the
beach. Facing the water, I eased the 9mm out of my waistband and held it close
against my stomach while I chambered a round and checked the safety. I put it
back. Suddenly the breeze and the sun were
irritating, the sand in my shoes ground uncomfortably into tender, sockless
feet, and I noticed seaweed and dead jellyfish marring the beach. Shit,
shit, and shit. I walked up the beach to a small dune behind Purcell's
place and pretended to collect driftwood. As seconds and minutes ticked by, I
walked back and forth along a small section of startlingly white beach
collecting smooth brown sticks one at a time and placing them on a neat pile
next to the dune, also one at a time. I was trying to stretch a two-minute job
into twenty. Finally, when I had exhausted the stick supply, I took a minute to
walk up and look for Loutie. Nothing wrong with looking for a friend who
promised to join you on the beach. No reason to hide. When no one had arrived at Purcell's by
nine-thirty, I plopped down on the dune, wiggled a butt-shaped seat into the
warm sand, and began to sort my sticks by size and color. It was stupid, but no
one Would be looking that hard. And, even if they did, people do stupid,
slow-motion things on the beach. The poor fella's on vacation, Marge. Let
him play with his sticks in peace. A black Chrysler pulled up and parked next
to Purcell's Caddy. Okay. Now what? How do I get close enough to do
anything? I picked up the carefully sorted sticks in my left hand and
cringed to think I was leaving my "gun hand," for God's sake, empty
and ready to shoot. I tried to look relaxed, to look like a
tourist, to look proud of my sticks. I was near the cars now, and the
Browning's heft and its steel ridges chafed my side. Loutie materialized around
the front corner of the house. She didn't look relaxed. She looked ready to
kill someone. The car door opened. Tim, Sonny's painting partner at See Shore
Cottage, stepped out of the driver's door and slammed it shut as the passenger
door swung open. An enormous man stepped out and gaped at his monied
surroundings like a Baptist in a titty bar. He had dark Mediterranean skin and
hair and, judging from a distance, looked to be maybe six four and close to two
eighty. He looked like more of Purcell's muscle, but something about the guy
bothered me. Something about him tugged at a memory. I waited. Carli had to be in the backseat
or maybe in the trunk. The men went inside, but I knew there could be someone
else hiding in back, someone holding my client hostage and waiting to shoot
anyone who came near. Loutie approached a ground floor window of
Purcell's mansion and peered inside. Then she motioned me forward with her hand
and pointed at the Chrysler. I nodded and trotted over next to the trunk. I
glanced back at Loutie. She gave me a thumbs-up. I peeked inside at empty seats
and then pushed the door release button and eased open the back door. My phone
vibrated. The backseat and the floorboards were indeed empty, and my phone
vibrated. I opened the passenger door, found the trunk release, pushed it, and
my phone vibrated. Carli was not in the trunk. I raised my shoulders and shook
my head at Loutie, and my phone vibrated. Loutie motioned for me to follow her, but
I shook my head and walked back out onto the beach and sat on my dune, all the
while wondering who was vibrating my hip. Of course, it was Susan. "What is it?" I may have sounded
a little terse. Susan said, "You didn't answer." "Bad timing. I'm fine. What is
it?" "They're not bringing Carli here.
They don't even have her." And I had it. I said, "That's her
father, isn't it? That's Rus Poultrez." "How'd you know?" I didn't
answer. I was trying to think this through. Susan went on. "I heard them
over Loutie's equipment. They brought him in to help find Carli. They're
talking money now. Sounds like they had some kind of agreement, and now
Poultrez is trying to squeeze more money out of Purcell. I've heard the numbers
thirty thousand and fifty thousand." I felt sick. "Who would sell his own
daughter for thirty thousand dollars?" Susan said, "The same guy who would
rape and abuse his daughter instead of protecting her or even ignoring her. Someone
disgusting and worse. Someone evil." I cussed and kicked some sand into the air
that blew back in my face. I told her I was returning to the house. For most of the next hour, Susan, Loutie,
and I listened over hidden mikes as Poultrez bitched about how much money he
was losing by sitting around Seaside instead of staying home to work the seas
off New England for cod. Every now and then, as Poultrez paused to savor a
particularly salient argument, Purcell would say, "If you don't want the
thirty thousand, go back home." Purcell didn't get to be king redneck just
by being the biggest nut on the tree. As Poultrez tried to work him for more
money, Purcell was demonstrating surprising control and even glimmers of
limited intelligence. He knew Poultrez had put his fishing business on hold and
flown all the way to Florida based on an offer of thirty thousand. The
fisherman would take more if he could get it. But Poultrez had come for thirty,
and, in the end, he would happily sell his daughter's life for that amount. In contrast to his host, Carli's father
kept pushing after all hope and most of Purcell's patience had evaporated.
Poultrez proceeded from financial arguments to threatening to get on a plane,
and Purcell told him to do what he thought best. Poultrez tried anger, and
Purcell gave the same answer. Finally, Poultrez tried threatening Purcell, and
the football-hero leader of the Bodines offered to kill Poultrez, chop him into
edible chunks, and leave his butchered carcass scattered over a saltwater marsh
for the crabs and alligators. That was pretty much the end of that. Poultrez still tried to sound tough, but
he mostly just sounded defeated. "This is bullshit. Over the phone, you
said thirty for sure and probably more if I came. That's what you said. 'Probably
more.' And now that I hauled my ass down here to the middle of nowhere, you
just say take the thirty. Shit. I lost my temper threatening you the way I did
before, but... shit." A feminine voice with a heavy Latin accent
announced lunch. Joey's bugs were so good we could hear the springs on the sofa
creak as someone stood. A few seconds later, Purcell's voice said, "Sit
over there," and we could hear even better than before. I whispered to Loutie, "This is
amazing." Loutie said, "They're not two-way
mikes, Tom. You don't have to whisper." Of course I knew that. It just seems like
you should whisper when you're eavesdropping. But explaining would have been
worse than nothing, so I said, "Oh," and Susan pretended not to notice. Chewing, slurping, and swallowing sounds
emanated from Purcell's and Poultrez's mouths and buzzed into our rented
kitchen through black-screened speakers. Loutie said, "There's a bug under the
table and one in the light over it." More masticating filtered through the
speakers, and Purcell said, "Thirty's all you get for Carli. You wanna
make more, you gotta do more. There's a lawyer named McInnes, Tom McInnes,
who's mixed up in this. I personally took the time to try and reason with him,
but the guy's a prick. Attacked one of my men by throwing food at him like some
dumb-ass kid and then stabbing his tire and running away like a chicken
shit." Purcell paused to gulp something and emit a barely stifled belch.
"Like I said, I gave him a chance to be smart. He screwed it for hisself.
So, here's the deal. I want you spending your time looking for the girl. That's
first. But, if you come across McInnes while you're doing it, and if you put a
bullet in his head, I'll add twenty thousand to the thirty thousand finder's
fee I'm offering for Carli." Poultrez's greed had new legs.
"Twenty's not much for killing somebody. Hell, back home, up in
Boston..." Purcell said, "Do I look like
somebody who gives a rat's ass what people in Boston-fucking-Massachusetts
do?" Poultrez didn't answer. "Twenty's the same deal I'm giving my
own men. One of 'em nails McInnes, I'll pay the twenty. You nail him, you get
the twenty." The room swirled—just a little—and I realized I was breathing too fast.
Shallow gusts filled the top shelf of my lungs and gushed out again under their
own power. I blinked and focused on breathing deeply and slowly. Two strong
hands squeezed my shoulders, and I jumped—again, just a
little. Susan was standing behind me, meaning to comfort me. I said, "That's interesting." Loutie looked unfazed. She said,
"Yeah. It is." chapter twenty Susan tried to put the best face on my
impending death. "Tom.
In a way, this is good. Isn't it? I mean, we've got Leroy Purcell on
tape." She looked at Loutie. "It is on tape, isn't it?" Loutie
nodded, and Susan turned back to me. "So, we've got him on tape taking out
a contract on your life. We can take that to the police and get them to do
something." I said, "Do what?" "Arrest him or something." "We illegally bugged Purcell's house,
Susan. Down the road somewhere, the tapes may or may not be admissible in
court, if we get that far. But, for now, we've got all kinds of problems with
them. Just to start, Joey and Loutie committed breaking and entering, which is
a felony, to hide the bugs. Joey would lose his investigator's license, he and
Loutie might do some jail time, and I'd expect the State Bar to question my
fitness to continue practicing law, since Joey and Loutie planted the bugs at
my direction." Susan said, "But if it'll save your
life." "Susan, if I knew turning over the
tapes would save your life, Carli's life, or mine, I'd turn them over to the
cops today. But it wouldn't work. It's only our word that that's actually
Purcell on the tapes. He'd claim we manufactured them. And he's connected down
here and we're not. Who do you think they're going to believe? The guy's scum,
but he's still a hero to a lot of people in Florida because of his football
days." Susan's eyes scanned the room, lingered on
the window, and came to rest on the listening equipment. She was completely
focused, trying with everything she had to find the good in what we had heard.
I was touched by how hard she was working not to think about what it really
meant. I said, "We're a long way from dead,
Susan. The tapes aren't important. What is important—the good part—is that we know about Purcell's plans
ahead of time." Susan brightened. "Yes, that is good.
Now you know to stay out of his way and not to go wandering around his house
again like you did this morning. Now we can figure out what to do." I've always read about people in danger
smiling bravely. That's what I tried to do. While Susan rummaged in the refrigerator
and began putting out cold chicken salad and sliced fruit for lunch, I trotted
upstairs and packed. Purcell's conversation with Poultrez had let me know one
thing. It let me know to get as far as possible from anyone I cared about; it
let me know that Susan's dyed hair wouldn't do much good if I was around to be
seen and shot at and, more or less, murdered. Purcell had never seen Susan—particularly outfitted with her new brunette persona. My presence
in the house would be a neon sign for Purcell and his tattooed toadies. The phone rang as I was packing my razor
and other bathroom stuff. Someone downstairs answered. I tossed the small
toilet kit into my duffel and carried my little hobo bundle down the rented
teak stairs and put it next to our canary-yellow door. Susan glanced at the
duffel and looked confused. Loutie held out the telephone receiver and said,
"It's Joey. I filled him in. He wants to talk to you." I put the phone against my ear and said,
"It's been a fun morning." Joey said, "Sounds like it. You get a
look at Rus Poultrez?" "Yeah. He's big. Not as tall as you,
but he weighs more. I thought he was some of Purcell's hired muscle when he
went in, if that tells you anything." The line was quiet for a few beats. Joey
said, "I hear somebody wants you dead." I didn't say anything.
"I wouldn't worry too much about it, Tom. But I do think you ought to come
down here with me. We can watch each other's back." "Not to mention that Susan and Loutie
will be safer with me gone." "Not to mention that." Joey
said, "Listen, the reason I called is our buddy, Thomas Bobby Haycock,
looks like he's getting ready to do a little smuggling. Maybe commit a felony
or two." "How can you tell?" "Just been watching him so much I
guess. I don't know if there's a list of reasons I think he's going out, but I
think he is. You know, he doesn't have any of that swamp trash nookie hanging
around. He gassed up the truck. And hell, I don't know, he just has the look
about him." "I'll call Billy Teeter and see if I
can rent his boat." "I'm thinking I should come with you
on the boat. You could run into some trouble out there." "No." I said, "I want you
to get over to the mainland and be ready to follow Haycock's truck when he goes
over tomorrow morning." Joey started to argue. I said, "We can tiptoe
around protecting each other, or we can figure this mess out and maybe bury
Purcell and his people." "I don't like it." "But I'm right." "Yeah," Joey said. "I
guess." And he hung up. I placed the receiver in its cradle, and
Susan's voice, unnaturally quiet, came from behind me. "Where are you
going?" I turned to face her. Loutie said,
"He's not running away, Susan." Susan said, "I know," but it
sounded like a question. Loutie said, "Tom's the only one of
us Purcell and his men have seen, Susan. If he's here and they want to kill
him, then..." Her voice trailed off. I said, "Joey says Haycock's getting
ready for another shipment tonight. I'm going back down to the island and get
Billy Teeter to take me out and have a look around." Susan said, "You packed before Joey
called about Haycock." I was stunned. Susan really did think I was running
out on her. Loutie quietly left the room. I walked over and put my arms around
Susan's waist. She placed her hands on my shoulders but not around me. She felt
stiff in my arms. I asked, "Do you really think I'd run
out on you because I'm scared?" Susan said, "I've been dealing with a
lot by myself for a long time, Tom. I kind of thought that was over." I
said her name. She shook her head and kept talking. "I'm not eighteen. I
know that just because we feel the way we do... Well, I know lust, or whatever
this is, doesn't always last. But I care about you, and I thought you'd be
someone to get through the bad stuff with even if we didn't last as
lovers." "I thought the same thing, Susan. But
I can't stay here like some kind of murder beacon to bring the Bodines down on
you and Loutie." Susan said, "I don't think you're
running out and leaving me at Purcell's mercy. I think you're being a noble
ass. You're going to leave here and get killed, and I'll get to go through
another six months of guilt and misery and hell like the ones after Bird
died." I said, "Oh." Twin crescents of tears filled Susan's
lower lids above the uncharacteristic, spiky shelves of dark mascara. Loutie
and I had both read her wrong. Susan wasn't upset because she thought I was a coward.
She was getting mad at me in advance for getting killed. I smiled. "Jeez, Susan, just go ahead
and kill me off, why don't you?" I kissed her and tasted salt. She pushed
away, then stood on her toes and put her arms around my neck. I said, "I'm
kind of a resourceful guy. I'll be fine. And remember, Joey will be around, and
I'm not sure Joey's someone who can actually be killed. And, as for you,
you couldn't ask for better protection than that scary chick in the other
room." From the living room, Loutie said, "I
heard that." Susan laughed, and I kissed her again.
This time, she kissed back. Loutie Blue and I walked outside and,
after I opened the trunk of my rented, silver-blue Bonneville and tossed my
duffel inside, we stood by the car and talked. Loutie wanted to follow Rus
Poultrez when he left Purcell's place. I wanted her to stay in Seaside, keep an
eye on Purcell, and keep Susan safe. The bottom line was that Joey worked for
me and Loutie worked for Joey. So, in the end, I more or less insisted, and she
stayed with Susan. I cruised into Apalachicola a few minutes
before four. A soft breeze ruffled the fronds of tall palms lining the main
drag; housewives steered station wagons and four-by-fours in and out of the
Piggly Wiggly parking lot; a bony-tailed real estate type taped new listings on
a plateglass window; and twenty or thirty cars and pickups cruised the streets
with aimless intent. I curved hard in the air, circling the marina, and
followed the suspended pavement over the bay and out of town. Fifteen minutes
later, I turned right toward St. George and then left onto the narrow county
road leading into Eastpoint. I had called ahead. I was expected. Billy Teeter's partner-in-seafood, Julie,
was planted in the same porch chair she had occupied the last time I was there.
I parked and stepped out onto the narrow, sandy parking area. I said,
"Hello," and she nodded. She just nodded. Julie's features stayed
noncommittal. I asked, "Where's Mr. Teeter?" "Around back." "I need to park off the street."
Julie just looked at me. I added, "You know, out of sight." She said, "Drive around back,"
as if any fool would have known to do that. I steered over faint wheel tracks leading
across the ragged yard and around the left side of Teeter's Seafood and pulled
in close to the back of the shack. A sandy pathway led down the shoreline past
a series of commercial docks where blue-gray pelicans perched atop two of the
creosote pilings that stuck up above concrete walkways. Diving bunches of ugly,
mottled gulls picked at mounds of discarded shellfish that held just enough
decaying flesh to keep the birds interested and to fill the air with the bitter
stink of sea animals dying on land. Twenty yards west of the shack, Billy
Teeter's bear-like form rose above the deck of a shrimp boat so perfectly
maintained that it looked like it had just come out of dry dock. I waved, and
Billy parted his scruffy, bearded face into a surprisingly welcoming smile full
of nicotined teeth. Down the path and out on the dock next to
the Teeter Two, I called out. "Hello!" Teeter said, "You gonna need a coat
out on the water." I told him I had one and went back to the rented
Pontiac to get it out of the duffel. Back on the dock, I said, "Am I
supposed to ask permission to come aboard?" Billy Teeter smiled, put one foot on the
gunwale, and reached out a hand. "Get on up here, boy." Most
white-collar types would never believe a human hand could get that hard. I
thought about what my own soft lawyer's hand must have felt like to Billy as he
pulled my hundred and ninety pounds over the gunwale and into the boat with no
more effort than most men would expend pulling a child into the family van.
Billy said, "It's good to see you again, Tom." I reached into my
pocket and came out with two hundred fifty dollars, and Billy shook his scruffy
brown and gray chin. "No, sir. I ain't done the work yet. You pay when we
get back." I held out the money. "You better
take it. If I fall in the water out there and drown, you may not get
paid." The old man looked into my eyes before
shifting his glance to my hand as he took the money and pushed it deep inside
his hip pocket. In a matter-of-fact voice, he said, "You think you're
kidding." I smiled. He didn't. Billy turned and
called out, "Willie!" A nineteen-year-old version of the captain
emerged from the tiny bridge. Billy's namesake stood about five ten. He had a
football player's overdeveloped neck and the thick back and shoulder muscles of
a shrimper. Brown hair stood erect on the boy's tanned head in an old-fashioned
crew cut, and his square chin and jaws were smudged with a dark stubble of
Teeter family whiskers. If young Willie had grown a seaman's beard, his
resemblance to old Billy Teeter would have been almost comical. Captain Billy said, "This here's Mr.
McInnes." Willie didn't speak. I reached out and shook a limp, calloused
hand; and I was struck, not for the first time, by how softly most men who work
with their hands shake hands with other men. Maybe it's just something that
people outside the white-collar world don't do in the ordinary course of their
lives, so they never get very good at it. Or maybe they're just afraid they'll
hurt you. "Call me Tom." Billy said, "Get Tom a life jacket.
He's gonna be wearing it soon as we leave the dock." I doubted that the
Teeters bothered with life jackets while shrimping, and that doubt was verified
by young Willie's amused expression. Billy saw his grandson's face too. He
said, "Straighten up, Willie. Tom's a paying passenger. It's gonna be your
butt gets kicked if I see him with that jacket off." Willie said, "I'll keep an eye on
him, Granddaddy," but he kept smiling. Over the next two hours, the three of us
talked over the best way to proceed. Billy sat on a crate, Willie sat on the
gunwale, and I sat cross-legged on my bright orange, oddly emasculating life
jacket. I described the location on Dog Island where I thought
the smugglers would land around midnight. Billy and Willie discussed channels,
oyster beds, and other things I didn't know a lot about. Finally, Billy said he
knew all he needed to know. He said we would wait until nine to leave. "Be
black dark by then. And we don't want to be floating around out there too long
without putting nets in the water. It'd look wrong if anybody cared enough to
pay us any attention." With three hours more to kill, Willie
found a deck of cards and we played stud poker to pass the time. The kid had
grinned a little too broadly about Billy sentencing me to spend my hours on the
water in a life jacket, so I played a little harder than I should have against
a nineteen-year-old and ended up with eighteen dollars of his money. It was not
a mature exhibition. My only saving grace was that I let his grandfather win
most of it back. By 8:40, my playground honor felt mostly restored, and we were
ready to get under way. I walked back to the stern, away from the shrimpers,
and placed a call to Susan. There was no news of Carli. Willie cast off while Captain Billy fired
the diesels. As we nosed away from the dock, young Willie walked up holding my
orange flotation device by one finger like it was a dainty thing disdainful to
his gender. I took it and tied it on. chapter twenty-one Inside Apalachicola Bay, black water
chopped against the hull in
jarring stutters. Captain Billy moved west along the buoy-marked intracoastal
waterway, steering a course parallel with the shore before turning toward the
dark silhouette of an ancient lighthouse on Little St. George Island. A fine, stinging rain began to fall as we
cruised through the mouth of Bob Sikes Cut a few minutes after nine. Gray
boulders held the edges of the narrow passage between St. George Island to the
east and Little St. George to the west. Both islands are long, narrow strips of
land, especially thin near the cut, and a strong man could come close to
throwing a rock from one end to the other and from one island to the next.
Inside the cut, stuttering chop turned smooth and then rose to a deep, steady
roll as the boat pushed out into the Gulf. Our bobbing bow cut a line to the moonlit horizon,
which seemed to roll up and down and side to side in an ever-changing figure
eight with no sense of balance or equilibrium. It was fascinating to watch
until I felt the queasily familiar pressure on the sides of my throat, the
beginning flow of saliva, and the thick ropes of nausea crawling inside my
stomach. I stepped outside the bridge cabin and washed away most of the nausea
by leaning my head back, opening my mouth, and letting rain pellets splatter my
face and neck and tongue. Captain Billy called out. "Boy, you
gonna get cold later with that rainwater down your shirt." I decided I'd worry about later when it
came. I hadn't had dinner, and the thought of dry heaves made a little freezing
rain seem comforting by comparison. I yelled over the engines. "How
far?" "Be there in thirty minutes or so. Taking
the long way around. We got plenty of time." The shore was a dotted line of lights now,
and, in the distance, lightning began to splinter the horizon. Slowly, the
ropes of nausea uncoiled and settled, almost comfortingly, into one small
corner of my stomach. Then Billy turned east toward Dog Island. Heading
directly into the waves had provided me with one sort of challenge, but now we
steered a course parallel to the shore and the rolling swell gave the boat a
whole new disconcerting movement and personality. As we moved back and forth,
side to side, up and down, and sometimes, it seemed, round and round in a
horizontal kind of way, my mind searched desperately for distraction, and I
thought of an old joke about a young boy who married an older woman. After his
honeymoon, the boy's father asked if the girl had been a virgin. The boy
responded that he thought the up-and-down had come naturally but the
round-and-round must have been learned. I smiled, then leaned out over the
gunwale and emptied Susan's chicken-salad-and-sliced-fruit lunch into the Gulf
of Mexico. The rest of our trip to the waters off Dog
Island proved to be personally difficult, gastronomically repetitive, and a
source of genuine amusement to the Teeter men. But, at first, it appeared to
have been worth it. As we neared the island, Captain Billy called out my name.
I loosened my death grip on the railing that had seen so much of my inner
workings and looked up. He pointed at a short row of white lights suspended
beneath a bright blue dot in the distance. I yelled, "What is it?" "Big pleasure boat." "How can you tell?" Billy looked concerned about my faculties.
He yelled, " 'Cause it looks like one." Obviously he saw something I didn't, but
that wasn't surprising. Billy Teeter had spent the better part of fifty years
on those waters, much of it shrimping at night. I had to assume that he knew
what he was talking about. It was close to ten. Billy cut the engines
to an idle and came out to stand beside me. He was wearing full yellow rain
gear like a fisherman in a children's story. "Whatcha wanna do?" I asked, "How suspicious would it
look for us to just sit here and watch them for a while?" "Probably be fine. Depends on how
jumpy they are. The captain's gonna know shrimpers set still all the time to
rig nets or check the water or just decide where to head next. With this rain
comin' down, anybody who knows boats is likely gonna figure we're tryin' to
figure whether to head back in." "So we're fine here for a
while." "Yep." At exactly 11:00 p.m., a blue spotlight flashed three times on the deck of the
yacht. Young Willie had joined us; he was outfitted in a green plastic poncho.
I told the Teeter men about the signal Joey and I had seen a week earlier at
midnight on a deserted stretch of beach on Dog Island. And we waited. Willie
said, "I reckon they're not too worried about us if they're givin' the
same signal." Through silver streaks of rain, a pair of
headlights flashed three times on shore, and I said, "It doesn't look like
it. It looks like they're going to go ahead with the drop-off." Young Willie was jumpy. I could almost
hear the adrenaline pumping inside his poncho. A smaller blue light flashed
midway between the yacht and the shoreline, and Willie pointed and said,
"Look! Look at that. What're they doing?" I said, "That's the drop-off boat.
They're taking whatever they're smuggling to shore." Willie said, "Cool," and Captain
Billy shook his head. Another set of blue flashes was answered by
headlights. I said, "The men in the drop-off boat are armed. We better
cruise over now and check out the yacht. I'm guessing there'll just be one or
two men left onboard. They've got to be figuring that any trouble is going to
come onshore." Billy climbed into the bridge cabin and
eased the engines into gear. We had started our rolling approach when a loud
hum approached the stern out of the night. I called Billy and pointed into the
dark rain. Billy squinted at me and then at the piece of night I had pointed
into and then at me again. I stepped up next to the small door leading
into the covered bridge. "Somebody's out there. I hear a loud motor, like
a speedboat or something." "Whatcha wanna do? It's your
dollar." I said, "Keep moving as fast as you
can." Just as Billy pushed the throttle wide
open, a spotlight swept a silver path through the rain and came to rest on the
bridge. A twenty-foot cigar boat pulled up alongside. Billy called out.
"We ain't gonna outrun that." I said, "Turn away from them,"
and Billy spun the chromed wheel. The speedboat shot past us and quickly began
to circle back. I pulled the 9mm out of my back waistband,
and Billy said, "Whoa. I didn't sign up to shoot nobody. Put that thing
back where you got it." "What if they shoot at us
first?" "Then you can take it out." He
reached up to pat a twelve-gauge pump hung from two brass stirrups above the
front glass. The rear stock had been sawed off and shaped into a pistol grip.
"Somebody points a gun at this boat, and I'll blow their ass out of the
water. You don't worry about that." Billy was a tough old bird, but I held on
to my Browning. The cigar boat was alongside again. Its narrow spotlight swept
the deck, stopping on young Willie who gave them a one-finger salute through
pouring rain that shone like tinsel in the light's beam. A loud, sharp crack
cut the night air, and Willie went over the side. I screamed at Billy. "Stop!
Stop this thing. Willie's in the water." Billy yanked down on the throttle
arm. The shrimp boat dropped its nose into the surf, and, once again, the cigar
boat shot past. I shouted, "I'll go after Willie. Use the shotgun." As I turned to run, Billy's leathery hand
closed painfully on my bicep. "Stay still. You get out in the water, and
they'll run you down or shoot you too. We can't do nothin' for Willie till we
take care of that boat." We could hear the speedboat coming back. Billy
said, "Get down. I'll try to hit the spotlight. You unload that pistol
into whoever's drivin'." I nodded and wondered if I'd have that much sense,
that kind of balls, if someone I loved was flailing around in the night ocean
with a gunshot wound. The speedboat revved and then cut to idle
as it came near. A yellow beam hit the bow, and Billy waved me
back. I ran doubled over to the stern and hunkered down behind a pile of nets.
The light swept back over the deck and then forward again to the bridge cabin.
Without warning, automatic gunfire splintered Billy's bridge into bits of glass
and wood that spun and flashed across the light like lethal fireflies. Shit.
I popped up and put three shots as close to the light as I could,
considering that I was firing from the deck of one rolling boat to another. The
light spun toward me, and I hit the fiberglass-coated metal deck just before
automatic gunfire made the netting pop and dance above my head. A loud boom interrupted the fast crack of
automatic fire, and the spotlight blew, spewing electric sparks into the night.
Two more booms came in quick succession. Billy was unloading on the boat. I
rolled away from the netting and jumped up. Two dark bodies moved inside the
cigar boat. I took aim at the form behind the wheel and had fired six jarring
shots before the shadow jumped and fell sideways. Two more booms echoed across
the water, and flames shot out of the oversized motor next to the larger man
who had fired the automatic weapon. The big man dove forward. I pumped three
rounds into the speedboat and the windshield fell and twisted like a gleaming
mirror reflecting fire from the engine. Something heavy splashed, and the big
man was in the driver's seat. The torched engine roared. The boat hooked hard
to port, and its bow shot out of the water as the stern scraped the hull of the
Teeter Two. I was on my feet screaming into the night,
emptying my clip into the flaming cigar boat. I stared hard through the rain to
see who had done this, to see who Billy Teeter and I would have to kill when we
got home. The bullet-shaped boat skipped down the larger boat's hull and, just
before roaring away, the driver looked across the gunwale directly into my
face. Then Carli's father, the New England cod fisherman, literally fired off
into the night. Billy stood beside me. I cussed. Billy
grabbed my arm. He said, "He's going the wrong way. Watch him. He's gonna
hit." Poultrez zoomed toward shore trailing
flames and thick smoke like a jet afterburner. I said, "It's going to
blow." "Won't need to. Watch." A loud, mechanical ripping noise echoed
across the water, and Poultrez's flaming bullet boat shot into the air, tucked
its fiery tail under, and slapped top down into the surf sending a gush of
black seawater into the air. I said, "What the hell?" "Oyster beds." Billy said,
"Let's go find my grandboy." While Billy cleared broken glass off the
bridge and got the boat going, I found a flashlight and examined the hull
section scraped by Purcell's cigar boat. It was going to need some woodwork and
paint—and I was going to pay for it—but, as far as I could tell, we weren't in any danger of sinking. Billy was working his spotlight back and
forth across the water, steering carefully toward the place where Willie went
over. The old man was slowly and rhythmically clenching his jaw with each
swivel of the lamp. I moved up to the bow. I heard Billy using his radio,
calling for help. Then I heard something else—a voice,
thin and distant. I held up my hand. Billy pulled back on the throttle and
stepped out to look. I said, "Cut the engine. I think I
hear something." The old man reached inside the bullet-riddled bridge
cabin and twisted a key, and the Gulf fell silent. I said, "Move the
light. See if you can see him." The spot swept across rolling waves, and
the thin voice came again. "He's seeing the light. Stop!" Sixty yards off the starboard bow, an
eerily white head bobbed in the waves. I pointed, and Billy turned over the
engines and moved the right way. I lost Willie twice in thirty yards. Then we
were on him, and I dropped over the side. The Gulf in March was still cold enough to
take my breath when I hit the water. Willie's pale head seemed to float toward
me as I paddled in place. His eyes were open, his lips blue and trembling. I
managed to slide my arm under his and grip him across the chest. I kicked hard
and seemed to paddle in place again while, this time, the boat floated toward
me. Billy had a ladder over the side. I perched Willie on the bottom rung, held
on with my left fist, and pushed his hypothermic mass up into Billy's strong
arms with my right hand. I hung there trying to catch my breath and quickly
realized the water was sapping my breath and my strength. I made it up the
ladder alone. On deck, Captain Billy had Willie on his
stomach, alternately pressing his upper back and lifting his underarms. It's
what the United States Marines taught in 1942, and it works, just not that
well. I said, "Move," and was surprised when Billy complied. I
flipped Willie onto his back and checked his pulse and breathing. The first was
strong. The second was weak and shallow. I put a hand under Willie's neck to
cock his head back and swept the back of his tongue with my fingers to check
for blockage. Then I placed my lips over his clammy, whiskered mouth and pushed
a lung full of air into his chest. Willie gurgled and choked the air back out.
Again, I breathed deeply into the young man's lungs; and he vomited violently
into my mouth. Reeling backward, I spit out Willie's mess and then puked the
last few morsels of my lunch across Willie's chest and onto the deck. He was breathing strongly on his own, so I
began checking for gunshot wounds. There weren't any. I looked up at Billy.
"He's not shot. He got some water in his lungs when he hit the water. You
got any blankets?" Billy immediately pulled off his coat and put it over
his grandson. A few seconds later, he was back with a silver emergency blanket
and two large sheets of opaque plastic. I got Willie as comfortable as possible
on the rolling, rain-soaked deck while the old man throttled up and headed for
shore. God and nature protect teenage boys.
Willie began to come around before we hit the bay. Captain Billy had radioed
ahead for help, and an ambulance met us at the dock. Willie, complaining loudly
now, got lifted onto a stretcher and loaded into the ambulance. Billy climbed
into the front seat next to a paramedic, and the white van screamed off into
the night. I was left standing on the dock, checking
the lines, surveying the damage, and generally feeling like a complete asshole
for involving the Teeters in a death match with Carli's father and the Bodines.
I would pay for the damage. I would give Captain Teeter one hell of a bonus.
I'd even pay for Willie's medical bills. But none of that was going to make me
any less of a prick for having involved them. It was past midnight and cold. My
saltwater-soaked clothes felt hard and rough on my skin. I opened the trunk and
pulled out my duffel. No one was around. I found clean underwear, a shirt and
chinos. I had stripped and, thankfully, pulled on dry boxers when Billy's
partner, Julie, came around the corner of the shack. I started to apologize; then
I saw the two men behind her. They wore dark suits and ties, and they had the
look of men you run from in the night. I pulled on my pants. I smiled. I spun on
the balls of my feet and ploughed into the widest human being I have ever had
the displeasure of meeting. chapter twenty-two The human wall looted like an Hispanic Odd
Job, minus the decapitating
bowler. This one just had a gun, which he used to tap me on the head until he
had my complete attention. He didn't say much. One of the other men, one of the
ones with Julie, spoke. "Come with us, please." "Where?" It seemed a reasonable
question. Odd Job said, "Move," and gave
me a shove. I turned and looked for my 9mm inside the Bonneville's open trunk.
It was there, no more than a foot from the bumper where I could easily grab it
as I walked by and, if I were really lucky, click off the safety, chamber a
round, and shoot one of these guys before the other two pumped me full of
little pieces of metal. And, at that moment, standing in the shadows behind a
shrimper's shack at midnight with a twenty-thousand-dollar bounty on my head,
it didn't seem like a particularly bad idea. Fortunately, Julie saw me look.
She stepped forward into pale yellow light from inside the trunk, picked up the
Browning, and fixed me with a look of such hatred that I thought she was going
to shoot me herself. Instead, she turned and handed my gun to one of her
escorts. Odd Job bumped me on the head again and repeated, "Move." "Mind if I get a shirt?" He pushed me aside, rummaged in my duffel
while keeping his narrow black eyes trained on my face, and handed me a
sweatshirt. More precisely, he shoved the wadded shirt against my chest with
enough aggression to leave no doubt that he enjoyed his work, and, as he
manhandled me, Odd Job repeated his last instruction. "Move." I wanted to stick a fist in one of his
nasty little porcine eyes—eyes that looked like someone had slit his
dark meaty face with a razor to reveal onyx marbles—but the man had a gun and he outweighed me by a hundred pounds, so
what I did was move. The two suits led the way. Julie followed
them. I followed her, and Odd Job brought up the rear. We circled Teeter's
Seafood, mounted the porch, and walked in through the front room where, during
the daytime, customers bought shrimp and fish and frozen crab cakes so good
they "taste like something that came off a menu at a restaurant." We
walked through a doorway into a back room that looked like an old, single guy's
idea of a den. A wood-burning stove squatted in the back right corner beneath a
crooked length of stovepipe that angled out through the rough paneled wall. The
front right corner held an abused television in a stained and chipped wooden
cabinet. Opposite the stove and the television, antlered deer heads, plaster-filled
fish with lacquered scales, and worn fishing tackle hung from the walls. Below
the trophies and spinning rods, a collection of upholstered chairs and sofas
waited in varying states of distress. As we entered, a dark, slender man in a
two-thousand-dollar suit rose effortlessly out of an orange Naugahyde chair and
stepped forward. "You are Thomas McInnes?" I was a little overwhelmed and more than a
little afraid, and I didn't answer right away. Odd Job took offense and tapped
me once again on the crown with the barrel of his automatic. I found my voice,
"You want to talk to me, tell Odd Job to quit hitting me on the
head." The dark man held up his palm at Odd Job,
and, with the quiet authority of someone who was used to being obeyed, he said,
"Please." Then he nodded at the door and my head tapper walked out,
turning sideways to navigate the opening. The dark man turned back to look into
my eyes. "I apologize, seсor. Please sit down." He motioned at a
used-up La-Z-Boy upholstered in mustard hopsack and punctuated with exposed
tufts of almost matching foam rubber. I sat. One of the suits, the one who had
spoken, moved to the far wall and watched. He held what appeared to be an UZI
in one hand. At least, it looked like what I imagined an UZI would probably
look like. The second suit left the room, I assumed to help Odd Job secure the
perimeter or some such thing. The dark man was attired with the
formality expected of a business executive in Europe or Latin America. Thick
black hair swept back from a narrow forehead and would have curled if he had
been the sort of man to allow such lack of control. He said, "Are you comfortable?" "No." He smiled. "No, seсor. Yours is not a
comfortable situation." He sat back and studied me. "You like
cigars?" "Sure." He reached inside his coat and produced a
black alligator cigar case. As he opened it, he said, "Would you like
one?" "No." He didn't appear surprised or offended. He
pulled a huge, unwrapped cigar from the case, glanced at the foot, which had
already been cut, and put it in his mouth. The UZI guy walked forward, reaching
into his pocket with the obvious intention of lighting the cigar. The dark man
held up his palm, just as he had earlier, and the UZI guy stopped and returned
to his corner. I said, "Got 'em trained with hand
signals." "Seсor?" "Nothing." He lit his cigar with a match, and he took
a while doing it. When he had it going, he said, "My name is Carlos
Sanchez." "Nice to meet you. I'm John
Smith." Once again, he smiled. "Yes. I see
what you mean. But it is something to call me. We have business to
discuss." A.k.a. Carlos Sanchez smoked his Havana
the way only Central and South Americans smoke them, drawing the thick, pungent
smoke deep into his lungs and then letting it out through his mouth and nostrils.
He said, "You are an intelligent man. Or, more precisely, you are 'smart.'
That is the word we hear about you. "Tom McInnes is smart.'" "I feel so good about myself
now." "Seсor?" "What do you want?" "We want you to leave Leroy Purcell
and his group alone." I said, "What?" and he started
to repeat. "No, I hear you. I just don't believe what I hear. Your buddy,
Leroy Purcell, has taken out a twenty-thousand-dollar contract on my life. He's
trying to kill a young girl who's a client of mine, and, I'm not certain, but
he's probably got a contract out on another woman who's a better person than
you and me put together." Sanchez simply said, "Susan
Fitzsimmons." I looked at him. "And Carli Poultrez. Daughter of
Russell Poultrez of Gloucester, Massachusetts." I kept looking at him and thought some
more before I spoke. "Are you offering an end to this? Can you guarantee
the safety of Susan and Carli if we agree to walk away from Purcell and his
people?" "I can try to arrange these things. I
cannot guarantee. Seсor Purcell is an unpredictable and
dangerous man. But I believe I can arrange for your safety and that of Seсora
Fitzsimmons." "And Carli?" Sanchez shook his head. "Are you saying Carli's not part of
the deal?" "I'm afraid she is not. That part has
gone too far. But I can arrange..." I interrupted. "Who are you? I've
been sitting here talking with you, basically humoring you, because there's a
guy with a gun over there. But it looks like you know everything about me and
my clients and ... Who the hell are you?" Sanchez rolled his cigar between a
manicured thumb and a set of fragile-looking, tanned fingers, then raised the
moist foot of the Churchill to his lips and turned the ash red as he pulled
smoke into his lungs. He was thinking. Considering. He reached inside his
tailored coat, once again pulled out the alligator case, removed the cap, and
held out the cigars. "Please." This time I took one—maybe I needed a prop too—and he lit it
for me with a wide, flat match. As he replaced the case in his inside pocket,
Sanchez said, "I work with a group of Cuban patriots who are pursuing a
number of goals. None of which are in any way contrary to the interests of the
United States. Please understand that. It is most important. We have great
respect for the United States and wish to see many, if not all, of its ideals
emulated in a free and democratic Cuba." He stopped to smoke and look at
the UZI guy. Some unspoken communication passed between them. He went on.
"You, Seсor McInnes, and your two clients have become involved, through no
fault of your own, with something that could become quite ...
unmanageable." He paused to give me a chance to comment
on that. I didn't. He said, "I am told that either Susan
Fitzsimmons or Carli Poultrez witnessed a murder last Wednesday night on St.
George Island. Is that correct?" I looked at him some more. Sanchez said,
"We have a problem. Your clients are in danger because of what one or both
of them saw, and, of course, because they want to go to the police and see
justice done. Unfortunately, I cannot allow them to take that action." "You can't allow that, huh?" "No. I'm afraid I cannot. You see,
Leroy Purcell did kill someone that night." "Who?" "Seсor?" "Do you know who he killed?" "Not that it should matter to you, Seсor McInnes, but no. I do not. It was, as they say, an internal
matter." "Is that what Purcell says?" "That is precisely what he says. So,
you see, other than the understandable shock of witnessing such an, ah, event,
it was a bad ending between two men who both worked in the kind of business
where such things are, if not foreseeable, at least they are not unexpected. In
any event, you will never prove that anyone died inside that cottage. All
evidence has been obliterated, and, if it becomes necessary, your clients will
disappear along with the rest of the evidence." "Is that how Cuban patriots do
business?" "We will protect our interests. It is
that simple. We will take any and all necessary actions, however distasteful,
to pursue and protect our interests. As far as 'doing business,' as you put it,
we do business with Mr. Purcell and his organization because, at this time, it
serves those interests." "With the Bodines." He smiled. "Yes. I believe that is
how they are known by the police. In any event, they perform essential services
for me and my organization. And I cannot allow you to cause the authorities to
investigate the murder on St. George Island." "How do you plan to stop us? I mean,
other than killing me, which, just so you'll know, won't stop anything." "It is very simple, Mr. McInnes. If
you cannot promise to cease your attempts to jail Mr. Purcell and guarantee
that you can control your clients, then we will kill you and everyone else who
is involved." He paused, and then said, "Tonight." "But Carli's not part of the deal,
right? Keeping a teenage girl alive isn't something that serves your
'interests.'" He shook his patrician head. "Seсor McInnes, we are interested. The Bodines are not. They do not
trust the girl—this runaway who works as a waitress—to keep silent." "And if I can't agree to
that..." I needed to think, to stretch out the conversation and run
Sanchez's offer around in my head. I said, "These are decent people you're
talking about murdering." "That is why we are talking." "And I think I should point out that
I have a few friends who are kind of hard to kill." Sanchez said, "The white giant and
his associates? Yes. That is another reason we are talking." "Well, that's honest." Sanchez
struck another wide match and held it out toward me. I hadn't realized my cigar
had gone out, since I hadn't really wanted the damn thing to begin with. I
leaned forward and let him relight the ash. I said, "The family on the
beach on Dog Island the other night. They were some of your people, weren't
they? Purcell smuggles in illegal immigrants. People fleeing Cuba? Hot people
from other places?" He didn't answer, but then I really didn't expect him
to. I was thinking out loud. "Whatever. The guy who came in with his
family is kind of famous, I guess." Again, Sanchez didn't respond, but he
couldn't stop a small ripple of surprise, maybe even panic, from moving across
his handsome features. And I thought, not for the first time, that there seemed
to be much more to the chubby illegal immigrant with the pretty wife and the
cloned son than just another "patriot" seeking a better life in Los
Estados Unidos. I registered Sanchez's discomfort and made a mental note to
remember the tender spot. I said, "I guess South Florida has gotten too
hot. So now you're bringing in warm bodies through the Panhandle. And nobody
does illegal business on the Panhandle without going through the Bodines." Now Sanchez spoke. "We do business
where we please." "But it's easier to work with an
existing operation than to set up your own from scratch." Sanchez was letting me think. He nodded
slowly. "It is easier." I decided to float some of Squirley
McCall's information and see if I could get a reaction. "Is it easier to
do business with an arms smuggler?" Sanchez didn't answer. I took a
different tack. "And is it easier to work with someone who wants to kill
three or four innocent people than it is to get rid of one criminal who's
turned a spotlight on your group? And he'll do it again. Leroy Purcell is a
bomb waiting to explode in your face." Sanchez said, "I'm sure you are a
talented lawyer. But we are not bargaining." "Then explain about Carli. You said
she's not part of the deal. Why is that? Why is it you can't protect a teenage
girl who's more willing to forget all this than I am?" "It has gone too far. Arrangements
have been made. Payments have been accepted, and, unfortunately, emotion is
involved. Arguments from you will not help. I have made those same arguments to
no avail. The feeling is that a point, an, ah, example, must be made. Too many of
the Bodines know of her involvement. This problem, seсor, has digressed into notions of honor and control in ... in some
minds." "That doesn't make any sense. Why do
I get to walk away? Why does Susan get to walk away? They've already tried to
kill her once at her beach house." "First of all, you, Seсor McInnes, did not actually witness anything. You are an
attorney, a professional, and, in Leroy Purcell's view, something of a
mercenary. He, therefore, believes that your actions are motivated by considered
self-interest. He believes that if it is better for you to keep quiet, then
that is what you will do." "That's funny. I thought he wanted me
dead." "He and I engaged in discussions this
evening that I am certain have influenced his view." "What about Susan?" "Seсora Fitzsimmons is an adult. She
is well-off and has much to protect. Also, Purcell is aware of a long-term
relationship between the seсora and yourself. He believes that your silence
will be guaranteed by including her in the offer." Sanchez paused to
relight his cigar and fill his chest with smoke. He said, "Which brings us
to the issue of Carli Poultrez. She is young. She is frivolous, and she is from
the peasant classes. Even I would not expect her to control her tongue.
Purcell, of course, feels even more strongly on this point. And, as I have
said, he believes an example must be made. It is, he believes, important to his
position with the Bodines. In his mind, the Poultrez girl is the obvious choice
for that example." "And I'm expected to just turn my
back on her and walk away?" "Seсor McInnes,
that is exactly what Purcell expects you to do. In your place, he would do so
without a second thought." My mind raced. I could, I thought, react
loudly and emotionally and get myself and a handful of my favorite people
killed, or I could accept Purcell's deal—protecting
Susan's life and my own—and take steps to find Carli and get her
to safety, assuming I could find her before the Bodines did. But that option,
while immeasurably superior to the first, still left Carli with a lifetime of
looking over her shoulder, waiting for a bullet or a knife or just a quick
shove at a busy intersection. His quiet voice startled me. "You are
thinking." It was a statement. I nodded. "Do you
care what I do, so long as my actions do not expose your operation or bring the
authorities into the equation?" Sanchez just smiled at me through a
curtain of cigar smoke. I said, "I will not go to the police.
Neither will Susan Fitzsimmons." Sanchez stood and walked to the door. He stopped
and said, "You have chosen a proper path, seсor. Thank you for your time
and for... the intelligence of your response." I studied his spare,
intelligent features. He said, "Be careful, Seсor McInnes. We have, for many reasons, gone to great lengths to
avoid bloodshed. It is the right thing to do, and it is the smart thing to do.
But, please make no mistake, just causes such as ours produce zealots—useful men who believe the greater the violence, the greater their
commitment to the cause. So, as I said, please be most careful." He
paused, and, as if mentioning an afterthought, said, "And you should know
that a deputy sheriff in Apalachicola, a Mickey Burns, has been asking
questions about you." Sanchez turned to leave. I said, "One
more thing," and he paused in the doorway. "Your buddy Purcell
threatened me with, in his words, 'a crazy, mean-ass spic' who likes to cut
people up and play with their guts. Purcell said all he'd have to do is make a
phone call." Sanchez's eyes narrowed, and small muscles knotted in his
slender jaw. "That wouldn't be the kind of 'zealot' you're so proud of,
would it?" Sanchez opened his mouth to answer, then
closed it again without emitting a sound. He cocked his head to one side as if
physically rolling thoughts around in his skull. Finally, he said, "I will
control my people, and I think Leroy Purcell can control his. But," he
hesitated, "some people, some ... forces are beyond reason and
control." "And one of these forces—one who likes to play with knives and other people's guts—just may turn up if I don't walk away. Is that the bottom
line?" Sanchez met my eyes and held them before
turning and walking out of the room, followed closely by the UZI man. I looked around the room at the
decapitated deer and glass-eyed fish and felt a certain kinship. Sanchez's cigar tasted heavy and bitter. I
stood and walked over to poke it through the mouth of the cast-iron stove
before leaving. In the front room, perched on a red commercial cooler with Coca-Cola
written on the front, sat Julie the seafood woman. I stopped to look at
her. She looked back. I put two dollars on the counter and said,
"I'd like a beer." She said, "I ain't giving you nothing." I walked around the counter and stood in
front of her. She sat on one of the cooler's two chrome doors. I opened the
other one and found a cold Coors. Julie looked furious but didn't move to stop
me. I asked, "What did I do to you?" "You come close to getting Willie
killed tonight for one thing." "What's the other thing?" "Huh?" "What else have I done to get you so
mad?" "You done enough. You mess with one
of us down here and you messed with all of us." "Is Captain Billy one of you? Is
Peety Boy?" Julie's face flushed. She looked at the
floor and muttered, "You messed with Sonny." Now, she had my full
attention. "Made him look bad to his boss. We ain't gonna put up with
that." "What's Sonny to you?" Julie
didn't answer. I said, "He's on his way here, isn't he?" Now she smiled. Sonny was coming to kill
me. chapter twenty-three "I know you want me to stick around
and get dismembered by Sonny,
but I'm leaving. Sorry." As I spoke, Julie put her right foot against the
counter, blocking my path by creating a bridge with her leg between the red
cooler and the Formica counter. I said, "You've got to be kidding,"
and turned to put my left buttock on the counter to swivel my legs over and
leave. But Julie really had not been kidding. I
glimpsed an amber flash just in time to dodge an unopened bottle of Budweiser
swung hard at my left ear. A violent breeze swept the tip of my nose as I
jerked my head back and pivoted over the counter. Julie seemed to feel deeply
about not wanting me to leave. I, on the other hand, felt just as deeply that
rolling around the floor trading punches with a female fishmonger would
irreparably damage my self-image—particularly if
she won. So, as soon as my bare feet hit floorboards, I sprinted through the
open front door and into the night. Julie's longneck exploded against the door
frame behind me, but I was gone. Not only did Julie decline to chase me, which
would have been undignified for both of us, but she also confounded
expectations by failing to pelt my windshield with bottled beverages as my
rented Pontiac spun around the front corner of the shack and screeched onto the
road. I could only guess that she was busy calling Sonny or maybe looking for
one of Captain Billy's old shotguns. This, I thought, is not why I went to law
school. A mile or two west of the causeway to St.
George, a speeding Apalachicola Sheriff's Department cruiser met me on Highway
98, going, I suspected, where I had come from. I couldn't tell for sure whether
the uniformed driver was my old compatriot Mickey Burns, since, speeding at
eighty miles an hour through the night, one black-and-white looks pretty much
like the next. I watched the deputy's red taillights recede in my rearview
mirror until they faded from sight; then I reached over to switch on the radio
and noticed my Browning 9mm on the passenger seat. Bless Carlos Sanchez. The
clip was full and the chamber was empty, just as they had been when Julie
lifted it out of the trunk. Following a quick stopover in Panama City
at an all-night truck stop with a Hertz franchise, I pulled into Seaside a few
minutes after sunrise in a newly rented, dark-blue Taurus. I parked in back,
stepped out of that peculiar rented-car smell, and walked around to the front
of the cottage. Loutie Blue answered the door. I said hello and searched her face.
"Can you tell me what's going on with Carli?" Loutie shook her head. "Sorry, Tom.
There's nothing to tell. As far as we know, they're just still looking." When we were seated in the kitchen, she
said, "Purcell's gone. He left late yesterday to meet with 'the Cubans,'
whoever they are. Susan's fine. She's still asleep. Kelly's been calling you. Three
times last night. She said she needs to talk to you as soon as possible." I stood and walked to the refrigerator. "The
Cubans are a group of self-described 'patriots' who waylaid me last night
to give us our lives back. According to their leader—at least I think he's their leader. Anyway, I wouldn't bet my life
on it, but it's possible that Purcell no longer longs for my demise. I'll fill
you in on the details later." I looked inside the fridge at eggs and
cinnamon rolls and bagels and realized I was too tired to eat. I closed the
door. "I'm going to bed. If anything happens, come get me." "Kelly found out something about that
yacht's ownership. The one the Teeter guy told you about seeing the other night
when you and Joey were on Dog Island. It belongs to some corporation in
Tampa." "Would you mind calling her for me?
Ask her to check out the company. Find out if there's any Cuban-American
management or ownership." "There's Cuban-American owners or
managers in just about everything in South Florida, Tom." "I know. Just ask her. And call Joey
and ask him if he can turn loose and meet us here ... What time is it? Six-twenty?
Ask him if he can make it around three or four this afternoon." "No problem." Loutie said,
"Go to bed. You look like hell." I trudged up the stylish staircase and
hesitated outside the room where Susan slept. It was the same room where she
and I had made love two nights before. I liked her. She liked me. We had slept
together and liked that too. But climbing into her bed at daybreak to catch up
on lost sleep, that—I don't know why—but that seemed too intimate, as if I would be taking too much for
granted. Maybe it was the way we had parted. Maybe it was the fear that her
idea of us was different than mine. Maybe it felt too, almost, married. Maybe I
was just tired. I walked a few steps farther down the hall
and found a room no one was using. The mattress was bare. I spied a yellow
blanket with satin trim stuffed onto a shelf in the closet. I put my head on a
purple, ruffly pillow, pulled the nubby blanket up to my chin, and felt sleep
soak into my body like a warm bath. Someone sat on the bed. A woman's voice
said, "Tom, Joey's here now, and Kelly's been here for a couple of hours.
They're waiting downstairs." It was Susan's voice. And I felt no ambiguity
whatsoever about how glad I was to hear it. I pushed the twisted blanket away, rolled
onto my back, and said, "Nice to see you." Susan smiled. "You too. Wash your
face and come on down. Everyone's waiting." And she left the room. I walked out into the hall and through
Susan's room to the bath, where I had a look in the mirror and was greeted by
swollen eyes, red pillow marks on one cheek, and, I was pretty sure, breath
that would melt paint. I turned on cold water in the shower, took off my shirt,
and leaned over the tub and let the frigid spray run over my face, neck, and
hair. I needed a real shower, but people were waiting, so I did what I could.
After toweling and combing my hair and making vigorous use of a toothbrush, I
felt more or less like myself again, and I headed downstairs. Once again, everyone had congregated in
the kitchen. I said, "I'm getting tired of looking at this kitchen. Can we
do this in the living room?" Joey said, "Did we wake up grouchy
from our nap?" I said, "Bite me," and walked
into the living room. Joey, Susan, Loutie, and Kelly followed. Loutie came in
carrying something that looked like the kind of miniature radio my father used
to listen to at football games. As she walked, she worked at poking a tiny
black foam knob into her ear. I looked at her. She said, "Mobile
monitor," and sat on the sofa next to Joey. Susan sat in an upholstered
chair next to mine, and Kelly came in a few seconds later and put a glass of
Coke on the table next to my chair. I said, "Bless you," and drank
half of it right away. "Who wants to start?" Susan said, "Loutie says you said
something about Leroy Purcell not wanting you dead anymore." "That's what this Cuban guy wants me
to think." My stomach felt queasy, and I realized I
hadn't eaten in almost thirty hours. I took another swallow of Coke. Joey said,
"You trying to be dramatic? Tell us the frigging story." "Oh. Sorry." I said,
"Actually, I'm trying not to throw up again. It's been a while since I
ate. Yesterday at lunch. And I managed to lose most of that on Billy Teeter's
boat last night." I looked at Susan. "I'll back up and fill you in
later on Teeter's boat and the yacht off Dog Island and all that, but the
bottom line is that Carli's father, Rus Poultrez, is dead." All Susan got out was, "How?" I told her. Susan said, "I can't believe how
happy I am that another human being is dead." "Something else," I added.
"I met with some kind of Cuban revolutionary last night who claims to do
business with Purcell and the Bodines. He also claimed he's convinced Purcell
to leave you and me alone. He didn't offer the same deal for Carli." Joey said, "Why the hell not?" "He said Purcell wants to make some
kind of example out of her. You know, 'don't fuck with Leroy Purcell' or some
equally eloquent sentiment." Susan stood. "Kelly, tell Tom what
you told us about the yacht. I'm going to get this poor guy something to eat.
Don't let him say anything else until I get back." I said, "Thanks. Just not that
chicken salad and fruit we had for lunch yesterday. I saw a little too much of
that on the boat." Susan said, "Yuck," and left the
room. I picked up my Coke and turned to look at Kelly. She said, "The yacht Billy Teeter
spotted the night you and Joey saw the drop-off is registered to a corporation
in Tampa called Products Americas, Inc." Just as a good legal secretary
should, Kelly pronounced Inc. "Ink," rather than saying
"incorporated," as most people would—a
distinction that matters only to people who try lawsuits or draft contracts for
a living. She said, "They are sort of an import-export business. I called
around and found out they sell American machinery in half a dozen South
American countries, and I guess they buy mostly agricultural stuff down there
and sell it here. "Anyway, after Loutie called this
morning and said you wanted to know about Cuban owners or managers, I started
calling again, and you were right on the money. The chairman and the president
and three other senior officers are 'of Cuban descent,' as they put it. I found
that out from the company itself. The investor relations department.
Apparently, I wasn't the first person to ask. I guess other Cubans like to
invest in Cuban enterprises or something. Whatever the reason, they weren't shy
about telling me." Joey interrupted and said, "Tell him
about the guy in Tallahassee, Kelly." Kelly said, "Okay. So, after I got as
much as I could from the investor relations woman, I asked who I could talk to
about this yacht the company owned. That kind of rattled her. Not, I think,
because some manager in investor relations would know about illegal activity on
the company yacht. What I think was that she didn't want to catch a lot of
grief from an investor about expensive perks for the president or something
like that. Anyway, she said she didn't know anything about any boats the
company might own, and she referred me to their outside PR guy." Joey was literally on the edge of his
seat. He said, "Listen to this," as if I might have been napping
through the rest of it. Kelly said, "Be quiet, Joey. It's not
that dramatic. I just called the guy. It's a man named Charles Estevez.
'Charlie,' he says. He's one of those guys who wants everyone to call him by
his first name. This Estevez has a lobbying and PR firm in Tallahassee, and I
found out before I called him that he has a pretty good reputation. I also
found out that he is the point man in the Florida legislature when it comes to
lobbying for anything having to do with Cuban refugees, or like relations and
trade with Cuba, that kind of stuff. "So, I get him on the phone and ask
about Products Americas, and he starts babbling a mile a minute about what a
great company it is and how wonderful and civic minded the management is. "Then I ask about the yacht, and
suddenly Estevez just doesn't have that kind of information about his clients.
So I give him the registration number and tell him the Coast Guard has verified
that the boat belongs to Products Americas. And, guess what. He seems to
remember something about the yacht. Suddenly, he even remembers being on it one
time for a cocktail party or something. Then, get this, he just volunteers that
the boat is, quote, 'really just a marketing tool for the company.' He says the
thing is used mostly for entertaining customers who are in Tampa on business,
and that it, quote, 'hardly ever leaves the Tampa Bay area.' Which, I don't
know about you, but I thought that seemed like kind of a strange thing to just
volunteer out of the blue. So Tom, you weren't around to ask, so I just told him
the yacht was spotted in Apalachicola Bay on such and such a date, just to see
what he'd say. I hope that was okay." "That was fine. This isn't a
walk-on-eggshells kind of case anymore. What did he say?" Kelly smiled and looked endearingly proud
of herself. "He said he had another call coming in, and he'd have to call
me back." Joey and I laughed as Susan came in the room and put a plate
with two sandwiches and a handful of chips on the table next to my Coke. I
thanked her, and she got comfortable in her chair. Loutie frowned at the floor and pressed
the foam knob further into her ear. I ate some sandwich. Kelly said, "A
little over an hour went by, and the phone rang. All of a sudden, Estevez knows
all about you and wants you to call him. 'Personally.' I tried to get
more information, but he insisted on talking to you." I asked, "When was this?" "I called Products Americas
yesterday. My conversation with Estevez was this morning." "This is getting
interesting," I said. "Last night I get briefly kidnapped by a Cuban
revolutionary who knows all about Carli and Susan and Joey and, especially, me
and Purcell. And the discussions he said he had with Purcell took place
yesterday morning. I guess after you called Products Americas. I wondered why
Sanchez showed up out of the blue last night." Everyone seemed to pause and think about
that for a beat or two; then Susan said, "Okay. Now tell us about the
Cubans and Purcell not wanting you and me dead and why he won't leave Carli
alone." So I did. I started with chugging out into
the bay with Willie and Captain Billy and finished with every detail I could
remember about my forced meeting with Carlos Sanchez. When I was done, I asked
Joey, "How close are we to finding Carli?" "We're not." I said, "Damn." "Yeah. I know. Randy Whittles is
killing himself, and I've got a couple of guys helping him. But, like you said,
damn." Joey shook his head and went on. "I did find out where our
buddy Thomas Bobby Haycock has been taking his illegal shipments, though." I asked, "Where?" Joey said, "You're not gonna believe
this shit, either." Loutie Blue interrupted. "Joey. Come
in the kitchen. I've got a female voice at Purcell's place." chapter twenty-four Susan asked the question. "Is it
Carli?" Loutie pressed the tiny foam knob against
her ear and waved Susan off as she left the room. We all hurried into the
kitchen where Loutie turned up the volume on the speakers. A feminine voice
said,"... not that hungry. Sorry I'm late. I thought Jim was never going
to leave." "That's not Carli," Susan said.
"Sounds like little Leroy has a hot date." Loutie agreed. "Sounds like it. I'm
going to stay in here and listen." We looked at her, and she explained.
"If there's any kind of conversation, we need to listen. You never know
what might come out." She looked around. "And it would be easier if
the rest of you went somewhere else." Back in the living room, Joey returned to
his story. "So, getting back to Haycock. I followed him this morning from
the ferry landing in Carrabelle. He headed west up 98 and then hung a right on
65 toward Tallahassee, and I figure he's planning to fence the stuff in the
city. But just a few miles up, he turns off into a place called 'Tate's Hell
Swamp.' No shit. That's actually the name of this frigging place on the
map." Joey looked at Susan and Kelly and then at
me. I was anxious for less color and more useful facts, and I think it showed. He said, "So anyway I follow Haycock
into the woods. About four miles in, the woods turn into swamp, and it's just
this one pissant logging road. And if somebody decides to come out, there's not
much I can do but try to get out of their way. So I'm getting pretty nervous
about being able to keep tailing him without anybody seeing me. "About that time, I come around a
curve and Haycock's truck is stopped dead in the middle of the road. So I slam
on the brakes and damn near wreck sliding into a little gully there." I said, "Joey, this is a fascinating
travelogue. But you're here, so we know you got away. Can we cut to what you
found at the end of the road?" "I'm getting there, but you gotta
hear this. I'm off in the gully where Haycock can't see me, and I can't see
him. I roll down the windows and hear his track start up again, and I'm hoping
he hasn't turned around. But, if he has, I don't wanna get caught like a
sitting duck, so I pull back up on the road. And, guess what, Haycock's gone. Disappeared." Susan asked, "Where'd he go?" I said, "Don't encourage him." Joey smiled. "Took a while to figure
it out. Haycock had driven off through this tall grass next to the road.
Stuff's like rubber. Just pops back up after you drive over it. But he just had
turned off, so I could still see his tracks. I followed 'em three or four
hundred yards across this field and then hooked a left into some trees. And I'm
telling you, he took me through some of the nastiest-looking shit I've ever
come across. Black, scummy water up to my axle most of the time. "I could see on the trees where the
way was marked with cuts in the bark, like somebody marking a land line. A few
hundred yards of that and I'm back on a road that just picks up in the middle
of nowhere. "I follow the road up around this
little curve where the road rises up to a bridge over a creek, and I can see up
ahead. About two hundred yards off, there's four metal buildings, and Haycock
was just pulling up to 'em. "I shit you not. These guys got a
frigging compound out in the middle of the swamp. Like an island or something.
It's this piece of solid ground slap-ass in the middle of Mosquitoville. I'm
telling you, the place is nothin' but mile after mile of fuckin', I mean
friggin', snake heaven. I saw four alligators on the way in. No shit. Four
alligators." I tried to get him back on point.
"You said you could see Haycock pull into the compound?" "Yeah. Haycock's unloading his truck
and taking the stuff into this big warehouse-looking building. And there's a
guard. The guy just stands there holding some kind of short weapon—it was too far away to tell what kind of firearm it was—and he spends his time watching the road for trouble." "Did you see anything else?" Joey said, "I sure as hell did,"
and paused for dramatic effect. "I saw that dark, chubby guy Haycock
picked up on the beach the other night. You know, the Carpintero guy they
smuggled in with his wife and kid." I asked, "What was he doing?" "Just talking with Haycock. Looking
through the boxes and stuff in the truck, and, it looked like, maybe telling
Haycock where to put the stuff he was unloading." "Anything else?" "Nope. That's about it. I needed to
get out ahead of Haycock. So, after I checked things out and made a little map
and a diagram and took some pictures, I got the hell out of there." For a few seconds, I wasn't sure I'd heard
right. "You took some pictures?" "Sure." Joey grinned. "When
Carpintero came out, I went back to the car and got my camera and popped a
three-hundred-millimeter lens on it. I clicked off a roll of film, mostly of
Carpintero, but I got the buildings and Haycock and the boxes and stuff
too." I said, "You're a genius." "Ain't that the truth. I haven't
gotten it developed yet. Overnighted it to a guy in Mobile. He'll turn 'em
around in an hour, once he gets 'em." "Good." I said, "Let me ask
you something. Did the chubby guy from the beach—Carpintero—did he look familiar somehow? I mean, familiar from somewhere
besides Dog Island." Joey stopped and looked at the floor for a
second or two and said, "Nope. Why?" I shrugged. Joey looked amused. "Did he scare
you?" "He gave me the creeps, is what he
did." I turned to Kelly. "Have you got
Charles Estevez's number?" She said, "Sure," reached down
to get her purse, and fished out a thick Day-Timer bristling with business
cards, pink phone message slips, and a couple dozen yellow and pink Post-its. I
said, "Come on. Let's go give Charlie a ring." Kelly tagged along as
I used the phone in Loutie's bedroom. Estevez had gone home for the day. I left
my cell phone number with his answering service, and less than five minutes
later, he called. He admitted "knowing of Carlos Sanchez." I
felt him out, discussed the various uses of beachfront properties, dropped a
name or two, and got off the phone. Kelly said, "What did he want?" I said, "He wanted to make sure that
I'm more afraid of Sanchez than I am Purcell, which I am. And he wanted to,
quote, 'open up the lines of communication.' No kidding. That's what he
said." Kelly smiled and asked, "Well, are
they open?" I said, "I think maybe a little more
open than he had in mind." The weather had become less fickle outside
our aggressively cute beach house, and bright spring sunshine glinted off sand
and water in one direction and white impatiens, pink and purple azaleas, and
faux-Victorian gingerbread in the other. Susan opened the blinds to let in the
late afternoon sun, and, for the next two hours, we rehashed stories and
theories. I still had a young client with a death
sentence, and even if we did find her first I'd have to figure out what to do
about Purcell. Carli was a juvenile with little education and fewer skills, and
we weren't going to be able to simply send her to Europe or South America and
expect her to fend for herself. Carli would want to stay in this country. And,
sooner or later, she was going to call her mother, if she had one, or her
sister, if she had one of those, or her best friend from junior high. And, when
she did, Purcell would have her. Around seven, I drifted into the kitchen.
"What's Purcell up to?" Loutie said, "Screwing." It was not an answer I had expected. So I
said, "What?" Joey said, "Screwing, Tom. You know,
rubbing uglies, choking chubby, grounding the gopher..." Loutie sounded like a disappointed mother.
"Joey?" "...bumping monkeys, pounding the
puppy, squeezin' squigley, polishing the Jag..." Loutie sounded, at once, amused and
exasperated. "Shut up, Joey." Joey grinned. "I know a lot
more." Loutie said, "We don't care." While my giant friend wasn't exactly
drunk, he wasn't exactly sober either. But after long days and sleepless nights
of crouching between a pine tree and a gritty sand dune forcing himself to
focus on every insipid detail in the life of an eighth-grade dropout turned
criminal, Joey was entitled. I looked at him, and he grinned some more.
I turned to Loutie. "Have you heard anything useful?" Loutie said, "Other than entertaining
Joey? No. Some doctor's wife came over when her husband left to take their kids
back to Atlanta. Apparently, she wanted to stick around for a few more days of
sun, and whatnot." I wandered back into the living room and
plopped down on the sofa next to Susan. Kelly sat on the carpet. She had pulled
down a seat cushion and leaned it against the front of her chair to make a
floor-level lounger. The two women were watching an attractive female anchor on
CNN who looked disturbingly like a vampire. A report on one of Princess Grace's
randy kids ended just as I was snuggling my backside into the linen cushions.
The vampire anchor rearranged her smiling eyes and glistening red lips into a
somber expression as a photo of a petite, bookish woman appeared over her
shoulder, and she began to read a story about an Iraqi physician with an almost
Teutonic genius for exploiting horrific diseases. A few minutes of that was more than enough
reality, and we switched over to HBO and watched a Bruce Willis,
everything-gets-blown-up movie until we were bleary-eyed. Kelly got up to go to
bed, and Susan went with her to help find sheets and blankets. When Susan came
back, she said, "I'm tired, Tom. I'm going on up." And, suddenly, I didn't quite know what to
say. It occurred to me that the problem with having avoided Susan's bedroom
earlier in the day was that my actions might have damaged the assumption that
it was still my room too. In other words, now that I had gotten out, I wasn't
quite sure how to get back in. I said, "Where's Kelly sleeping?" Susan said, "She's in the yellow
bedroom." "The yellow bedroom? Is that the one
I took a nap in today?" "I'm not sure I'd call seven hours a
nap, but, yeah, that's it It's the only empty room we've got. Joey will stay
with Loutie, assuming she ever goes to bed. She's listening to that black box
every night when I go upstairs and every morning when I wake up. So I'm just
assuming she actually goes to sleep at some point." Susan yawned and
stretched her arms over her head and arched her back in a maneuver that caused
her knit shirt to pull across her breasts in an interesting way. Of course, it
would have been hard for me to imagine anything about Susan's breasts that
wasn't deeply and profoundly interesting. She said, "Good night." "Susan?" She said "Huh?" And I hesitated.
Actually, I choked. Susan smiled and said, "You're still invited. Is that
what you're hemming and hawing about?" "I wouldn't exactly call it hemming
and hawing." She rolled her eyes and said, "Come
on. Let's go to bed." A blinding light filled the room.
"Tom! Susan! Get up." It was Loutie. "They've got Carli." I bolted up in bed. "Where? Where is
she?" Loutie said, "I don't know where. But
she's still alive. Purcell got a call from some guy named Rupert about five
minutes ago saying they found her. We gotta move. Joey's downstairs listening.
Get up. We've got to be ready to follow Purcell when he leaves his house." A thought hit me. "You sure Joey's
ready for this?" "Joey's fine. The man's got the
metabolism of a racehorse. He sobers up like nothing I've ever seen."
Loutie said, "Now, come on. Move it." Susan was already on her feet and dressing
while I was sitting on the bed talking to Loutie. She went into the bathroom
while I got dressed, and, as we hurried downstairs, I noticed that she had run
a wet comb through her hair. I glanced at my watch. It was
seven-fifteen. We had gotten more sleep than I thought. Down in the kitchen, Joey's massive frame
was perched on one of the fragile-looking chrome and leather chairs that seemed
to have been designed more for looking at than sitting on. He said, "Go
brush your teeth and get dressed for some outside work. Purcell's not going.
Not now anyhow. He's got that little doctor's wife in his bed, and he ain't
going anywhere anytime soon. He told this Rupert guy who called to just hold on
to Carli, quote, 'on the island,' and he'd meet them there around noon." Susan said, "Do you think they're
talking about St. George, or did they actually bring Carli to Dog Island on the
one night you weren't there?" Joey and I together said, "Dog
Island." Susan looked confused. "How do you
know?" Joey said, "Makes sense." "Why?" Joey looked pleadingly at me. I said,
"I guess they could mean any island within driving distance, Susan. But
Dog Island is hard to get to; they've got an isolated cottage there; they're
used to doing business there; and there aren't any cops on the island." Susan said, "Okay." "None of that means we're right. But
I think we are." I looked around. "Where's Kelly?" Loutie said, "Still asleep. She
hasn't got any business in this. She works for you, Tom. But that's what I
thought." "You thought right. Kelly needs to
get back to Mobile. And I guess Joey and I need to head for Dog Island. Try to
beat Purcell there." Joey said, "Yeah. And Loutie, you get
on over to Purcell's place. Hang around outside. Don't let him out of your
sight." Joey turned to me. "Tom, did you get
that tracker box stuck under Purcell's Caddy?" "Yeah, the first day here." Joey caught Loutie's eye to make sure
she'd heard me and then looked at Susan. "Can you handle the listening
equipment?" Susan said yes. "Okay, then you stay here and listen and
work the phones. Tom and I will keep you up on what we're doing. Loutie, you do
the same. I mean, you keep in contact with Susan to let her know what you're
doing." He stopped and looked around the room and smiled. "I never
been around such a bunch of gloomy people. We know where she is. This is the
good part." chapter twenty-five After two days without a decent bath, one
of which was spent hurling
digestive juices on a rolling shrimp boat, a hot shower was not a luxury. I
made a quick job of it, left Susan upstairs getting dressed, and met Joey
downstairs. He had loaded his Expedition with guns, blankets, and food—what he described as his "rescue kit." Loutie would stay
by the listening equipment until Susan came down; then she would head over to
watch Purcell. By eight, Joey and I left the strained
charm of Seaside behind. Neither of us spoke much. Joey pulled out
a paper sack of Dolly Madison cinnamon rolls and canned drinks, and we made a
breakfast of that as we listened to the news on NPR. On the eastern side of
Port St. Joe, as we neared Apalachicola, Joey said, "I called about a boat
while you were in the shower. Susan knew somebody. We don't need to be trying
to ride a ferry with all these guns in the car, and we sure as hell don't need
to be standing around waiting for the ferry after discharging firearms into the
locals." I asked, "You really think that's
going to be necessary?" "Never know. I sure as hell hope not.
We have to kill a couple of those Bodine boys, and you're gonna have to take up
the life of the hunted again." I said, "The life of the
hunted?" And Joey smiled. He drove straight through Apalachicola and
Eastpoint to a marina called "The Moorings" in tiny Carrabelle,
Florida. It was where we had caught the ferry when we went out to watch Thomas
Bobby Haycock. As Joey put his vehicle in park and pulled
the key, he said, "Why don't you wait in the car? After your adventure
with the Teeters, you're probably a minor celebrity around here." And he
closed the door. So I hunkered down in the seat feeling a
little embarrassed to be left behind but lucky not to be going—like a child waiting for his father to come out of the liquor
store. Four interminable minutes passed, and the door locks snapped as Joey
shot them with his remote. He opened the door and stepped in. He said,
"Got it," and backed the Expedition out and pulled around the side of
the marina. Dozens of luxury sailboats and motor
yachts were huddled so tightly around a maze of concrete docks that it looked
as though the first guy in would never leave again. But then, no one seemed to
be leaving. Retired couples in baggy shorts and slouch hats polished brass or
coiled ropes between trips to other boats to talk sailing or diesel motors or
maybe a little fishing with someone from Wilmington or Bar Harbor or some other
place where money intersected with seacoast. Our little Boston Whaler was tied up among
the working boats, which were kept well away from the yacht trade, and we had
clear access to the waterway leading out into the bay. Joey popped the hatch on
his Expedition. The food was in a cooler; the blankets were loose; and the
firearms were discreetly zipped inside a fatigue-green duffel bag. As we loaded
the blue-and-white Boston Whaler, Joey and I looked like nothing more than a
couple of friends out for a day of fishing, except maybe for the complete
absence of fishing equipment. Joey said, "You know how to drive one
of these things?" "Well, yeah. On a lake. I thought you
were in the Navy." "We didn't spend a lot of time
tooling around in pissant fishing boats in Naval Intelligence." I looked
at him. He said, "How hard can it be? Crank it up. The guy in the marina
told me how to get to the island. Hell, it's just over there. Soon as you pull
around that place there where the land boops out you can see the damn
thing." "Boops out, huh?" Joey ignored me. I asked, "Did he tell you where all
the oyster beds are too?" "I asked about that." "That was nice of you." "He said they're not too bad between
here and Dog Island. Just don't drive too fast." "Like Rus Poultrez did?" "Just like that." While Joey rummaged in the cooler for
additional sustenance, I puttered the boat away from the dock. Then, ever so
gently, I steered a course in the general direction of Dog Island. The
sour-sweet, almost carnal scents of the coast swirled in the spring air as a
persistent chop paddled the hull and sprayed us with salt mist. Thirty minutes
out of Carrabelle, I judged that we were not quite halfway there. I asked,
"How far is it supposed to be out to the island?" "The guy in the marina said seven
miles." "It didn't look that far when we came
out into the bay." "You can't tell lookin' over water.
Everything looks closer. The way to tell is you gotta turn around and bend over
and look across the water through your legs." I said, "Uh-huh." "No shit. It works. An old forester
taught me that. One summer in high school, I worked on a survey crew cutting
land lines through the woods. We'd hit a stretch of swamp every now and then.
The only way to tell how much wading you were gonna have to do was to bend over
and look through your legs." I said, "Uh-huh." Forty minutes later, we were maybe a
hundred yards off the narrow strip of island, and Joey said, "Hook around
the left end of the island there." It took another half hour to putt around
the tip of the island and land the boat on the same desolate stretch of beach
where I had parked my Jeep a week earlier as we hunkered in the dunes watching
Haycock's place. I had been working at keeping things light—trying to behave as though none of this bothered me. But, as Joey
unzipped the green duffel and pulled out some kind of machine pistol, I could
feel the morning grow cooler as light perspiration covered my face and neck and
hands. Acid churned my stomach and adrenaline fogged my mind, and I had to
concentrate to follow what Joey was saying. "This is a Tech 9. It holds twenty
rounds in the clip, plus one in the chamber. This is the safety. Up is on. Down
is off. Push it down to fire." "I've got my nine millimeter." Joey said, "That's fine. You're used
to shootin' it, so you should stick to it if you can. But we don't know what or
who's waitin' for us. If six guys come around a corner with guns, you're gonna
get your ass shot off if you count on that Browning. The Tech 9 is automatic,
or at least the way I've got it set up it is. Pull back like this to chamber
the first round and then just hold down the trigger. It'll squeeze out four
rounds a second. So don't waste 'em all on one guy. Spread it around if you
have to use it." Joey pulled out two black shoulder bags and tossed one to
me. "Put it in there till you need it. We could run into somebody." Then
he pulled out an identical weapon for himself, which he put in his black nylon
bag. He also dropped in a Glock 9mm before zipping it up. Finally, he produced
a tiny Walther PPK .380 and put it in his hip pocket. As Joey worked at readying assault weapons
in the morning sun, knot-kneed sandpipers scurried in and out with the surf,
poking spindly beaks into quartz-white sand in search of sand fleas and baby
shrimp. Above our heads, black-headed laughing gulls spiraled in the air,
begging frantically for food. The gulls' shrill calls sounded in sporadic
bunches, and with each shriek the abdominal muscles south of my navel clenched
my gut like a nervous fist. I said, "Somebody's been feeding them
bread or something." Joey glanced up at the birds and then back
at me. "You ready?" "Not really." Joey looked at me for a second or two and
said, "Look, why don't I just go in by myself? It's probably just Haycock
and the Rupert guy watchin' Carli and waitin' on Purcell. Tell you what. Let me
go look around. If it's bad, I'll come back for you." "Nope." Joey shrugged. I took in a deep breath and said,
"Let's go." "Okay, hot dog. But as soon as we
take the first step, I'm in charge. You do what I say. You got it?" I nodded. We moved crouched over, running awkwardly
across dry sand, filling our shoes with grit and our pant legs with
cockle-burs, and finding inadequate cover first behind one sand dune and then
another. When we were about two hundred feet from Haycock's cottage, Joey waved
me toward the trees we had used for shelter on stakeout. I turned and trotted
to the scraggly clump of wind-tortured pines. Joey waited. When I got there, he
made a hand motion that usually means "Hold it down." I dropped to
one knee. He nodded and moved behind a dune. Minutes dragged by, and I saw him
near the house on his stomach. Joey was crawling commando-style toward the back
window, and he looked like he knew what he was doing. I watched him crawl, and
I watched too long. Tim the painter was only thirty feet from
the front door when I saw him. Adrenaline flushed through my brain and muscles
with such violence that I almost yelled out to Joey. Think. Joey was out
of sight in back, and, so far, Tim seemed oblivious to our presence. Then he
seemed to hear something. The man stopped, and I fell onto my stomach as he
turned to survey the dunes and trees and scrub. I could just see his head. He
was very still and seemed to be listening, more so than watching, for trouble.
Then he swiveled his head toward the cottage. Now, he knew Joey was there. I moved. Keeping low and quiet, I circled
behind the painting Bodine and watched as he unclipped a small walkie-talkie
from his belt and spoke quietly to someone. Shit. Joey was coming around
the back corner, shaking his head and looking for me among the pines. Tim was
too close to the cottage to see Joey—the angle was
wrong—but he heard him. In one efficient
movement, Tim gently dropped the radio to the ground and pulled a machine
pistol from a shoulder holster. He dropped to one knee and waited. The Tech 9
was still zipped inside my shoulder bag. The zipper would make noise, and I
didn't really know how to use the damn thing anyhow; so I eased it onto the
sand and reached back inside my windbreaker and pulled out the Browning and
clicked off the safety. Joey was going to walk around the corner
and get shot in maybe two seconds. I tried to sound official. "Hold it
right there, asshole." Tim froze. Slowly, he began to raise his
hands, and I began to breathe again. Joey was still out of sight. I said,
"Drop the gun." The gun moved and, for one fleeting
instant, I thought he was putting it on the ground. Then he spun on his knees
and landed on his back. The man took aim with both arms stretched out toward me
in a rigid wedge and both hands steadying the pistol. I fired. Tim's pant leg
popped out at the knee as if some unseen hand had snatched the cloth, and a
second shot from the other direction followed so quickly that it sounded like
an echo of the first. Tim the painter's face exploded with his eyes fixed on
mine. Joey was standing next to the house,
holding the Glock on the man whose face he had just blown off. I called out,
"He's dead," and Joey and I began to approach the body from opposite
sides. Joey's hollow-point had entered through Tim's crown and blasted out
through some part of his face. Standing over the body in a kind of fascinated
and repulsed shock, I couldn't tell much more than that. There wasn't enough
face left to tell exactly where Joey's mushroomed bullet had exited. I managed to say, "He had a
walkie-talkie," and to point at the tiny communicator where Tim the
painter had dropped it. Joey leaned over and picked it up. He
said, "Let's get the hell out of here." "What about Carli?" "Get your bag." I looked at him.
He snapped, "Get the goddamn weapons bag you dropped back there." I ran back and retrieved the shoulder bag
with the Tech 9 inside. As I returned, Joey grabbed my jacket and pulled me
roughly along as he retreated behind the house. As I stumbled behind him, Joey
said, "Carli's not here. Nobody's here. We're in the wrong place. Or
somethin' worse." I looked at him. He said, "Let's get to the boat.
Keep your eyes open. That guy wasn't talkin' to himself." Joey took off
toward the beach, running in his tucked-over stance, and I followed. Voices floated across the sand. Joey kept
moving. I sprinted to catch up and slapped him on the back. As I did, I said,
"Down," and Joey dropped even before I did. "You hear
that?" Joey moved his chin from side to side and
sat still. The only sounds were the surf and the wind and the sporadic, shrill
cackles of laughing gulls as they fished the waves and fought for trash along
the shoreline. Then the human voices came again. Joey turned and pointed at my
chest and then at the ground. I nodded, and he left me there sitting on one
knee in the sand between a grassy dune on one side and a gnarled clump of brown
and green brush on the other. Male voices ebbed and flowed among the
sounds of surf and wind, and Joey reappeared and motioned for me to follow. We moved
away from the beach. A hundred feet in, Joey stopped and spoke quietly. He was
breathing heavily, more, I thought, from fear or excitement than effort. He
said, "One man at the cottage. Two on the beach. Spread out. They're
watching the boat. Waiting." I asked a stupid question. "For
us?" Joey nodded. And he looked scared, which
was one of many emotions I had never seen on his face. I tried to think, to
concentrate, and then wished I hadn't. I said, "They knew." My
oversized friend didn't answer. He was scanning the beach. Then he whispered, "Call Susan,"
and my breathing turned fast and shallow. I found my cell phone and punched in the
number of the beach house. No one answered. I asked Joey how to get Loutie and
punched in her number. She answered on the second ring. I said, "Where are
you? Are you at the beach house?" Loutie sounded surprised. "No. I'm in
Mobile. Purcell's taking the doc's wife to some kind of party here. Brunch or
something." I interrupted. "Susan's not
answering." "Maybe she's..." Again I cut her off. "Carli's not at
the house on Dog Island. They may have been waiting for us." Loutie said, "How would
they...?" And her voice trailed off. I said what she was thinking.
"Purcell may have found the bugs. We're on the island, and you're following
him around Mobile. And Susan's not answering." Joey reached for the phone, and I let him
take it. He said, "Loutie? Haul ass back to Seaside. Keep trying Susan.
The Bo-dines have got our boat staked out, and Tom and I are gonna have to find
another way off the island." He stopped to listen and said, "Call the
goddamn second you know something." chapter twenty-six Bright sunshine radiated across blue sky,
glinting off sugar-white sand and suddenly consuming the world in blazing light that blocked out everything
except the tiny black cell phone in Joey's hand and the tortured thoughts
racing through my mind. I grabbed the phone from Joey and once again dialed the
beach house in Seaside. Still no one answered. I hit the end button and
punched redial, and Joey said my name. I listened to the phone ringing
in our whimsically sterile Seaside cottage, and Joey said my name again.
Finally, I said, "What!" "That's not doing any good, Tom.
You're just gonna use up the battery." "I don't really give a shit if I use
up the battery." "Loutie's calling. She's in her car.
So she can call all day without running out of juice. If we run out, Loutie's
not even gonna be able to call and tell us if there is news." I could feel my heart thumping against my
sternum, and coursing blood sounded inside my ears like boots running in mud. I
tried to control the erratic rhythm of my breathing. Slowly, shapes began to
emerge from the blinding glare, and other sounds floated back to me. Wind
sighed across the island, and gulls filled the air with shrill chatter. Joey looked out across glowing sand
dappled green and brown with undulating sea grass and streaks of coarse
underbrush. He said, "You see what I mean, don't you? We gotta stay calm
and wait on Loutie. She's as good as they get, Tom. You couldn't ask for
somebody better if—and I'm just saying if—Susan's gotten in trouble." I flipped the phone shut and pushed it
inside the pocket of my windbreaker. I looked out at the idyllic landscape,
searching now for human shapes, and asked, "You said the men are spread
out?" "The two at the beach are spread out
maybe a hundred feet apart hiding in that tall grass and stuff between the
dunes." "What about the guy at the
cottage?" "Standing around cussing about the
one we shot when I saw him. Could be hidden by now. Or I guess he could be down
at the beach with the others." I stopped to think and said, "But
he's probably covering the road between here and the ferry." Joey said, "Yeah. I guess. I hadn't
thought of that, but it makes sense." "Because their job is not to let us
get out of here alive." "That would be it." "So, can we take out the ones
watching the boat? I mean, if they're spread out, couldn't we just take them
out one at a time?" Joey stopped scanning the land between us
and the Bodines and looked at me. "You okay with killing two more
men?" "I didn't say kill anybody. We could
just knock them over the head or something, couldn't we?" Joey returned to scanning the surrounding
countryside as he spoke. He said, "Not unless you know something I don't.
And I know how to take somebody out without making a sound. That's
something I did learn from the Navy. But you don't do it by 'knocking
'em on the head or something.' You do it with a knife." "That's not an option. I shot the guy
back there because he was trying to shoot me. We are not going to start cutting
throats." Joey said, "It's not really a cut.
It's actually more of a stab and twist thing." "Joey." "I know. I wasn't arguing to do it.
I'm just explaining that you can't sneak up and bop a man on the head with the
butt of a gun like on Mission: Impossible and expect him to fall over
without a sound and wake up later with a bump and tiny little headache. You hit
a guy hard enough to knock him unconscious and you're probably gonna kill him
anyway. And if you don't hit him pretty much hard enough to kill him, he's
gonna squawk and bring in his buddies, who will shoot you full of little
holes." "I got it, Joey. The horse is dead
and beat to hell." "Just trying to be helpful."
Joey said, "So, what now? You're supposed to be the smart one." Joey was talking too much, and he was
doing it for a reason. He was—none too subtly—trying to keep my mind off Susan, and, even though some part of my
brain was able to analyze the conversation and realize what he was doing, it
was still kind of working. I said, "Well, I'm not an old Naval
Intelligence man or an ex-cop, but it seems pretty obvious to me that the
Bodines are going to be watching the road and the ferry. If we wait
until dark, we can probably get by whoever's watching the road. By then,
though, the ferry will quit running. Which doesn't really matter, since, like I
said, they'd be watching it anyway. And we can't just run into the motel and
scream for the cops, either. First of all, there aren't any. Second, we're the
ones who killed someone out here today. These guys haven't done anything but
look for us. All of which means we wait until dark, head toward the other end
of the island, and see if we can find an unguarded boat along the way." I
paused. "At least, that's what I think. You got a better idea, I'm all for
it." Joey said, "You're a very analytical
person." I looked at him. He said, "And you're probably right." An hour passed. The sun shone directly
overhead now, and Joey trotted off to check out the beach while I did
reconnaissance on the road and Haycock's cottage. It wasn't easy, and, if I
hadn't grown up hunting in the tangled forests along the Alabama River, I might
never have picked out the outline of a lone man crouched in thick cover along
the roadside. But I did pick him out, and I started to feel pretty confident
that Joey and I could circle around him and get out well before sunset. And
since it was just past noon, that was not an inconsequential discovery. A little over thirty minutes after we
split up, I returned to our hiding place nestled between a tall sand dune and a
cluster of wild azaleas. Joey was waiting. I told him about the man guarding
the sandy road leading away from Haycock's cottage and how I thought we could
circle him in daylight. He agreed. Then the phone vibrated in my pocket. I flipped it open and said,
"Loutie?" "Yeah. It's me. Let me talk to
Joey." I asked, "Are you in Seaside?" She said, "It'd be better if I talked
to Joey, Tom." And my face turned cool and clammy just as it had earlier
when we were stuffing automatic weapons into little black bags. "What happened?" She didn't
answer. I said, "Goddamnit, Loutie. What happened?" Joey reached for
the phone but took his hand back when I met his eyes. Loutie said, "It's Susan, Tom. Looks
like they waited till we were all gone and sent somebody in here." "She's gone. Is that what you're
saying?" Loutie paused, and I listened to three or
four seconds of mild static. Then she said, "I'm sorry, Tom. Yes, Susan's
gone, and it doesn't look good. The house was shut up. I could still smell
gunpowder when I came in. And, I'm sorry, Tom, but somebody lost a lot of blood
in the kitchen." She paused again and said, "There are drag marks,
like feet or legs, from the blood in the kitchen to, well almost to, the front
door." My face and hands felt sleep-dead, and I
lowered the phone. Joey pulled it from my hand, and, as if from a distance, I
could hear him talking with Loutie. My cheeks pricked with numbness, and a
cruel claw began to stir my guts. I felt movement and looked up to see Joey
walk away to leave me to grieve in private. Time passed, a lot of time, and
sickness turned to anger and then quieted into stunned withdrawal, and I came
to realize that Joey had been gone a very long time. I was just rising to go in search of my
friend when he stepped into view. Joey walked toward me, standing straight now,
and said, "Let's go to the boat." I looked at him without comprehending. He said, "Come on, Tom. Let's
go." I asked, "What about the men? Are
they gone?" Joey was silent, and I looked into his face. Surface calm
masked pure rage. Joey said, "They're dead." I studied his face. "How many?" As Joey turned in the direction of the
beach, he said, "All of 'em." This time Joey drove the open boat, and he
gave me some time before he spoke again. We were a hundred yards off Carrabelle
when Joey said, "Just so you'll know. I paid cash for the boat, but the
guy at the marina knows we took it out and were headed for Dog Island. Not much
we can do about that." I didn't feel like talking, and I didn't. He went
on, "Not much to worry about, though. There's just one cop in Carrabelle.
They don't even have a police station. The place is kinda famous for that. This
cop just hangs around a phone booth and waits for it to ring." I looked at
him. "No shit. The town was famous for about five minutes twenty years ago
when Johnny Carson talked about it on The Tonight Show." Joey was trying, once again, to make me
think about something other than Susan. I said, "You think we could talk
about this later?" He gave up and concentrated on steering a course to The
Moorings, which was fine with me. The marina was open. We did not go back
inside. We tied up the boat, loaded the Expedition, and left. Two hours later,
as we cruised through the unsightly jumble of Panama City, Joey turned north
onto Highway 231 and drove away from the coast. I asked, "Where are we going?" "Mobile. But right now, we're making
a big damn circle around Seaside." Until then, I had thought of nothing but
loss. Now, my mind conjured the too-vivid image of Susan lying in a pool of
blood in that tacky designer cottage. I asked, "What about Susan and
Loutie and the cottage?" "Loutie's taking care of everything.
By tonight, nobody'll ever know we were there. Rented under an alias. Loutie's
doing cleanup." Cleanup. What a nice, descriptive term. I said,
"Why don't we just call the cops? As far as I'm concerned, all bets are
off. Sanchez didn't protect anybody. What's he going to do? Threaten to kill
me? The hell with him." "We don't need to do anything right
now, Tom. We gotta get somewhere and think this mess out. You gotta realize, it
ain't Sanchez or Purcell killing you I'm worried about. I mean, you know, that
wouldn't exactly make me happy, but we got other problems too. We just left
four dead guys piled in a beach house on Dog Island. What're we supposed to
tell the cops? We were in a shoot-out, and they lost? Hell, three of 'em aren't
even shot. How do you figure we're gonna explain two guys with their jugulars
knifed open and one with a broken neck?" He turned to look at me, then
turned back to watch the road. "Shit. I don't know. Maybe that is what we
wanna do. But I'd kinda like to think about it before we volunteer for the
electric chair." I thought out loud. "Second degree or
manslaughter. Wouldn't be the electric chair." "Huh?" I said, "Nothing," and closed my
eyes. "Turn around." "Why?" I opened my eyes and looked out at the
strip-mall and fast-food mess scattered across the north side of Panama City.
"I want to go to Seaside." Joey slowed, but he didn't stop.
"That's a bad idea, Tom. You sure you wanna do it? 'Cause some
major-league bad shit has happened today, and we need to put some space between
us and..." "You going to turn around?" Joey mumbled, "Well, just fuck
me," but he pulled into the parking lot of a Chevron station and circled
back out heading south. Less than an hour later, we pulled up next to Loutie's
car outside the rented beach house in Seaside. I knocked on the canary door. No one
answered. Joey called out, "It's us, Loutie. Open the door." Immediately, the door swung aside, and
Loutie motioned for us to hurry inside. She said, "You're not supposed to
be here." Joey looked down and shook his head from
side to side. "Tell him that." Loutie said my name, but I had already
walked out of the room. In the kitchen, the gray metal boxes full of
eavesdropping equipment had vanished. Our food was gone. Our presence had been
erased, and so had Susan's—or, hopefully, someone else's—blood. I turned around and saw Joey and Loutie standing in the
doorway, watching me. Joey said, "There's nothing to see,
Tom. We all need to get out of here fast." I looked at Loutie. "Is Purcell still
in Mobile?' Joey cussed. Loutie didn't answer. "Answer my question, Loutie. Where's
Purcell?" Loutie sighed and said, "He got back
a little over an hour ago. I heard him come in before I unhooked the
equipment." I started out of the room, and Joey
stepped in front of me. "Tom, let's talk about this a minute." "Move." Joey put his hand on my shoulder. He did
it in a friendly way, but it was meant to stop me. "Let's just sit down..." I looked up and met his eyes. "Get
your hand off me, Joey." He smiled, but he didn't move the hand. "You
can move, or I can move you." Joey's eyes narrowed. "You sure you
can do that?" My hands trembled with adrenaline and
rage. None of it was aimed at Joey, but he was in the way. I said, "Step
aside, Joey." Joey dropped his hand from my shoulder and
surrendered with a grin. "Be a hell of a fight. I'll say that much."
He stepped to one side. "If you're gonna go, mind if I go with you?" I said, "That's up to you," and
walked through the living room and out through the front door. I didn't look at beaches or birdhouses or
pastel architecture. I watched my feet strike sand for a hundred yards, and I
was on Purcell's front stoop. The knob twisted easily in my hand. The door
swung open, and I stepped inside. The huge beach house was quiet. I pulled the
Browning from my waistband, chambered a round, and clicked off the safety; then
I started in. Purcell's living room, dining room, and kitchen were all clean
and cool, well-lighted and empty. The last room on the ground floor was his
study, which was where I finally found what was left of the former University
of Florida football great. Closed blinds blocked out the afternoon
sunshine. The only illumination was a cone of yellow light radiating from a
brass ship's fixture suspended over the desk. Beneath the fixture, Purcell's
lifeless form and the attendant handiwork of a deeply sadistic person stood out
in sharp relief beneath the single lightbulb. chapter twenty-seven Purcell hadn't been dead long, so the
smells inside his
air-conditioned study were the slaughterhouse odors of fresh blood and
butchered meat. Whatever horrible things the man had done during his first
forty years on the planet, he had paid for many times over during his last
hour. The heavily muscled ex-jock lay
spread-eagle across a cherry partners' desk that had been cleared off and used
as an operating table. Yellow seams of fat and jagged clumps of gray muscle
protruded from a gaping incision extending across his belly; thick ropes of
intestines had been pulled from the wound and draped over his sternum where
they lay in a mass of thickening fluids. A blood and saliva-soaked hand towel
had been stuffed inside his mouth to muffle his screams. Even as I wondered if the killer was still
in the house, I found myself edging closer. Strange. The corpse was empty and
flattened somehow, like a snakeskin nailed to a board to dry in the summer sun.
And I could see now that that was close to the truth of it. The tortured body
had been restrained by forty or fifty ten-penny nails driven through the skin
of his arms and legs and through the outside of his rib cage. Under the glow of
the overhead light, his thick neck shone like melted wax where the skin had
been stretched out like gills on either side and nailed to the desktop. I
gagged and gagged again as I stepped back away from the blood-soaked carpet.
Stomach acid burned in my chest and against the sides of my throat. I heard footsteps on the carpet behind me.
I turned and saw Joey spin Loutie around and shove her out the door before
closing it tight. He came up beside me. All he could say was, "What
the..." "I guess he didn't take Susan." "I guess not." Joey took a
tentative step forward before recoiling. "Shit, Tom. They even nailed his
nutsack to the desk. Who would do that?" Joey didn't expect an answer, but I said,
"He called him a 'mean-ass spic'" "Huh?" "Nothing. I don't know." Joey raised his voice. "Well, can we
please get the fuck out of here now?" "Let's go." Joey moved out ahead of me, pushing Loutie
ahead of him and pausing only twice to wipe two doorknobs clean of our
fingerprints on the way out. Back inside our rented beach house, we
stopped in the living room to catch our breath. I was numb. Loutie looked like
she was going to be sick. Joey's face had grown pale and hard, and his hands
trembled at his sides. Loutie said, "I've never seen
anything like that." It was a stupid comment—none of
us had ever seen anything like that—but stupid is
what shock does to you. Joey walked into the kitchen and came back
with a glass of water for Loutie. She took a small sip. Joey looked at me. "We need to
go." I asked, "Is the place clean?" Loutie nodded. I looked at the tough ex-stripper and
asked, "Are you going to be okay? Can you drive?" She nodded. I said, "Joey. Drive her. I'll see
you back at Loutie's house in Mobile." Loutie shook her head as if trying to
shake off the image from Purcell's study. "No. My car's jammed full of
equipment and stuff. There's no room for Joey even if I wanted him to come with
me, and I don't. I'll be fine. You two get out of here. I'm going to give the
place a final once-over and I'll be right behind you." Joey said, "We're not leaving you
here." "Fine. Then wait. I'll be done in
three minutes." And she was. Loutie turned the key in the
lock, climbed into her car, and pulled out ahead of us. Joey and I climbed into
his Expedition, and he steered back onto Highway 98. Miles of scruffy beach vegetation droned
by, and exhaustion poured over me. I was drifting into unconsciousness when the
phone began vibrating against my hip. I reached into the wind-breaker's side
pocket, fished out the phone, and handed it to Joey. It was probably Loutie. Joey said, "Hello," listened
some, and handed the phone back. I looked at him and put the tiny gray
receiver against my ear. "Hello?" "Mr. McInnes, this is Charlie Estevez
in Tallahassee. We must talk." "No shit." "There has been a death." My stomach tightened, and I prepared to
hear the worst about Susan. "Who is it?" "Leroy Purcell." I let out a breath I didn't know I was
holding. "How do you know?" "I don't understand. Were you
involved? We believed you weren't. If you were, then we have nothing else to
discuss." "What the hell are you talking
about?" Estevez said, "I'm calling on behalf
of Mr. Sanchez. He wanted to warn you. One of our people found Leroy Purcell
murdered not five minutes ago. Mr. Sanchez was concerned that certain people in
Purcell's organization might suspect you." I tried to sound a little more surprised.
"What happened?" "Somebody knifed him. He was... I'm
sorry, but I don't know how else to put this. As it was described to me,
Purcell had been ... well, gutted. And, ah, something worse than that." Estevez wanted to tell me the lurid
details. But he wanted me to ask. Instead, I asked about the doctor's wife from
Atlanta who had been with Purcell that morning in Mobile for brunch. Estevez said, "She's fine. Reports
are that there was some kind of argument, and Purcell walked out and left her
at the party." I thought it was kind of soon to already
have "reports" on Purcell's date that morning. I said, "Well,
that's good," and decided it was time for an awkward pause. I was getting on Estevez's nerves. He
wanted to tell me about Purcell's death, and I wanted to get off the phone. Almost five seconds passed before Estevez
said, "Purcell had been ... Our man found him spread-eagle on the top of
his desk with a bunch of nails hammered through his wrists and the skin on the
sides of his neck and, pardon the detail, but..." I interrupted. "I got the
picture." Once again, Estevez paused. I asked, "Anything else?" "That's not enough?" I said, "More than enough." Joey slowed to a respectable speed as we
crossed the state line and followed Highway 331 through the fruit-stand-lined
streets of Florala. Just a couple of car lengths ahead, hard tropical sunshine
bounced off the back window of a red Saturn, partially obscuring our view of
four sun-streaked ponytails that bobbed and bounced with animated conversation.
The Greek letters for phi mu clung to the red, rear-window brake light,
and one of the girls had draped a shapely, suntanned leg out of the front
window on the right side. The leg's owner wiggled her toes in the warm wind as
she sipped dark cola from a liter bottle and adjusted her sunglasses. Joey said, "That's what Carli ought
to be doin' at her age." I looked over at him and nodded. He said, "It's not gonna happen, is
it? We get her out of this, and—after what her father did to her and
everything else—she still ain't ever gonna be like those
little sorority girls." The scene back at Seaside had gotten to
him. For Joey, this was pouring his heart out. I put my hand over the cell
phone mouthpiece and said, "Not like them. No. But one day she'll make it.
Look at Loutie." Joey was through talking. He was studying
the girls. I refocused my attention on the cell phone and on Charlie Estevez,
who had been patiently waiting for me to respond to his news about Purcell. I said, "Tell Sanchez I need to see
him right away." Estevez cleared his throat. "Mr.
Sanchez is a very busy man. I'm not even sure where he is, ah..." "There have been other, connected
deaths today. Do you understand?" Estevez didn't answer. I said, "And
that's all I'm saying over the phone about that. Sanchez needs to know, though,
that somebody's making a move on everyone involved, and up until now I thought
it might be him. That's why I wasn't real polite when you told me who you were.
But, if it's not your patriots, you better tell Sanchez to call me in a
hurry. This is all spinning out of control, and somebody's going to pay. You
got that?" Estevez let a few seconds pass before
answering, but when he spoke he sounded more thoughtful than irritated. "I
have it. Will you be at this number?" "Yeah. Unless my battery gives out.
If it does, I'll call you back in one hour." I said, "By the way, we
learned something interesting today about who my client actually saw with
Purcell in See Shore Cottage that night. One of Jethro's cousins—if you follow me—told my partner that all this started over
some Cuban, in his words, some 'Castro' getting whacked." Estevez was
quiet. I said good-bye and pushed the end button. Joey said, "By any chance, am I the
partner who heard about the murder?" "Yeah. You are." "Just when exactly did I hear
this?" I said, "I haven't decided yet,"
then tossed my phone on the seat and pulled Joey's out of the clip on his dash
and called Kelly. I explained to her, somewhat cryptically since we were
talking over airwaves, what had happened, and told her to check into a hotel or
go visit her mother for a few days. Kelly promised to get out of town. When I finished, I filled Joey in on
Charlie Estevez's side of our phone conversation, and Joey said, "Gimme
that," and took his phone out of my hand. He called Randy Whittles, Navy
SEAL and loser of lost girls, and checked on his progress finding Carli. Joey
filled Randy in on what was happening and told him to be available in Mobile
that night for a meeting. Joey put the phone back in its dashboard
holder and said, "We gotta get everybody together tonight and figure out
what to do about all this." I said, "I'm not going to vote on it,
Joey. I'm going to find out who took Susan and ... and cause somebody some
pain." Joey looked miserable. "I know it
doesn't look good, but we don't know what the hell happened with Susan
today. And, Tom, I like Susan too. Not like you do. But she's my friend too.
Believe me, if we find out somebody hurt her, I'm gonna skip the pain part and
go right to killing the sonofabitch." Bright sunshine glinted off the hood and
burned a fiery oval into my retina. I closed my eyes and rubbed hard at them
with the heels of my hands. I could still see the blazing dot. Joey said,
"There's a pair of sunglasses in the glove box." I put them on. I said, "You remember telling me
about that dagger tattoo on the arm of one of the guys who jumped you outside
the bar the first night you were in Apalachicola?" "Outside Mother's Milk. Yeah. I
remember." "You said there were initials over
and under it." Joey rubbed his jaw. "Yeah. I
remember it said R.I.P. Rest in Peace, I guess. And it had something like
initials too." "R.E.T." "I'd have to check my notes." "It's R.E.T. I remember. And I saw
the tattoo myself on Sunday." Joey glanced over. I said, "Sonny. Purcell's
guy who was one of the painters. It's the same asshole who burned Susan's painting." Joey smiled a little for the first time
since leaving Seaside behind. "The one you threw grits at." I nodded. "And the one Billy Teeter's
partner, Julie, called to come kill me after Willie fell in the water off Dog
Island. Look, I was thinking. There are obviously a hell of a lot of names that
start with T, but the arm stamped with this particular T is tied to Julie and
the Teeters. So, I was thinking that maybe we could make another donation to
your friends on the Panama City force and find out if they have any record of a
convicted felon named R. E. Teeter. You said it looked like a prison
tattoo." Joey sat and thought about that for a few
seconds. "It was definitely one of those shitty homemade jobs like people
get in prison. Can't be sure, though. Nowadays, street punks give themselves
fake prison ink to try and look tough, but..." He picked up his cell phone
and dialed up Detective Coosa in Panama City. When the conversation ended, Joey put his
phone back in its clip on the dash and said, "He'll call back." Twenty minutes later, the phone rang. It
was Sanchez. We set up a meeting at my office that night in Mobile; then Joey
called Randy to make arrangements for that evening. An hour went by before Detective Coosa
called. Joey listened, made phone noises, and hung up. He said, "Rudolph
Enis Teeter." I said, "Not a really
dangerous-sounding name." Joey grinned. "Damn if I wouldn't
wanna be called Sonny too." "What did he do time for?" "Assault with a deadly weapon,
attempted murder, and resisting arrest." I said, "Tough guy." Joey said, "Or just a dumb-ass." chapter twenty-eight We pulled into Mobile at rush hour and
slowly made our way to
Loutie's house. As we turned down her comfortable, tree-lined street, Joey
said, "You sure this is a good idea? Your buddy Carlos could be behind
this whole thing." "Maybe, but I don't think so. I think
he's the catalyst." "What's that mean?" "A catalyst is..." "I may not be a lawyer, Tom, but I'm
not a moron. How is Sanchez a catalyst?" "I'm not sure yet." Joey said, "Thanks. I'm glad I
asked." "But it's got something to do with
the fat guy on the beach and whether somebody thought Leroy Purcell stepped
outside his territory or overstepped some kind of bounds when he started
smuggling and shooting people on the islands." Petite, dangerous, and nervous, Randy was
waiting inside when we arrived. Two of his men kept watch on the street and the
alley. Loutie Blue wasn't home yet, and Joey was having a hard time hiding his
concern. Finally, he called her and found out she was caught up in traffic. Randy had picked up Chinese takeout, but I
skipped the egg rolls and rice and found a bottle of Dewar's. After two
whiskies, I thought I was better. After the third drink, I could feel the tense
tingling pressure that, since I was a child, has always closed in on the sides
of my throat when I'm going to lose it, and tears began to fill my eyelids.
Without excuse or explanation, I left Joey and Randy in the kitchen shoveling
Mongolian beef into their mouths and pretending not to notice that there was
another grown man in the room who was crying—sort of. I
walked through the house to the room where Susan and I had made love while
panic had gripped Carli and sent her climbing through a window to escape into
the night. Inside the bathroom, I twisted the
shower's ceramic crosses and stripped and stepped into the steaming spray. Hot
water poured over my face and scalp and shoulders, and I tried to think. If
Susan really was dead, well, there would be time to grieve. But, right now, I
had to work on the premise that she and Carli were alive and well and out there
somewhere in desperate need of help. I stood there beneath the stinging spray
until it turned warm and then cold, and I stood there some more to let the
frigid water run over my face. It didn't help. I checked my reflection in the
mirror while drying off, and I still looked awful. I didn't necessarily look
like I had been crying, which, I admit, was what I was worried about, but I
still, unarguably, looked, as Joey would say, like shit on a lollipop. When I was dressed, I took a deep breath—and a lesson from Loutie Blue—and pushed the
hurt and anger down deep where, I hoped, I could use them when the time came. Back downstairs, Randy and his men had
left to recon my office building and take up positions. Joey and I climbed into
his Expedition and followed. Twenty minutes later, we pulled into the deck of
the Oswyn Israel Building and stepped out into the oppressively dark concrete
structure. As we walked toward the entrance to my building, I whispered.
"Somebody's here." Joey spoke even more quietly than I had.
All he said was, "Yeah." "Is it Randy's men?" Joey shook his head and whispered.
"No idea," but I noticed the Glock 9mm had moved out of his shoulder
holster and into his hand. I used my key card to open the double
glass doors and work the elevator. The hall was lighted, and my office door was
open. Odd Job waited, appropriately enough, in the waiting room. As we entered
he tried to pat me down. I pushed him away, and, with surprising speed, Odd Job
pulled a gun from inside his coat. But before he could level it, something
white flashed across his face and he hit the floor shoulders first. I looked
over and saw Joey massaging his right fist with his left hand. His gun was on
the floor. Joey said, "I figured you didn't want
him shot." I said, "Knocked on his ass is
good." We found Sanchez waiting in my office. He
stood and nodded. "Good evening." Joey said, "Not for Sumo Joe out
there." Sanchez looked puzzled and stepped out of
the office. We followed. Sanchez very nearly tripped over his
three-hundred-pound bodyguard, who lay unconscious on the floor opposite the
front door. Odd Job, a.k.a. Sumo Joe, was breathing heavily, and a small
rivulet of blood trickled from the corner of his mouth. Sanchez asked,
"What is this about?" I said, "He behaved badly at the end
of a bad day." Sanchez looked a little disgusted, but I
couldn't tell with whom. He turned and walked back into my office and sat in
the upholstered guest chair he had been using when we came in. Then he
casually, almost gracefully, crossed his legs and said, "It also was a bad
day for Leroy Purcell." Joey said, "We don't really give a
shit about Leroy Purcell's day." Sanchez shrugged and turned to me. "I
cannot sympathize with whatever difficulties you encountered today because I do
not know what you are talking about. On the telephone, you told Seсor Estevez
that there have been other deaths. That is all I know." I looked at Joey, and he raised his
shoulders. Tell him if you want to. So I leaned back in my chair, put my feet
on the desk, and told Carlos Sanchez about our day on Dog Island. As I talked, Sanchez pulled out his cigar
case and placed a long, thin Montecristo between his small, white teeth. As he
put the match to the end, he said, "They knew about the listening
devices." I said, "Yeah. It looks that
way." He said, "I am sorry about Seсora
Fitzsimmons, uh, missing. As you know, I wanted very much to avoid anything
like this." I looked at him. "Actually, you
assured me that Purcell would leave me and Susan alone." He held up open palms. "We did all we
could to control the situation. Leroy Purcell is... was too ambitious
for his own good. I imagine his death was no great loss to anyone." "No shit." He paused. "You said there was an
attempted ambush. People died." "We had to kill them to escape." "Where are the bodies?" I said, "In a house used by the
Bodines on Dog Island. A man named Thomas Bobby Haycock has been living
there." He said, "Do you expect me to clean
up your mess? Is that why you are telling me this?" I said, "Yep." Sanchez said, "No," and Joey's
Glock 9mm appeared. Sanchez said, "Do you plan to kill me also?" Joey shrugged. I said, "If I thought you had
anything to do with Susan, you'd already be dead. But I don't think you would
have come here if you had. So we have to decide how we're going to move
forward. Joey and I are working on the assumption that you and your group are
either going to be with us or against us. In other words, we don't see you
sitting on the sidelines while we get slaughtered. And if you're not willing to
help, that means—and I'm just guessing here—that you will probably try to kill us to keep this mess from
getting any messier and to keep the cops out of your business. And Mr. Sanchez,
or whoever the hell you are, if you're going to try to kill us, well, we have
to figure we've got a better chance of staying alive long enough to find Susan
if we shoot you right now." Sanchez let thick, gray smoke drift out
through his nostrils. He said, "I could simply lie and kill you
later." "That's true. But I don't think you
will. Something's going on with the Bodines, and I think you need to know what
it is. Your contact man, Leroy Purcell, just had his guts cut out by
someone." I said, "The man had a long list of enemies, but it's too
much to believe it's a coincidence that he got killed the same afternoon when
someone was busy kidnapping Susan and trying to kill Joey and me. It's all
connected somehow. And since you didn't do it, and since Joey and I don't have
a frigging clue, it stands to reason that killing us isn't going to solve the
problem." I paused, and Sanchez remained quiet. I said, "So, in
short, someone's drawing a lot of attention to the Bodines in a way that's bad
for you and for us. We don't want to go to jail for defending ourselves on the island,
and you don't want your fellow patriots to rot in South America while you try
to set up a new operation. And you sure as hell don't want to get yourself in
the newspaper or on the evening news." Sanchez looked from me to Joey and back
again. He said, "I expected more. That is a weak argument, Seсor McInnes." This time, I shrugged. He inhaled deeply from
his Montecristo, blew a long, narrow plume of smoke at the ceiling, and said,
"If the bodies have not already been discovered, we can take care of the
cleanup on Dog Island." My stomach tightened as I heard cleanup used
the same disturbing way for a second time that day. "But understand that I
am making what I believe is the logical choice under the circumstances. Please
do not fool yourself that you can deal with us through threats." And he
rose to leave. As he passed Odd Job, he stopped and looked down. Joey said, "I got 'im," and
walked over to drag the unconscious bodyguard outside. Sanchez turned back to look at me.
"You told Charlie Estevez that one of the Bodines you saw today said
something about your client seeing Purcell kill a Cuban." "Nope. He said, as nearly as Joey
could remember, that, quote, 'all this mess started over a fucking Castro
getting whacked.'" Sanchez said, "What else did he
say?" I said, "As far as I know,
nothing." I hesitated and said, "There was something else, but it
didn't make much sense." "What was that?" "This guy, I think it was the one who
ended up with a broken neck, tried to bargain with Joey. He said he could tell
us about 'the fat spic in the swamp.'" I stood and looked at him.
"Does that make any sense to you?" A.k.a. Carlos Sanchez looked at the floor
and shook his head as if giving the question great thought and coming up empty;
then he walked out the door. When Joey came back in, I asked if Sanchez
had tried to talk to him in the hallway. He shook his head and said, "You
think you talked him out of killing us?" "I don't know. I think, probably
yeah, for the time being." "It was kind of a weak-ass
argument." "Yeah. Well, you'd be right except
for one thing." Joey looked puzzled. I said, "Sanchez's front group owns
the house on Dog Island where you just left a pile of dead guys. And he's
scared to death somebody's going to find out." chapter twenty-nine We headed back to Loutie Blue's house, making sure, we thought, that no one was
tailing us. As we came through the front door, Loutie came downstairs, and I
heard the back door close a few seconds before young Randy Whittles strode into
the room. He said, "We made two in the alley and two on the street." Loutie nodded. "That's what I saw.
There's probably at least one more waiting with their car, wherever that is,
but two and two is all I could see." I asked, "Who are they?" Randy said, "No way to be sure. But
probably the Cubans. They're not doing anything. Just watching the house, and
my men are watching them." Loutie glanced at me and said, "Let's
go talk in the kitchen. Tom needs to eat something." I said, "I'm not hungry," and
everyone walked out of the room in the direction of the kitchen and left me
sitting alone. My choices seemed to be either to sit in the living room by
myself or to go in the kitchen and let Loutie shove food at me. Randy's take-out feast was spread out
across the kitchen table in little white boxes with red pagodas printed on the
sides and wire handles looped across their tops. I sat at the table, and Loutie
put a clean plate in front of me. I said, "I don't want anything,"
and she started piling steamed rice on the plate. I said, "Damn it,
Loutie, I told you I don't want this stuff," and she began to spoon
Mongolian beef over the rice. I gave up and turned to Randy. "What have
you found out about Carli? Do you think she's still on the Gulf
somewhere?" Randy managed to look both embarrassed and
a little impotent. He said, "Loutie says we can't talk until you eat
something." I exploded. "This is childish
bullshit. Susan may be dead. Carli's missing and God knows in what kind of
trouble." I turned to look at Loutie. "We do not have time for this
crap." Loutie said, "Then I guess you better
eat something." I looked at Joey with the intention of
reaming him out. But he just grinned and raised his shoulders as if to say,
"Whatcha gonna do?" So I picked up a fork and ate a mouthful of
lukewarm beef and onions and rice. Loutie smiled and walked to the
refrigerator, where she poured a glass of iced tea and put it down next to my
plate. I said, "You going to burp me when
I'm done?" Loutie looked unfazed. She said, "If
you need it," and sat down. Now that I was actually eating, I was kind
of hungry. I chewed while Randy talked. "Carli went from here to a bus
stop three blocks east. Around five a.m.,
she caught a bus to the main terminal downtown and left there for Biloxi
at seven-twenty. She got off the bus in Biloxi at their main terminal
and was spotted later in the day, just after lunch, hitchhiking about forty
miles northeast of there on the road to Meridian." Randy looked down at
the table and flexed his jaw. He said, "That's it. That's all we
know." Joey said, "Tom. I don't wanna sound
like an insensitive prick here, but now that Purcell and Rus Poultrez are dead,
how much difference does it make that we can't find her? I mean, I know it's
bad for any fifteen-year-old to be out running around the countryside by
herself, hitchhiking and all, but... Hell, you know what I mean." I said, "You're right. At least, you
probably are. Some of Purcell's boys may still be out looking for her, but I'm
guessing they're more interested in finding who killed their boss. Not to
mention jockeying around to see who's going to be the next King of the
Jethros." Randy said, "Don't you think they're
gonna blame you for killing Purcell?" "Probably." Randy was not a complex personality. He
said, "What're you gonna do?" I stood and raked half the food Loutie had
given me into the garbage disposal and put my plate in the sink. My bottle of
Dewar's was on the counter. I found a glass, put some ice in it, and poured
some whiskey over the ice. Loutie wrinkled her nose a little, but didn't say
anything. I sat down and said, "Randy. I'm going to have to think about
that. But right now I'm thinking that we're going to need almost an army to get
the Bodines off our backs." Randy chuckled. "We don't exactly
have an army, Tom." I said, "No. But Carlos Sanchez
does." At 11:47 that night, the hero of New Cuba
knocked on Loutie's door. This time, Odd Job had been replaced by the UZI man
who had guarded Sanchez in Captain Billy's trophy den in Eastpoint. Now, he
seemed to have lost interest in me. Joey's fame had preceded him, and the UZI
man made a point of staying close to Sanchez and watching Joey the way a
rattler watches a king snake. I said, "I guess those are your men
outside." Sanchez said, "They are." "Planning to hurt somebody?" Sanchez walked over and sat in an
upholstered chair. He said, "The matter on Dog Island has been taken care
of. The men are buried, and the house has been cleaned and stripped of fabrics." "Sounds like you've done this
before." Sanchez just looked at me and waited. I said, "Thank
you." "You still have problems," he
said. "The Bodines do, indeed, believe you killed Purcell." "They think I slaughtered him like
that?" "The Bodines know about your
brother's criminal activities before he died. And I am told that you personally
and violently drowned the person responsible for his murder." I was getting angry. "It was ... not
how it sounds." Sanchez nodded. "I am sure." He was working me, probing the ragged
edges of my guilt to maneuver me into doing something—much the same way I was doing my best to maneuver him by feeding
him small bites of information, mixed with out-and-out lies, designed to drive
a wedge between his group and the Bodines. I just didn't know yet what he
wanted me to do, and it was becoming clear that, whatever it was, he wasn't
going to just come out and tell me. I asked, "What do they want?" Sanchez said, "They claim to
want you dead." "Claim?" "Well, there is a man—very young, very ambitious—who is not
unhappy that Purcell is out of the way. The problem is that he sees killing you
as the final step in becoming the new leader of their organization. You see, he
feels that avenging the death of their football-hero leader will make him
something of a hero to his unwashed brethren." "Then I guess I better find out who
really killed him." Sanchez looked off into the distance.
After a time, he said, "I'm not sure that would make much difference. Your
death would be symbolic. This is not a court of law. It's not justice he wants.
It is the appearance—or, I should say, the reputation, if you
will, for violence and revenge that is important here." "So this new wanna-be leader doesn't
really care who killed Purcell?" "No." "He just wants to be known as the man
who took out somebody for doing it?" "Yes." I looked over at Joey and asked, "You
got anything to say?" Joey had locked eyes with Sanchez's bodyguard, and
he didn't speak. He just slowly shook his head. I looked at Sanchez. "I
don't think they like each other." Sanchez smiled. "They are a different
sort of man than you and I." I said, "You think you and I are
alike?" "No. Or I should say, I do not know
you well enough to have formed an opinion." He motioned to Joey and his
bodyguard. "Except that I suspect we are alike in that—while we are capable of violence if provoked—we are not drawn to the sort of primitive, visceral violence that
comes so easily to men like these." Joey said, "You might wanna watch
your mouth, Carlos." Sanchez smiled and continued to look at
me. "My people have done enough. I do not wish to adopt you, Seсor McInnes. So I would like to know how you are going to handle
your problem with the Bodines without going to the authorities." "I'm a lawyer. You're going to tell
me who this new leader is, and I'm going to find out something he wants and
make a deal." Sanchez shook his head. "You're not going to tell me?" Sanchez said, "No. At least, not now.
There are many people watching or, I should say, looking for you. My group, we
are watching. The rest look. And I have no plans to turn you over to anyone.
But, Seсor McInnes, I quite frankly do not expect you to make it." I said, "And you're not interested in
tying yourself to a dead man." "No." Sanchez stood and said,
"By the way, what has become of your young client?" "I wish I knew." I asked,
"Have they found Rus Poultrez's body?" "Seсor?" "After the crash the other night off
Dog Island. I thought you knew. Rus Poultrez flipped a speedboat over an oyster
bed and slammed upside down into the water." "I knew of the accident, but Poultrez
is not dead." I felt sick. "How do you know
that?" As Sanchez walked toward the door, he
said, "We know. You do not need to know how." He turned and looked
into my eyes. "Who do you think killed Leroy Purcell?" I said, "Are you saying that...?" He answered before I finished the
question. "I am saying only that Purcell is dead and Russell
Poultrez of Gloucester, Massachusetts, is alive. The rest is simply what I
think, what I... surmise." And he walked out the door followed by the UZI
man. I looked at Joey. "Do you think
Poultrez killed Purcell?" He said, "Yep." "Why?" "Beats me. I guess I surmised it." chapter thirty I stood in the living room and felt pure exhaustion soak into my muscles and begin
a warm ache in my neck and shoulders and back, even in the tiny joints of my
fingers. I didn't sit for fear that I wouldn't want to stand up again. So Joey
and I stood there looking at each other, at the floor, at whatever until Loutie
and Randy appeared and informed us that Sanchez had departed, taking his
business-suited soldiers with him. I said, "I'm about to drop, and I
know the rest of you probably are too, but we've got a lot to do. I'm sure as
hell open to suggestions, but I can't see us waiting until morning to get
started. With Rus Poultrez out there, we all know he could find Carli any
minute. And I don't even want to think about what she might be going through
while we're catching up on sleep." Loutie said,' "And there's Susan.
It's been about, what, twelve hours since she came up missing?" "Close to that." "Well, we may not want to think about
it, but if that blood on the floor was hers, she needs somebody to find her
fast and get her to a hospital." I said, "Even if it wasn't her blood
...," and my voice trailed off as images of Purcell's tortured and
mutilated body flashed through my thoughts and I left the obvious unspoken.
"Anyway, Randy, I'd like you to split up your people—hire somebody if you need to—and put at
least one good man looking for Carli and another looking for Rus Poultrez. And
I'd like you to concentrate your own time on the father. That's the key
with Carli. She's a tough kid. We can deal with her living on the road. She's
done it before. The danger to Carli is her father." I turned to Loutie and
said, "I'd like you to find Susan." And I knew any further
instructions or suggestions would be pointless. With Loutie, the thing to do
was just point her and pull the trigger. Everything else was self-guided. Loutie -said, "It might help if you
told us what's going on." "What do you mean?" Joey said, "Loutie thinks you're
smarter than the rest of us." He looked from me to Loutie. "She's
probably right." I said, "Loutie, I'm not even sure I
know what I know. I'm mostly still guessing." Loutie put her hands on her
hips and locked eyes with me. I gave up. "Okay, I haven't wanted to waste
time on theories, but... here's what I think I know." Against my
better judgment, I walked over and sat on the sofa. "The murder that
started all this took place in a house called See Shore Cottage, and that house
is owned by a group called ProAm Holdings Corp. I found that out pretty early.
Then the name came up again when Joey and I were trying to get information out
of a snitch in Apalachicola called Squirley McCall." Joey interrupted. "Said it was the
name used by a bunch of what he called 'cigar spics,' who are buying property
on the coast. He claimed Purcell brought them into the area." I said, "So we know that ProAm is
buying land, that it's a Cuban-American enterprise, and that they owned See
Shore Cottage. Also, I checked, and the same company owns the house on Dog
Island where Haycock was staying." Loutie said, "Products Americas.
ProAm for short, I guess." I said, "Holding company." "Oh. Okay. That's the company Kelly
found out about that owns the yacht they used to smuggle in the fat guy and his
family." "Yep. L. Carpintero." I said,
"What's the name sound like?" Joey shrugged. "Think about it.
Change the 'L' to 'EL' and it literally means 'the carpenter.' I didn't get it
either until Squirley said one of the Cubans' leaders was called Martillo and
the other one was nicknamed 'Carpet Hero.'" Loutie said, "Carpintero." "Uh-huh. When Squirley mentioned the
name along with Martillo, it finally rang a bell. A couple of Mexican-American
carpenters remodeled my new office when I left Higgins & Thompson last
year, and I was in there trying to work while they were still nailing up
molding. They learned 'hold it down' from me and I learned, among other things,
that martillo is Spanish for hammer." Loutie said, "The fat guy killed
Purcell." "Looks like it." Randy said, "I'm not following." I said, "El carpintero is 'the
carpenter.' Martillo is hammer, and Purcell was..." "Nailed to his own desk," Randy
said. "But that doesn't make sense. You're saying that Purcell brought the
Cubans, including this Hammer guy, into Apalachicola. Why would he turn around
and kill Purcell?" "I don't know. But I do know that
Purcell threatened me early on with a 'mean-ass spic,' who he said would do
something like slice me open and play with my guts while I was alive and
watching. I thought he was just making up a scary story—and not a very realistic one—to get me to
turn over Susan and Carli." Loutie said, "Purcell probably just
pissed this crazy guy off. Somebody psychotic enough to do something like that
I'm guessing isn't really weighted down by normal human emotions like loyalty
or gratitude." I said, "Yeah, and Purcell could piss
off the pope." Joey looked confused. "I thought we
thought Rus Poultrez murdered Purcell." I took a deep breath and stood up.
"As far as we know now, he did. This hammer stuff may be reaching. We're
just guessing it's some kind of street name for a sadist with a nail fetish.
For all we know, the guy's last name is Carpintero or Martillo or Hammer, and
they're just playing word games with aliases. Poultrez may still be the
killer." I looked around. "But, I don't think so. Poultrez hated
Purcell. But—unless somebody else made Poultrez a
better offer—Purcell getting dead means Poultrez has
lost any chance of making money on Carli, which is all he cares about. And
earlier tonight Carlos Sanchez made a not-very-subtle point of trying to point
us at Poultrez for Purcell's murder." Joey said, "He surmised it." I ignored him. "It just doesn't make
sense for Poultrez to kill the golden goose. No, I think all this is happening
because Carlos Sanchez, Charlie Estevez, and Products Americas are throwing way
too much money around, and we've blundered into a gang war over control of
the smuggling trade in and around Franklin County, Florida. And I think that
Carpintero, or whatever his name is, killed Leroy Purcell mostly because he
needed to and—considering what he did to him—at least partly because he enjoyed it." Everyone was quiet for a few beats. I said, "I guess the only other thing
is about Susan. There's no reason I can think of why somebody would want to
kill her, except maybe to get to the rest of us. Or I guess she could have
surprised someone." Joey cut in. "She ain't dead. We
don't need to stop pressing now." "I know. You're right, and it's what
makes sense. If the Bo-dines killed her by mistake or on purpose they would've
left her there. Think about it. There was too much blood for them to think they
were covering something up. No. No, I think somebody took Susan, and
they took her for one of two reasons. Either we're going to get a
'leave-us-alone-or-we'll-kill-her' call or somebody out there needs her
help with something—and, as far as I can see, the only thing
she could help with is finding Carli or finding us." Joey said, "And nobody's called any
threats in or dropped by to shoot at us." "Yeah. So, I'm thinking that somebody—Sonny or Poultrez or some other asshole—grabbed her to help find Carli." Joey reached up and scrubbed at his scalp
with both hands and then looked off into the distance. No one spoke for a few
seconds until Joey said, "Okay. Tell me if I got it. Purcell was connected
with both the Cubans and this sick Carpintero bastard. The Bodines are
smuggling for the Cubans, and one of the things they smuggle is the fat guy and
his family, who are holed up in the middle of a swamp. So, both the Cubans and
Purcell know about the fat guy, and it looks likely that the fat guy is this
nail-hammering asshole." I said, "Yeah, it looks like it. I
guess we can't be sure, but when there's a guy around named El Carpintero and
somebody gets nailed to a desk..." Loutie said, "And it looks like
Carli's father—this Rus Poultrez—was busy grabbing Susan..." I said, "If he's the one who
did it." Loutie nodded. "Yeah, well, bear with
me a second. Let's say Poultrez took Susan 'cause he needs her to help find
Carli. He was grabbing Susan at pretty much the same time this Hammer guy was
wailing on Purcell. So, unless it was one hell of a coincidence, it looks like
there was some coordination there between Carpintero and Rus Poultrez." I said, "And even if it wasn't
Poultrez, the fact that Susan's kidnapping and Purcell's murder happened the
same afternoon leads us right back to Carpintero." Joey said, "So, if Poultrez took
Susan, looks like he was working with—or at least
coordinating with—Carpintero. And if Carpintero took Susan
... Well, shit, it all leads back to the fat prick with the hammer, doesn't
it?" I said, "Yeah. It looks like it. Of
course, as logical as it sounds plotted out like this, it could all still be
wrong." "Yeah," Joey said, "but it
makes sense." I said, "And it gives us a place to
focus." Joey flipped his head to one side and
cracked the tension out of his neck. "Damn right. We focus on finding this
Carpintero asshole and see how bad he is with his hammer stuck up his
ass." Vertical lines formed between Loutie's
eyebrows as she processed the conversation. When the room grew quiet, she
asked, "Is that it?" I said, "That's all the facts and
most of the guesses," and she left the room. Randy hung around for another minute or
two, staring into space and working it out in his head, before leaving by the
front door. Joey and I were the only ones left. I didn't know what I looked like, but he
looked beat. His tanned complexion had gone pale except for dark smudges over
his cheekbones. Everyone involved was tired, but it was Susan's blood-trailed
disappearance that was devouring Joey and me. I asked, "Did your people get a good
picture of Sanchez tonight?" "They got him. We gotta wait to see
how good they are, but we took a shitload of shots." "What about the shots of
Carpintero?" "A buddy of mine at the ABI has
already got 'em. He's checking Carpintero's shots against their files."
Joey stopped to rub the back of his neck. "Randy'll send over the shots of
Sanchez when they're ready." I thought for a minute. "That's just
a criminal check though, right?" Joey nodded. I said, "Well then, get a set of
prints to Kelly too, with a message to run them by somebody at the newspaper.
That's not a problem is it?" Joey said, "That is not a
problem," and walked over to Loutie's phone. After conveying instructions
to Randy, Joey replaced the headset. He tilted his head back and looked up at
the ceiling. "So this Carpintero or Hammer or whoever he is is the
key." "Looks like it." "I guess you and me are going to
Florida." "Yeah." I said, "Tate's
Hell Swamp." I hadn't been home for a week, and I
needed clothes and waders, a flashlight and field glasses. Our choices for
procuring these things at two in the morning were to either stop by my beach
house on Point Clear or burglarize a sporting goods store. Joey had a pair of
binoculars, camera equipment, and camouflage clothing—your basic private investigator stuff—for himself. But I needed my things, things not made for the big
and tall. My white gravel driveway shone like snow
in the moonlight. I rolled to a stop a hundred feet from the front steps and
shoved the rented transmission into park. Joey had disconnected the Ford's
interior lights, which was one of his private investigator stealth specialties,
and we were able to leave the car with minimal fuss. With the empty car left
idling on the driveway, Joey moved quietly toward the front of the house, while
I trotted around to the bay side and stopped short of the open beach to look
and to listen for something wrong or different. Deep purple clouds with silver edges sped
across the sky, and warm breezes flowed across the choppy, charcoal bay,
rustling sea grass, and sharp black pine needles. On the house, squares of
white trim floated, suspended in air, as cloud cover rendered weathered siding
invisible. I closed my eyes because I once read that assassins wait outside
dark rooms with their eyes shut so their vision will be adjusted to the dark
when they go in to kill. And I listened. Closing one's eyes in a dangerous
place is unnatural; so I listened hard during the long seconds I was able to
last. And when I reopened my eyes, I actually could see a little better in the
night. I watched the home where, for six months
of endless nights, I had tossed and turned and wandered the beach, and I began
to make sense of the shadows, separating shades of charcoal into familiar
shapes and objects. I knew every sound and smell and look of that fragment of
the world—even at 2:00 a.m. And there was something wrong. I crouched closer to the sand and flipped
open my cell phone and punched in Joey's number. Somewhere on the front of the
house, his pocket vibrated, and I put the phone away and waited. He did not
respond, which meant either his side was clear or he was incapacitated. But,
inasmuch as I hadn't heard a cannon go off, the likelihood of his incapacity
was, I thought, pretty close to nil. I studied shadows because those were what
bothered me. Everything looked fine. Only it didn't look the same, and I wasn't
really sure why that was. I jogged across the beach, sending little
half-circles of powder puffing out in front of each foot as it struck dry sand.
Ten yards in, I stopped by a clump of tall, black grass that I hoped would
break up my silhouette. And again something was out of place, something near
the first-floor deck in back. Then he moved. Too small and too thin at the
waist to be Poultrez, the man had thick shoulders, and he was holding a long
weapon. He was waiting inside a deep shadow beside the deck. He was just
waiting. Maybe he understood now that no one was inside the idling Taurus, and
he was scared. Maybe he was just patient. I decided to test my virtue against his
and settled in for a long wait that wasn't. No more than three minutes passed,
and he couldn't stand it. The strong man with the narrow waist had to have a
look around, and he moved left toward the near corner of the house. As he
moved, I saw new movement at the other, far corner and recognized Joey's
hulking shadow. I circled left, matching my pace with the armed man's, then
stopped and waited some more when he halted two paces from the corner and, it
seemed, turned to look out at the beach. Shadows from the eaves blanked out his
head and body, but now the moonlight found his arms and the tip of his nose,
and I knew he had seen me. The long gun came up to his shoulder, and I dove
into the sand as the hollow boom of a shotgun blast pounded the beach. And then
nothing. Nothing but wind and the redundant sigh of water lapping sand. I
rolled onto my back and pointed the Browning with both hands the way Tim the
painter had done just before he died, and I waited for the shotgunner to come
inspect his kill. Phantom boots jogged through wet sand
inside my head; the hard tang of copper flooded my mouth; and Joey called out
my name. I waited. If the shotgunner was near, answering would give him a
target. Then Joey's voice came again. "Tom! Answer me. I got the guy.
Answer me!" I called out, "I'm here," and
got to my feet, dusting sand out of my shirt and pants. "You okay?" "Yeah. Fine." I could see Joey
now, standing near the spot where the shotgun had gone off. I shouted,
"Who is it?" "Don't know. Never seen him
before." As I approached, I saw Joey standing over
a vaguely familiar form lying prostrate on the sand. I asked, "Is he
alive?" Before Joey could answer, a voice said,
"Mr. McInnes, it's me." And young Willie Teeter sat up and looked at
me with the moonlight now full on his face. "What the hell are you doing
here?" Willie sounded scared. "Granddaddy
sent me. Julie said you and her had a run-in, and Granddaddy couldn't get you
on the phone, and he sent me up here to find you. Make sure you're all
right." I said, "Stand up," and Joey
reached down and lifted the nineteen-year-old shrimper by one arm. The boy's
feet actually dangled in the air for a second before Joey put him down. Willie seemed
impressed. When Joey released his arm, the boy turned and studied the big man's
face. I asked, "Did your Granddaddy tell you to come up here and blow my
head off too?" "No, sir. No, sir, he didn't. I was
supposed to wait around for you and let him know, you know, whether you're
okay. But I heard the car and got scared and hid around back here." Joey said, "You bring that shotgun
along to shoot possums while you were waiting?" Willie turned to Joey and looked up into
his face. "No, sir. We knew Sonny was pissed off at Mr. McInnes. And you
don't know Sonny, but he's crazy. Been in prison half his life. Kill anybody.
No shit. He'd just as soon kill you as look at you. I thought that's who I was
shooting at. I seen a shadow, and I could see what looked like a gun, you know,
kind of outlined against the beach. And I shot." He turned back to me.
"I'm sorry as hell, Mr. McInnes. I was scared." I looked into the boy's face but couldn't
read anything there. Maybe it was the dark. Maybe not. I asked, "Have you
checked out the house?" Willie said, "Just through the
windows, but I been here a long time. I'm pretty sure there ain't nobody in
there." Willie waited in the yard while Joey and I
went in fast. The alarm was set. Everything was just as I had left it. I
punched in the alarm code, called Willie, and told him to go in the kitchen
with Joey. I ran upstairs, pulled together a loose stack of clean clothes, and
located my fishing gear. Joey would be amused. I laid out a pair of Orvis
Gor-Tex waders with inflatable suspenders and a pair of Russell Moccasin custom
wading boots with felt soles. None of which was exactly what one might call
swamp gear, but they were what I had and they fit. I emptied out an old nylon
dive bag, put my clothes and gear inside, and threw a pair of quick-focus Nikon
binoculars and a black-rubber Mag-Lite flashlight on top. When everything was packed down and zipped
up in the dive bag, I closed the door to my bedroom and made two phone calls.
The first, which took less than a minute, was to the information operator for
the area code covering Florida's Panhandle. The second was to a number in the
quaint fishing village of Eastpoint, and that one lasted much longer. Joey and Willie were drinking from glasses
filled with something clear and carbonated when I came into the kitchen. I looked
at Joey—he was holding Willie's shotgun now—and said, "Let's go." Willie's eyes perked up. "Where are
you goin'?" Joey caught my eye and, almost
imperceptibly, shook his head. I said, "We've got business to take
care of. Sorry, but if you want that drink, you're going to have to take it
with you." Willie put his glass on the kitchen
counter. "Alright then." He turned to Joey. "I need my shotgun
back." Joey just said, "Nope." The young shrimper flushed red.
"That's an expensive gun. It's mine and I want it back now." Joey glanced at me. He'd had about all he
wanted of Willie Teeter. I said, "Willie, I'll get the shotgun back to
your grandfather. You already tried to shoot one person tonight. I don't think
we'd be doing you or Captain Billy a favor to let you leave here with that
thing." Willie glared at the floor; then he said,
"Well, fuck both of you," and walked out. Joey said, "Somebody ought to explain
to that kid that the innocent good-old-boy routine don't exactly fly if it's
sandwiched between shooting at you and telling you to fuck off." "Who's going to go get him?" Joey sighed and walked outside. The muffled sound of Joey calling Willie's
name floated in on the night air. I set my duffel on the floor and fished keys
out of my pocket as I walked through the living room to my study. Inside the
study, I unlocked the dead bolt on the heavy closet door and stepped inside to
retrieve my Beretta Silver Pidgeon over-and-under and an old humpback Browning
twelve-gauge. I heard Joey and Willie come in the front door and called out for
them. They entered the study just as I was emerging from the closet with an
armful of fly rods. Joey said, "I told Willie we changed
our minds about sending him off by himself." Willie smiled and tried to look
appreciative. As I dropped the tackle on a leather sofa,
Joey said, "Tom, you got everything you need out of there?" I said, "Everything that's worth
anything." A dim bulb seemed to light in Willie's
eyes, and he just managed to get out, "What the...," before Joey
clamped one hand on the back of Willie's neck and another on the boy's belt and
sent him hustling into my gun closet. Joey slammed the door and wedged a foot
against the bottom to keep it shut. I walked over and turned the key in the
lock. I looked at Joey. "Not very smart, is
he?" Joey said, "Doesn't look like
it." And Willie started screaming a furious
line of insults, curses, and threats, the gist of which was that he wanted out
of the closet. Joey and I left the room. I retrieved my duffel while Joey went
outside to get the car. But when I stepped onto the porch and closed the door,
the car was there and Joey wasn't. Before I had time to worry, I heard what
sounded like the roar of a race-car engine coming from the beach, and Joey came
tearing around the side of my house in a mud-splattered four-by-four pickup
mounted on elephantine circus tires. He skidded a little when he stopped; then
he rolled down the window. I said, "What are you doing?" "We're headin' into the swamp. That
little Ford over there might make it where we're going, and, then again, it
might not. This thing was built for it. Get in." I tossed my dive bag into the truck bed
and stepped up and slid onto the passenger seat. I noticed a couple of spliced
wires hanging down next to Joey's right knee. I said, "I guess you didn't
ask Willie for the keys to his truck." As Joey backed around to head down the
gravel driveway, he said, "Didn't see where I needed 'em." Minutes later, as we swerved onto Highway
98, I asked, "Have you got a good friend in the Baldwin County Sheriff's
Office?" Joey said, "How good?" "I don't want Willie breaking out of
that closet and trashing my house. If you know somebody who could go by and
pick him up, the key's on the kitchen counter." Joey nodded and fished a phone out of his
pocket. As he punched in the number and then cajoled some deputy into picking
up Willie, I rolled down the window and reached out to adjust the oversized
outside mirror so I could watch the road behind us. When Joey ended his call, I said, "Do
you believe his grandfather got him out of bed or maybe even out of the
hospital to come up here and check on me?" I noticed Joey was also keeping an eye on
the rearview mirror. He said, "Nope." "You think someone else we didn't
know about could have been back at the house?" Joey looked again at the rearview mirror. "Nope." I said, "But you're not sure there's
not someone following us, are you?" Joey concentrated on the road ahead.
"No," he said, "I'm not." chapter thirty-one A gray ribbon of pavement unwound beneath the yellow wash from our headlights as
Joey sped toward Tate's Hell Swamp and a confrontation with a refugee sadist.
He pushed Willie's ridiculous, steroidal truck hard, anxious to confront
Carpintero and squeeze the truth out of him. I, on the other hand, wasn't much
looking forward to meeting the man who had tortured and eviscerated Leroy
Purcell. I was doing what I had to do to find Susan and Carli Poultrez. Joey interrupted my thoughts. "The
shotgun was kind of a giveaway." "What?" Joey motioned over his shoulder with his
thumb, pointing at the window rack where he'd hung Willie's shotgun. "The
kid—Willie Teeter—he screwed up bringing the gun to your house. It's kinda hard to
believe his granddaddy sent him up to check on you armed with a shotgun." "He didn't plan on having to explain
it. He could have killed both of us." I said, "We were lucky." "That's the trick in this business.
Don't let anybody kill you, and stay lucky. Something usually turns up."
Joey scratched his jaw. "I guess that's two tricks." Relieved to think about something—anything—other than Carpintero, I said, "You
know, Willie does have the same last name as Rudolph Enis Teeter." "Huh?" "Sonny." "Oh, yeah." "And one of the guys who came after
Susan and Carli on St. George—the one who blasted out the picture window
downstairs—used a shotgun." Joey flicked on the high beams. "Be
hard to find a house on the Panhandle that doesn't have two or three shotguns. Something
to think about though. Most men who wanna kill you from close up tend to bring
a pistol. Not many professionals use a shotgun, but the ones who like 'em won't
use anything else. Course, as far as we know for sure, the only profession
Willie's got is shrimping." I turned to study the shotgun Joey had
lifted from Willie. "What kind of gun is that? It looks like it's made out
of plastic." "The stock's some kinda polymer. It's
a Benelli. Loutie's got one at her place." "Isn't that a riot gun?" Joey said, "Can be. Some people use
'em for hunting. With interchangeable chokes, it's a pretty good all-around
shotgun. They use 'em in Mexico and down in South America where doves are so
thick they don't have any limits on how many you can kill. You can run forty
boxes of shells through one of these things without it jamming. Regular hunting
guns like a Remington or a Browning aren't made for that." He looked at
me. "But, a Benelli like this one is really designed to be an
assault weapon." I said, "Oh," and reached down
to feel the outline of a switchblade in my hip pocket. It was the
yellow-handled knife Joey had taken from Haycock at Mother's Milk, and it's
sharp outline imparted a strange sense of comfort as we sped over that lonely,
dark strip of highway. I leaned against the door and closed my eyes. Some time later, a bump or turn or maybe
nothing at all jerked me out of a deep sleep. My legs jumped, my chin bounced
off my chest, and I said something along the lines of "Ooobah." "Huh?" I looked around. "Where are we?" "Just passed the turnoff to St.
George." A few miles past Eastpoint, Joey hung a
left on 65. Minutes later, he pulled off onto a strip of sand next to a sign
that read North Road. We were five miles into the swamp, still
on solid logging roads, when Joey accelerated around a curve, cut his lights,
and turned into a side road. I started to speak, and Joey said,
"Wait." Fifteen or twenty seconds passed, and one
set of headlights passed by on the road behind us. I asked, "Were they following
us?" Joey shrugged. "I'm not sure. People
do live up in here. Not many, though." I noticed his hands twisting
nervously on the steering wheel. I smiled. "I thought you were good at
this." Joey turned the truck around and pulled
back onto the road. He said, "I am good at it. But I'm a hell of a lot
better in daylight. Out here at night, one set of headlights half a mile back
look pretty much like the rest of 'em. Just keep your eyes open." More than an hour after leaving the
blacktop, Joey stopped the truck. "We gotta turn over that way through
that field for a pretty good ways. Three or four hundred yards." I asked, "Is there a road?" "You see the grass?" I said that I did indeed see the thousand
or so acres of grass extending out in front of us. "That's all there is. Saw grass. And
it's not like a field, really. The stuff grows in mud. And the mud can be a
couple inches deep or it can be deep enough to swallow your ass up. Like
quicksand." "You've driven over it before. Right?
When you spotted Carpintero at the compound." "Yeah. That was daytime, and I was
followin' somebody, but... When you don't have a choice, you just do it,
right?" The ground wasn't a problem. Finding the
turnoff through the brackish water surrounding the field was. But an hour
later, as the first rays of sunlight preceded the sunrise, Joey spotted the
machete marks on a pair of ancient cypresses that marked the entrance to the
invisible road beneath the swamp. As we moved from the field to the thick
swamp, the beginning glow of sunlight we had been enjoying disappeared and was
replaced by almost total blackness. Fifty yards in, the road descended into two
feet of brackish water and disappeared from sight, and the machete marks on
cypress trunks that Joey had followed in daylight were now invisible. The
trees themselves were almost invisible. I grabbed a flashlight and tried using it
from the window. Twenty yards later, I crawled out through the passenger door
and into the truck bed, where I moved the flashlight's beam back and forth like
a poacher spotlighting for deer. When I managed to find a machete mark high up
on a tree, I'd bang on the top of the cab. It worked pretty well—right up until the truck pivoted right as if sliding on oil, and
the rear axle dropped into four feet of water. A loud thump echoed across the swamp, and
I realized the sound was my back pounding into the metal truck bed. The jolt
sent me rolling into the tailgate, where I did a one-eighty into the swamp. I
was under. Cool, black water engulfed me. The fall had knocked the wind out of
me, and I could feel my diaphragm spasming. Seconds passed when I couldn't tell
which way was up, until my feet hit the quicksand bottom. I pushed hard and
felt the mud take hold of my feet and suck me down as I pushed away. I pushed harder, and the cold suction of
sludge reached up to my calves. Blood thumped in my ears, and I concentrated on
choking off the hard spasms in my chest. I reached down to pull at my knee, and
only pushed the other foot deeper. Mud and algae leaked into my mouth, and I
gagged and gagged again. Stretching to reach high over my head, I
felt my fingers break the water's surface. I turned my palms out and pulled two
handfuls of water in hard, downward arcs, and my legs came free. Another sweep,
and my head popped through the surface. I kicked hard and clamped one hand over
the tailgate. Joey was standing inside the truck bed.
Black mud covered him from chest to toe, and the giant man's eyes were bright
with fear. He reached over the tailgate, and pulled me into the bed. I
scrambled to my knees and sucked in a lung full of air; then I bent double and
honked. Breathe, honk. Breathe, honk. And, all the while, Joey just stood there
looking at me. Finally, he said, "I couldn't see
where you went in." I nodded and breathed deeply. "How
long was I down there?" "I don't know. As soon as we stopped,
I jumped out on the roadbed and lost my feet and fell into this shit up to my
armpits. I got up and climbed back here as fast as I could. You came up seven
or eight seconds after I got back here and started looking." I said, "It feels longer when you're
drowning." "Yeah. I guess it would." He
turned around to survey our mess. "You okay?" "I'll live." "You ready to get out of here?" I stood next to Joey. "The engine's
still going. It's a four-wheel-drive, and two tires are still on the roadbed.
It's worth a try." Joey reached forward and grasped the open
driver's door. As he stepped over the side of the truck bed and swung a leg
inside the cab, he said, "Get your ass inside." And I thought that sounded like a hell of
an idea. While I scrubbed dark swamp mucus out of
my eyes, Joey dropped the transmission into low and revved the engine. The roar
choked and caught and the back bumper eased out of the muck, sending an oily
gray cloud of exhaust into the still, dank air. Joey yanked on the parking
brake to hold his ground while he spun the steering wheel to get us off a
diagonal and headed back in the direction of the road. With the clutch engaged
and the transmission in low, he gunned the engine again to build up torque and
reached for the parking brake release as exhaust fumes billowed across the
black water and the roar of the engine echoed through thick stands of cypress. And if it hadn't been for the fumes and
the roar—if Joey hadn't been looking back at the
submerged rear tires and I hadn't been rubbing muck out of my eyes and trying
to shake off the delayed confusion of nearly drowning—we might have heard the growing rumble of another monster truck
hurtling toward us like a freight train. chapter thirty-two I heard Joey shout and cuss, and the world
exploded into swirling bits
of glass and flying metal. Every bone and joint, every muscle and organ seemed
to smash in one crashing millisecond of pain, and I was flying against the open
passenger door and somersaulting once again into the swamp. Penetrating cold
enveloped me, and I fought against the black ooze like a drowning animal. This
time, I came up fast and banged the top of my head on the truck's
undercarriage. I hooked throbbing fingers over rusted steel and hung on, not
out of conscious thought but in the way a drowning man will grab another
swimmer and pull him down with him into death. So strong was my need for something solid
to hold on to, if the truck had gone under in that hurt and dazed second after
the crash, I would have held on and gone with it. But it stayed. It stayed
bottomed out across the submerged roadbed with just enough air between the
swamp and the rear axle for one scrambled head and ten locked fingers. I blew
the swamp out of my nose and mouth and let go with one hand long enough to wipe
at my eyes and face. And the world fell back into place. Muffled voices carried across the water. I
was on the left side of the roadbed, and my feet could touch something more
solid than quicksand. My arms and hands worked; my legs and ankles ached but
moved freely enough to rule out fractures or puncture wounds. I moved my neck
to see if I could. And the voices came again, and I thought of Joey. Using Willie's oversized rear tire for
cover, I moved hand over hand to the side of the truck facing the vehicle that
rammed us. An old, two-tone Chevy Blazer, mounted, like Willie's truck, on
tractor tires, sat solidly on the roadbed. Its grill was smashed and separated
by three or four feet from the decimated, left front quarterpanel of Willie's
truck. Above the Blazer's buckled hood, two men were visible inside the cab.
And they were screaming at each other. The larger man sat in the passenger seat
but had turned and leaned in toward the much smaller driver, whose shirtfront
was gathered inside the big man's fist. The windows were up, and the words
inaudible. But the sounds of the two contrasting voices were fury answered with
fear. Turning away from the Blazer, I slid my
hands along the rear axle to the other side to put the truck between me and
what I assumed were a couple of homicidal Bodines. The passenger door I had
shot through like a stream of tobacco spit was still open, and, if it hadn't
been spun into the swamp by the collision, my Browning was on the seat or in
the floorboard or somewhere inside the cab. Moving around the right rear tire,
I crawled up onto the roadbed and had raised up onto my knees in the shallow
water when I heard one of the Blazer's doors open. Up on my toes and staying low now, I
scurried to the open passenger door of Willie's wrecked truck and popped my
head up over the seat. Joey sat crumpled against the steering
wheel. Blood covered the side of his face and neck and ran in a viscous stream
from his right ear, and shiny bits of glass stuck to the splattered blood
covering his head and shoulders. I whispered his name. "Joey?" Nothing. His left arm appeared to be wedged between
his ribs and the driver's door; his right was tucked in front of him, pressed
between his stomach and the steering wheel. Water splashed as one of the Bodines
stepped out onto the roadbed, and I could hear his voice clearly. "Okay,
damnit. I'm going." Feet sloshed through water, and I began
frantically scanning the inside of the cab for my Browning automatic. But
nothing was where it had been. The seat where I had been was clear, except for
thousands of diamond-sized shards of windshield glass. The floorboard was
strewn with shattered bits of plastic and metal, with fragments of electronics
and heating and air-conditioning parts. Even Willie's riot gun was gone—shot through the rear window, taking the gun rack with it. A door slammed, and I pulled up onto the
side of the truck bed and peeked inside. Willie's twelve-gauge Benelli lay
propped against my dive bag like the hand of God had placed it there for me.
All I had to do was get to it without catching a bullet in the process. I caught a flash of color and dropped down
as the smaller Bo-dine came around the front of his smashed grill and
approached Joey's window. "This one, the driver, looks
dead." I heard another door open, and the larger
man's voice came from inside the Blazer. "Which one is it?" "It's the big sonofabitch." Water sloshed as the bigger Bodine stepped
out onto the road and then slammed his door shut. "What about the
lawyer?" The little man said, "He ain't here.
Looks like he got slung out when we hit 'em." "No sign of him?" "None I can see. Probably on the
bottom of the swamp." "I told you to slow down. We didn't
need to wreck both goddamn trucks to stop 'em." The little one wanted to argue some more.
"You said ram 'em. You didn't say bump 'em a little, and I'm tired of you
riding my ass about it." The big man cussed and said, "Well,
pull him out of there, and let's get the road cleared." "The hell with that. This guy's
bigger than you are. You come up here and pull his big ass out." I heard the big man sloshing toward the
truck. "You're a useless little shit. You know that?" The water
sounds stopped. "He is big, though, isn't he?" "I told you." The mechanical click of the door handle
being lifted sounded unnaturally loud in the still swamp, and a deep moan came
from inside the cab. The small man yelled, "Shit! He's
alive." I reached up and grabbed the top edge of
the truck bed and sprang up out of the water with all the power left in my
aching legs. My knees caught on the side, and I spun into the truck bed and
scrambled for the twelve-gauge. One of the men screamed like a woman. My
hands found the shotgun, and I jumped up to see the big man spinning my way
with a short double-barrel. I lowered the Benelli to fire, but the
double-barrel exploded first as Joey's door flew open and slammed into both
men, sending a load of buckshot straight up and knocking both men over backward
into the water. The big man managed to lift up his shotgun and blindly blast
one of Willie's tractor tires before he sank out of sight. I stood in the truck bed with the Benelli
trained on the swirling water. I called out, "Joey?" "Yeah." His voice sounded tight
and strained. "You okay?" "I'm not dead." Seconds passed before the two men surfaced
ten or twelve feet from where they'd gone in. They had been trying to swim away
underwater. Now they gasped in air and spun in the muck looking for me and the
shotgun. I called out. "Where the hell do you think you're going?" They
didn't answer. "You've got nowhere to go." The smaller man yelled, "Help." Joey's strained voice came again.
"Help yourself, you little prick." I said, "I'm not going to shoot you.
Swim to the road." The smaller man almost cried. "I
can't make it." I said, "Then don't," and jumped
down out of the truck bed and sloshed up to Joey's open door. Joey was sitting back now. His pale gray
eyes were shining through a mask of blood and windshield glitter. I said, "I thought you were
dead." "Thought same thing about you."
He spoke with his teeth clenched. "Better keep watchin' the water." I nodded and turned to watch the two men
flail around in the swamp. I asked, "How bad are you? Looks like a broken
jaw." Joey's voice sounded even weaker than
before. "Yeah. And something's wrong with my left leg. Can't move
much." I nodded. "We'll take the Blazer. Get
you to a doctor." "You gonna drive right over Willie's
truck?" Willie's monster truck was completely
blocking the only way out. I said, "We could try to push it out of the way
with the Blazer, but we could end up with both trucks underwater." Joey
was quiet. "I guess there's probably somewhere to turn around along here,
but..." I looked back, and Joey just shrugged. I went on, "...we don't know where it
is." "And we been having enough trouble
just staying on the road in here." "So, I guess we load you into the
Blazer. And, since the road's underwater and we don't know anywhere to turn
around, I get to try to drive backward through this mess until we hit dry
land." Joey tried to smile and grimaced instead.
All he got out was, "Sounds pretty stupid." "Yeah." Joey motioned toward the Bodines, who had
made it up onto the road and were sitting in water up to their chests and
catching their breath. "What're we gonna do with those two?" I said, "I thought I'd tie them up
and toss them in the back of Willie's truck and leave them here." Joey said, "Now that's a good
idea." Three hundred yards and thirty minutes
later, I backed the Bodines smashed and smoking Blazer onto dry land. After pulling
up onto the sandy roadbed, I put the Blazer in park and turned to check on
Joey, who was laid out on the backseat. When I turned, Joey had his hand down
the front of his pants. I said, "Bored?" Joey just unzipped his pants and said,
"Turn around." "Would you two like some
privacy?" "Fuck you. Something's trying to hook
on to my unit." "Leech?" "Yeah." "You okay?" "Do I fucking look okay?" "I don't know. You made me turn
around. Not that I really want to get a good look at this." I heard Joey
roll down the window and flick something out. "You get it?" "Yeah." I was laughing. "Well, can I turn
around now?" Joey said, "You know, it really ain't
funny." I turned around and said, "Actually,
it kind of is." "You know," Joey said, "you
were in the water a lot more than I was." I stopped laughing and got out of the
Blazer. After a short inspection, I climbed back in and said, "I tried the
flip phone. It's a goner. I don't know what else to do but try to get to a
phone or maybe a CB at Carpintero's compound and see if I can get a Life-saver
Helicopter or a boat to come out here and get you." Joey just nodded. "You got a better idea?" Joey reached up to rub at his eyes. "Nope." "How far is it to the compound?" "Not far. You can keep driving until
just before you get to this little bridge. There's a place there you can pull
off and hide the Blazer." I guess he saw the worry on my face because he
added, "I ain't gonna be any safer here than I am there, and you'll have
the vehicle close by." I turned around in the driver's seat and
maneuvered the rickety gearshift into first. "So," I said, "I
guess it's time to meet the Hammer." chapter thirty-three It was almost eight o'clock when the little
bridge came into sight. I
pulled off into a stand of scrub pine, and Joey told me as much as he could
about the compound's layout. I left my cut, bruised, and broken friend
stretched out on the backseat of a stolen vehicle with Willie's Benelli
twelve-gauge across his chest. I took Joey's little Walther PPK and
started out through the underbrush to the camp's perimeter. Joey told me there
would be one guard at the entrance. So I circled around to the side of the
compound and, keeping a huge Butler Building between me and the road, moved
into the clearing. Running low and feeling ridiculous, I
checked out the buildings for communication equipment. One warehouse was just
that—full of machinery, firearms, and rum and
more cigars than I thought were in the world. The cavernous metal building was
stuffed with all the things the Bodines had been smuggling in, things in demand
on the black market. The second warehouse was the weird one. Padlocks secured
both doors, but large windows had been mounted in opposite walls, and morning
light flooded the place. It looked like a high school chemistry lab full of
long tables with beakers and test tubes and electronic machinery. From the
window, I could see three desktop computers. Besides the warehouses, there were two
smaller buildings. One looked like a makeshift home, with a porch across the
front and a vintage Mercedes and a new Explorer parked out front. An old
air-conditioning unit droned in a side window. The other smaller building had a porch,
too, but looked empty—if it's possible for a building to look
empty from the outside. But that's how it looked; so that's where I went. And
that's where I found an unlocked door, four filing cabinets, a metal desk, and
one beige telephone. I placed a long-distance call to Loutie in
Mobile and made sure the first words out of my mouth were that Joey was going
to be fine. As I was downplaying his injuries, Loutie interrupted. "Tom. I
know you'll take care of Joey, but you need to know something. Joey's buddy at
the Baldwin County Sheriff's Office called." "About Willie?" Loutie sounded scared. "Don't interrupt,
Tom. Somebody could be after you right now. When the deputy got to your house,
Willie was gone. And he didn't break out. Somebody had used your key to let him
out." I said, "So he wasn't there
alone." "Doesn't look like it." "And they could have been behind us
all the way. Is that what you're saying?" Loutie said, "I'm saying they could
be watching you right now." I said, "Loutie. About Joey. We need
to get somebody out here..." I froze in midsentence as the door to the
shack swung open and Willie Teeter pointed an autoloading shotgun at my gut. I put the phone back in its cradle and
said, "Hello, Willie. I was just talking about you." Then a strange thing happened. Willie
pulled a silver whistle from his hip pocket and blew a shrill, piercing blast. Through the door over Willie's shoulder, I
saw three young men—all about Willie's age—sprint out of the woods and onto the cleared grounds of the
compound, where they dropped to their stomachs and pointed guns at nothing in
particular. I asked, "Playing army?" Willie was back to his tough-guy mode.
"Let's go outside." I said, "There's a guard out
there." Willie smiled. "Not anymore. Move." As we passed through the doorway, a big,
baby-faced, football-player-looking kid stepped up onto the porch. I said, "So.
I guess you're the young Turks." Willie smiled again. "No. We're 'The
Sequel.' You know, better, bigger, even more explosions." "Cute." The pie-faced football player said,
"Cute ain't the word for it, asshole. The Sequel is your worst fucking
nightmare." "My worst nightmare is about getting
lost in a department store." Pie Face looked puzzled. Willie said, "Let's go," and
stepped up to take the gun out of my hand. I walked out into the yard ahead of
Willie. "Where are we going?" Willie just said, "Stop." So I
stopped. "Down on your stomach. Hands behind
your head." This was not going well. I said, "You
going to shoot me in the back of the head, Willie?" And he hit me in the
stomach with the butt of his new shotgun. I lay on my stomach and laced my fingers
behind my neck. Willie stepped a few feet away and blew
three sharp blasts on his whistle. Seconds later, three more men—college age but not exactly college material—came running. Willie said, "Simon and Rooter?" One of the boys, a thin kid with acne scars
on his cheeks, said, "Got 'em set up north and south." "Okay. Good. Looks like the only
people here are in that house over there with the Mercedes parked in front. The
two big buildings are like warehouses. One's got whiskey and cigars and other
stuff Purcell smuggled in. The other one may be a meth factory." Pie Face spoke up. "They're ours
now." The others guffawed and said things like,
"Bet your ass," and "Fucking A." Then I heard Willie blow his whistle
again. One long blast. Nothing happened. Willie cussed and blew again. Still
nothing. He said, "Don't those morons know the signal?" Pie Face said, "Maybe they see
something. They ain't gonna come if they're watching somebody." Willie said, "Go see," and Pie
Face trotted off in search of Simon and Rooter. Minutes passed during which the grumbling
from Willie's posse grew louder. Finally, he blew his whistle again. And, once
again, nothing happened. I had seen Willie and Pie Face and two
others. Two more, Simon and Rooter, had been standing watch on the north and
south ends of the compound. Now, the lookouts were unaccounted for, as was Pie
Face. There were three left, including Willie, and they were all standing over
me. I said, "Something's wrong,
boys." Willie said, "Shut up." Two rifle shots split the air, and I heard
the soft thuds of bodies hitting dirt. I eased my hands to the ground and
looked up. Willie's two buddies squirmed in the grass. One cussed. The other
sobbed like a child. Each boy gripped his thigh and tried to keep blood from
pumping out. A voice came from the trees. "Put
your gun down, Willie." Willie stood his ground. "Granddaddy?" "Put the shotgun on the ground,
boy." Willie hesitated before answering, and the
cussing and sobbing of the two leg-shot boys filled the air. "Granddaddy, what're you doing? Mr.
McInnes is fine. We didn't hurt him. We just stopped him. They're working with
Purcell. Come on out here where we can talk about it." I yelled out. "Don't do it,
Billy." Willie lowered his voice. "You wanna
get shot in the back of the head? Shut your mouth." "You going to shoot your own
grandfather, Willie?" "Shut up." "You can still walk away from this.
Put the gun down. Let your grandfather come up here and take care of you." Willie said, "I can take care of
my..." An engine roared. Willie spun around, and
I sprang to my feet as the Mercedes that had been parked outside the only
occupied house in the compound threw a cloud of dust into the air as it rounded
the small warehouse and headed for the road. I ran for cover behind the empty shack and
felt the first shotgun blast in my chest, but it was the percussion I felt and
not the load. I glanced back and saw Willie firing at the speeding car, leading
the driver's window the way you lead a dove flying over a field of Egyptian
wheat. Three more explosions shattered the morning air, and the car swerved and
burst into flame and crashed into the porch. I dove to the left to avoid the
car and any shots that might be coming my way. I landed and rolled in the sand and sat up
facing Willie. He was reloading. Without thinking, I jumped up and ran hard at
him. Willie saw me when I was ten yards away. The swamp was silent except for the wind
gushing in my lungs and the blood pulsing inside my chest. The barrel arced
slowly upward from the ground to point at my stomach, and what Willie's hands
were doing became very important to me. The blunt, gnawed fingertips of his
left hand gripped the front stock. His right fingers flipped out and away from
his body like someone slinging water off his hands, and Willie tossed three red
spinning shells into the air. His right fingers moved back to the checkered
lever on the side of the housing, and he pumped the first round into the
chamber. I dove under the barrel at his ankles and found nothing. Willie still moved like the high school
jock he had been. And I skidded across clipped saw grass as he skipped out of
reach. I rolled onto my back and looked up. Willie smiled. He had seated the
stock against his shoulder and just taken aim at my face when a rifle shot from
the brush snapped Willie's head forward and dropped him face first into the
dirt. For a time, I could see only the boy's
face pressed into soft earth; I could hear only my own breathing. Then
conscious thought floated back and brought with it the soft whimpering of
leg-shot teenagers, the muffled pump of running feet in sand, and the hiss of
fire. Peety Boy reached me first. He held a
carbine in his left hand. He used his right to pull me to my feet. "You
all right, son?" I didn't answer, and he repeated the
question while shaking me by the arm. "Yeah. Yeah, I'm okay. Who shot
him?" "I did. Didn't figure his own
granddaddy ought to have to do it. Somebody had to." Peety Boy looked over
at the flaming car. "Who's that?" I looked over at a curly black, lifeless
head hanging from the side window. I said, "It's L. Carpintero. The
Hammer." Peety Boy seemed to think about that for a
few seconds. His leathery forehead wrinkled, and he worked his nearly toothless
jaw. Then he said, "Who's that?" While Captain Billy stood watch, Peety Boy
and I loaded Joey into the cab of his truck and tossed the four hurt members of
The Sequel into the bed alongside the two Bodines that Peety Boy had already
retrieved from the wrecked truck in the swamp. The old fishmonger headed out
for the hospital emergency room in Apalachicola. Back in the compound, Captain Billy
crouched on one knee beside his dead grandson and wept. I walked over to examine Carpintero and
the wrecked Mercedes. On the leather seat beside him were an automatic pistol,
a black leather briefcase, and a nail gun with a portable compressor next to
it. I walked back and stood over Captain Billy
Teeter. The old man got to his feet. I said, "I never meant for anything
like this to happen." Billy looked up at the sky with pale wet
eyes. "When you called me last night, I knew it was gonna get bad. The boy
took a shot at you then, and he was gonna kill you just now. I reckon I didn't
know the boy, 'cause the one I knew couldn't a done this." Then he added. "Didn't
have no daddy and not much of a mother." "I'm sorry, Billy. But I've got to
get moving. The young girl I was trying to help is missing now. And a woman, a
good friend, is missing too and may be hurt." Billy wiped tears from his eyes with the
veined back of a calloused hand. "The house over there where the car come
from, that the only one with anybody in it?" I nodded. "Better check it over again. We could
still get shot out here." And the old man picked up his carbine and
started off. I retrieved a thirty-thirty that one of the leg-shot boys had
dropped and followed Billy's path. When I arrived, the old man had his back
pressed flat against the outside wall next to a window. He held up a palm to stop me. Then he
pointed at the house, nodded his head, and made an opening-and-closing motion
with his thumb and fingers to indicate someone was talking inside. I retreated around the corner of a
warehouse. Minutes passed. Billy listened, and I
waited. Finally, the old shrimp boat captain waved me over. "There's a
woman and a little kid in there. Maybe somebody else. But, if there is, he
ain't saying nothing. You think you can kick open that door?" "You cover me through the window, and
I'll kick it in." The old man had aged a decade since Peety Boy, his
childhood friend, had shot his grandson and namesake in the back of the head.
Tears still clung to his gray eyelashes, his wrinkled-leather face had turned
sallow, and his thick hard hands trembled on the stock of his carbine. But
Captain Billy Teeter was functioning. He was still helping a man who was
arguably responsible for getting his grandson killed because it was the right
thing to do. He said, "Go." chapter thirty-four This was not an oak security door on a
million-dollar beach house.
One hard kick buried my shoe in the veneer surface and sent the door hurling
inward. I jumped inside, minus one shoe that now hung from a footprint-shaped
hole in the open door, and pointed my gun at nothing. The room was empty. I snatched my shoe
from the door and pulled it on. A single door led to a back room. I walked
toward the door, being careful to stay to one side, and tried the knob. It
turned. Keeping to one side, I pushed it wide. Three shots spit through the
opening and splintered wood across the room. Shit. I tried, "You're surrounded,"
and realized it sounded even dumber out loud than it had in my head. No answer. "You've got nowhere to go. Toss out
the gun. We don't want anyone else hurt here today." Three more shots hit the other side of the
wall that my back was pressed against. One blasted out a light switch and
snapped my shirt against my ribs. The hell with this. Lots of handguns
are six-shooters; a lot aren't. I took off my shoe and flipped it into the
room. I heard the clack of a firing pin
striking a spent casing, and I went in fast. So fast and so scared that I
almost shot the dark pretty woman from the beach on Dog Island. She was
fumbling with the cylinder of a snub-nosed revolver. I yelled, "Stop!" She didn't. Trembling fingers with
manicured nails pulled spent rounds from the chamber and reached for a box of
cartridges on the bed beside her. "What are you doing? Stop, damnit. Uh,
alto. Alto!" She had a fresh bullet now, but she was
fumbling as frightened eyes darted from me to the empty chamber of her
revolver. "Shit! What's the word?" My mind
raced back fifteen years to Seсora Stippleman's Spanish I. Some half-forgotten
vocab test floated in. "Pare!" She glanced up at that one. She glanced up
as trembling fingers clicked the bullet home. I raised my carbine. "Pare,
goddamnit. Pare!" The dark beauty had one bullet and five
empty chambers. She swung the cylinder into place, and I tightened my finger
against the trigger. I couldn't do it. "Shit!" I let
go of the front stock and whipped the carbine at the wall to divert her
attention. Before the gun hit, I was moving. Three steps and I dove as Seсora
Carpintero leveled the snub-nose at my chest and pulled the trigger. I heard the metallic clack of the
firing pin snapping an empty chamber as I hit her full force and jammed the gun
into the air with my right hand. She fought, and I had to twist her wrist
harder than I wanted to wrest the gun from her grip. I plucked the revolver off
the bedspread where it had fallen and scrambled to my feet. The seсora rubbed her wrist and watched me
with narrow wet eyes. I popped open the cylinder on her handgun and let the one
good bullet drop to the floor. When I did, she sprang off the bed and ran for
my discarded rifle. She almost made it. I got a handful of blouse and spun her
back onto the bed. "Stop! Jeez, lady, it's time to give
up. I'm not going to hurt you. It's okay. You understand? It's okay." She sat and watched. I called out for
Captain Billy before realizing he was standing four feet behind me. He said,
"You okay?" I was trembling as much as the tiny woman
on the bed. "I'm not shot. Do you speak Spanish?" "Nope. She think you were gonna rape
her or somethin'?" I looked around. "We just killed her
husband." "Oh." "And she's got a kid around here
somewhere. That's who she's trying to protect." Billy walked up to stand beside me.
"Want me to have a look in the closet?" "No. I want her to calm down first.
If she thinks we're looking for the boy to hurt him, I'm afraid we'd have to
shoot her to keep her from scratching our eyes out." Billy was quiet for a few beats; then he
said, "I seen what you done. Been easier to shoot her. Didn't want to, did
you?" "Would you shoot her for defending
herself and her kid?" Billy said, "Might. If it was me or
her." "Bullshit. Come on, let's get her out
of here. See if we can get her to calm down some." Captain Billy handed me his gun and walked
over to the bed. He held out his hand and parted his Brillo-pad beard into a
brown-toothed smile. Seсora Carpintero didn't take his hand, but she did stand and
walk toward the door. She was leading us away from her child. We let her. Unfortunately, just down the road, her
husband lay dead in a wrecked Mercedes, which didn't seem to be a recipe for
either calm or cooperation. I stopped her in the outer room, which was kind of
a living room, dining room, kitchen combination. I pointed at a green sofa, and
she sat down. I said, "Billy, go stand by the front
door," and I walked to the sink. On the plywood counter, four glasses had
been left upside down to drain on a red striped washcloth. I picked one up,
turned it over, and filled it with water from the tap. After handing the glass
to Seсora Carpintero, I pulled over a folding director's chair from next to the
dining table and sat down. "Do you speak English?" She sipped the water and searched my face
with her black eyes. I repeated my question. "Sн. Un poco. A little." Ah
leetle. "Good. We do not want to hurt you. Do
you understand that?" She said, "I understand the
words." I smiled. "You have a son, uh, hijo.
Sн?" The seсora's eyes grew large and her arms
tensed. Then, just as suddenly, the muscles in her face and arms relaxed a
little. "You are the man from the beach? La isla?" "The island. Yes. I am the man who
spoke to your son on the island." She said, "There were shots."
And she pointed at the open door leading outside. "Yes." "The doctor, ah, he is the
dead?" "You mean your husband?" She nodded her head. "Yes. He's dead." Now all the tension seemed to drain from
her body. "You kill him?" I said, "No," and she simply
nodded her head. "It was, como se dice? Destino?" "Destiny?" "Sн. Destino. My husband, he go
with violent men." I watched her eyes. She seemed neither
happy nor sad that her husband was dead. She accepted it the way people accept
the death of the old and sick. She seemed to say, Perhaps it's better. "We know your son is here. Do you
want to bring him out?" She looked less-than-genuinely surprised. "Que?" I smiled. "Fine. Can we take you
somewhere?" "The four-wheel. It is outside
still?" I nodded. "You will leave it for me?" I nodded again. A weak smile turned the corners of her
full lips. She saw hope for her son. I asked, "Can you help me? I'm
looking for a friend. I believe your husband knew where she is. Now he cannot
tell me." "No. Now he cannot." "Can you?" "I am the wife. My husband did work
not... I have no understanding of his work." "My friend will die. She does not
deserve to die." "My husband, he deserved to
die?" I didn't answer. Seconds ticked by. Seсora
Carpintero said, "Your friend, she is granjero?" I raised my
palms in the air and shook my head. Her face brightened. "Farmer. She is
farmer?" "Yes. She has a farm." "Then she is with a man who is the
fisherman. That is all I know." "Is anyone else with them? A young
girl? A teenager?" She repeated, "That is all I
know." "What do you know about why your
husband, the doctor, was here?" She went back to, "I am the
wife." "Yeah. I got that. You are the wife.
But I don't think even a South American wife boards a boat with smugglers and
lands in a new country in the middle of the night without a pointed question or
two for her husband." "Que?" Wonderful. We were back to Spanish again.
I tried a more direct path. "Is that your husband's laboratory out
there?" "Yes." "What's he been cooking up? Meth? Coke?" The seсora's high cheekbones burned red.
"My husband was a medical doctor, expert in tropical disease. He was not
the drug lord." I started to ask more, but decided it was
a lost cause. Or maybe I was a little afraid of Seсora Carpintero. Billy Teeter and I left dark, beautiful,
dangerous Seсora Carpintero—or whatever her name was—sitting on the green sofa in the living room of a metal house deep
in the bowels of Tate's Hell Swamp. After taking a cursory look into the
doctor's lab, I retrieved Joey's Walther PPK from Willie's corpse. Captain
Billy and I loaded his grandson's body onto the air boat that The Sequel had
used to tail us to Carpintero's compound. Billy climbed into the high chair in
front of the fan. I sat at his feet as he steered away from the compound and
skidded across miles of flooded saw grass. We didn't talk. I didn't kill Willie. I hadn't even gotten
him killed. Not really. Willie got killed playing tough guy. It was his choice.
If it hadn't been that day, it would have been another. Sooner or later, he
would have met up with men who don't play tough, the kind who make money by
taking it away from wanna-bes. Billy Teeter and I would not be friends.
And, from that day on, neither would he and Peety Boy—the childhood friend who had fought Hitler in France. And won. Marina was too complimentary a term. It was a gray-weathered shack
with sodas and bait inside and a ragged dock outside. Billy was using the pay
phone. I waited with Willie's corpse. A bass boat pulled up and two men climbed
out and walked over to look at Willie's body. "Goddamn. What happened? Who
is that?" I looked at the men, who looked excited.
To them, this was a story to tell, something to spread around work the next
day. I said, "Show some respect."
They ignored me, so I tried another tack. "Get the fuck out of here." One of the men—he wore a slouch hat with fishing flies stuck in the sweatband—said, "What's your problem?" I stepped into the boat and picked up one
of the carbines. The men moved off. When he thought he was out of earshot, the
one with the flies called me an asshole. Captain Billy walked out onto the small
dock. "Ambulance is on the way. I talked to the other boys who got shot.
Told 'em to say somebody shot them and Willie from a bridge. Told 'em which one." "Cops going to buy that?" The old fisherman shrugged. "Thank you." Billy sat on the dock with his feet
hanging off the side and rubbed at his eyes with the thick muscles at the base
of his thumbs. "Way I see it. You didn't kill Willie. You might've got him
killed a little sooner than he should've been. But you called me up on the
phone last night to tell me what'd happened, and I told you me and Peety Boy'd
cover your back." The old man wiped his palms on his pant legs. "Naw.
You didn't kill him, Tom. But my grandboy did try to kill you. Twice. I owe you
something for that." I said, "You didn't owe me anything.
But I appreciate what you did." Billy looked out across the water. "Yep." "I don't guess you want to see me
again, though." "No, Tom. I don't." chapter thirty-five The ambulance bearing Willie Teeter's young
body pulled into the
emergency entrance of Apalachicola Memorial Hospital more than an hour after
Captain Billy placed the call. No need to hurry. The EMTs off-loaded the gurney
with its lumpy, sheet-covered cargo and wheeled it inside. Billy followed along
to the morgue, and I went in search of Joey. I found him in a private room on
the third floor. A clear bag of something dribbled through a tube into his arm;
silver wires peeked out through his lips; and he was seriously sedated. I went in search of a doctor, then a
nurse, then another living soul. Lots of patients, but no healers in evidence.
Finally, I just reached over the nurses' station and helped myself to Joey's
file, which was hanging on a rack with the rest of the patient histories. I had
just hooked the file folder and flipped it open when a nurse appeared as if by
magic. "What are you doing?" "Trying to find you." She said, "Did you think I was hiding
inside that private folder," and took Joey's chart out of my hand. I smiled. "It was the last place I
looked." She didn't return my smile, which was kind of a shame. Nurse
Ratched wouldn't have been a bad-looking woman if she smiled or maybe just quit
looking quite so pissed off. "The patient is a friend of mine. I wanted to
find out how he is." "Are you family?" "If I were family, I would have used
that word. I just want to know how he's doing." So much for charm. She flipped open Joey's chart. "Your
friend has a fractured nose, multiple hairline fractures of the left orbital
globe, and a dislocated jaw. His left shin has been fractured." She
skimmed the page. "He also has a minor concussion. He has been
sedated." I said, "Thank you," and turned
to walk away. Nurse Ratched said, "This is a
hospital. The way you live is your business, but you shouldn't come in here
covered in filth." Nice lady. I found Joey's room again and placed a
credit card call to Loutie. She promised to be in Apalachicola as soon as
possible, and I promised not to leave Joey's side until she got there. I sat down in the hospital's idea of an
easy chair—a metal frame holding foam rubber cushions
covered in tan plastic—and tried to get comfortable and think.
The swamp water had evaporated out of my clothes, leaving my pants and shirt,
even my underwear, crisp with dry sand and sludge. My mouth tasted like mud; my
hair felt like steel wool; and, in every little out-of-the-way, never-seen
crevice of my body, I could feel small, crusty remnants of my morning dip in
the swamp each time I moved. Two long nights had gone by now without
sleep. I put my head back and tried to concentrate. Somewhere, buried deep in the foggy
recesses of my mind, I knew that I knew where Carli was, if only I could reach
in there and pull it out. I started with her good-bye note and tried to work
forward. The room got kind of shifty. Shadows floated and blurred, invisible
weights pressed on my eyelids, and I fell into a dark pit of unconsciousness.
When a woman's hand finally shook me awake, I was vaguely aware that I hadn't
dreamed or turned or even moved my hands for more than four hours. "Tom?" It was Loutie Blue's
voice. I think I said, "Umphum." "You okay?" I sat up and moved my head around, trying
to roll the crick out of my neck. "Fine. Just tired." Loutie stepped into the bathroom. I heard
water running, and she came back out with a wet washcloth. She wiped my face
with the warm cloth, like a mother waking a toddler from a nap. She asked what
had happened and I told her, starting with Joey's condition
and then looping back to our encounter with Willie at my beach house and coming
forward. When I was finished, Loutie said, "We
have news about Carli, but we haven't found her yet." "What news?" "She's back in the state. A
pulpwood-truck driver reported seeing her either yesterday or the day before,
hitching outside a little town called Pine Hill. There's a big pulp mill there..." "Yeah. I know." And there was
the thought again. Loutie had moved over by Joey's bed and
was squeezing his huge thumb in her hand. She cocked her head at me. "What
is it?" I reached back to massage the stiffness
from my neck. "It's just... I keep thinking I know where she is. It's in
the back of my mind somewhere, and I can't get to it." Loutie looked down at Joey. "Go grab
a quick shower. I've got clean clothes for you and some for Joey when he needs
them." I stood there trying to think. She said, "Go! I'm here with
Joey now, so you're free to go find Susan. Get in the shower. Wake up. It'll
come to you." And fifteen minutes later, as I toweled
the water out of my hair, it did. With more than three hundred dollars in
her pocket, why hadn't Carli grabbed the first bus or plane to Denver or Tucson
or Los Angeles? Why head west and then turn back toward the northeast? And why,
in the first place, did she write a cryptic good-bye note on the bottom of a
sheet of notebook paper where she had sketched Susan's old Ford pickup sitting
in a hay field with rosebushes covering the front wheel? Simple. But everything seems simple after
you finally get it. I should have had it sooner. On some level, Carli had
wanted to be found even before she dropped out of Loutie's guest-room window. Susan's farmhouse—a place set among rolling hay fields and nestled inside swirls of
holly and boxwoods and rosebushes—was empty. And
Carli knew it. She had traveled to Biloxi by bus to throw off her father. Then
she had started her real journey when she began hitchhiking northeast toward
Meridian. And that's when I really did have enough information to have found
her, if I had just been able to put it all together. My father owns a sawmill just outside a
small town on the Alabama River called Coopers Bend, which, as it happens, is
about two hours drive due east of Meridian, Mississippi. If you drive to the
side of town opposite the mill, cruise a few miles up a county highway called
Whiskey Run Road, and turn down a narrow dirt road and follow that for four or
five hundred yards through cow pastures and stands of loblolly pine and water
oak, you will come to a mailbox that marks the entrance to the farm that Susan
Fitzsimmons had shared with her crazy artist husband before he was murdered. It
was where I first met Susan, and I was now sure that it was where Carli had
been headed the minute she climbed out of the window in Loutie Blue's guest
room. I should have had it figured out a second
time back in Tate's Hell Swamp when Seсora Carpintero had asked if Susan was a granjero—a farmer, and then said Susan was with "the fisherman."
My third bite at the apple came when Loutie reported that Carli had been
spotted in Pine Hill, which is almost dead center between Meridian and Susan's
farm in Coopers Bend. The only question now was whether Rus
Poultrez—"the fisherman," as the seсora
had called him—had both women, or only Susan. It was
possible that Carli hadn't yet made it to Coopers Bend. It also was possible
that Poultrez was holding Susan somewhere else and that Carli would find the
safe haven she had been seeking at Susan's farm. These things were unlikely,
but still possible, which is why I didn't call the state police, the FBI, or
even a few bad-ass boys I went to high school with to rush out there and take
care of Poultrez. Instead, I pulled on clean clothes and went out to hurriedly
explain things to Loutie. Then I placed a call to the Sheriff's Department in
Coopers Bend and spoke at length with local law enforcement. As I replaced the receiver in its cradle,
Nurse Ratched came in. "What are you doing in here?" I wasn't in the mood. "What is
it?" The nurse looked like she had just sucked
a crawfish head. "Are you Tom McInnes?" "Yep." "Then you have a phone call at the
desk." Nurse Ratched turned and marched out, and
I followed. A beige receiver was lying on a raised, white-Formica platform on
the horseshoe-shaped nurses station. I picked it up. "Hello?" "Hi. How's Joey?" It was Kelly's
voice. "He got smashed in the face, and he's
got a broken nose, a dislocated jaw, and some hairline fractures. But he's
going to be fine. They've got him doped up for the pain." I was glad to
hear Kelly's voice, but I also wanted to get off the phone and get on the road
to Susan's farmhouse. The sheriff was checking it out, but... "Thanks for
calling, Kelly. Sorry, but I've got to go. Call back later if you want. Loutie's
in Joey's room with him." "I found out something about L.
Carpintero." I said, "He's dead. Is it something
that still matters?" Kelly hesitated. "I'm not sure. I
just kind of know who he is, or I guess who he was." I didn't speak. She
went on. "The reason you thought his face looked familiar but you couldn't
place it was that he looks like someone else. A lot. His uncle was the military
dictator of Panama. He's in prison here in the states now. His name..." "Yeah, I know who he is. Damn, it's
obvious once you know it. Take away the general's acne scars and about thirty
years and they're twins." "Yeah. I didn't get it. The lady in
the newspaper morgue saw the resemblance, and once we had that we were able to
find out who he is. He's got the same last name as his uncle. And he was mixed
up in his uncle's drug business." "Which, I remember, was supposed to
have a Cuban connection." "That's it." Nurse Ratched walked over and glared at
me. "That is not a public telephone." I turned my back. "And that's
everything you found out?" Kelly said, "That's all so far. Nothing,
by the way, about him having any nicknames like Carpintero or hammer or
anything like that. I'll keep looking, though. But," and Kelly paused for
effect, "I did find out Carlos Sanchez's real name." "Who is he?" "We found a picture of him at a
Republican fund-raiser in Mobile. The paper ran the shot a few months ago
because the picture also included the son of a former president. Sanchez was
kind of looking down and holding a glass in front of his face, but you could
tell it was him." "Kelly!" "Okay, okay. You know how you never
see Superman and Clark Kent in the same place? Well, guess who Carlos Sanchez
really is." I said, "Charlie Estevez." "You're no fun at all. How in the
world did you figure that one out?" "I had a suspicion." "Well, so much for my bombshell.
That's all I've got." I thanked her and got off the phone. Ten minutes later, I was speeding north in
Loutie's cherry-red GTO convertible. Four hours of road time stretched out
ahead, and my contact with the world—my little
Motorola flip phone—was a goner. Slopping through Tate's Hell
had taken care of that. I stopped at a quick mart in Panama City and called
Sheriff Nixon in Coopers Bend. Deputies had been dispatched to check out the
farmhouse. No report. An hour later, I stopped in Florala and got the same
message. A little over an hour after that, I pulled over in Monroeville and
made the same call. This time Nixon was in. "Nobody's there." I had been scared and nervous, worried
about what might be happening to Susan and Carli while I was on the road. Now I
was just scared. If they weren't at the farm, if all the clues I had stringed
together were nothing but snippets of a larger picture that I was missing... Nixon's hard voice cut my thoughts short.
"You hear me? Are you still there?" "Yes, I'm here. I was thinking. Are
you sure no one was there?" "Well, I didn't go out there myself.
But two deputies did and said they looked around pretty good. Looked for cars,
knocked on the door, even looked in the windows as best they could." "They didn't go inside, though?" "Hell, Tom. We can't just break in to
somebody's house without a reason." I grasped at straws. "Did they check
out the barn in back?" Nixon sounded like he'd had enough of
this. "They checked the place out. You want to go out there and look some
more, help yourself. I got other things to do." And he hung up. Nice guy. I climbed into Loutie's classic
convertible and pulled back onto the blacktop. Before I had just been worrying.
Now I was driving slower and thinking more, and I wondered if I had imagined
all the clues and coincidences pointing to the farm. I ran everything over in
my mind, turned it around, and pulled at it from as many different sides as I
could find. The bottom line was that Carli had to be either at the farm or damn
close to it. Susan—if the dark and dangerous Seсora
Carpintero could be believed—was with Rus Poultrez ... somewhere. I jammed down the accelerator. Either I
was right about everything and everyone coming together at Susan's farm, or I
didn't have a frigging clue. chapter thirty-six According to the fluorescent lines on my
diving watch, I turned onto
the dirt road leading to Susan's farm a few minutes after 7:30 that evening.
The sun had fallen beneath the horizon, but the western sky still glowed with
sunset colors that cast long shadows across new-green hay fields. Pecan trees,
post oaks, and cedars grown from bird droppings interrupted kinked lines of
barbed wire that stretched along both sides of the right-of-way. Susan's
mailbox came up on the right, and I clicked off the headlights. I pulled off
onto the gravel shoulder and stepped out. The shrill of crickets filled the fields
and woods, and a bullfrog on one of Susan's ponds bellowed at whatever they
bellow at. I turned down the gravel driveway and found myself trotting then
jogging then running full out. I forced myself to stop. With my back pressed
against the thick trunk of a pine, I got quiet and tried to listen. Crickets
made music. A light wind rustled the pine needles and oak leaves overhead, and
my heart thumped like a fist on the inside of my sternum. I breathed deeply,
forcing my mind to calm, and started once again down the driveway. Staying close to cover along the roadside,
I walked slowly around the last small curve of gravel and dropped to one knee
when the house came into view. Susan's classic white farmhouse seemed to float
above the ground on a soft black cloud of shrubbery. No lights showed through
the dark-shuttered windows in front. To the right of the house, the small,
whitewashed barn Susan used for a carport seemed empty, but inside the barn was
shadowed black, and I knew that a car or even Rus Poultrez himself could be
hidden deep inside. I had a choice to make. The driveway leading to the farmhouse
passes between two ponds. One is higher than the other, and water pours from
the higher pond to the lower through large white pipes beneath the roadbed. I
could reach the house in less than a minute, maybe thirty seconds, if I stayed on
the road and crossed between the ponds. And, if I did that, I would make one
hell of a nice target. On the other hand, I could circle one of the ponds, stay
in thick cover, and get to the house in ten or fifteen minutes. No question
about it. Circling made more sense. But on the other hand, I thought... Screw
it. I crept to the pond's edge, took three deep breaths, and sprinted
across the roadbed in full sight of God and possible killers and anyone else
who wanted to watch. Joey's Walther PPK was in my right hand,
and I used it to pump as I raced into the night. Ten seconds of eternity passed
as it felt as though my knees were flying up to my chest and my heels brushed
the back of my head. Ten seconds, as it turned out, of nothing—nothing but running and breathing and terror. The far bank of the
lower pond passed by on my left, and I dove off the driveway and landed in a
base runner's slide, tearing down the bank with my right knee tucked under and
my left toe pointed. Gravel ripped my pants, and I felt the sharp sting of
small stones grinding away at flesh. It was a shallow ditch, and I hit bottom
quickly. I tried to hold very still and listen for sounds other than my own
heavy breathing. I clicked off the Walther's safety and
eased back up to the roadbed on my belly. The house was still dark. The carport
was dark. Nothing moved. But there was something. In back, just visible
through thick azaleas and boxwoods and holly trees, a pale light framed a porch
swing hung from the limb of an oak tree. It could have been a security light or
the reflection of moonlight off a second-story window. It could have been a lot
of things. I made another quick scan of the house and
the carport and the grounds; then I worked my way through the ditch to a row of
thick brush lining the fence. Minutes later, I was pressed against the wall of
the huge red barn in back of the farmhouse, and I was looking up at the lighted
shade of a bedside lamp in one of Susan's upstairs bedrooms. Okay. Now what? I watched. I watched for what seemed a
very long time. And nothing happened. But finally I did notice something new.
Through one of the back windows on the ground floor, I could just see the top
of a doorway that I could have sworn led into Susan's study. And, I realized,
there was no reason on earth that I should have been able to see the outline of
an open door inside a dark house. The opening seemed to be lighted by a faint
glow from the other side, from inside the study. I needed a better view. Circling around
the back of the barn, I made it to the other side of the yard and paused to
pick out a shadowed path to Susan's wide, wraparound porch. Another quick look
around the moonlit yard, and I took off, staying low and silently cringing as
each footfall crunched through dried layers of leaves and pine needles that had
accumulated while Susan was away. Next to the back edge of the banistered
porch, I had just hooked left to head for the side steps when my left foot
struck something that felt like a sack of loose dirt. My front foot faltered and
twisted as the other foot slid backward across loose leaves. I lost balance and
hit the ground chest first. Something dull and hard gouged the side of my neck.
Wind rushed out on impact, and I made an involuntary "Oomph" sound. I grabbed for the stick that had gouged my
neck and pushed. It moved, but in a strange, organic, rolling motion. It was
attached to something, and that something was a leg. My hand was wrapped around
the dirt-caked toe of a cowboy boot. And I was lying full across someone's corpse. Shuddering and rolling, I cleared the lump
of flesh and pressed my back against the porch. I held the Walther automatic
against my chest and listened. But I looked at nothing but the dead body at my
feet. It was a man. Thank God. He lay on his back with one narrow cowboy
boot pointing up and the other lying flat. His head was twisted at an unnatural
angle that buried his face in grass and leaves. But I knew who he was. I
recognized the short, light hair; I recognized the build and even the clothes.
I reached down and yanked up his left sleeve and found the tattoo: an ugly blue
dagger with R.I.P. over it and R.E.T. underneath. Rudolph Enis
Teeter, a.k.a. Sonny, had a bullet hole through his left side and, from the
looks of it, a broken neck to boot. I had just leaned forward to check his
neck when I saw the shadow. A shovel with a tombstone-shaped head smashed into
my right wrist, and the Walther PPK spun off into the dark. The giant black
shadow of Rus Poultrez loomed over me. He didn't speak. He didn't laugh. He
just raised the shovel back up over his head and aimed the metal spade at the
top of my head. I was crouching. I came up fast, burying
my head in his gut, clamping his legs with my forearms, and driving with my
legs. Poultrez managed to bring the shovel down in an excruciating blow to my
lower back that shot hot waves of pain from my butt to my shoulder, but I had
him off balance. The big man went over on his back as I jammed my head and all
the weight behind it into his belly. I somersaulted over his chest and landed
just over his head. My right hand was numb. I jammed the fingers of my left
hand into my hip pocket and came out with the switchblade that Sonny Teeter had
donated to Joey in the parking lot of Mother's Milk. Poultrez was big, even bigger than Joey,
but he didn't have Joey's speed. My fingers found the chrome button on the side
of the yellow knife handle, and I felt the blade click open as I spun around
and slammed my right elbow into the big man's face. In the same instant, the
long thin blade protruding from my left fist found the soft flesh of his neck.
And, just as Joey described on Dog Island, I jammed it in up to the hilt and
twisted with all my strength. Hot blood gushed over my fist and down my
forearm. Rus Poultrez shuddered and fell limp. In an old cattle trough next to the barn,
I washed off Poultrez's blood in a shallow pool of rainwater. The feeling
started to return to my right hand, and with the feeling came searing pain. I
could use my thumb and two of my fingers, but my index and middle fingers hung
like dead tubes of meat. I went back to check Poultrez. He was
extremely dead. It took a minute or so to find Joey's
handgun. I picked it up in my left hand and mounted the porch. No one was
moving inside the house. I circled the house, found the front door
unlocked, and stepped inside. The only sounds were the ticktock of Susan's
antique grandfather clock and the periodic hum of the refrigerator's ice maker
cycling on. I knew the house, so I left the lights out as I conducted a search
of every room on the ground floor. Upstairs, only one person was in residence.
And it was my client, Carli Poultrez. Carli jerked and made a yelping sound when
I opened the bedroom door. She said something like, "No." Her wrists
and ankles were bound with shaggy twine and lashed to a four-poster bed. Her
slit-up-the-outside shorts were unsnapped and unzipped, but they were still on.
Carli's shirt and bra had been torn or cut open at the front, and the white
mounds of her breasts looked soft and vulnerable against the tanned muscles of
her stomach and shoulders. I said, "It's okay, Carli. It's me,
Tom." She lifted head off the bed and stared
wildly in my direction. "Get out of here. Run. Run now. Get out of here,
Tom. Get out of here." "Carli, it's okay." She screamed. "Don't you understand?
He's here! He'll kill everybody." I glanced down the hallway and closed the
door before walking over to the bed. I reached down and pulled a spread over
Carli's exposed breasts. "Who's here, Carli? Is it just your father?" She started to cry and spoke between deep,
wrenching sobs. "Yes. My father. He's here." I dropped the Walther in my hip pocket and
started picking at the knots on her left wrist. I could have cut them—if only my knife hadn't still been buried in her father's neck.
"Is anyone else here? Anyone else who wants to hurt you?" "No. Just him." She looked at
what I was doing and seemed to find herself a little. "Hurry. He'll be
back. You need to hurry. We gotta find Susan." I had one wrist free now, and Carli
reached across to claw at the twine binding her other arm while I moved down to
untie her ankles. "It's okay, Carli. Your father's dead. He tried to bash
my head in with a shovel, and I had to kill him. I'm sorry." Her wrists were free now. Carli sat up and
looked at me. "He's dead? You sure? He's really dead?" "Yes, Carli. He's really dead." She squeezed shut her eyes and began to
cry again. The spread had fallen away when she sat up, and each sob made her
young breasts tremble. All she said was, "Good." I was untying the last piece of twine. She
looked down and pulled the covers up to her neck. I said, "Do you have any
other clothes here?" She seemed to be coming into the present. "Yeah.
In my bag. It's over in the closet there." I walked over and opened the
closet. As I bent over to pick up her backpack, she said, "I put it in
there yesterday when I first got here. You know, before I knew Susan and my ...
before I knew he was here." I dropped the backpack on the bed.
"Susan's here?" Carli came a little unfocused, then said,
"She was here. He couldn't handle her and me at the same time. He
said ... he said he was gonna shut her up and save her for later. He said she
was gonna be dessert." She started to cry again. "Is she okay?" "I don't know. I guess." "Carli. Was Susan hurt? We found a
lot of blood in the room where they kidnapped her." The girl's eyes focused. "No. Susan
wasn't hurt when I got here. Unless, since then..." "Did he leave the farm with
her?" Carli stopped to think. "No. I don't
think so. He wasn't gone long enough. At least, I don't think he was." She
gazed off at the wall. "He tied me up before they left. He was gone
awhile, and I heard him downstairs. Banging around the kitchen, fooling with
the TV and stuff. Some time went by. I heard him come up the steps and open the
door. That's when he tore up my clothes and got his hands in my pants." "Carli, don't." She shrugged and reached for her bag, but
it was feigned callousness. "He's done worse." "I know he has, Carli. But he won't
anymore. I promise, nobody's ever going to hurt you like that again." I
patted her calf. "Get dressed. Take a shower if you need to. I've got to
find Susan." As I turned to leave, Carli said my name.
"Tom? The first time we met you told me it'd be easier to just walk away
and forget about the murder on St. George. You know, not go to the
police." She looked down at the bedspread. "When it came to it,
though, you didn't walk away." I didn't know what to say. I was opening the door when she said,
"I knew you'd come help me." And I left my young client sitting on the
bed, staring at the little collection of possessions in her backpack. I trotted downstairs and walked quickly
through each room, flipping on lights and checking closets as I went. Susan was
not in the house. Like most Americans, Susan had a
flashlight in a drawer in the kitchen. I found it rolling around among
batteries and matches and scissors and tape. I clicked it on and left through
the back door. No one had disturbed the barn that had been Bird Fitzsimmons'
studio, and the carport was empty. I could think of only one other place to
lock someone up. At the rear of the house, I found four fifty-pound bags of
fertilizer stacked on top of the door to Susan's bomb shelter. Susan had shown
it to me six months before when I needed a place to store my dead brother's
stolen money. Some prior owner had built it during the 1950s atomic-bomb scare.
Susan had used it as a root cellar. I tossed the bags aside and yanked open
the door. "Susan!" "Tom?" She walked forward into
the flashlight's beam. "Are you okay?" Susan squinted into the light.
"Poultrez is here." "Not anymore." Susan is tough, and she seemed unhurt. I
told her Carli was inside the house, getting cleaned up and changing clothes. "What did he do to her, Tom?" "Maybe she should tell you about
that." Susan looked scared, so I added, "He didn't rape her. Just,
you know, ripped her clothes and touched her, I think." We were up on the porch now. Susan reached
over and rubbed her hand over my back and said, "Thanks." I cringed.
She had managed to rub over the imprint of the business end of Poultrez's
shovel on my lower back. She stopped and faced me. "What'd he do to
you?" I smiled. "Hit me with a
shovel." "God. Is that why you're holding your
hand funny?" "Yeah." "Is it broken?" "Well... yeah." Susan pushed open the door. "Go in
the kitchen and put some ice on that. I've got to go check on Carli. I'll come
tend to you when I'm done." She looked at me. "Go!" So I went. And, as I went, I was all but
certain I heard mumbled words, containing, among other things, the words
"ridiculous" and "macho," coming from Susan's direction. In the kitchen, I found a family-size bag
of Green Giant LeSeur Early Peas in the freezer, bopped it on the counter to
break up the frozen peas a little, and draped the bag over my broken hand. Then
I walked over to the little built-in, kitchen desk, picked up the phone, and
punched in 911. I relayed my predicament to a bored municipal employee and hung
up. Not five minutes later, I heard a loud
knock on the front door. Susan was still upstairs with Carli. I
wandered through the house to the entry hall, pulled open the door, and found
myself face-to-face with Deputy Mickey Burns of the Apalachicola Sheriff's
Department. chapter thirty-seven "You get a transfer?" Deputy Mickey smiled. But then, he pretty
much always did. "I heard the call go out about the murders on the way in.
I was already headed up here to get you." He stepped forward with the
obvious expectation that I would react normally and step aside. I didn't. He
stopped and said, "May I come in?" "I'm still thinking about it." Deputy Mickey actually stopped smiling.
"I'm here to take you back to Apalachicola for questioning in the murder
of Willie Teeter." This was not good. Either Captain Billy
had changed his mind or the two boys who Billy and Peety Boy had plugged in
their respective legs had started talking. I decided to do innocent. "What
are you talking about?" I should have been paying closer attention
to his hands. I knew he had stepped back. I just hadn't noticed the service
revolver in his meaty, freckled paw. "Turn around and put your hands
against the door." I hesitated, and he raised his revolver level with my
chest and brought up his left hand to steady the gun in firing position.
"Do it!" So I did. At least, I leaned with my left
hand and kind of propped against the door with my right elbow. "Get your feet back." I managed to put one foot back a little
and say, "My hand's broken." I listened for Susan and Carli, hoping they
were locked in a bathroom upstairs taking care of each other. Just stay
upstairs. The sheriff's coming. An ambulance is coming. The deputy patted me down, lifted Joey's
Walther PPK out of my pocket, and said, "Oh. Okay, turn around. I'll cuff
you in front." I pushed away from the door and turned to
face him. "Cuff me? What the hell for? Am I a suspect or something?" His only answer was to slap cuffs on my
wrists in that quick, clip-on way cops have of doing it. It hurt, and I
wondered how much time he'd spent practicing that cute move on his bedpost or
maybe a girlfriend. I let the bag of frozen peas drop and
said, "Can you hand me that? It's the only thing that's helping the
pain." My plan was, first, for him to bend over
to pick up the peas and, second, for me to kick him as hard as I could in his
friendly freckled face. But apparently he'd heard of that plan because, before
he bent over to get the frozen veggies, Deputy Mickey jammed the barrel of his
revolver into my stomach and kept it there until he had placed the bag back
over my wrist and stepped away. He said, "Move," and I thought I
could see panic creeping into his eyes. I had a new plan: kill time. "Look,
you and I both know you don't even have jurisdiction here, and the local cops
are on the way. Let's just sort this out when they get here. I grew up in this
town. You probably don't know that but..." He was panicked, and the veneer of
polite professionalism disappeared. Deputy Mickey Burns reached out and clamped
his gun-free hand over my broken hand and gave it a sharp squeeze and a yank. I
yelped a little, which wasn't particularly dignified, and he said, "I told
you to move. Now." Another change of plans: I decided that
getting the deputy away from Susan and Carli wasn't the worst thing I could do.
And since I didn't have a hell of a lot of choice, I might as well find
something good about being hauled off into the night by a Florida deputy with
no jurisdiction, authority, or good reason. Deputy Burns maintained a death grip on my
arm as we hurried across the porch and down the front steps. When we reached
the cruiser, he pulled open the back door, put his hand on the back of my head,
and shoved me inside. Peering out through the steel screen
separating the back seat from the front, I could see the flash of moonlight on
the deputy's equipment belt as he sprinted around the front of the vehicle. He
literally jumped inside. The motor roared, and I fell sideways as the grinding
noise of tires spinning through loose gravel filled the air. I righted myself
in time to see Susan's twin ponds streaming by the side windows. The trees
across the way were coming too fast, and the cruiser fishtailed through a small
curve as it left the ponds behind. We spun and swerved over another quarter
mile of dirt road. But the deputy never lost control, and he had made it out to
the highway and covered another three miles toward town before the sweeping red
lights of the ambulance met us. The deputy slowed, and a quarter mile later
representatives of the Coopers Bend Sheriff's Department appeared over a hill
in a wash of swirling blue light. Unfortunately, they weren't interested in us.
They were speeding toward the charming country farmhouse where I had just
discovered one corpse and deposited another. We had been riding for a little more than
an hour. I had been trying to think. I guessed my captor had been doing the
same. I decided to try a little conversation. "Where are we going?" "Where do you think?" "I mean, are we going straight to the
Apalachicola Sheriff's Office? Or are we going to the hospital, or what?" He didn't answer. I was beginning to feel
ignored. A minute or two passed. Deputy Mickey
plucked his mike off the dash, looked at it like it was something he'd never
seen before, and put it back. Then he reached over and punched the button on
the glove box. The door fell open and a little bulb lighted a haphazard
collection of maps and what looked like paperback field manuals. Burns shoved a
freckled hand under the maps and stuff and came out with a thick mobile phone
that had a coiled wire hanging from it like an oversized tail. I said, "Who are we going to
call?" The deputy glanced back and forth from the
road to the phone as he pulled the cigarette lighter from the dash and replaced
it with the phone's adapter. I decided to try again. "You think I
could use that thing to call a lawyer? It'll make things go faster when we get
there." Again, he didn't answer, and it was
becoming clear that we were not going to be friends. Instead of engaging me in dialogue, the
good deputy punched a long series of numbers into his phone and then pressed it
against his ear. "This is Burns. I got him." Silence. "No. No
problem. We oughta be there in three hours or less." Silence. "Yeah,
okay." He punched a button and put the phone on
the seat beside him. I leaned up close to the metal screen
separating me from the front seat. "What's wrong with your radio?" "Shut up, McInnes." "I was just wondering..." "You want a drink of water, you can
get one when we get there. You need to take a leak, you can piss your pants.
You want to use the phone, well, you're shit out of luck. Now. That's all the
conversation we're gonna have. Any more questions and I'm gonna pull over on
the side of the road and cuff your hands and feet together and stick a rag in
your mouth. You got that?" I said, "Got it," and lay back
against the seat. Might as well get comfortable. Three hours later, when we cruised
straight through the municipality of Apalachicola, Florida, without stopping, I
got a lot less comfortable. After Deputy Mickey Burns turned north on 65 and
hung a right into Tate's Hell Swamp, I felt downright miserable. Burns followed the same route Joey had
taken the night before. We were going to Carpintero's compound. I thought about
the dead nephew of a Panamanian dictator—the corpse we
had left in a smoldering wrecked car—and I thought
about the pretty young wife who I hoped had gotten far away with her fat little
kid. I wondered how Deputy Mickey planned to
get his patrol car across the submerged road that led through the swamp without
either drowning out the engine or sliding off into the ooze the way Willie's
truck had. But, as we rounded a curve and approached the saw grass field, that
question was answered with the headlights of half a dozen pickups and 4x4s. We had a welcoming committee. And I didn't
feel a damned bit welcome. Bumping across miles of field and marsh
and swamp while lying in the bed of a truck tied to a metal cleat, nursing a
broken wrist, and trying to avoid any contact with the black-and-blue
imprint of a shovel on your back ... Well, it sucks is what is does. Deputy Mickey Burns had departed, leaving
me in the care of eight guys with long hair, multiple tattoos, and expensive
jewelry. And it quickly became obvious that the caravan of 4x4s was indeed
headed for Carpintero's compound. With each new jolt of hot pain in my
wrist, my breathing grew more erratic and another ounce of hope floated away
and drowned itself in the slimy black water that surrounded us. I tried to think. I couldn't. I was too
damn scared. Even with jarring pain, even lashed to the
cleat of some redneck criminal's truck, being alive was better than what waited
at the compound. So I felt no relief when the six-car caravan entered the
compound and parked in perfect order beside two more off-road vehicles. For some reason, I glanced at my watch. It
was close to midnight, and the swamp was full of the sounds of crickets and
frogs and night birds. I could hear the metallic clicks and thuds of truck
doors being opened and closed. Someone opened the gate on the truck I was tied
to and stepped into the bed. The back end sank under his weight, and the truck
made creaking, complaining noises of metal against metal. A knife clicked open. The ropes pulled
against my wrists sending an electric jolt of pain shooting up to my shoulder,
and I looked at the man standing over me. He wore cowboy boots like the ones
Sonny Teeter's corpse was wearing that night. The ropes popped loose under the
pressure of his knife blade, and he jerked me to my feet. He wore a white,
western-style shirt with pink stripes and starched blue jeans with sharp
creases down the front. His bald head shone in the night above a curtain of
shoulder-length hair that hung from his temples and the back of his head. He
looked like a malnourished Benjamin Franklin. I asked, "What do you want?" Ben spun me by one shoulder and shoved me
over the side of the truck. I managed to spin and get my feet under me but then
misjudged the ground and landed on my shovel-imprinted back. Bald Ben hand-sprinted over the side and
landed next to me. Another man joined him. They snatched me up, and each man
picked an elbow and clamped down. We headed into the large warehouse structure
that I had searched earlier that same day—although it
seemed days now, maybe weeks, since I had watched Peety Boy shoot Willie Teeter
and since I had disarmed Seсora Carpintero and helped Captain Billy take his
dead and dishonored grandson to the morgue. Inside, overhead fixtures flooded the
warehouse with yellow light. Shipping crates lined the walls. Ten feet up on a
storage area that looked like a barn loft, brown cardboard boxes were stacked
head high. My escorts walked me to the middle of the
wooden floor and left me. My shattered hand shot hot jolts of
electricity up my arm. My back throbbed, and the bright light stung my eyes. I
looked around the warehouse. I was surrounded by cowboy boots and Air Jordans,
printed T-shirts and tank tops, blue jeans and cutoffs, and, everywhere,
tattooed arms and hands. A man I recognized stepped forward. He was
the on-duty deputy who had pointed his gun at Susan and me the night Purcell's
killers had broken into Susan's beach house. "This is the man who killed Leroy
Purcell." He spoke like a senator addressing Congress, like a man giving a
speech, except that his voice came out in a high-pitched, bluegrass twang. I decided to speak up. "That's not
true." The orator was quicker than he looked, or
maybe I was deeper in shock than I thought. He spun on his heels and popped me
across the mouth with a backhand before I saw it coming. The blow scattered my
thoughts for a few seconds and the deputy resumed his speech. "This man's name is Tom McInnes.
Yesterday afternoon, he killed Tim and Elroy, Johnny and even little Skeeter out
on Dog Island. He rented a boat at The Moorings, floated out there with this
big white-haired asshole, and they killed all four of 'em. Then he come back in
and drove up to Seaside and killed Leroy." The deputy swept his open hand
around the room, motioning at the rogues' gallery. "You heard about it. It
ain't no secret. This rich asshole lawyer from up at Mobile killed Leroy and
then used a hammer to nail his ball sack to a table." The deputy was doing a good job, and, with
the mention of Purcell, murmuring began to fill the warehouse. When he reminded
them of the nails, the threats became audible and graphic. "Mickey promised you he'd bring in
Purcell's killer. He done it. Mickey said he'd let all of us get a chance to
question the bastard that done it. He done that too. And—as much as Mickey Burns wanted to take this piece-of-shit bastard
and nail his balls to a table—he promised to bring him here and give us
the pleasure of fuckin' him up any way we want before we bury him in the swamp.
And Mickey done that too." It was pretty obvious that Deputy Mickey
Burns was the ambitious young man Carlos Sanchez had mentioned who wanted to
replace Leroy Purcell as the head Jethro. It was also obvious that Deputy
Mickey had a hell of a campaign manager in his fellow deputy. Now or never. "I did not kill Leroy Purcell. He was
killed by a man named Carpintero. A man called 'the Hammer.'" My voice
sounded hollow. The speaker spun and slung another
backhand at my mouth, and I tasted blood. The deputy said, "Who's got theirself
a question?" The skinny Ben Franklin who had pushed me
out of his truck bed spoke up. "Fuck that. Only question I got is who gets
to kill him." My voice came again, almost without my
knowing it would. "Listen! Listen to me, damnit!" The skinny speaker stepped toward me and
threw a fist this time. But I saw this one coming and slipped the punch. When
his hand had swung around and he was off balance, I stepped forward and kicked
him in the balls with every ounce of strength left in my body. A thick groan
came from deep in his chest as his legs lifted off the ground and he fell
facedown on the floor, squirming and puffing and making the same guttural sound
over and over. I heard running, and a strong hand grasped
my arm. Half a second later, a fist slammed into my left kidney, and I fell to
one knee. Legs and fists swirled around me as more
men rushed forward. I caught a flash of cowboy boot, jerked my head back, and
felt the wind from a hard kick aimed at my mouth. A knee hit and pain exploded
in my chest, and I went down in a hailstorm of pounding boots. Automatic gunfire shattered the air inside
the metal building. "Stop!" An accented male voice
boomed above the celebration. There was a pause as murmuring filled the
space above my head. Again automatic gunfire crackled
throughout the warehouse, and pieces of the boxes lining the walls spun and
danced under the floodlights. "Step away from Mr. McInnes."
The Bodines looked for the disembodied voice, but they didn't move. The unseen
man shouted, "Now!" Jean-clad legs had just begun to back away
when a pair of creased and starched jeans walked past and swung a cowboy boot
into my stomach. A single, penetrating explosion echoed inside the warehouse,
and skinny Ben Franklin fell backward and landed perpendicular to my prostrate
body. A ragged, bloody hole poured blood from the place where his left eye had
been. I pushed my chest up off the floor just as
another shot echoed inside the metal walls, and I glanced over to see a man in
a tank top fall to his knees with a hole in his chest. He looked surprised;
then he fell dead. The voice came again, and I was sure I
could hear echoes of an equatorial accent. "Mr. McInnes, you may
leave." A quiet mumbling started again. "Mr. McInnes! Get up and get out of
here!" I was on my feet and moving fast through
the outside door. I ran out past the trucks and looked for whatever help was
there. A soft, familiar voice came out of the darkness. "Over here, Seсor McInnes." And Carlos Sanchez stepped out of the night. At
his side was Deputy Mickey Burns. I said, "What's going on?" It
was a stupid question, but I wasn't really in a smart mood. Sanchez said, "You are safe." I nodded at Burns. "I was safe before
he brought me here." Sanchez puffed on his ever-present cigar. "Actually,
no. You weren't. There was a price on your head. Those men inside wanted you
dead." "And now they don't?" Sanchez shrugged. In the distance, I could hear helicopter
blades beating the night air. I pointed at the sky with my good hand. "Is
that yours?" He nodded. "Was Deputy Mickey here in on this
all along?" The deputy spoke up. "That's Deputy Burns.
And what I've been doing is none of your business." The freckle-faced deputy was puffing
himself up to fill Leroy Purcell's shoes; he was ready to don the Caterpillar-cap
crown of the next King Jethro. And he seemed a lot surer than I was that there
would still be a few Bodines around to follow him after tonight. As I stood there thinking about all that,
I heard running and turned to see a dozen men in black clothing round the
corner of the warehouse and disappear inside. Each man had an angular automatic
weapon suspended from a shoulder strap and secured by one hand. I asked, "What's going to happen in
there?" Sanchez drew again on his thin cigar,
making the red tip glow like a hot coal in the night. "Do you really want
to know?" "Yeah. I do." "There will be a boating accident. A
chartered fishing vessel has already left the marina in Carrabelle. The names
on the charter will match those of the men inside." "Am I safe?" He nodded. "What about my clients?" "You and they have nothing else to
fear from Leroy Purcell's branch of the organization." Sanchez turned to
Deputy Burns. "Go see what's happening." The deputy squared his shoulders and said,
"I don't want no part of this." Sanchez turned to face Burns and simply
said, "Now." Two seconds passed while the deputy tried
to think of a way to salvage some dignity, and he turned toward the warehouse. I looked up to search the stars for the
helicopter, and a pistol fired next to my ear. I fell to one knee and froze.
Deputy Mickey Burns of the Apalachicola Sheriff's Department lay dead on the
ground. I turned to see if Sanchez was still alive. He was. And he was sliding
what looked like Joey's Walther PPK into a hiding place inside his coat. Suffering a broken wrist, a shoveled back,
and multiple kicks and stomps had taken a lot out of me. It took some effort to
get back on my feet. I asked, "Am I next?" Sanchez just said, "No," and
then paused to look at the blanket of stars spread overhead. "The
helicopter will be here soon. It will take you to only one place. Dog
Island. I am sorry about your hand. You hold it as though it is broken." I nodded. "Too bad. There is no medical help on
the island. In any event, you will check into the inn and stay there until
morning. At that time, you may take the ferry to Carrabelle. After that, you
are free to go wherever you please." "Except the police." "Yes. Except the police." "Why Dog Island?" "Arrangements have been made. It is
the island or, well, nothing. Perhaps, so you will understand, nothingness would
be a better word." "Why are you doing this?" Sanchez paused to look at one of his men
who had exited the warehouse. The night-clad soldier nodded at Sanchez, who
shook his head in response. The soldier went back inside the building. The
two-named patriot turned back to me. "Your young client deserved none of
this. You are in trouble only because you tried to help." He paused.
"We are not criminals. We are soldiers. This mess was, in some ways, our
doing. I have decided to set it right, to the extent that that's
possible." I studied his aristocratic features in the
moonlight. I said, "And Purcell got out of line." He didn't answer,
so I repeated the same words and added, "And it's as good a reason
as any to take the Bodines out of the picture once and for all." Sanchez smiled. "As I said, we heard
you were smart." Suddenly the helicopter appeared over the
treetops and dropped its tail as it began its descent into the compound. I yelled over the blades. "One more
thing." Sanchez looked at me. "Whose idea was it to bring a dethroned
Panamanian dictator's nephew into the country?" Carlos Sanchez rolled his cigar between
manicured fingers. A few seconds passed before he said, "We did. And we knew
the dangers associated with his family's presence. But he was well connected in
Castro's government, and we thought his contacts would be worth the risk." I shouted. "And was it? Was it worth
all this?" His only answer was to point at the
helicopter and say, "Go." I ran to the chopper and climbed inside.
The helmeted pilot lifted off as I watched Sanchez walk to the warehouse door, speak
with one of his soldiers, and then hurry to a waiting Hummer. As the helicopter
climbed into the night sky and leveled out over the black mass of oak and
cypress treetops, I could have sworn I heard the jarring staccato pops of
automatic gunfire echoing inside the warehouse and splintering the night air. epilogue Bright sunshine filled the bedroom. A cool
spring breeze floated through
open French doors, softly ruffled the sheets, and lifted me out of a deep,
satisfying sleep. I smiled and reached over for Susan. She was gone, and my
heart missed a beat before I realized Carpintero, Leroy Purcell, and—thanks to New Cuba—the rest of the renegade Bodines had gone
on to their rewards, if the kind of afterlife that was likely to greet them
could be called a reward. I plumped my pillow and leaned my back against it. I
didn't look at my watch or the clock on the bedside table. Judging from the
sun, it was somewhere around midmorning, and that was close enough. Sounds of Susan piddling in the kitchen
drifted up the staircase. I rolled out of bed, and, after brushing
my teeth and splashing a little water on my face, I lifted the terry cloth robe
off the hook on the bathroom door and wandered out onto my second-floor deck.
And that's where I was, leaning against the railing and watching a tanker
headed for the Port of Mobile, when Susan appeared in the doorway with a large glass
of orange juice in each hand. And, only two days after being rescued from
root-cellar imprisonment, she looked pretty damned good. Lying in bed last night, Susan and I had
talked long past midnight, and now I understood most of what had happened. It looked as though Purcell had dispatched
Rus Poultrez and Sonny Teeter to grab Susan from Seaside while Joey and I were
busy on Dog Island looking for Carli. Purcell had wanted Susan as a hostage.
Poultrez, on the other hand, wanted Susan to help him find Carli. What neither
of them counted on was Susan plugging Sonny with her little snub-nosed .38 when
he broke into the Seaside cottage where she was manning our listening
equipment. That's where the hole in Sonny's side and the blood at the Seaside
cottage had come from. Unfortunately, Susan only got off one shot before
Poultrez grabbed her from behind after coming in the back. Apparently, Poultrez and Sonny had spoken
freely in front of Susan—probably because they planned to kill her
later. Susan heard Poultrez say that he knew Carli had headed for Meridian,
and, after finding Susan's address in her purse, Poultrez and Sonny just sat
Susan in the backseat and headed for the farm. She had waited for a chance to
get away, but none came. When they arrived, the house was empty.
So, Sonny—just having been gut shot and all—decided that killing Susan right then was a hell of an idea.
Poultrez disagreed and finally snapped Sonny's neck to drive home his point. What I didn't know and couldn't figure out
was the sequence of events at the farm. When did Carli get to Coopers Bend and
why was Susan in the root cellar unhurt...? "Hello?" I came back into the present. "Oh,
hi." Susan smiled. "I'm here bearing
gifts." I took a glass in my good hand; my right
fist was locked in plaster and suspended from a sling. "Orange juice is a
gift?" "Yes. From Minute Maid. What were you
thinking about?" "Poultrez and Sonny and the rest of
it." Susan set her glass on the railing and
plopped down in a redwood deck chair. "You're not still worried, are
you?" "Oh. Hell, no. I'm just trying to
piece it all together. You mind if we talk about it a little?" "I told you last night. I'm
fine." I thought maybe she was a little testy
about the subject for someone who was fine, but I let it go. I said, "I
just didn't know if you wanted to mess up a great morning like this by talking
about it." Susan looked at me, then picked up her glass and sipped some
juice. So much for my stab at sensitivity. "Okay. Here's what I don't
understand. I know Carli didn't get to the farm until after you and Poultrez
and Sonny were already there. But I don't know how long Carli was there with
her father before I showed up." Susan rose out of her chair and came to
stand beside me. "I guess a couple of hours. Poultrez locked me in the
bomb shelter just after Carli got there. I didn't have a watch, but about two
hours or so is my best guess. And Poultrez killed Sonny before I went in. So..."
Susan put her elbows on the railing and leaned out to look down the beach.
"In case you're wondering, you probably saved Carli from being raped by
showing up when you did. She told Sheriff Nixon in Coopers Bend that, when her
father heard you outside, he had just 'started on her.'" Susan made a
face. "God, what a way to put it." "Better than most of the
alternatives." "I guess. Anyway, he's gone and she's
going to make it." I shrugged, and Susan said, "Really. I believe
that. Loutie's going to take care of her for a while. Get her some counseling,
whatever she needs. Like I told you from the first, there's more to Carli than
meets the eye." "What about her mother?" "It's pitiful. Carli says not to
worry. Apparently, the mother's kind of... well, she's just about what you'd
expect to be married to her father." I drank some orange juice and said, "Oh." I was thinking about Carli and watching
three slack-jawed pelicans drift over the bay when the phone started ringing. I
set my juice back on its round wet spot on the railing. Susan said, "Let the machine get
it." "Turned it off." "Well, then just let it ring." As I turned to walk inside, I said,
"I stabbed a guy in the throat two days ago. They know it was
self-defense, but it wouldn't be a great idea for the cops to think I had
sneaked off somewhere. I'll be right back." I walked around and sat on the bed before
picking up the receiver. "Hello?" "Tom?" It was Carlos Sanchez—known in political circles as Charlie Estevez—and he apparently had decided that we were on a first-name basis. Unfortunately, I wasn't sure which name to
use. So, all I said was, "Yes?" "Carlos Sanchez." That answered that. "Good morning,
Carlos." Two could play at that game. "How's your friend? The giant with
white hair." "The giant with white hair is fine.
He's back in Mobile, and he's got a beautiful woman to nurse him back to health.
The doctors say a few weeks and he'll be back to normal." "That is good to hear."
Sanchez hesitated just as Susan walked into the room. She whispered, "Who is it?" I put my hand over the mouthpiece.
"Carlos Sanchez." Susan whispered again. "Did you tell
him you know his real name?" I kept my hand over the phone. "Hell,
no." Susan laughed, and I realized that Sanchez had been saying something.
"I'm sorry Carlos, someone just came in. What were you saying?" "I was asking about your young
client." "Carli's doing about as well as I
guess anyone could under the circumstances." "Yes. It is very sad." As far as I was concerned, Carlos Sanchez
was a pretty good guy. I formed this opinion after he rescued me from being
kicked to death in the swamp by a bunch of tattooed, redneck smugglers. But I
did not believe he had called my home to check on my friends' health and
well-being. He wanted something. "Why'd you call?" "Ah, we have a problem, and it could
turn out to be your problem too." He had my attention. "Someone is
missing." "Who?" "The Carpenter. With what happened to
Leroy Purcell, well, I don't need to tell you what kind of attention such a
psychopath could focus on my organization." "Then I take it Carpintero's done
this before." Sanchez hesitated before answering.
"Yes. I am afraid 'the Hammer,' 'the Carpenter,' whatever name you want to
use, is quite famous among former political interrogators in Central
America." "I didn't think that kind of thing
went on down there anymore." "Well, with the spread of democracy,
it is certainly not accepted practice anymore, which is one reason El
Carpintero was looking for a new, ah, venue." "And you were going to supply
one?" "What? No. No, seсor." I decided I had jerked him around enough.
"Carpintero is dead." "You have seen the body?" "Sure. He crashed into a building out
there in the compound. He was trying to make a run for it in an old Mercedes
and one of the young Bodines, a guy named Willie Teeter, either shot him or
just shot at him and made him crash. Whichever, he was dead." Sanchez was silent long enough for me to
wonder if we had lost the connection. Finally, he said, "You said Seсor Carpintero died in a crash?" "That's right." "And his wife. What happened to the seсora?" I could feel hair prickling on the back of
my neck. "We found her in a cabin. She tried to shoot me. I managed to
disarm her and ask a few questions. Then an old man and I left on an airboat.
We left Seсora Carpintero and her son—who she had
hidden somewhere in the bedroom—we left them in the cabin. There was a
four-wheel-drive parked outside with the keys in it." Sanchez laughed, but there was no humor in
it. "And you North Americans say Latinos are chauvinists. The man you call
Seсor Carpintero was an overweight,
undisciplined political hack with a rich uncle and family connections. His
wife, the mother of that chubby little boy, was a prison physician who was
brought in years ago to revive political prisoners after torture. She developed
a taste for it. And a specialty. In addition to her scalpel, she liked to use
nails." I opened my mouth to speak and nothing
came out. Susan sat on the bed beside me and put her hand on my leg.
"What's wrong? What is it, Tom?" I shook my head at Susan and spoke into
the phone. "Why did she kill Purcell?" "We don't know the details, but it
appears Leroy Purcell treated Carpintero and her husband like employees. I
expect it doesn't take much to set her off. Anyway, they were setting up some
kind of lab out there in the swamp. And the word is that a disagreement
arose." "A disagreement." It wasn't
really a question or a statement, and Sanchez let it lie there. I said,
"What was it, a meth lab?" "I'm afraid not. As far as we can
tell, it was some kind of biological hazard setup. That's something
this woman has tried her hand at before. I can only guess that Purcell planned
to enter the weapons trade." I cussed, and Sanchez added, "We burned
her laboratory to the ground." "If you didn't, I'll make sure
someone else does." "We set fire to the whole complex.
Feel free to ride out there and check, but it shouldn't be necessary. The fire
rangers were all over it an hour after we pulled out. I'm sure there's a
report." Pictures of Leroy Purcell's corpse flashed
through my mind, and one stuck. I couldn't shake the image of his thick
jock-neck spread out and nailed to the desk, the skin glistening like melted
wax where it was stretched tight across his throat from neat rows of nail holes
on each side. And, I thought, I had let the person who
did that loose on America. I could almost see the seсora, riding down a highway
somewhere in the heartland in that harmless-looking, soccer-mom
four-wheel-drive—a raven-haired beauty with a chubby little
boy and a taste for evisceration. Sanchez was waiting for me to say
something about the fire. I managed to say, "Okay. Fine." "Tom, are you all right?" "No." Some time went by, and he said, "So.
If nothing remains to be handled, we will put this behind us." I looked at Susan. All the color had
drained from her face. She was suddenly frightened, and she didn't even know
why—except that she had seen the terror in my
eyes. I said, "One more thing. Who was the
poor bastard who started all this? Who did Leroy Purcell shoot in the
mouth in See Shore Cottage while Carli was peeking in the window?" "Tom," Sanchez said, "I
have absolutely no idea." dog island MIKE STEWART BERKLEY PRIME CRIME, NEW YORK This is a work of fiction. Names,
characters, places, and incidents either are
the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and
any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments,
events, or locales is entirely coincidental. DOG ISLAND A Berkley Prime Crime Book / published by
arrangement with G. P. Putnam's Sons, a division of Penguin
Putnam Inc. PRINTING HISTORY G. P. Putnam's Sons hardcover edition /
January 2001 Berkley Prime Crime mass-market edition / January 2002 All rights reserved. Copyright © 2000 by
Michael G. Stewart. Cover art by Craig White. This book, or parts thereof, may not be
reproduced in any form without permission. For information
address: G. P. Putnam's Sons, a division of Penguin Putnam Inc., 375
Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014. Visit our website at www.penguinputnam.com. ISBN: 0-425-18204-5 Berkley Prime Crime books are published by
The Berkley Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Putnam Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York
10014. The name BERKLEY PRIME CRIME and the
BERKLEY PRIME CRIME design are trademarks belonging to Penguin Putnam Inc. PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 For my parents
From the beach the child holding the hand
of her father, Those burial-clouds that lower victorious
soon to devour all, Watching, silently weeps. WALT WHITMAN On the Beach at
Night prologue The motor stopped. Cool rain glanced off
the windshield and side
windows in gray needles and disappeared into the dark sheet of water stretched
across the parking lot. Inside the car, a sinewy boy with sun-bleached hair
leaned across the center console and pushed his mouth against a teenage girl's
lips. She put her hand on the back of his head, and the boy began to fondle her
breasts with his left hand. Pulling away, the girl popped open the passenger
door and stepped out onto wet pavement where she spun in a circle, her arms
extended, her palms cupped to catch the rain. Even at night, her face glowed
from warm days of Florida sun. Thick black hair bounced against her shoulder
blades as she danced. The boy said something from inside the
car. The girl stopped and ran across the pavement and onto the sand toward the
surf, where she disappeared into the night. The boy muttered something; then he
stepped out and followed. He found her sitting on a scattered path
of gray and white shells at the high-tide mark, kicking at waves with her toes
as they lapped against her feet and calves. He sat down on the sand behind her,
encircled her hips with his legs, and reached around from behind to hold both
of her breasts in sunburned hands. She seemed not to notice. She sat and
watched whitecaps roll across the rain-splattered Gulf. Growing restless for a response, he pulled
her over backward and rolled on top of her. His hands met behind her neck, and
his legs intertwined with hers. Their mouths worked together while her hands
slowly kneaded the sand beside her hips. Without warning or finesse, the boy's
clumsy hands shoved her wind-breaker, shirt, and bra up to her neck, and the
sun-bleached head moved down to kiss her breasts. The girl lay still for
seconds while his mouth moved over her nipples. Her hands squeezed pockets of
sand. Tears filled the corners of closed lids and rolled down her cheekbones
and temples, mixing with the salt spray and cool raindrops in her hair. "Stop." The boy didn't respond, except to press
harder against her with his hips and to work more frantically with his tongue. "Stop, please." She pushed him
away and stood up. He watched her breasts until she had untangled her clothes
and pulled her shirtfront over the cotton bra. She looked out again at the
whitecaps. Behind her, the boy walked back up the beach and climbed into his
Mustang. The girl turned and walked away down the shoreline. In the distance,
she could hear the car drive away. She carried her sandals dangling from two
fingers and squeezed the sharp, cool sand with her toes as she walked. The
rhythms and the scents of the Gulf echoed the rhythms and scents of childhood;
they reminded her, in a softer, easier way, of the Atlantic shore. There was
still the throb of distant hurt in the waves, but she needed the sound. Maybe
she even needed the hurt. She hugged her windbreaker tight. All around her,
swirls of fog hugged the beach above rippled shadows in the sand. She had hoped the boy in the Mustang would
walk with her along the sand and softly kiss her and maybe tell her something
about the stars, but that wasn't life. She had known that when he asked her
out. Now, she had no way to get home. The girl walked until creosote pilings
marking the end of public access beaches materialized out of the night. Turning
her back to the water, she moved up the beach and found a lounge chair on the
patio of a pastel beach house. There was no car on the oyster-shell driveway
and no sign of life inside. She pressed her fist against the flesh between her
stomach and chest, closed her eyes, and tried to sleep. Voices floated out of the beach house, and
she sighed. Moving quietly out of the chair, she walked around the corner of the
house opposite the driveway and headed for the road. A few paces ahead, a
jagged rectangle of light fell from a window onto a tangle of sea grass,
cockleburs, and dirty sand. She turned toward the beach, but the sound of
something or someone falling brought her back. Crouching to the side of the window,
she peered through the slats of a bamboo blind that hung against the inside of
the glass. She saw four men in the room. One lay on the floor and seemed hurt.
The others were standing. Two wore tank tops, cutoffs, and caps. One of the two
had tattoos on one arm. The fourth man was larger than the others—over six feet and bulky, like a weight lifter or an ex-jock going
to fat. He wore tan dress pants and a red short-sleeved shirt. The big one seemed to say something, and
the other two picked up the injured man by his armpits. Someone was talking—a baritone hum floated into the night. She saw the big man pull a
pistol out of the back of his waistband and put it in the hurt man's mouth. A
loud thoump bounced against the glass in the window, and the hurt man's
cheeks flashed iridescent blood red like a kid shining a flashlight into his
mouth on a summer evening. At the same time, the man's head popped back and he
sagged between the two men in cutoffs. The next instant, all three men swiveled
their heads to look at the window. She may have tried to say "no,"
but what came out was shapeless and guttural—not something so
precise as a word. The big man started out of the room. The other two dropped
the dead man and followed. Within seconds, all three were outside searching the
beach. They found nothing to account for the
sound. chapter one Spring rains east of Baton Rouge had poured
fog across Mobile Bay. A cool
breeze, stirred up by warm days and cool nights, swept down the beach and
across the second-floor deck where it tugged at my robe. Inside, through French
doors, red dots hovered in the dark over the bedside table, showing that it was
a little after four in the morning. Glenfiddich scotch and Umbйrto Eco had
finally put me under a little after midnight—about three
hours before I woke and wandered out on the deck. I was getting used to it. You
can get a lot of thinking done if you aren't able to sleep. The bedroom phone was ringing. A
greenish-white glow pulsed next to the red dots on the clock. The answering
machine was off, and I watched the telephone ring for most of a minute before
walking into the bedroom. I picked up the handset and cleared my throat.
"Hello?" A woman's voice said, "Tom?" "Yeah, this is Tom." "Tom, this is Susan Fitzsimmons. I
apologize for calling in the middle of the night." I felt for the switch on the bedside lamp,
and yellow light jarred the backs of my eyes. "Are you all right?" Susan said, "I'm fine. Something bad
has happened though." "What do you mean by 'something
bad'?" "There's someone here with me who
needs to talk to you. We need some legal advice on how to handle
a disturbing situation." I had known Susan for six months. We met
in early October when fall was just starting to cool the Gulf Coast. She was
smart and graceful and striking, and I had almost gotten her killed. Or, at
least, I was one reason among many why Susan found herself limping through the
holidays recovering from knife wounds. One set of reasons was that her artist
husband had gotten greedy, crossed my little brother, and ended up with his
throat sliced open. Another was that I stuck my nose in and figured out what
happened and, along the way, managed to bring an impressively dangerous person
into Susan's life. Now she had only fading memories of her dead husband and,
apparently, a friend in trouble. I had a dead brother and a long line of
sleepless nights. And I was not blind to the possibility that, over the past
few months, I might have been wallowing in it a bit. I reached for the pen and pad on the bedside
table, I asked, "Where are you?" "We're at the beach house on St.
George. The girl who needs to talk to you is," she paused, "a friend
of mine here on the island. She thinks she may have seen someone get killed.
You know, murdered. Earlier tonight on the beach." I thought, damn. I said, "I'm
assuming she wasn't involved." "No. Well, only to the extent that
she saw it happen." "Then the advice is easy. Call the
cops." "She wasn't involved, but it's more
complicated than that." Susan sounded unsure of what to say. "I think
she needs to talk to a lawyer." "What's complicated about it?" Susan didn't answer. "It's okay to talk on the phone. No
one's listening." "You're right. I guess it's silly,
but I am uncomfortable talking this way. Part of the problem is, well, you know
how it is down here on the coast. Somebody disappears or you see somebody
flashing a wad of money or somebody looks like they're up to no good, first
thing that pops into your head is it's got something to do with drugs. And you
never know whose brother or cousin or friend might be involved, so you don't
know who's safe to talk to." "She thinks she saw some kind of drug
hit?" "Tom, she doesn't know what it was.
Just that somebody got killed right in front of her, and she's scared out of her
mind. And here's the complicated part. She's a runaway, and she's a minor.
She's absolutely terrified that her family's going to find out where she is and
come get her. You know, if she goes to the police and they check her out and
find out she's a runaway." "Susan, maybe her father or mother
coming to get her is the best thing that could come out of this." "I don't think so." "What do you mean, you don't think
so? You can't decide something like that on your own." "In this case, I can." "I guess there's something you're not
telling me." She didn't answer. I gave up. "When did it happen?" "When did what happen?" "The murder. When did this friend...
What's her name?" "Carli. Carli Monroe." "When did Carli see this
happen?" "About three hours ago, I
think." "Shit." "Yes, I know." Susan hesitated, then
said, "She needs to talk to a lawyer, Tom. I hate to ask, but could you
come down here?" "Susan, I know she's scared, but I'm
not a criminal attorney. Hell, I'm not even licensed in Florida. And I'm
supposed to be at a meeting in Tuscaloosa this afternoon. My advice is to find
a good local attorney, somebody who's down at the courthouse every week
drinking coffee with the prosecutors and bailiffs, and work through him or
her." Susan lowered her voice. "Tom, it's taken
me two hours to get her to let me make this call." She had cupped her hand
over the mouthpiece, and her muffled words buzzed around the edges. "Carli
doesn't know who to trust down here and neither do I. If you don't help, she's
just going to leave here and try to deal with it by herself. And she's not
really capable of doing that." I didn't respond. Seconds passed as faint
static filled the earpiece. Finally, Susan just repeated my name with what
sounded like a little shame sprinkled over it. My mouth tasted bitter and smoky from last
night's scotch and three hours sleep. I breathed deeply to clear my head and
looked out at the night. Light from the bedside lamp had washed out the view
through open French doors, merging sea and sky and clouds into one black sheet.
Susan waited some more while I decided to do the right thing. I said,
"I'll be there around mid-morning." "Thanks. I'm sorry to do this to
you." "Don't worry about it. I should have said yes right away."
Puffs of clean air rolled through the open door and across the bed. I walked
into the bathroom and splashed water against my face and neck before going back
to the phone and punching in a seven-digit number. A deep voice, wide awake,
answered on the second ring. chapter two "We've got to check out something on
St. George Island." The best investigator on the Gulf, maybe
one of the best anywhere, said, "You know what time it is?" "It's twenty till five." "I know what time it is."
Joey didn't call me a dipshit, but it was there in his tone. "What's on
St. George Island that's worth me hauling my ass out of bed this time of the
morning?" "Somebody's dead." "Anybody I know?" "Got no idea. That's what I need you
to find out. You got any contacts over around the Apalachicola-St. George
area?" "Nope. Hang on a second." I
heard some rustling and a few clicking sounds, and Joey came back on the line.
"Okay, go ahead." "I just got a call from Susan
Fitzsimmons." "She okay?" "Susan's fine. But she's got some
friend on St. George who thinks she saw some guy, or maybe some woman, get
killed tonight." "You're kidding." "No. I'm not." "For one hell of a good person,
Susan's got some bad karma or something junking up her life." I was thinking the same thing. I said,
"Yeah, well, she needs some help. So, I was hoping you could sniff around
the cops in Apalachicola and see if anything's been reported. I could do it,
but..." He interrupted. "But they aren't
going to tell some lawyer shit. You'd just start 'em beating the bushes."
Joey paused, then went on. "Yeah, I can do that. Don't know anybody down
there in the fucking boonies, but I got a couple of boys on the Panama City
force who'll fish around for me. Cost a couple of bills. That okay?" "Sure. Fine. Thanks." "Give me the details." I looked at the pad on my bedside table.
Exactly seven words were written on it: Susan, St. George Island, Carli
Monroe, and Murder. I said, "I don't know any." Joey sighed and hung up. Before stepping into the shower, I called
the office and left voice mail for my secretary, Kelly. I told her to call the
prospective client I was supposed to meet that afternoon and make something up. A few minutes later, as hot water began to
sting my chest and shoulders, I thought about the timber tycoon in Tuscaloosa
who—after receiving Kelly's call—would be seeking legal advice elsewhere. And I realized that it
was all part of my grand plan. A year ago, I had bailed from a fat six-figure
job to start a solo practice. And now, blowing off wealthy, paying clients was
the next logical step in my strategy to avoid worldly distractions like money
and success and solving legal problems for people who could actually afford to
pay me. I squirted shampoo into my palm and rubbed
my hands together. Maybe Carli would turn out to be a runaway
heiress. A few minutes after six-thirty, a blue
Ford Expedition crunched onto the white gravel drive. I stepped out onto the
porch. Heavy dew had darkened the tops of the weathered banisters. Smudged
swirls of orange and pink glowed in the east beneath a light gray sky. Joey stepped out of the car, and I said,
"Good morning." Joey said, "Morning," as he climbed the
front steps and turned sideways to navigate the entry hall on his way to the
kitchen. It was a tight fit. I'm six feet tall, and I could look Joey squarely
in the throat if I concentrated on my posture. He was about six six and two
hundred forty pounds of muscle and bone. He looked like a lost Viking: short
white-blonde hair, ruddy sun-creased skin, and hard gray eyes the color of a
new tin roof. That morning, the Viking wore pleated olive-green khakis, a
cream-colored rugby shirt, and Hush Puppies without socks. I followed and found Joey standing in
front of my open refrigerator drinking out of a half-gallon carton of Tropicana
Pure Premium orange juice. "Help yourself." "That's what I thought I was doing.
Been up half the frigging night looking for a dead guy who probably ain't even
dead. You got any of those sesame seed bagels you had last time I was out here?
Found 'em." "Want some breakfast?" Joey ignored the question. He found a
knife, cut two bagels in half, and popped them in the toaster oven. I poured
two cups of coffee and gave one to Joey. He smeared cream cheese on the four
toasted bagel halves and put all four on his plate. When he was seated at the kitchen table, I
said, "No dead guys. Is that the story?" Joey said, "That's the story." "Well, did you find out anything from
your Panama City contacts besides the fact that no murder has been
reported?" Joey talked over a mouthful of bagel.
"Like what?" "I don't know. I thought maybe you
got the lowdown on the cops in Apalachicola, or you fished around for some
general information about whether they've had any trouble down that way." "No cops. Just a sheriff's office.
Sheriff Todd Wilson." "Todd? They got a yuppie beach
sheriff?" "From what I could find out, Wilson
wouldn't know a yuppie if he ate one. Word is, though, he's a good enough guy. Probably
as honest as most small-town sheriffs along the coast." Joey paused to
drain the rest of the orange juice from the carton he had lifted from my
refrigerator. "What's that mean?" "What's what mean?" "What do you mean he's as honest as
most sheriffs along the coast?" "It means he keeps the peace. You
know, keeps the streets safe for old ladies and tourists. But the rumor is that
he also takes a little money every now and then to ignore the Bodines." "The what?" "Kind of a redneck mafia. The cops
down there call 'em 'the Bodines.' You know, like Jethro on The Beverly
Hillbillies. Lots of jokes about this bunch of rednecks 'ciphering' their
profits and that kinda shit. But they run the coast down there. And they're
organized—half of 'em are related to each
other." "And that's all you know right
now?" "That's it. No murders, no bodies,
nothing." I asked Joey to lock up and left him
sitting at my kitchen table drinking coffee and reading my morning Mobile
Register. By seven, I was in my Cherokee cruising down Scenic 98 toward
Apalachicola and the causeway to St. George Island. I flipped on the radio to
drown out the whine of mud grips on blacktop. National Public Radio out of
Mobile lasted through Foley and Pensacola, across Pensacola Bay, and into
Navarre. Outside Ft. Walton, static drowned out
NPR. An oldies station out of Panama City filled the Jeep with a different noise
as 98 wound next to Choctawhatchee Bay, past the new-money, Easter-egg villas
at Seaside and the old-money resort at Grayton Beach, and then cut through the
spring-break motels, neon signs, and giant water slides that pollute Panama
City Beach. East of Panama City, used car and mobile
home lots with hand-painted signs, boxy fast-food joints, and staccato
stoplights dissolved into pine forests that sporadically separated the pavement
from a clear view of the Gulf. After an hour of nothing, the road bumped into
the quick-mart-and-fast-food outskirts of Apalachicola and then eased into that
quaint seaside town's Victorian architecture and palm-lined streets. I killed the radio and tried to think
about what I would say to Susan and her friend about witnessing a crime and the
best way to handle involvement with the police. I couldn't think of anything. Without music, the mud grips whirred again
on the causeway that stretches from the east end of Apalachicola to the bay
side of St. George Island. I drove to the ocean side of the island, turned
right away from the state park, and cruised between rows of stilted,
hurricane-ready vacation homes. As the road moved away from the center of the
island, the houses grew generally newer and larger until I turned away from the
ocean and then left into The Plantation. An overstuffed guard's uniform shuffled
out of the gatehouse and asked my business. I asked for directions to Susan
Fitzsimmons' house. He found my name on a clipboard, handed me a green tag to
hang from my rearview mirror, and told me how to get where I was going. Back
over on the Gulf side of the island, I found a two-story
Caribbean-plantation-style beach house with the right numbers. Latticework and tropical plants
camouflaged the hurricane stilts. Above the crisscross pattern, weathered gray
siding contrasted with white trim work around windows and doors and highlighted
an oversized round window suspended beneath a gable's point above the back
entrance. A banistered crow's nest stretched twenty feet across the apex of a
green copper roof, providing what had to be one hell of a view of the water. I smiled. Sticking out of the carport
beneath the house was Susan's antique step-side pickup. I parked on
oyster-shell paving behind Susan's truck and climbed wooden steps to the main
door. I pressed the doorbell. Someone was moving inside the house. chapter three Susan Fitzsimmons opened the door and
smiled with perfect white
teeth and sun-crinkled eyes. She stepped out, gave me a quick but exuberant
hug, and stepped back to look at my face. I said, "You look great." And
she did. The last time I had seen Susan, she had
been lying in a hospital bed with clear plastic tubes looped into her arms and
nostrils. She had been pale and tired and frightened. Now Susan looked like
Susan again—sun-streaked blonde hair worn short and
shaggy, tanned cheeks, and intelligent blue eyes. Susan is from the Midwest and has never
had the penchant for small talk that Southerners think is part of good manners—or, as she describes it, talking until you can think of something
to say. Now, all Susan said was, "Come in. Carli's inside." The door opened into a cavernous room
featuring a large circular staircase made of polished aluminum that swirled
upward against the left wall. Twelve feet up, metal stairs connected to a
wooden catwalk that hung from the left and right walls, wrapped around the back
wall that held the door we had come through, and, apparently, provided access
to bedrooms on the second level. On the right wall, a six-foot oil painting of
nothing but dozens of beautifully detailed seashells flooded the room with
color. Glass stretched across the front of the room, showing huge rectangles of
ocean and sky framed by rough-cut beams. Susan's kitchen lay to the right and
against the back wall. It was separated from the main living area by a long,
antique butcher's table surrounded by brushed aluminum chairs that echoed the
staircase. Next to the table sat a striking teenage girl with blue-black hair,
dark brown eyes set in a pretty oval face, and suntanned legs that she
displayed beneath blue jean cutoffs with slits up the outside seams that ended
high enough to show just a hint of where her panties curved around her hips.
Above the jeans, four inches of skin and a very attractive navel were on
display beneath a green knit shirt designed to show off young navels. She sat
with her ankles crossed and her legs extended toward us as we entered. She wore
black sport sandals with blue Aztec designs on the straps, and her toenails
were painted pink. A yellow windbreaker hung across the back of her chair. "Tom. This is Carli. Carli, this is
the friend I told you about." She uncrossed her ankles, recrossed them
with the other foot on top, and smiled a strange, somehow inappropriate smile.
Her pelvis seemed to rise up in the chair as she moved her legs. She said,
"Nice to meet you." She had some kind of working-class Northern
accent. I was suddenly a little irritated. I said,
"Can your friend excuse us for a minute?" Carli stopped smiling. Susan
asked her to please step outside for a moment, and Carli stood and walked out
onto the deck. I said, "What was that about?" Susan said, "A brave front." "That didn't look like a brave front.
That looked like plain old come and get it, which I guess is fine and
maybe she's old enough to advertise if she wants to, but don't you think the
Lolita routine is a little out of place considering what she says happened to
her last night?" Susan studied my face. She was thinking,
and I was standing there waiting for her to do it. It's her way. Some time
ticked by, then Susan spoke softly. "Carli's a good person, and she's a
lot smarter than you'd think when you first meet her. She waits tables at the
Pelican's Roost. I eat there a good deal when I'm down here, and I've gotten to
know her. Carli doesn't know I know this, but she used to switch tables with
other waitresses so she could wait on me whenever I came in." "What's that, some kind of mother
complex?" "No. At least, I don't think that's
part of it. She wants to be an artist, and somebody told her Bird Fitzsimmons
had been my husband. We started talking, and she knew all about him. Carli was
kind of proud of the fact that she was once thrown out of the gallery in New
Orleans that handles Bird's paintings because she hung around there for half a
day just looking." "Why would they throw her out for
looking? I thought that was what you were supposed to do at galleries." Susan smiled. "You're innocent.
You're supposed to buy art at commercial galleries. Looking is only
foreplay for people who can afford to consummate. And, as Carli said, she had
'broke runaway' written all over her. I'm telling you, Tom, Carli's got a lot
going for her. But however smart or artistic or sensitive she can be, for some
reason, what you just saw seems to be the only way she knows how to act around
men." "Well, nothing has been reported to
the authorities that supports her story, which could just mean the killer is
either lucky or good. But, take it all together, and you have to wonder if we're
wasting our time here. You have to admit, she doesn't exactly look traumatized
and desperate for help." Susan said, "Go talk to her." I walked out onto the deck and closed the
glass door. Carli was leaning against a weathered railing, staring down the
beach to her left. I asked, "How old are you?" When I spoke, she turned to face me and
propped her left hip against the rail. Tears had drawn dark wet trails across
her cheeks down to her jawline, but I couldn't decide whether she was upset or
angry. She wasn't wearing makeup. She didn't need any. She said, "What difference does it
make?" "Susan says you're a minor." She repeated the same question. "Look, Carli. Susan asked me to help
you. And she says the reason you can't just go to the police and tell them what
happened is because you're a minor and you're a runaway. So, I'd like to know
how old you are. It could make a difference, a legal difference, as to whether
your family has any right to come get you. Also, if I'm going to help you,
you've got to trust me enough to answer some questions. And we don't have time
to argue about whether everything I ask you makes a difference." "Sixteen. I'm sixteen." "When's your birthday?" "What diff... It's in May, The
fifth." "So you're going to be seventeen in
May." "No. I mean. I guess I'm not really
sixteen yet. I'll be sixteen in May." "You look older than fifteen." "Yeah. They let me serve beer at the
restaurant. Nobody's said anything." She seemed to focus on the pupils in
my eyes. "I guess I'm more developed than most girls my age." As she
spoke, Carli began to stroke her bare stomach with her index finger in a
calculatedly absentminded way. She noticed that I noticed, and her expression
changed. She looked like maybe she knew a secret that I didn't. "What happened last night?" "I was down on the public beach with
this guy I met." "What's his name?" "Bobby. Anyway..." I interrupted. "Bobby what?" "Oh, uh, I don't think he told me.
He's a local. Works at the Chevron station in town. Anyway, he picked me up at
one after I got off at the Pelican and we drove down to the parking lot at the
public beach. After a few minutes, we got out and walked down to the beach. I
like it at night. Anyway, we stayed there awhile and Bobby left." "He just left you there on the beach when
you two were done?" Carli's face flushed red. "We weren't
done the way you say it. I don't just do it like that." "No offense, Carli. I'm not judging
you. It just sounds like the guy acted like a jerk." "He left 'cause I wouldn't do it. In
case you're wondering." It had been a long time since I'd talked
to a fifteen-year-old girl about her sex life. In fact, I had never talked to a
fifteen-year-old girl about her sex life. I said, "Let's talk about what
happened after Bobby left. How did you get from there to witnessing a
murder?" Carli told me she had walked on the beach,
tried to crash on the patio of a seemingly empty beach house, and ended up
witnessing a murder through a bedroom window. She described the men who came
out and searched the beach while she darted from one dark house to another,
finally making her way to Susan's door. By the time Carli finished her story,
tears had overfilled wide brown eyes and begun rolling down her cheeks. Susan
was right. As Carli talked, she had become the adolescent she was, and she
looked genuinely frightened. Carli rubbed the tears away with her palms while I
stood there feeling impotent and wishing I carried a handkerchief in my back
pocket the way my father always did. When she was composed, I asked, "What
is it you want to do here, Carli? I checked this morning, and nothing has been
reported to the police. They have no idea that a murder even happened. So I
want you to consider that the easiest thing—the safest
thing for you—would be for you to walk away and forget
the whole thing." Carli focused hard on my pupils again, but
this time the look wasn't seductive or affectionate. "You're telling me it
doesn't matter if somebody got the back of his head shot off?" "Hell, no, Carli. But I'm here to
look after your interests, and I'm telling you the safest thing for you
to do. If you want me to report the crime, I think I can protect your
identity from the police. But if you step into the middle of something like
this, there's always a chance somebody's going to find out who you are. And, if
they do, you've got to realize that being a witness in a murder trial is
dangerous under any circumstances. Plus, if you're that scared of being sent
home... Well, that's one more reason to just walk away." Carli turned to look out over the water.
"Mr. McInnes, would you run away and hide if it were you?" "It's not me." It was a lawyer's
answer. Seconds passed as my young client scanned
the curving blue horizon where ocean met sky. "I want you to tell the
police about the murder and get them to ... to investigate it. Just don't tell
them who I am. Can you do that?" Tough kid. I said, "Yeah, Carli. I
can definitely do that." While we were outside, Susan had piled
brunch on the long butcher's table next to her kitchen. We all ate and made
polite conversation. Afterward, Susan walked me to the Jeep. We were back on
the driveway, well away from Carli, when Susan simply said, "Well?" "I'm pretty sure something happened,"
I said. "I don't think she's just looking for attention, but, if she is,
she's got me fooled. Maybe she's that good. Who knows? Anyone who claims they
can tell if a truly dishonest person is lying is full of it. You just
can't." Now it was Susan's turn to sound
irritated. "Carli's got some problems, but I told you she's basically a
good kid." "I'm not calling her a liar. Like I
said, I think she saw something, and I think whatever it was scared the hell
out of her. It's exactly what she saw that's in question." Susan started
to argue, and I held up a hand to stop her. "Just hang on. I'm only saying
eye-witness testimony is the most unreliable evidence you can have,
particularly in a murder trial. Emotions take over and color and distort
perceptions and memories. Jurors love to hear somebody say they saw what
happened, but lawyers and judges know how shaky that kind of testimony usually
is." I scratched at the oyster-shell paving with my shoe. "Look, you
and I don't know for certain what happened last night. Only Carli knows, and
she wants me to go to the cops. So, that's what I'm going to do." Susan just looked at me. "Let's say I stop by the sheriff's
office in town and tell him I have a client who saw some shady-looking guys up
to no good last night at this particular beach house, and we're just concerned
that someone may have gotten hurt. If the sheriff checks it out and it's
nothing, then Carli probably need never come forward." Susan said, "That's fine if it works
out that way, but what if it's not nothing?" "Well, if we find blood splattered
all over the walls then we'll negotiate some kind of deal to keep her identity
secret. She's a minor, so that's possible. Maybe we could also get you
appointed Carli's guardian ad litem until this mess is over." "Is that the best you can come up
with?" I smiled. "No. There are other things
we can do, including just telling them that my client refuses to testify. The
DA can't compel her testimony if he doesn't know who she is. And, as her
attorney, I don't have to tell them. But first we need to find out if..."
Susan raised an eyebrow. "Okay, first we need to find out what actually
happened last night. Don't worry. If the cops find blood all over the place,
then I'll either negotiate a deal to keep Carli's name out of it, or we just
won't let her talk to them." Susan told me the name of the house in
question—in resort towns every little hovel has a
desperately cute name—and I prepared to dance my jig for the
sheriff. chapter four I drove into Apalachicola and found the sheriff's office—a squatty yellow-brick building wedged between two Victorian homes
that had been converted into offices for a few lawyers and accountants and a
couple of real estate agents. Inside at the front desk, a pleasant young
woman wearing a telephone operator's headset and an overbite asked if she could
help. I said I was hoping to see a deputy. She pushed a button, waited, and
spoke into her headset. A few seconds later, a friendly red-headed guy came
through the door. He looked like he smiled a lot, and that's what he did as he
introduced himself as Deputy Mickey Burns. He looked strong, and he had a
scattering of faded-blue, Marine Corp tattoos competing for space among a few
hundred freckles and a carpet of reddish-blonde hair on his forearms. I told my
rehearsed story. He smiled some more and said, "Let's go have a
look." Twenty minutes later, we pulled onto the
driveway of "See Shore Cottage" in the deputy's patrol car and parked
behind a white truck with a chrome toolbox installed behind the cab. Two
five-gallon, plastic paint buckets lay on their sides in the sand and clover
that made up the front yard. The deputy said, "Looks like they're having
some work done." I agreed that it looked just like that. He thought for a
few seconds, and asked, "You think maybe your client saw some construction
workers horsing around and got the wrong idea?" "I guess you never know, but I don't
think so. That really doesn't fit what my client told me." Deputy Mickey Burns exhaled through his
nose, looked out at the water, and said, "Well, let's go look
around." We both stepped out of the car into a bright spring day. The cottage was a classic Florida beach
bunker—concrete block, aqua-blue exterior, white
asphalt roof, and, running along one side, a privacy wall constructed of
decorative cement blocks turned on edge so that you could see through the
inside pattern. A pair of mirror-image, oversized plaster casts of seahorses
flanked the front door. The cottage sat at ground level and would violate every
high wind and water damage construction spec on the books if it were built today. Local law enforcement took the lead, and I
followed. After banging on the aluminum doorjamb, the deputy pulled open the
screen door and walked inside. "Yo! Who's here?" No one answered, but I could hear what
sounded like an old Lynyrd Skynyrd song bouncing around some other part of the
house. We walked down a short hall and into what seemed to be a bedroom. Drop
cloths were draped over the furniture, the carpet had been pulled up, and two
guys in shorts and sandals and not much else were working hard at brushing
white paint onto white walls. The deputy said, "Can't y'all hear back
here?" At least that's what I think he said. All
I heard was, "Can't y'all he...," before one of the painters yelled,
"Shit," and spun around, slinging a thick streak of white across his
buddy's shoulder. The deputy held up both palms and said, "Whoa. Nothing
to get excited about here. We're just looking around." The jumpy painter smiled now and said,
"You scared the hell out of us." The deputy said, "Sorry about that.
We knocked, and then I yelled for you in the front room there. I guess you
couldn't hear over the music." The painter with a new white stripe on his
shoulder didn't smile. He did walk over and flip off a paint-speckled boom box.
The talkative one said, "What can we do for you?" The deputy introduced me to the two
painters by name, which, even then, seemed like a bad idea. The one who was
doing all the talking said "Hey," and gave their names: Tim and Sonny.
My escort then explained that someone on the island had called me the night
before and reported that they had seen some guys up to no good at See Shore
Cottage. Tim, who was apparently the only one of the two with the gift of
speech, laughed and said, "Me and old Sonny here are generally up to no
good alright." We all laughed a little, everybody except
Sonny. Tim laughed because he thought he was funny, and the deputy and I
laughed to be polite. The bare-chested, paint-spattered Sonny glanced furtively
around the room while paint dribbled from the brush in his hand onto the bare
concrete floor. Deputy Mickey said, "I don't know if anything happened
around here last night or not. And I don't think Mr. McInnes really knows
either. He just had somebody..." The deputy turned to look at me.
"Was it a man or a woman? I don't even know whether to call 'em him or
her, here." I stared at him for a couple of seconds
while trying to decide why he would ask that in front of Tim and Sonny, whether
it really made any difference that he had, and, finally, how much of a schmuck
I would look like if I refused to answer. I said, "A man. The client is a
man." And I said it after just enough pause and with just the right
emphasis to look like I was completely full of shit The deputy looked a little
confused, said, "okay," and went on talking to Tim and Sonny.
"Mr. McInnes' client says he saw three guys hauling a fourth guy around
who looked like he was hurt. Said it was late last night sometime." Tim fixed his face into a look of concern,
Sonny glanced around the room some more, and I was beginning to regret giving
too many details to Deputy Mickey. Tim said, "Me and Sonny worked here
pretty late last night. We had to get the carpet up and out before we could
start painting this morning. So we just kept at it until it was done." I asked why. Tim said, "Whatcha mean?" "Why pull up the carpet? I mean, if
the owner's going to keep it, you could just cover it with drop cloths like you
did the furniture. And if you're planning to throw it out and put in new
carpeting, why not just use the old carpet for a drop cloth and tear it up
later?" Tim looked theatrically puzzled. The
deputy scrunched up his face in thought and said, "Yeah. I don't know why
we're that worried about the carpet. But what he says makes sense, if you
wanted..." Sonny, the mute painter, blurted out,
"It stunk." We all looked at him. He had stopped glancing around the
room and focused his eyes on mine. I liked it better when he couldn't focus. He
looked a little nuts. "We got it outta here 'cause it stunk. The roof
musta leaked or something and got it wet. All I know is it smelled like ... it
stunk when we come in to do the job. I told 'em I wasn't going to paint nothing
until that rug was gone." Tim joined in, "That's a fact, buddy.
First thing we did was rip it up and get it out of here." Sonny continued to stare into my eyes. I
asked, "What happened to it?" Tim said, "Took it to the dump. Probably
buried under a few tons of garbage by now. Don't know why you'd care,
though." The deputy said, "We're getting off
the point here. All I want to know is if either of y'all saw anything last
night or this morning that didn't look right, and if anybody else came with you
or stopped by yesterday." Sonny resumed his wandering eyes act, and
Tim said, "Nope and nope. Just another job, Sheriff." "Deputy Sheriff." "Sorry. Nobody got hurt around here
that we know about, Deputy." Deputy Mickey thanked them and then, as if
it were an afterthought, asked, "Have you two got a contract or a work
order or something like that from the owner for this work?" Tim said, "Yessir, we sure do. Out in
the truck." The deputy asked if he could see it, and
the rest of our little group left Sonny alone to continue his eye exercises.
Outside, Tim lifted a metal clipboard off the truck seat, flipped open the
cover, and handed it to Deputy Mickey. I read it over his shoulder. The only
page in the clip was a work order from Dolphin Rentals, authorizing carpet
replacement and new paint in the bedroom of one See Shore Cottage. The work
order was dated two weeks earlier and signed by Billie Timmons, Agent. Back at the sheriff's office, Deputy
Mickey walked me to my car. I got in and rolled down the front two windows. He
bent down, leaned two furry, tattooed forearms in the driver's window, and
peered inside the Jeep. He smelled faintly of sweat and citrus aftershave.
He said, "Well, that looked like a wild-goose chase, but chasing wild
geese is mostly what the job is about. You happy?" I wasn't a damned bit happy, but I just
shrugged and said, "Sure. At least I can report back to my client. I'm
sure he'll be relieved no one was hurt." Deputy Mickey said, "Yeah, we can all
be happy about that. Anyway, I was glad to help." He fixed a reassuring
smile on his face and turned to walk away. I asked, "Does your department keep
ownership records on the houses on St. George?" Burns stopped and turned back. "We
probably got that information around somewhere. But, if you're a lawyer, you
can find it as easy as I can by going by the courthouse." "I just thought you might be able to
save me some time." Deputy Burns smiled again. Very nice. Very
friendly. But we both knew he was done with me. Then he turned and walked
inside the sheriff's building. I backed out and, once again, turned southeast
toward St. George Island. Back at the beach house, I discovered that
Carli was gone. Susan had given her a ride to the restaurant so she would be
there to help set up for the lunch crowd. In light of my unsettling encounter
with Tim and Sonny, I wasn't happy about my new client running around the island
unescorted. But Susan assured me that she had impressed on Carli the need to
keep her mouth shut. Susan added, "It's hard anyway to get Carli to say
much of anything except just making small talk or, if she's really comfortable,
maybe talking about being an artist one day. I think you learn early to keep
secrets when you grow up in a family like hers." I asked, "What kind of a family does
she have? You've mentioned a couple of times that she's terrified about
going home, but you've never said why." "I really don't know exactly. And I
don't know why I tried to sound dramatic and sage about 'keeping secrets.' The
whole thing sounds a little Barbara Walters, doesn't it?" "It sounds like you're making it up
as you go. If that's what you mean." Susan gave me a look. "I just know
that Carli's scared to death of having to go back. And I know it's not
just some high school angst thing. And I know that she won't talk about
it." Susan paused and said, "What did you find out at the sheriff's
office?" I told her. I recited my morning adventure
and jotted down notes while the whole mess was fresh in my mind. Later, I would
transfer the notes to my laptop, just as I did with every case, so they would
be available for word searches and for preparing a chronology of the facts.
While I was writing out a summary of my meetings with Deputy Mickey Burns and
the painting duo of Tim and Sonny, Susan pulled out her yellow pages and looked
up Dolphin Rentals, which turned out to be a small real estate company in
Apalachicola. She punched in the number and asked for Billie Timmons. Ms.
Timmons was not in the office and would not be back for another four days, but
she did handle See Shore Cottage and had full authority to authorize normal
repairs to the property. Susan and I sat in her living room and
looked at each other for a while. She was thinking. Finally, she said,
"Okay, what about the paint? They can't just slap some paint on the walls
and cover up all traces of blood. I mean, I know real life isn't like cop shows
on TV. But the police are more sophisticated than that, aren't they?" "Sure they are. The cops could
probably peel the walls and find some bloodstains between the paint layers. But
they'd need sufficient probable cause to get a search warrant that would allow
them not only to search the cottage but to also strip the walls looking for
bloodstains. Which sounds like a good idea, except that a warrant that allows
destruction of property is pretty hard to get. At a minimum, any judge would
want an eyewitness before he allowed something like that to happen." I
stood and stretched out my back. "I'm afraid something like that would
take Carli coming forward and making a sworn statement." Susan started to
speak, and I said, "And, even if Carli did that, we couldn't be certain the
cops would find enough evidence to do anything. A little blood on the wall
doesn't mean much without a body." Susan looked disappointed. "We should
be able to do something." I said, "We will. We just don't know
what it is yet." A few quiet seconds passed before Susan's
head snapped up from the impact of a sudden thought. "Tom! Shouldn't we be
over there to follow those painter-guys when they leave?" "Nope." "Why not? They've got to be connected
some way with the murder. If we followed them..." I sat up and put my elbows on my knees and
looked at Susan. "If we followed them, they'd probably spot us a mile down
the road. Neither of us is qualified to do that kind of thing well. And, if Tim
and Sonny did spot us tagging along behind their pickup, we could count on one
of two things happening. One, they would know we were on to them, which
would cause them to take off down some swamp road to the middle of nowhere and
hide. Or, two, they would know we were on to them, which would cause
them to turn around and attempt to do us bodily harm. In either case, we've
announced that I didn't buy their good-old-boy routine at the cottage. And, in
one case, we could end up hurt or worse." "You're sure about this?" "I've got the tag number and make of
the truck, their descriptions, and the names they gave us. This is a small
place. If we need to find them again, I imagine Joey can do it in an hour or
two." Susan and I wandered out onto the deck.
Frustration and feelings of impotency seemed to be working on her, and I felt pretty
much the same way. Maybe I was handling it better because, for a lot of
reasons, the feelings were less foreign to me. Finally, we decided to load into
my Jeep to go have another look at See Shore Cottage. We made a reconnaissance trip past the
cottage and saw that Tim's truck had departed taking Tim and Sonny and the
plastic paint buckets with it. I turned around in a driveway three doors down,
backtracked, and pulled onto the now-familiar parking pad of Carli's nightmare
house. We got out. For the second time that day, I approached the
giant-seahorse-guarded door of See Shore Cottage with the intention of
conducting some sort of investigation. Through the front bedroom window, we
could see that the paint job was lousy but finished, the drop cloths had
vanished, and the bed and other furniture had been shoved back into place.
Susan said, "Poof." "Yeah. Like magic." I walked
around to the side window to peer inside the way Carli had the night before. Susan said, "Look at the floor."
I cupped my hand against the glass to block the sun's glare and looked down at
bare, paint-splattered concrete. "You think they're coming back later to
put down new carpet?" She was being sarcastic. I said, "I
wouldn't count on it." I drove Susan to her beach house. Along
the way, a running debate streamed through my mind—should I stay on St. George with Susan and the girl or head back
to Mobile? On the one hand, I didn't much like the idea of leaving Susan and
Carli alone on the island. Emotionally, it felt like I was deserting them. On
the other hand, my surprise meeting with Tim and Sonny had turned my presence
into a liability. As we turned into Susan's driveway, I decided that putting
some distance between my clients and myself seemed the smartest way to go. I explained my reasoning to Susan. She
agreed and promised to keep an eye on Carli. I promised to try to think of
something useful to do. It had not been a successful day, and the
drive home seemed endless. Back at my place, I checked in with Kelly, my
secretary, and made a few business calls before wandering down the beach to the
Grand Hotel for dinner. I thought a good meal might make me feel better. It
usually does. It didn't. Back snug in my living room, I checked my answering
machine, turned the recording volume and the ringer all the way down, and spent
a couple of unfocused hours with Umbйrto Eco. The hell with it. I
started getting ready for bed. Maybe I'd wake up smarter in the morning. Twenty minutes later, I heard a fist
banging on my front door. I trotted downstairs, flipped on the porch light, and
peeked outside through a narrow column of windows. Joey stood there glaring at
the door, looking angry and excited all at once. I opened the door. "Where the hell have you been? We
called Susan. She said you left there hours ago." "I've been here. I just turned the
sound off on my machine. What's wrong?" In the half second before he could
answer, I had a sickening thought. "Is Carli okay?" "Carli's fine. Everybody's fine. But
Kelly's been trying to get you for over an hour. Somebody broke in your office.
Kelly says the security company called her. She's down there now with the cops,
and they need you to come down." I said, "Hang on," and went
inside to get my shoes. Two minutes later, I was seated in Joey's huge four-wheel-drive,
and he was speeding toward Mobile. I looked out the window and watched pine
trees and underbrush spin by in the dark. Joey asked about my trip to St.
George, and I filled him in. As we entered the city's neon outskirts,
talk turned to the break-in, and Joey said, "One more crummy thing in a
crummy day, huh?" "Maybe not." "You like having somebody break in
your office?" "Not much. But at least something's
happening. I sat around all day down at Susan's drinking coffee and wondering
what to do next. I did learn a few things from the painters. But now, at least,
the coincidences are starting to pile up, and we can begin trying to make some
sense out of it." "That all sounds real good. But
somebody still busted in your office tonight and probably took some of your
favorite lawyer stuff." "Lawyer stuff?" Joey didn't elaborate. We were on city streets now, close to the
Oswyn Israel Building where my violated office and, I hoped, some answers
awaited. I said, "I'm going to call Susan and tell her to get hold of
Carli, maybe bring her to the beach house and lock everything up tight until we
can think this out." "Probably a good idea. Susan got a
gun?" "I have no idea." I used Joey's cell phone to get Susan. She
promised to pick up Carli from work and keep her at the beach house. Susan
reminded me of the guard at the gate to The Plantation and said she also had a
.38 revolver. I hung up as Joey turned into my parking lot. Upstairs, Kelly was waiting in the
reception area. She said, "Looks like they got scared off." A pair of blue uniforms lounged on the
sofa drinking coffee that I guessed Kelly had brewed for them in my new Krups
machine. One of the officers started to stand. I said, "Let me look around
first, okay?" He nodded and sat back down. His was not a controlling
personality. As I walked back to my office, I asked Kelly, "Nothing's
missing?" Kelly followed. "Almost
nothing." I made a quick inventory of the desk
drawers, the small wall safe, and the few expensive odds and ends on my walls
and shelves. I sat down behind my desk to think. Joey strolled in holding a mug
of steaming coffee in each giant paw and put one down in front of me. Then he
plopped into a leather guest chair and sipped his coffee. Kelly sat in a chair
that matched the one Joey was overflowing, looked across the desk, and said,
"The policemen want you to sign some kind of report. They couldn't find
any fingerprints or anything like that, by the way." I said, "What do you mean 'almost
nothing' is missing?" "What? Oh. It's creepy. Right now, it
looks like whoever broke in just grabbed the appointment calendar off my desk
and took off." "Your appointment calendar? Are you
sure that's all?" "I've got to look around some more,
but, like I said, right now that looks like it." A shapeless, but vaguely disturbing,
thought was worming around the back of my mind. I let it work through, and my
stomach began to squeeze into a knot. "Kelly, did you put Susan
Fitzsimmons' name in the appointment book today?" "Sure. I put all your appointments in
there." Joey cussed as he and I jumped up and ran
out of the office. As we rushed through the waiting room, the two cops looked
surprised. They didn't move, but they did appear to consider the option. chapter five Joey was a former shore patrolman, former Navy Intelligence officer, former Alabama
state trooper, and former Alabama Bureau of Investigation agent. In fact, former
would serve as a pretty accurate one-word description of his career in law
enforcement, all of which sounds worse in some ways than it is. Joey was never
unreliable, unless you were counting on him to follow orders or to treat an
employee handbook like the Word of God. And, when things get serious, attitude
and obstinance and confidence are what I want. Boy Scouts scare the shit out of
me. Now, on the highway east of Mobile, Joey
was driving like the cop he used to be, going ninety-plus on two-lane roads.
And, like a cop, he seemed to be in complete control behind the wheel as trees,
houses, shops, and other traffic whirled by as varying shapes and colors in the
night. "She's not there." It was the
fourth time I had punched in Susan's St. George number. "Shit. Can you call that deputy from
Apalachicola?" "What am I supposed to say? Hello
Officer. Somebody kicked in the door of my office in Mobile tonight, and now my
secretary can't find her appointment book. So, I was wondering if you'd mind
driving back out on the island there and checking on a female client who I told
you earlier today was a man. And, by the way, I know I wouldn't tell you the
client's name today and I'm still trying to keep it a secret because it might
put her in danger, but..." "You got a better idea?" I didn't like it, but I dialed up North
Florida information and then the sheriff's office in Apalachicola. Deputy Mickey
Burns was off duty. "We have a deputy on patrol. Is this an
emergency?" "I don't know. Probably not. I just
asked for Deputy Burns because he helped me earlier today. I'm a lawyer in
Mobile. I've got a client on the island who may be in trouble. It'd be a big
help if your patrolman could just ride by and check on her." The operator
agreed to have a deputy do just that. I gave her the address and said goodbye. Joey said, "You know if you don't say
it's an emergency they'll take fucking forever to get there." "Yeah, I know. But I'd have to do a
lot of explaining to call in an emergency on St. George from a car phone in
Alabama." "We're in Florida now." "Thanks for the update. But to make
it an emergency you usually have to say someone's inside your house or you're
in some kind of imminent danger." "I know all that. I used to be a
cop." "Then what are you bitching
about?" "I just don't like it." The truth was that we were both worried
and irritated and feeling impotent and, in general, acting pretty graceless
under pressure. I asked, "How much longer?" "If we don't run into any blue
lights, we'll be there in less than two hours." I glanced at the digital clock on the
dash. 10:33. Yellow-tinged high beams swept gray pavement ahead of the
Expedition as it lunged and swayed and rocked along Highway 98 northwest of
Panama City. Every ten or twenty miles, bright eyes stared and fixed on the
headlights as whitetails froze along the roadside. "It'd be hard to miss a
deer at this speed if it was in the road." Joey said, "Fuck 'em." More road. Joey turned on the radio and
played with the search button until he found a soft rock station. I put up with
Mariah Carey for a while, then reached over and turned it off when an old
Journey song came on. Joey didn't complain. I don't think he realized I had
done it. We had been outside of cellular range for
some time. As we neared Panama City, the in-service light flashed on, and I
tried Susan again. She answered on the third ring. "Where have you been? Are you
okay?" Susan sounded surprised. "I'm fine.
You knew I was going to pick up Carli from work." "You've been gone a long time." "She didn't get off till after ten. I
had to wait. What's wrong? Has something else happened?" "I don't want to scare you." "Then that's not a good way to
start." "Sorry. Look, somebody broke into my
office about three hours ago. All they took was Kelly's appointment book. It
probably doesn't mean anything, but the book had your name in it. And, you
know, after everything that happened today." "We're fine, Tom. Carli's here. We're
locked up in the house, there's a guard at the gate, and I put the .38 in my
purse. Go back to sleep. We can figure all this out in the morning." I said something like, "Uh." "Is there more to it?" "Kind of. Joey and I got worried when
we couldn't get you. And, we're most of the way there. We'll probably be
knocking on your door in about an hour." "Tom, that's sweet." Now she
sounded amused. "Like I told you, we're fine. But you're almost here now,
so you may as well come on. I'll put some coffee on." "It was Joey's idea." After I ended the connection, Joey said,
"Everything okay?" "Yeah." "What was that about something being
my idea?" "She was thanking me for
coming." I looked over at Joey's face in the glow
from the dash. He looked like he was thinking about that. "Want to turn
around and go home?" "No. We've come this far. I'll feel
better if we go have a look around." The dash clock glowed 12:18 as we
pulled onto Susan's driveway and a motion detector light popped on. Susan met
us at the door. We were sitting at the butcher block table
drinking decaffeinated coffee when Carli descended the dark staircase and
walked into the downstairs light. She wore a maroon Florida State football
jersey for a nightgown, and a huge white towel wound around and covered her
head like a turban. Wet black curls peeked out from beneath the towel. Susan
said, "Feel better?" Carli just smiled and sat down next to
Joey. Susan introduced them. I said, "Did you tell Carli why we're
here?" "I told her about your break-in. I
also told her there's no reason for her to get worked up over it. Right? We
don't have any reason to think the break-in was connected to Carli in any way, do
we?" As she spoke the last two words, Susan gave me a meaningful look. I'm not stupid, or, if I am, I can at
least take a hint. I looked at Carli and said, "No reason at all. Joey and
I are only here because we tried to call Susan to tell her about the burglary,
and we couldn't get her. If we had known she was just out picking you up from
work, we would have stayed in Mobile." I wasn't the only nonstupid person at the
table. Carli said, "But your office got broken into after I talked with
you today about those guys on the beach. And Susan told me what happened with
those painters at the beach house where it happened." "Carli, it's easy to tie unrelated
problems together when you're scared, but, like Susan says..." Carli kept going. "You called here
right after you figured out Susan's name was in that book they stole. And you
drove all the way here at midnight when we didn't answer the phone."
Silence hung in the air above the table. "Isn't that right, Mr.
McInnes?" "You can call me Tom." Carli
sighed and lowered her eyes to stare at gnawed, glitter-pink fingernails.
"Carli, you really don't need to worry. Not about my office
break-in, anyhow. You have to understand my and Joey's history with Susan. I
got her into a pretty nasty mess about six months ago, and she ended up getting
hurt pretty badly." Susan interrupted with surprising force.
"That was not your fault." She held my eyes for a few beats and then
turned to face Carli. "My husband was killed last summer. They found Tom's
younger brother a couple of months later on the bottom of the Alabama River. It
wasn't easy and it cost him, but Tom found out what happened. While he was
doing it, I got attacked by someone involved in both deaths, but that
wasn't because Tom did anything wrong or messed anything up." I opened my
mouth to interrupt without really knowing what I wanted to say, but Susan kept
talking. She was still looking at Carli. "I just want you to understand
that Tom feels some misplaced sense of duty to me because of what happened.
That's why he and Joey drove down here in the middle of the night, and, as much
as I hate to admit it, even to myself, that's how I knew he would drop
everything and help you if I asked him to." Carli looked up at me for a moment. The
towel on her hair had tilted to one side, and the insides of her eyelids, the
part just inside her lashes, had turned red. I tried to smile reassuringly. Carli's brown irises seemed to have grown
larger, and, when she spoke, her voice was soft and unsure. "I was up all
night last night. I gotta go to bed." And she got up and climbed the
stairs. I looked at Susan. "You're right.
She's not stupid." Susan nodded slowly. "More there than
meets the eye." "Yeah, but well-adjusted she's
not." Susan shrugged. "Who is?" It was past one in the morning, and
suddenly I was bone tired. "It's been a long day. We better go and let you
get to bed too." Joey said, "I don't know where you're
going, hoss. But I'm tired, and I'm staying right here if it's okay with
Susan." Susan said, "It's perfect. If you're
as bushed as I am, you don't have any business driving anyhow. I was up most of
the night last night with Carli. And I know Tom's wiped out, because I called
and woke him before sunrise." "And he woke me up to tell me about
it," Joey said. "Well then," Susan said, "I
suggest we all hit the sack and think this through in the morning." The house had exactly four bedrooms, which
was exactly how many we needed. Upstairs, Susan showed us past Carli's closed
door to the empty rooms. Joey said good night and walked down the hall to find
the bathroom. Susan walked me to my room, clicked on the bedside lamp, and
turned to look at me. She sounded tired and a little hoarse when
she spoke. All she said was, "Thanks." I looked down into her
upturned face. Missed sleep and tension showed around her eyes, but they were
still beautiful eyes. Very quickly, Susan rocked forward onto her toes, kissed
me lightly on the lips, and left the room, closing the door behind her. I
stripped down to boxers, switched the light off, and stretched out on top of
the covers. I smiled up at the ceiling. My mouth still tingled where her lips
had brushed against mine. I didn't think I had been asleep when Joey
shook me awake. He was whispering. "Wake up, bubba. Wake up. We need to
look around." I rubbed my eyes and looked at my watch. I
was too groggy to focus on the glowing dots and lines that were supposed to
show me what time it was. "Whatsa matter?" "I thought I heard something a couple
of times, then the bedroom clock went out." I was too tired for this. "What're
you talking about?" He sounded exasperated. "The power's
out. You understand that?" I sat up. He went on. "The phone's dead,
too. Something's going on, and I'm gonna go look around a little. I need you to
keep an eye on Susan and Carli." I swung my feet onto the floor and felt
for my pants. I said, "Go," and Joey moved silently through the door
and down the hallway. I managed to pull on pants and loafers. My shirt and
socks had disappeared on the dark carpet, and I left the room bare-chested. Out in the hall, I found Carli's door and
stuck my head inside. A shadowy shape, surprisingly small and childlike,
breathed beneath the covers. I eased the door shut and moved to Susan's door,
which swung open without a sound. On the wall opposite her bed, open double
windows welcomed moonlight and a cool breeze into the room. I crept over and
looked outside, wondering who might be out there in the dark with Joey. When I
turned to look at Susan, she was looking back. She still sounded tired but wide awake.
"You scared me." I walked over and stood by the bed. As I
approached, Susan sat up, holding the sheet against her breasts. She appeared
to be naked beneath the covers. I held my index finger against my lips and then
leaned down to whisper. "The power and phones are out. Joey's outside
checking on it." To her benefit, Susan hesitated only a few
seconds before saying, "Turn around. I need to get dressed." I walked
back over and looked out through the open window. Night air flowed into the
room, sprinkling chill bumps across my chest and shoulders and making me wish I
had been able to find my shirt. I scanned the shore and the sand dunes and
listened for strange voices or the sound of feet on the wooden deck or...
something. Everything just looked and sounded and smelled like a spring night
at the beach. Behind me, I could hear Susan walk barefoot across the carpet and
open dresser drawers. She asked, "Have you checked on Carli?" "Yeah. She's fine, but I wanted to
get you first." I heard Susan slipping her legs into jeans. "Afraid you'd scare her?" "I though it'd be better if you woke
her. But we need to hurry. If somebody's out there, she needs to be up and
ready to move." Susan told me I could turn back around.
When I did, she was sitting on the bed in jeans and a dark T-shirt, pulling on
running shoes. She made loops and knots in the laces and stood up. We moved
down the hall. Carli's door was closed. Inside, the delicate shape I had seen
breathing under the covers was gone. chapter six Fine lines of moonlight angled through
miniblinds and faintly streaked Carli's empty bed with light. Visibly
shocked, Susan said, a little too loudly, "Where is she?" I shushed her and made a quick search of
the closet and the floor beneath the bed, thinking, hoping the girl had heard
something and tried to hide. I looked at Susan and said, "I don't know.
Come on." The hall was preternaturally dark—no
windows, no electricity, just black. I ducked into my bedroom and Joey's and
then checked the bathroom. Back in the hallway, I leaned in close to Susan.
"She probably heard something and got up to look around. I think we would
have heard some kind of scuffle if something worse than that had
happened." "Maybe she heard Joey." "Where's that thirty-eight you told
me about?" "In my purse. I think it's on the
kitchen table." I looked at her. She said, "You know,
downstairs." I wasn't that sleepy. I knew damn well
where the kitchen table was. I just wasn't happy about it. I thought about
asking Susan to stay upstairs, but decided I didn't want to take a chance on
losing someone else. I also realized that, with Carli missing and probably in
trouble, Susan wasn't likely to take instructions from me and hide in the
closet while I ran around doing manly things. I said, "Stay with me, okay,"
and led the way to the circular aluminum staircase. Three steps down, I heard a
soft hiss and froze. Susan heard it too. She stopped as still as death. A sharp whisper from the kitchen,
"Tom!" The glass wall along the front of the living area allowed a
diffused fog of gray light into the room. Joey stepped out from a shadow and
whispered, "Carli's here." Thank God. I started down the stairs and was quickly
stopped by another hiss. I looked down and back toward the kitchen where Joey
stood in the shadows. He appeared to be holding up three fingers, waving them
back and forth like a kid saying bye-bye. Then he pointed at the glass door
leading out onto the deck. I looked but saw nothing. I looked back toward Joey
and still saw nothing. He had disappeared. I glanced at Susan. She was looking
past me toward the deck. I whispered, "What?" She held up an index finger, telling me to
wait. I watched her pale eyes scan back and forth and stop. She tapped my
shoulder and pointed. The glass wall overlooking the Gulf was made of ten-foot
squares of tempered glass separated by thick cypress beams. Silhouetted against
the outside of one of the vertical beams was a very human shape. I held up one
finger. Susan nodded. She shook her head when I held up two. I pointed to where
Joey had been and held up three fingers. She nodded and raised her palms in the
air. We agreed. Joey said three. We saw one. Another
hiss. Joey's hand and arm materialized out of
kitchen shadows and motioned us back upstairs. We watched the silhouette
outside run from one beam to the next. He held a long, thick gun at an angle
across his midsection. Maybe a shotgun. When he flattened against the second
beam, Susan and I tiptoed back up to the hallway. She asked, "Has Joey got a gun?" "Joey's always got a gun. But one
pistol against three rifles or shotguns is a real bad idea. And Joey's got a
scared fifteen-year-old girl to take care of." "Can't we help him?" I tried to slow my breathing and think. She was scared and talking fast.
"What do you think he wants us to do?" "Joey waved us up here, so it's
probably safe in the house for now. But if there are three of them with guns
and they come inside, there won't be much we can do but
hide. Look, everybody but you and me and Carli has a gun, and Carli's with
Joey. We've got to trust Joey to look after her. He's going to expect me to do
the same for you." "I'm not fifteen, Tom." In fact, Susan was a few years older than
I was, even if she didn't look it. I said, "We can get politically correct
later. Right now, we need to figure out how we're going to get out of here if
that guy on the deck comes inside." "The stairs are the only way down,
but we can go up." A lightbulb went off. "The crow's
nest?" "Yep. But there's no way down from
there either, unless..." "Can we..." A shotgun blast
shattered the quiet. Glass exploded downstairs, and footsteps crunched across
broken windows. Susan gasped and yanked my arm by the
elbow. I turned to look, and she was hauling ass. I caught her as she hooked a
left and charged up a short flight of steps that dead-ended into the ceiling.
She twisted some little knob I couldn't even see and pushed open a hatch. Stars
filled a three-by-four foot hole in the roof. Susan shot through, and I
followed. Up on the catwalk, I quietly fitted the hatch back into place. We crouched on narrow strips of teak that
made the banistered catwalk look like a miniaturized deck. We had a space about
six feet wide and twenty feet long and nowhere to hide. Susan breathed hard.
She said, "Do you think we'll be able to stay here?" I looked around. "Do we have a
choice?" "There's a palm over there at the
back corner. The roof's steep, but if we could figure out how to slide down at
an angle somehow, we could get hold of it and climb down to the driveway." "What?" She started to explain
again, and I stopped her. "Listen." The house was quiet. "What
the hell? Susan, come on. Stay low. Get over here. We better sit on the
hatch." "They might shoot through it." "And they might just try it and move
on. It's better than leaving it open so they can pop through and shoot at
us." As Susan started to edge over, she glanced
through the banisters toward the shoreline. She said, "Look," and
pointed down at the beach. We saw a figure in dark clothes kneeling on the
sand. And he saw us. A black shape moved in his
hands, and a sharp rap sounded a split second before something small and hard
and deadly hit the copper roof below us. I said, "Let's do it. Stay low, and
go through the banisters. Don't go over them." Susan wiggled through a
repeating diamond shape in the banister and began inching down the side of the
steep metal roof opposite the beach. Easing my head to the far edge of the
catwalk, I looked for the gunman. He was motioning to someone in the house. He
was motioning at the roof. Shit. Belly crawling to the other side, I
found Susan flat on her back, butt against the roof with both feet wedged in
the rain gutter. She was eight feet away from the palm fronds and inching her
way there not nearly fast enough. Just in case, I tried to fit my shoulders
through the banister. It wasn't even close. Taking a deep breath, I came off my
knees at a full run and hand sprinted over the railing. I expected to hear, or
maybe even feel, another gunshot. The guy on the beach just stood there. He
probably couldn't believe his eyes. For all the world, it had to look like I
was leaping into a full gainer over the driveway. It felt that way too. I hit the copper
roof on my right hip and bare shoulder blade and started sliding like a downed
skier on a patch of ice. I managed to get my butt under me and my head up in time
to nail the gutter with my heels. The jolt jammed my knees and ankles, knocked
a section of gutter loose, and flipped me forward into a face full of palm
tree. It hurt like hell. I hurt everywhere, but I managed to grab fists full of
spiky fronds and hold on. The world scrambled for a second. When it
fell back into place, I looked around for Susan. She had fallen sideways trying
to grab me before I flipped off the roof, and she was almost gone. Her feet
were on the roof's edge. Her right hand had a death grip on the piece of gutter
I had slammed loose, and her left hand was reaching out for me. Clenching a
thick frond with my right fist, I bent my knees, swung to the left using the
frond as a pivot, and grabbed Susan's hand. Her grip on the gutter came loose,
and I swung her into the tree trunk with a painful thud. She held on. "Go, Susan. They know we're back
here." She started down the trunk and, with me
shinnying behind her, had made it to within six feet of the ground when three
gunshots snapped the night air. Susan dropped. Joey yelled, "Move. They're coming. Move!" Susan scrambled to her feet and ran. I
dropped ten feet, executed an unplanned and painful backward somersault, and
sprinted down the driveway. Up ahead, Susan veered left into underbrush and I
followed her. Out of nowhere, a hand grabbed my wrist and spun me into the
ground. As I landed in sea grass, Joey said, "Stay down." I did. Joey
sat crouched in a shooter's stance with his .45 automatic leveled at the house.
Susan lay on the ground next to him. "Susan? Susan, did you get hit?" Joey said, "Nobody got hit—none of us anyhow. That was me shooting. One of 'em came around
the corner while you two were monkeying around that tree, so I fired three
rounds. Think I hit him." Susan reached over and squeezed my hand to let
me know she was okay. Joey said, "Here they come. We better go." Tearing through sea grass, cockleburs,
wild azaleas, yucca plants, and a thousand species of lowland brier bushes,
Joey ran full out ahead of us for what seemed like a couple hundred yards. Next
to a wooden walkway that stretched from the road to the beach so normal people
could avoid the brush and thorns we had just run through, Joey stopped,
motioned with his head and said, "See that big, funny-looking bush?" I looked, and it was kind of funny
looking. "Yeah." "Carli's over there. I'll be back. If
I'm not, stay away from the house and figure out some way to get Susan and the
girl out of here." I started to say something, to tell him
I'd come with him. But he was gone. Susan walked toward Joey's bush. I
followed. We found Carli sitting in a fetal position on the dark side of the
bush away from the moonlight. She didn't cry. She didn't speak. She hugged her
knees and rocked and looked impossibly small. Susan sat on the sand and put an arm
around Carli's shoulders. I found some shadow nearby where a big, funny-looking
bush wasn't blocking half the world from view. I peered into the dark and
watched for nameless, faceless men who had come to murder two women in a house on
the beach. Minutes crept by. In the distance, sirens
swirled through the night air. Two shots popped almost quaintly farther down
the coastline. More time passed. The sirens grew louder as Joey emerged out of
the underbrush. I met him at his bush next to Susan and Carli. I asked, "What happened? I heard a
couple more shots." Joey said, "That was me. When I got
back to the house, they were loading one of 'em into a pontoon boat on the
sand. So I did hit him. Anyway, when he was in, one stayed with him and
the other one jumped out and looked like he might come back for more. I took a
couple of shots, and he jumped behind the boat and pulled it in the water. They
took off." Susan said, "Did you shoot to scare
them off?" "Hell no. I shot to kill the
sonofabitch. He was just too far away for me to hit him with a pistol. They
were getting ready to haul ass, anyhow. One of 'em was shot, and you could hear
the cops coming." I asked, "Are the police there
now?" "Probably are. I didn't stay around
to find out." He wedged his .45 in the back of his waistband, looked at
me, and said, "So, Counselor. That's what I do. Now do what you do. What's
the plan?" Susan and Carli were silent. The teenager
was still now, but she still hugged her knees tightly against her breasts. Susan
stroked her hair. I said, "You got a license for that
gun in Florida?" Joey said, "Nope. Licensed in
Alabama. Not here." "Okay. Susan and I are going back.
You look after Carli. Take her wherever you need to to keep out of sight,
but," I pointed at the street end of the wooden walkway, "be on the
path next to the road in, let's see, it's about two-twenty now, be there at
three-thirty." "What are you gonna say?" "Don't worry about it. You and Carli
were never there. See you at three-thirty. Susan? You ready?" Susan hugged Carli and whispered something
I couldn't hear. On the way back, I briefed Susan, telling
her to stay as close as possible to the facts with only the changes we
specifically discussed. Twenty yards from the house, I led her out onto the pavement
so we could approach along the driveway. Jumping out of the bushes at a bunch
of nervous, heavily armed deputies seemed like a bad idea. As we neared her drive, a deputy stationed
to keep people out said, "What the hell?" Susan's now filthy T-shirt was ripped
across her stomach where she had snagged it on the palm. Cuts and scratches
covered her arms, and dirt smudged her face. I was worse, having scrambled down
a palm tree, rolled around the driveway, and torn through Br'er Rabbit's
playground without a shirt. A grapefruit-sized strawberry covered my left
nipple. From the waist up, I was pretty much one big stinging scrape. I said, "I'm Tom McInnes, and this is
Susan Fitzsimmons. This is her house." The deputy seemed to think about
that for a second before he pulled out a nickel-plated revolver with a six-inch
barrel and pointed it at us. He said," "Walk up to the
house," and that's what we did. chapter seven We had rolled into Mobile as the sun rose
in our rearview mirror. Now
it was dark again, and the faint sounds and peculiar aromas of breakfast
cooking pulled me out of a hard dreamless sleep and into a tangle of covers. It was an old house and elegant, but
nothing seemed to fit quite right. Warm light from the hall shone through an
inch-high crack under the door, spotlighting ball-and-claw feet on an antique
dresser and softly illuminating the room like a night-light. Without thinking I
rolled to the right, found the floor with bare feet, and straightened up.
Pockets of pain erupted in every joint and muscle, prodding me with memories of
sliding down roofs, jumping from trees, somersaulting on oyster shells, and
running through picturesque coastal thickets. I stood there for a while and hurt.
Eventually the pain subsided, and I was able to walk over and switch on the
overhead light. When we arrived, we had taken turns with
the shower and the Bactine. Now I was surprised that the sandy-headed,
scratched-up guy in the mirror looked better than I felt. Beneath the mirror,
neatly folded squares of someone else's clothes were set out on the dresser. I
put them on and went in search of fellow victims. The place was a maze of oak floors and
crown molding. After visiting an empty living room and wandering twice through
the same study, I found the kitchen by locating the dining room and then
following the sound of voices through the butler's pantry. "Good morning." An ex-stripper named Loutie Blue, who was
our hostess, said, "It's seven o'clock." "Oh." "At night." "Oh." She handed me a cup of
coffee, and I sat in a chair at one end of a table with food on it. Joey sat at
the other end eating thick Belgian waffles. Susan perched on a bar stool next
to the center island where Loutie was working. "Where's Carli?" Susan said, "She's still
sleeping." I said, "Oh," and drank some
coffee. Loutie said, "With everybody just
waking up, I decided to make breakfast for dinner. You hungry?" I realized it had been twenty-four hours
since I had eaten. I told her I was starving, and she poured batter into a
waffle iron from a stainless steel pitcher. Loutie Blue was tall, exceptionally tall
for a woman, which, I thought, might be one reason Joey felt so comfortable
around her. Standing next to Loutie, he would have looked almost normal. She
had shoulder-length chestnut hair and greenish-brown eyes that grew harder the
longer you looked at them. She wore black jeans, white tennis shoes, and an
oversized blue polo shirt with the tail out. And, even in that domestic outfit,
standing over a steaming waffle iron chatting with Susan, you could see how she
had retired from stripping in her twenties with enough money to buy that house.
Loutie Blue was beautiful—in a thoroughly intimidating kind of way. She and Susan seemed to enjoy each other's
company. They weren't really saying much. They just looked comfortable
together. I looked at Susan, "How long have you
been up?" "I don't know. I guess I've been up
and down." Joey said, "Checking on Carli." I said, "Oh." It was becoming my
trademark. I looked at Loutie. "I hope it's not out of line to ask, but
would it be all right if Susan and Carli stayed here with you for a couple of
days? I need to get back to the office in the morning and try to figure out what
to do about all this. And, in the meantime, you know, after what happened at my
office and at Susan's beach house, I'm not sure yet where else they'll be
safe." Loutie said, "Joey already asked.
Glad to have them." Loutie Blue was resourceful and
intelligent and, under the right circumstances, a disturbingly dangerous woman.
I knew from past experience that, as far as the statuesque woman cooking
waffles was concerned, if Joey wanted something, he got it. She felt an
extraordinary and intense devotion to my giant friend. I turned to Joey. "I don't know what
you're working on right now, but I could use your help on this." Joey said, "You mean more help,
don't you? In case you missed it, I've been buried ass deep in this case since
about two this morning when I started shooting people." "I didn't miss it. But, unless you've
got a better idea, we need someone—you—who can hang around St. George and Apalachicola and bang on doors
or bang on heads, or whatever it is you do, to get a lead on who might be
trying to kill our client. And I'm guessing it's going to take more than a day
or two to do it." "So you're not really asking if I can
do it. You're asking if I can do it for free." "More or less. I can cover expenses,
but Carli's going to have trouble coming up with seventy-five an hour for your
time." Susan interrupted. "I'll pay." Joey looked embarrassed. "Shit,
Susan. I was just jerking Tom's chain. I damn sure wasn't trying to get you to
pay. You know if you're in trouble, I'm gonna help you." Susan stepped down from the bar stool and
pulled up a chair at the table. She said, "Thank you. But I asked you and
Tom for help." Joey said, "You asked Tom for help. I
just showed up." Susan said, "That's right. You showed
up last night and saved our lives. You don't need to be noble here. A lot of
things have been hard for me since Bird died, but with our investments and
Bird's life insurance and a studio full of finished canvases, my crazy artist
husband left me pretty well off." Loutie walked over and poured fresh coffee
in Joey's cup. He watched steam curl off the surface. "Okay. I'm
hired," Joey said. "But, look, we're gonna be dealing with a bunch of
crooks. And crooks, if they're making a living at it and they got any sense,
generally keep a wad of cash stashed away for emergencies. So, let's say you're
paying the tab for now, but we can renegotiate if I stumble across any free
money along the way." I said, "I didn't hear that." Joey said, "Kinda late in life to be
turning into a Boy Scout." And I agreed that it probably was. Whether she was sleeping the whole time, I
don't know. But when Joey and I left around ten, we hadn't laid eyes on Carli. After Joey had departed for his place,
Susan loaned me her snub-nose .38. I drove home to Point Clear where I half
expected to find my burglar alarm blaring. Everything was fine. Maybe an
unlisted number had spared my house the same fate as my office, or maybe the
burglars had already stolen everything they needed. I managed a few more hours'
sleep in my own bed, then drummed sore muscles under a hot shower before
dressing and driving in to the office. Building maintenance had nailed a square
of unfinished plywood over my broken window. It was not a look designed to
impress clients. Inside, Kelly was in her office, and a
fresh pot of coffee wanned the kitchen. Kelly heard me rattling around for a
mug and came in as I was adding sugar to my coffee. She looked anxious,
"Is Susan okay?" Oh hell. I had forgotten all about Kelly. I said,
"I'm sorry. Susan's fine. Three men with guns did come after her and the
teenager last night when we were there, though." She asked what happened, and I told her.
When I was through, she said, "Loutie, huh? I should have thought of that.
I called Susan's after the police left and I got back home, but by that time
her phone was out. I guess I called you and Joey about twenty times this
morning." "Kelly, I'm really sorry. You
shouldn't have had to think of calling Loutie Blue's house. I should have
called you." "You were busy." She paused. "I
thought of something. You said when you and Susan went back in the house after
the cops, or I guess the sheriff, got there that that deputy who took you to
meet those painters was there." I said she was right. She nodded and went
on. "And you said the sheriff was the only one out of uniform, which means
that that deputy..." "Mickey Burns." "It means that this Deputy Burns was
in uniform, but when you called earlier the operator told you he was off
duty." "And the other deputy, the one who
met us in the driveway, was on duty that night because he got the call about
checking on Susan. Even though he never got around to doing it." "So, the sheriff and Deputy Burns are
both off duty. It's two in the morning, and Burns shows up in full uniform.
Isn't that strange?" "Yeah, it is." "Do you think it means
anything?" "I have no idea." Four uneventful days passed. I made some
calls, practiced a little law, and learned that See Shore Cottage was owned by
ProAm Holdings Corp. Apparently, the same company owned a number of beach
properties scattered along the Panhandle, in addition to substantial real estate
investments in one of the agricultural regions located in the north-central
part of the state. Also, finally, on Tuesday morning I spoke with Billie
Timmons at Dolphin Rentals about the painting duo of Tim and Sonny. She refused
to "divulge information" about the property, but did offer to let me
rent the place for a nice vacation with my wife and children. I told her I
didn't have anyone who fit into those particular categories but that I knew a
private cop with an ex-stripper girlfriend who might be interested, and she
thanked me for calling. On Wednesday, I received a fax of two
clippings from the weekly Appalachicola Times. One described an
attempted burglary on St. George Island that Sheriff Todd Wilson said had
resulted in no harm to anyone and no theft of property. (No need to scare the
tourists.) He did mention that a window had been broken. The second clipping
was a short notice placed by the management of the Pelican's Roost restaurant.
It requested help in locating a missing employee named Carli Monroe. Scribbled on the bottom of the fax was a
note from Joey. Tom, I had a little trouble the first night
here. Tied up with a couple of locals in a bar parking lot. Have their ID, etc.
Will be in Mobile late this afternoon. Meet me at L.B.'s place around 4:00. We
need to discuss my progress and this stuff from the local paper. Joey A few minutes before four, I turned down
Loutie Blue's historic, tree-lined street and parked next to the curb. Joey's
Expedition was in the driveway. chapter eight Shipping merchants settled along Monterey Street in the late 1700s, building
rambling clapboard houses with impossibly high ceilings and wavy glass in their
tall windows. Like most historic districts, the place went to seed in the
fifties and sixties when prosperous World War II veterans were making
everything newer and, they thought, better; and, like some of the lucky places
that dodged new lives as parking lots or turnpikes, the neighborhood around
Monterey Street started a gradual comeback in the seventies. Joey once told me
that Loutie bought her place about ten years ago for eighty grand. Now she
could sell it for four times that. The house was built when friends actually
walked to see each other. So, instead of a modern-America concrete strip curving
from the driveway to the front steps, a wide herringbone-pattern brick walk
started on the shaded sidewalk and led visitors through twin rows of impatiens
and up the steps to a covered porch. I bumped a brass knocker against the door.
Loutie appeared and led me back to the kitchen. It was a replay of my last
visit to that room. Loutie leaned against her counter, and Susan and Joey sat
at the table. No coffee this time. They were all sipping Abita wheat beer. At
least Susan and Loutie were sipping theirs; Joey was taking his in mouthfuls. I asked, "Is there some reason
Carli's not here?" "She's just outside. My flowers are
the only thing she's shown any interest in since she got here. So I put her to
work this afternoon planting bulbs I've had in the refrigerator. Unless there's
something she shouldn't hear, I can call her in." I said, "Nothing from me. Joey?" He shook his head and took in a swallow of
Abita. Loutie stepped into the mudroom and called out for Carli. We heard Carli
say, "Just a minute." I asked, "How's she doing?" Susan said, "I'm not sure. She seems
fine on the surface." "She's a long way from fine,"
Loutie said. "She just doesn't show it."" I asked, "How can you tell?"
But, before the conversation could go any further, a screen door slammed, and
Carli walked into the kitchen. She was barefoot and wearing the same blue jean
cutoffs I had seen before. This time, though, her shirt was one of those flimsy
tank-top undershirts that everybody's grandfather wore. And it was soaked
through, concealing nothing, clinging like a second skin, and plainly
displaying an exceptional pair of gravity-defying teenage breasts with tan,
erect nipples. She looked sweaty from yard work, but the shirt seemed a little
wetter than the rest of her. While Joey and I sat there looking and
trying not to look at our young client's knockers, Loutie said, "Carli, go
put on a decent shirt." Carli said, "I'm fine," and
started to pull out a chair at the table. Loutie caught Carli's eye and gave her
what was, for me anyway, a sphincter-tightening look. When Loutie spoke again,
her voice was an octave lower. She said, "Do it." Carli dropped her eyes to the floor and
walked quickly out of the room. I said, "What's wrong with her?
That's the second time she's pulled something like that. And it's not like
she's just your basic high school tease driving the boys crazy. To her, Joey
and I have got to look like a couple of old men." Joey looked up and said, "Speak for yourself." While we were talking, Loutie had moved to
the doorway to make sure Carli wasn't within earshot. She turned toward us and
said, "It's probably more pronounced because you're older. I think some
older man taught her early, probably in ways you can't imagine, that her only
value to men is sexual. She's been abused, and she's scared. And she's acting
out when you're around because she wants your help and probably your
approval." Susan said, "I knew she was afraid of
her father, but that's all. Did she tell you about this?" "No, I've just been watching her.
That child has been sexually abused by someone. Probably her father from what
you're saying." Loutie turned to me. "Tom, I think it also explains
why Carli insisted on reporting the murder on St. George to begin with.
If Carli's father was the abuser, he's already killed that child inside a
hundred times over. Carli didn't want to walk away from this murder the way her
mother or her family or friends walked away from her abuse without
helping." I said, "How can you be so sure? The
way you explain it, it seems to make sense. But people are screwed up for a lot
of different reasons." Joey piped in. "This isn't a
deposition, Tom. Just take her word for it." He sounded angry. I was taken aback. "What's wrong with
you?" Loutie put a hand on Joey's shoulder and
squeezed to quiet him. She said, "Joey knows my history." I thought for a second and said,
"Oh." Loutie said, "You know I used to
strip. I'm not ashamed of it. It's how I got this house, in a roundabout way.
And it set me up so I can work with Joey to make ends meet, and I don't have to
go to some office every day and blow the boss to keep my job." Joey interrupted to tell her she didn't
owe anybody any excuses. She said, not unkindly, "Hush Joey.
I'm not making excuses. I'm explaining how I know something." Loutie faced
me again. "A therapist told me once that ninety percent of exotic dancers
have been sexually abused, and, from the girls I knew in the business, that
seems low. "I grew up mostly in foster homes.
Some of them were okay. Some were bad, and some were awful. At thirteen, I
looked eighteen, the way Carli looks twenty at fifteen. Anyway..." Loutie
turned away to look out the window as she continued. "I was thirteen when
I started having problems with a forty-year-old asshole who was suppose to be
taking care of me. No one believed me, and no one helped. And I ended up
probably more screwed up, for a few years, than Carli is now." Loutie's eyes looked soft and tired when
she turned away from the window to face us. She took a long pull from her beer. I said, "Sorry." "There's nothing for you to be sorry
about. You didn't do anything wrong. Neither did I, and neither did Carli. The
only difference between me and Carli is that she doesn't understand that
yet." Her voice sounded husky. She took another long swallow of beer and
cleared her throat. Then we watched as Loutie pushed more hurt than most people
ever deal with back down where it had been for twenty years. In the space of a
few seconds, her eyes turned as hard and cool as glass, and, through pure force
of will, she became the old Loutie Blue again. The level of self-control we had
witnessed was amazing and sad and a little frightening. We were quiet until Carli came back into
the room wearing a washed face and her Florida State football jersey. Carli looked at Loutie and said, "You
happy?" "Thrilled," Loutie said and
turned to look at me. "Who's got something to report?" I pointed a finger at Joey. "He's
done all the work, but before he gets started, I want to talk about this fax
Joey sent me this morning." I reached inside a leather folder, pulled out
the fax, and put it in front of Carli. "This is a problem. The newspaper
story about the break-in is pretty weak and doesn't present any problems on its
own. The problem is that it appeared in today's paper. And the notice that you
are missing was in the same edition. Now Carli, I may be giving these people
too much credit, but it wouldn't be impossible for someone to connect the
timing of your disappearance with the break-in at Susan's house. Particularly,
if they ask around a little and find out you and Susan are friends."
Loutie put a Coke in front of Carli. She ignored it. Her lips had turned pale.
I went on. "This is not something to freak out over. It's a stretch to
think they'll put this together. Even if they did, no one outside this room
knows you're here with Loutie. You are completely safe, Carli. But, I wouldn't
be doing my job if I didn't tell you about this and tell you that we can no
longer assume that no one has figured out that you were the witness on the
beach." I turned to look at Susan. "That's the long shot—that somebody has put all this together and decided the witness
was Carli. The reality, the thing we know, is that they found your name in my
appointment book, and three men came to your house with guns. "I know none of this is a news flash.
But I want you to go on taking it seriously. Stay here, stay out of sight, and,
for goodness sake, don't call anybody. And that goes for you too, Carli. With
caller ID and star-sixty-nine, calling somebody these days is like announcing
your address." I tried to sound more confident than I
felt. "Joey and I will get you through this, but we can't do it if we're
having to worry every minute of the day about whether you're safe."
Carli's lips had returned to their natural color, and she was sipping her Coke.
Good. "Carli. We're working for you. Do you have any questions?" Carli drank some more Coke and studied the
table in front of her. She said, "What happened at the house the other
night? You know, when you and Susan went back to talk with the cops, and me and
Joey waited for you by the road. What did you tell them?" "First Carli, let me explain
something I should have told you already. Everything we're talking about here
is privileged. That means you don't ever have to tell anyone on earth about
anything we say here, and I'll never tell anyone any of this. I would go to
jail before I would tell anyone anything you tell me as your attorney. "Do you understand all this?" She nodded her head. I said, "Carli, please look at me and
answer me out loud. This is important. I don't want to hear later that you
weren't really sure what I was talking about. Do you understand everything I've
told you?" She said, "I understand what you
said, but..." "But what, Carli?" "That stuff about going to jail to
protect me. Is that true? Would you really do that?" I smiled. "Don't worry, nobody's
going to throw me in jail for doing my job. But yes Carli, if it came to it, I
would definitely go to jail to protect you and what you tell me." Our fifteen-year-old exhibitionist client
actually blushed. She said, "What about the other night at Susan's beach
house? You still haven't answered my question about that." "I'm getting to that. I wanted you to
understand privilege before I got into it with you. "After Susan and I left you and Joey
on the beach, we talked about how to handle the sheriff. I told her to tell the
truth about everything except you and Joey being at the house that night.
Normally, I would never lie to the police." Joey cleared his throat. I
ignored him. "But the sheriff and his people were just treating it as an
attempted burglary anyway, so I didn't see any reason to argue with them. "When we got back to the house, the
sheriff and two deputies were there. We explained who we were, and Susan asked
to go upstairs to take an aspirin. No one had been up there yet, so Susan
quickly made up your and Joey's beds and came back down. "The only sticky part was explaining
about multiple gunshots that had been reported to the sheriff's office. But,
with glass blown all over the living room, it wasn't hard to convince the
sheriff that the intruders shot up the house for fun." Joey said, "And that wouldn't be
unusual. Teenagers who break into a house are usually drunk or stoned and spend
more time trashing the place than looking for stuff to steal. And Sheriff
Wilson would know that. Also, while I was down there this week, a couple of
people I talked to said something about 'all the trouble we've been having with
these young guys,' or something close to that. I'm guessing that the break-in
at Susan's wasn't the first local crime glossed over so they wouldn't upset the
tourists." I asked Carli, "Is that it? Do you
have any other questions about anything?" Carli shook her head. I looked
at Joey. Joey reached down, lifted a brown paper
shopping bag off the floor, and dumped its contents on the kitchen table. Most
of it looked like stuff you'd find on someone's dresser: keys, cash and change,
one billfold, and three Churchill-sized cigars. A couple of less routine items
rounded out the collection: a switchblade with a yellow handle and a
half-smoked joint. He looked at me. "You see my note on
the fax about getting jumped by a couple of locals the first night down
there?" I nodded. "Well, this is what they had on 'em. "The first night there, I'm driving
around, getting the feel of the place, and stopping in any bars I come up on to
have a drink and ask a few questions. Around eleven, I stop in a place called
the Shrimp Boat, buy a glass of whatever's on tap, and tell the bartender I'm
looking into the break-in the night before on St. George Island." Joey
stopped to drain his beer. "Somebody my size doesn't get told to fuck off
as much as your normal, run-of-the-mill loudmouth. But this bartender—who must have weighed about a hundred forty soaking wet—gave me that instruction. So, I take a couple more sips of
lukewarm beer and move on, figuring, you know, that the Shrimp Boat had future
possibilities. "Outside, I get in the car and, two
hundred yards down the road, I know somebody's following me. I keep going. Looking
for somewhere with lights and people. Over across the bridge, I see a place
called Mother's Milk." Susan laughed and said, "That's
impressive, Joey. Between the Shrimp Boat and Mother's Milk, you managed to hit
the two sleaziest places in Franklin County, Florida, in one night." Joey smiled and said, "Thank you. I
didn't think I was gonna find three killers at the yacht club or at one of
those yuppie restaurants they got stuffed into the storefronts there. Damnedest
thing I ever saw. Places that used to be diners and feed stores, they got
filled with pasta restaurants, cappuccino shops, shit like that. "Anyway, getting back to my story, I
pull into the parking lot of Mother's Milk, figuring whoever's tailing me will
probably hang back and maybe follow me if I go inside. But I park, and these
two assholes in a red pickup pull in behind me and block me in. To make a long
story short, they ask me why I'm asking questions about the burglary. I decline
to provide information, and they come after me with that little yellow knife
there and a baseball bat. I took the bat and tapped them with the small
end." I said, "Tapped them, huh?" "Yeah, I tapped 'em. It ain't what
you saw on the Rodney King tape, but it's the way cops are supposed to
use a nightstick. You don't wail on somebody with one, unless you want 'em
dead. You just pop 'em on the knees and shins and shoulders and maybe across
the nose. Hurts like hell." Joey stood and retrieved another Abita from
the refrigerator. He leaned against the counter next to Loutie and twisted off
the cap. "They were a couple of tough boys. Prison tattoos and one of 'em
with three or four teeth missing from other fights. They weren't talking. "I thought about calling the sheriff,
but any cop would have just thrown us all in jail for brawling outside a bar.
So, I emptied their pockets, went through the truck, got the tag number, that
kinda stuff. Before I left, I popped the hood and yanked a few wires off the
distributor so they'd stay put." "What have you found out from the
things you took out of their pockets?" I asked him. Joey told us that the only one with ID—Thomas Bobby Haycock—also owned the
truck. Mr. Haycock had a record going back twenty years and featuring drug
dealing, battery, and attempted murder. Haycock's friend had no ID and wouldn't
talk, but he had a dagger tattoo on his left forearm with R.I.P. over it and
the initials R.E.T. under it. The two had almost seven hundred dollars between
them, not to mention a bat, a knife, a joint, and three cigars. Susan picked up one of the huge cigars,
looked at the label, and rolled it between her fingers. She said, "Mr.
Haycock has pretty good taste for someone with prison tattoos. This is a Cuban,
handmade Cohiba. Legally, you can't get them in this country. But every now and
then Bird used to get a few from his gallery in New Orleans. The gallery owner
picked them up in Canada when he was up there schmoozing some wildlife artist.
These things cost about thirty-five, forty dollars each even up there." I said, "Where'd some Franklin County
hard-ass come up with three forty-dollar, imported, contraband Cuban
cigars?" Joey said, "Interesting, ain't
it?" I nodded. "Yes, it is. You had this
Haycock's name and tag, his criminal record, and some kind of address. What
happened when you checked out his address? He wasn't there, was he?" "You think you're smart, don't
you?" I just looked at him. It was a rhetorical
question. "No. He wasn't there, and he didn't
come home for two more days. I found a comfortable place in the brush nearby,
and caught up on my reading. He showed up Sunday night at his little house,
stayed inside until just before daybreak, and came out with a stuffed sports
bag and a half-full, brown grocery bag like this one." Joey held up the
bag he had used to hold his attackers' possessions. "I followed him down
the coast to a marina in Carrabelle. He waited around there until seven and got
on the ferry to Dog Island." "How close is that to St.
George?" I asked. Susan said, "It's just northeast of
St. George. Less than a mile. It's about half as big, and it doesn't have a
causeway. You've got to either take the ferry or take a plane. They've got a
little landing strip in the middle of the island. Or, of course, you could always
go by boat if the chop's not too bad and you watch out for oyster beds. "It's a lot less developed than St.
George, too, because it's harder to get to. The last couple of years, though, a
few people with big money have started building some major houses out there.
Still, for the most part, it's pretty undeveloped. There's just one small motel
and mostly a lot of old-fashioned, wooden beach houses." "And our friend Tommy Bobby Haycock
is in one of 'em." Joey added, "This ferry he got on ain't exactly
the Staten Island Ferry. It's a little pissant boat, where everybody sees
everybody else. So I waited for the next one and went over. Like Susan says,
there's not much on Dog Island, so I was able to find him pretty quick. "Last night, I tailed Haycock when he
went out on a little adventure. And, Tom, if you got a few days to kill, I
think I can show you where those Cuban cigars come from." chapter nine Seasons never change smoothly along the
coast. By Thursday morning, winter had stuttered
forward again into March and dropped the temperature on the Panhandle from high
seventies to low fifties. A steady rain fell from gray cloud cover, drenching
the morning in melancholy tones. I reached over and clicked off the high
beams as a scattering of weekend houses began to transition into boat shops and
real estate offices. Joey directed me through downtown Carrabelle, over a
curving bridge, and into a marina that looked like a transplant from Buzzard's
Bay in Massachusetts. Row upon row of oversized yachts lined a maze of concrete
docks, and, everywhere, gray-haired couples roamed about, sipping coffee and
talking boats. We were expected at the marina office,
and, after dropping ten twenties on the counter, my Jeep got the one vehicle
slot on the seven-o'clock ferry. Back out in the morning drizzle, I drove
around a bunker and down a concrete incline to the ferry. One of the less
promising delegates from Generation X stood on deck and waved us forward. I
rolled onto the boat and stopped next to a guy with three gold hoops piercing
one eyebrow and a large blue dot tattooed across the bridge of his nose. Joey said, "You don't see that every
day." I smiled and poured some coffee from a
steel thermos into a plastic cup. And we waited. The FSU station out of
Tallahassee was rerunning a segment from "Car Talk." Joey and I
listened to middle-age guys in New England act silly until the ferry left the
dock and moved toward the mouth of the harbor; then Joey reached over and
turned off the radio. Enough was enough. The view began to open up, and smooth
water turned choppy as the ferry beneath us moved out of the harbor and into
Apalachicola Bay. I flipped up the hood on my windbreaker and stepped out into
the morning mist to get a feel for the place. I guess Joey got out because I
did. Bumpy, steel-gray water reflected the
rain-filled sky. Diesel fumes swirled in the air, raising whispers of nausea in
my stomach and making me wish I had eaten breakfast. We climbed back in the
Jeep. An hour later we chugged into a wide,
sandy inlet on the bay side of Dog Island. The ferry ploughed a straight line
through a jumble of anchored sailing yachts and docked alongside one of two
wooden docks. According to a carefully painted sign on shore, we had arrived at
the Dog Island Yacht Club. There was no building or facilities; just the
sign. Near the docks, a collection of plywood
rectangles on two-by-four stakes held a laminated assortment of maps and charts
and set out a list of island rules. Joey poked me and pointed to one. Do not
clean fish on the dock. Alligator Hazard Area. I turned the key in the ignition and
looked for the off-ramp. There wasn't one. Cost or environmental concerns, or
maybe ambivalence, had kept the shoreline unblemished by concrete or asphalt.
If you wanted a car on Dog Island, you drove it off the ferry, down into a foot
or two of salt water, and up onto the beach. I guess it kept out the riffraff.
It also seemed to have a startling effect on the kind of vehicles people
brought over. The sandy ruts leading away from the ephemeral Dog Island Yacht
Club led us between rows of junkyard Americana. On each side, thirty or forty
decrepit, rusted-out vehicles formed precise queues of mobile scrap metal.
Ancient VW vans sat next to geriatric Jeeps with winches bolted to their front
bumpers, and those sat beside Brady-Bunch station wagons with
faded-plastic wood grain peeling from their doors. A dozen boxy Fords and about
as many tail-finned Plymouths were mixed in. Several had been hand painted with
rainbows and flowers. I said, "Looks like the parking lot
of a Grateful Dead concert from 1978." Joey nodded at a shiny new Range Rover
parked in among the rust buckets. "That's embarrassing." "What is all this?" "Most folks with houses out here
bring over old clunkers to use while they're on the island. They'll keep a heap
here until the salt air turns it into a block of rust; then they'll haul it
away and bring over another one. With the ferry just carrying one car at a time
and at two hundred a pop, I guess it's easier and cheaper than trying to bring
over the family car every time you wanna come out." "Looks like hell." "Yeah. Supposed to be some big
controversy. The old residents think it's ... I don't know." "Droll?" "Yeah, I guess. Kind of atmospheric.
Some of the new ones who came out here in the last couple of years and built
mansions think it looks like shit. That's probably what the Range Rover's doing
here. Somebody trying to make a point." "Or just somebody with more money
than sense." "It happens." I lowered my window and put my hand out
with the palm up to feel the rain. "How do you know all this?" Joey sighed. "I been talking to
people. You know, investigating. That's what I do." I pulled my hand back inside. It was wet.
"I thought you just beat up people and shot holes in them, that sort of
thing." "That too." Up past the rows of rusted junkers, the
sandy road dead-ended into the main island highway, which was nothing but a
couple of slightly deeper ruts in the sand. Joey told me to turn left, and we
followed the tracks of countless tires past Captain Casey's Inn and along the
backbone of the island before turning off onto an even fainter roadway. Finally, we parked; we found a spot near
our prey; and we waited. Hours passed. Thomas Bobby Haycock sat
warm and dry inside his island bungalow. Not far away, Joey and I sat, wet and
cold and miserable, huddled under a few scrawny pine trees and drinking coffee
from a steel thermos. My Jeep waited nearby on an undeveloped piece of beach
hidden from view by a half dozen sand dunes topped with undulating tufts of sea
grass. ' "Tell me again why we're sitting in
the rain, staring at his house." Joey had a pair of binoculars trained on
Haycock's bungalow. He said, "In case he goes somewhere." "And the reason we can't just wait
down the road in my Jeep—with a heater, out of the rain, maybe
listening to a little jazz on the CD player—and wait for
his pickup to drive by is... ?" "We're on an island. All he's gotta
do is take a walk on the beach and not come back. In twenty minutes, he could
be at the ferry or climbing into a buddy's boat or just be somewhere on the
island where we aren't." "That explains why you're doing it.
Why does a highly trained attorney like myself have to sit out here with
you?" "The bonds of friendship." "I knew there was a good
reason." "And Susan and Carli." "Even better." Joey leaned back against the trunk of a
wind-tortured pine and squirmed his butt in the sand to try to get comfortable.
"That little girl's got herself fixated on you, you know? All that wet
undershirt stuff and waving her tits around." "Fixated?" "Fuck you. You know what I mean. It's
just something to watch out for is all. Loutie says it's kinda sweet. Says
she's glad it's you and not some asshole who'd take advantage of her." I lay on my back, closed my eyes, and let
the light rain sting my face. I said, "I'll say one thing. You can't
bullshit her. She's going to need some counseling or something when this is
over, but she's not stupid. If we can give her the chance, she's going to be
okay. And Susan says she's got some talent. Draws and paints a little. Knows
the difference in good art and bad." "Something there worth saving." I said, "Everybody's worth
saving," but thought better of it and added, "Almost everybody." "You know what I mean." "Yeah," I said, "I
know." A little after noon, I hiked over dune and
dale to fetch Cokes, sandwiches, and Oreos from a cooler in the Jeep. Around
six, I made the same trip. These were the highlights of my day. At ten that night, I found a slab of my
left buttock and thigh with no feeling in it. Nothing, not even needles. Two
hours later, our quarry emerged from his house in darkness. We saw him when he
opened the driver's door on his pickup and stepped inside. Joey said, "Let's go," and my
dead hindquarters and I humped along behind Joey as he sprinted to the Jeep. I
unlocked the doors with the remote, jumped in, and got the thing cranked and
turned around in time to see Haycock's truck zoom by on the dirt roadway. Joey
had pulled the fuse responsible for lighting the Jeep's interior. It was my job
to remember not to turn on the headlights and, of course, to drive that way
down a curving dirt road at midnight without crashing and without losing sight
of Haycock. All of which I somehow did. Haycock led us to a deserted stretch of
beach, where he drove across the sand, pointed his front bumper at the water,
and killed the headlights. I hid the Jeep in a pine thicket diagonally across
the road, and we circled around to the beach on foot. My reward for my first
successful tail was another forty minutes cramped against a rain-soaked dune,
watching Haycock's motionless pickup. Finally, Joey tapped my back with a
knuckle, pointed out at the ocean, and said, "Look." "What?" "Straight out from here. Don't look
at the horizon. It's about halfway between the horizon and the beach." I still hadn't seen anything when Haycock
flashed his low beams three times. Almost immediately, a single blue light
flashed three times on the water. If we hadn't been looking for the signal and
we had noticed it at all, it would have looked like nothing more than a
reflected star. I whispered, "You saw this
before?" "Yeah. It's what we came down here to
see. Now watch. If it's like the other night, a boat's gonna pull up here in a
few minutes with a couple of men and some boxes." I moved up on the dune
for a better look. Joey said, "Keep your head down. The men on the boat
the other night were carrying what looked like AK-47s." I put my head down. An outboard motor rumbled in the distance.
Minutes passed. Twice there was a triple flash on the water that Haycock
answered with his headlights. I said, "The guy in the boat is checking his
course on the way in." Joey said, "Looks like it." Thirteen minutes after the first set of
blue flashes, an arrowhead-shaped pontoon boat puttered onto the sand. A figure
in the bow jumped out to pull the boat up onto the beach. Haycock stepped out
of the truck's cab and walked down the beach to help. Joey whispered, "I count three left
in the boat. And two on the beach, including Haycock." "Four and two. There's a kid in the
boat." "I'll be damned." With a quarter moon and cloud cover, the
passengers' features were impossible to see. But we could plainly make out the
dark outlines of Haycock, two armed men, a plump, unarmed man, a woman, and a
small child. Voices floated on the night air. The plump man helped the woman
and child out of the boat, and the woman led the child to Haycock's pickup and
climbed inside, placing the child on her lap. When the interior light came on,
we could see them both plainly. She had straight dark hair and black eyes. The
child had her coloring and his father's pudgy build—assuming the unarmed man was his father. While this was going on, the armed man in
the stern sat still with a rifle across his lap. When mother and child were
safe inside the truck, he stepped over the gunwale and stationed himself
halfway between the truck and boat, holding a serious-looking firearm at the
ready. The other three men formed a fire line. Pudgy Poppa knelt inside the
boat and handed large cardboard boxes and small wooden crates to the second,
formerly armed man, who, in turn, stacked the cargo above the high-tide mark
and out of the surf's reach. Haycock carried the boxes and crates to his truck
and stacked them in the bed. This was not the first time Haycock and friends
had done this. In less than fifteen minutes and with minimal communication,
they had filled the truck bed with cargo and the two armed men had departed in
the pontoon boat. Haycock secured a tarp over his truckload
as Poppa climbed in the cab with his family. Illuminated by the overhead bulb,
Poppa's coloring was, if anything, darker than his wife's. The kid hadn't
gotten anything from Mom. He was a curly-headed clone of his father. Joey tapped my leg and started to move
away. I closed a hand on his arm to stop him. "Wait." I motioned for
Joey to stay put and then crawled to a point ten yards behind and a few paces
to the left of Haycock's pickup. Something was going on inside the cab. Haycock
had a highway map unfolded and propped against the steering wheel. Poppa craned
his neck and leaned across his wife and child to see. Haycock held a metal
cigarette lighter to illuminate and trace a path across the map. The lighter snapped shut. Haycock flashed
his low beams twice and then twice more. The same pattern repeated in blue on
the water, and he turned the ignition key. Tires spun in the sand, and the back
bumper arced backward, thumping into the small dune I was hiding behind. Haycock
changed gears and dusted me with a cloud of sand as he drove off the beach and
turned left onto the dirt road. Scrambling to my feet, I sprinted to the
Jeep. Joey met me there. By the time we were back on the road. Haycock was out
of sight. I pointed the Jeep in his direction, flipped on the headlights, and
floored it. Joey sounded a tad judgmental. "That
was interesting." "Yeah, it was." "He's gone." "Maybe." Parallel white ruts stretched out in
front. Sand and dark thickets and an occasional vacation home whirred by in the
night. Joey said, "We lost him." "You said that." "Where are we going?" "The motel." "Why?" "Haycock's got to do something with
that family. The ferry doesn't run at night, and he's headed away from his
house. And I'm guessing they're not going to another boat. If they had planned
to reach the mainland tonight by water, they would have just landed there to
start with. It doesn't make sense to risk two landings when one would do. So,
that leaves two possible destinations—a private home
or the only motel on the island. And I think it's going to be the motel." "How do you figure that?" "Because," I said, "if
they're going to a private home, I lost them." Vapor lights bathed the roadside ahead in
ugly light. I slowed and cruised past Captain Casey's Inn. There in the parking
lot, big as life and butt ugly, was Thomas Bobby Haycock striding toward his
truck. Mom, Poppa, and junior were gone. We cruised on past and, a hundred
yards down, hung a "U." I waited for Haycock's red taillights to
disappear around a curve so we would be out of view and switched off my
headlights. We were able to tail him back to his bungalow, unnoticed. I turned to Joey. "Is that it?" "That's pretty much it. In the
morning—if he does the same thing he did a few
days ago—he's gonna catch the early ferry and
transport his truck to the mainland. Where he goes from there, I have no
idea." "And even if we could get on the same
ferry without being noticed, the Dog Island Ferry only hauls one car at a
time." Joey nodded. "Yep." "So, there's not much else we can do
for now." "Not much. If you think it's worth
it, I'll hang around a few more days and try to catch him coming off the ferry
one morning with a truckload of stuff. He knows my Expedition, but I can rent a
car and follow him. Try to see where he's taking it." "Yeah. I think it's worth it. I'll
double-check with Susan to make sure she thinks it's worth the money, but it
looks like the next step to me." My mind wandered over what we had seen
and formed a picture of a chubby little boy crossing the Gulf at night in an
open boat. I asked, "What was the deal with the kid in the boat? You told
me Haycock was involved in what looks like a smuggling operation. You didn't
say anything about smuggling people." "That's cause I didn't know it. The
other night, it was just "On. Okay. What now?" Joey said, "We go get some sleep.
I've got a room at Captain Casey's." I turned the Jeep around and, a quarter
mile down the road, clicked the headlights back on. I said, "How did you
know Haycock was going to meet that boat tonight? Don't tell me he does that
every night." "Nope. That's just the second time in
a week. We got lucky." My backside hurt. I had been drenched, chilled to
the bone, and nearly run over. I said, "Yeah. I guess we were." Captain Casey had thoughtfully placed a
clock radio on the chipped Formica nightstand in lieu of providing wake-up
service. I set the alarm, and Joey clicked off the lamp at 2:56 a.m. Having caught up on missed sleep at
Loutie's, I was back to my usual three hours. I woke Joey a few minutes after
six, stumbling to the bathroom to brush my teeth and rinse with motel
mouthwash. The first ferry from the island to the mainland was at eight. Joey
turned over. I pulled on yesterday's damp jeans and a windbreaker and went out
for a walk on the beach. As I've said before, you can get a lot of
thinking done if you aren't able to sleep. You also get to see things that
people without night demons never get to see. That morning, I saw a bleary-eyed
but exuberant Hispanic family watching the sun rise over the Gulf of Mexico.
Plump Poppa sat on the sand, presiding over mother and son as they fashioned a
drip castle from handfuls of sopping sand. As I approached, the mother seemed
to have tears in her tired eyes. I said, "Buenos dias." The little boy, who looked to be about six
years old, smiled up at me, and said, "Buenos dias." Mom froze with her pretty profile outlined
against the pale, early morning beach; then she turned to her husband. Poppa
gave me a hard look and said, "Good morning," in cultivated English
that, despite its precision, had an alien, equatorial inflection. And for the
first time—maybe because he had spoken or because
anger had flashed across his delicate, puffy features—I seemed to recognize him from some half-remembered news story,
from a faded newspaper photo or one of the hundreds of video clips that wash
across the television screen every day. And the faint gray-tone memory cast a
brief but unsettling shadow over my thoughts. As I walked away, the mother gathered up
Junior in her arms and the two parents walked quickly toward the motel. I could
hear the little boy start to cry and to beg his parents for something. My only
Spanish is what I remember from high school. But even I knew that the sweet
child who had smiled and wished me a good morning only wanted to stay on the
beautiful beach and finish building his castle in the sand. And I knew I was
the asshole who ruined it for him. chapter ten Outside the office window, tender new
growth flecked the dark ivy
that framed my view of the docks. Sinking deep into my chair, I sipped
coffee-flavored milk foam. It beat the hell out of crouching in the rain for
sixteen hours. Kelly had brewed cappuccino, in her words, to celebrate my
presence in the office. There seemed, I thought, to be a work-ethic message or
reprimand in there somewhere. I was thinking about that and about Carli and
about sand castles. Kelly sat in a client chair blowing gently
to make a hole in her foam. She asked, "How's the coffee?" "It's wonderful. It does, however,
seem to be encouraging sloth on my part." Kelly smiled, and, like every time she
smiled, I remembered how much I liked her. Kelly stood about five foot two and
weighed in at maybe a hundred pounds after Thanksgiving dinner. She wore her
black hair short, too short in my unsolicited and unexpressed opinion, and she
looked out at the world through bright blue eyes. For years, she had run five
miles a day, and she looked it. She said, "What happened to the
little boy on the beach?" "The whole family got on the eight
o'clock ferry with Tommy Bobby Haycock and his loaded pickup. Joey and I had to
wait for the next ferry, and, by the time we got to the landing, Haycock and
the family had cleared out." Kelly blew her foam some more. I said,
"Are you going to drink any of that or did you just make it so you could
play with the suds?" Kelly smiled, and a thought occurred to me. "Who
do we know at the state docks?" She looked out the window and wrinkled her
forehead with thought. "No one. We've got a couple of clients whose
families were in the shipping business a hundred years ago, but no one at the
state docks. And really no one who's in shipping now." "I need to find out what ships or
boats were in Apalachicola Bay on two specific dates. And, if there's any way
we can find out, I'd like to know if any of those boats arrived recently from
South or Central America." "Good luck." "Thank you." Kelly thought some more and said, "I
go out sometimes with a guy in the Coast Guard. I don't think he'd break any
rules for me. We're not that close. But if it's public knowledge, he should
either know how to dig it out or how to find someone else who can." "Do you mind asking him?" "Nah. What're the dates?" "Yesterday and last Tuesday. The
twentieth and twenty-second." She said, "Gotcha," and walked
out of the office. Ten minutes later, she was back. "Looks like he's out
guarding the coast. I left a message with the operator, or whatever they call
people who take messages at the Coast Guard. And I left a message on his
answering machine at home." "Thank you very much." "You're welcome very much." I turned once again to look out the
window. Over Mobile Bay, the sun lasered yellow beams through white clouds. I
did not feel like dictating or drafting or planning legal strategies. And, for
better or worse, my workload was such that there wasn't all that much of that
sort of thing to do. I swiveled my chair around to look at Kelly. "It's
Friday. Why don't you take off early?" "Because I've got work to do." "Can it wait until Monday?" "Probably." "Then you can probably go home. Take
off. I'll see you next week." A few minutes later, I heard her leave by
the front door. I flipped through pink message slips on my desk and tried to
return a few calls from fellow members of the bar. No luck. Mobile may be a
bustling international seaport, but then it's also a seaport. People don't kill
themselves with work and worry. And most lawyers play golf on Friday
afternoons. It's one of the things I always admired most about the city. I had finished off my coffee and was
ransacking the kitchen for a lost bag of double-chocolate Milano cookies when a
thought occurred to me. Back behind my desk, I flipped on my laptop and
searched Lotus Organizer for the phrase, "natural resource." Elmore
Puppet popped up. Elmore was one of my father's contacts at the Alabama
Department of Natural Resources and Conservation. My father owns a small
sawmill, and Puppet had helped him solve minor political problems over the
years. And, a few years ago, he had helped me find a job for an out-of-work
client with a forestry degree and a bad attitude. It was a few minutes past three—a problematic time to find a state employee in his office on a
Friday afternoon. I called. After getting passed around by a succession of
pleasant female voices, I heard Puppet pick up. "Mr. Puppet. This is Tom McInnes in
Mobile. Sam McInnes in Coopers Bend is my father." I had forgotten how unreasonably happy the
guy was. "I'll be damned. Sure. It's Sam's hot-shit lawyer son. How you
doin'?" "I'm fine, Mr. Puppet." "Call me Elmore, Tom. I may be old as
hell, but your old man is family." To Elmore, everyone he ever met was
family. I said, "I've got a problem. I remember seeing some aerial photos
of the sawmill and some timberland on Sam's desk." "You call your daddy Sam? My old man
would have kicked my ass." I turned to look out again at the bay. The
truth was that I didn't much care for the man who begat me, and I sure as hell
wasn't going to call him Daddy. Even as an adult, I never could figure out why
so many people seemed to like him. The closest I could come is that my old man
had made a lot of money over the course of his life, and too many people seem
to like saying some old rich guy is their friend. And it occurred to me that
that cynical conclusion probably said something about how nice a guy I was too. I took a deep breath. "Elmore, I've
lost track of everyone who wants to kick my ass." He laughed too hard, and
I resumed my effort to elicit useful information. "Anyway, I know Sam got
the aerials from you, and I need some photos of the Panhandle." "Oh. Okay. Well, you see, we don't
take the pictures ourselves. We get 'em from the federal government. Either the
Air Force or the Interior Department or NASA. There's several places that do
that." "Are they detailed enough to see a
particular boat anchored off the Panhandle and identify it?" Elmore paused to think about that. He
said, "Let me put it this way. No. But, if you knew the exact location of
the boat, you could hire a guy I know in Marengo County to fly over and get any
kind of pictures you want." "All I know is that the boat's
probably in Apalachicola Bay, but it could be anywhere within a dozen miles of
Apalachicola." Elmore laughed. "Well then, get out
your checkbook. To get the detail you want, you'd have to hire the pilot to fly
up and down the coast all day taking a series of overlapping photographs." What I had really wanted were photos from
the day before. I had gone ahead and asked about the pilot because there was
some possibility that Joey could let me know the next time the smugglers made a
nighttime landing, and I could take that opportunity to call the aerial
photographer. Which was a pretty stupid idea, since, if I were going to do
that, I could just hire a pilot or even a power boat and make the rounds
myself. I said, "What about NASA? I heard they had close-ups of Saddam
Hussein having breakfast before the Gulf War." Elmore laughed some more. He was one happy
guy. "Saddam Hussein ain't hanging out on the Panhandle, Tom. Most of the
time, NASA has their satellites shut down when they're not over something
they're interested in. I mean, I don't mean to make you feel stupid. I just
know 'cause I've been doing this for forty years." "Any suggestions?" "Check with the Coast Guard." "It's in the works. Thanks,
Elmore." "Any time. Any time at all. And tell
your father I said howdy." I said I would and hung up. State
employees. Some hold on to their jobs through shifting administrations by
digging up dirt, some by never being noticed, and some, like Elmore Puppet,
stayed put for forty years by liking every miserable s.o.b. they ever met. I couldn't think of anything else useful
to do, and the thought—or more precisely the absence of thought—was making me antsy. I called Susan and invited myself over for
dinner at Loutie's house. Susan said, "Joey's already coming
over to see Loutie tonight. Why don't you pick up some pizza, and we'll make a
party of it?" I agreed that that sounded like one hell of an idea. I called
ahead for two deep dish pizzas with everything, then drove to Blockbuster and
picked up Rear Window and Get Shorty, figuring that between
Hitchcock and Elmore Leonard there would be something for everyone. On the way
to the pizza place, I reached Joey on his cell phone. He said, "I hear we're having a
party." "Looks like it." I asked,
"Why aren't you on Dog Island watching Haycock?" "I thought I'd come home and talk
with Susan and Carli about what happened and go back down on Monday with a
fresh perspective." I said, "Wanted the weekend off,
huh?" "Basically." I told him to bring beer and soft drinks
and pushed the end button on my flip phone. When Get Shorty ended, Carli popped
in Hitchcock and made an effort to get into Jimmy Stewart and Grace Kelly. Susan
asked me to give her a hand with the leftovers, and we carried cardboard pizza
boxes, tomato-pasted plates, and sticky glasses into the kitchen. Susan scraped
cold crust into the disposal and loaded the dishwasher while I searched out
trash bags and stuffed one with boxes and napkins and other trash from the
plastic receptacle under Loutie's sink. I finished with the trash and walked
through the mudroom and out the back door with the intention of finding an
outside garbage can. The flat lawn reached back to a brick wall that separated
it from the service alley. The cans hunkered against the wall on the alley
side. I reached over the brick wall, stuffed my black plastic bag in an empty
Rubbermaid can, and pressed the lid back into place. When I turned around,
Susan stood in the doorway framed by light from the kitchen. I started walking
back, and she came out to meet me, carrying a fresh beer in each hand. She handed one to me, and I thanked her.
She said, "It's nice out, isn't it?" "Yeah. It is. It's funny. Joey and I
nearly froze in the rain yesterday on Dog Island." Susan walked away from the house and
leaned against a slender magnolia tree that looked like a relatively recent
addition to the two-hundred-year-old yard. I followed and stood in the shadows
looking at her. She asked, "How much longer before Carli and I get our
lives back?" "I don't know, Susan. We know a lot.
We might be able to go to the cops now and get Haycock arrested, but I don't
think it would stick. It's just our word against his. I guess we could report
the beach rendezvous and shut them down on Dog Island for a while, but they'd
just pick back up somewhere else. And then we wouldn't be able to keep an eye
on them. Right now, I think it's better to know where the Bodines are and what
they're doing. And, as far as I can see, shutting down one little smuggling
operation wouldn't do much to keep Carli safe." Susan's features had disappeared into a
dark silhouette, but I could feel her eyes moving over my face like fingertips
as I talked. My thoughts turned liquid, and I had to concentrate to bring my
mind back on point. "I'm ... I'm open to suggestions. But it looks like
we've just got to stick it out until we can figure out enough about what's
going on to completely shut down whoever's after you and Carli." Susan
shifted her weight from one foot to the other. With only a sliver of moon in
the night sky, she was nearly invisible beneath the tree's shadow. I said,
"I'm going back down there tomorrow to see if I can find out who was
anchored offshore last night." Susan's voice dropped to just above a
whisper. "I really appreciate everything you and Joey are doing." I
tried to say something about the others wondering where we were, but she kept
speaking quietly. "After the comments you made to Carli about getting me
hurt last fall, which you didn't, I want to make sure you're not doing all this
because you still feel guilty about something." "I don't think I feel guilty. It's
more like I feel responsible. It was my brother who..." Susan interrupted. "There's plenty of
blame in what happened, but none of it is yours. You helped me through a very
hard time. I am nothing but grateful for that and for what you're doing for me
and Carli now." As Susan spoke, she leaned forward and hooked her finger in
the front of my shirt and bumped me gently on the chest for emphasis. When she tilted forward, she came out of
the magnolia's shadow, and I could see her face in the moonlight. Her small
hand felt warm against my chest, and my mind filled with the image and
sensations of our brief kiss at her beach house. Without really thinking, I
leaned forward and kissed her lips. I stepped back, and she smiled. I took a
sip of beer, because I wasn't sure what else to do right then, and felt her
hand on my shirt pulling me toward her. I put my arms around her waist, and her
hand slid up my chest and neck to the back of my head as our lips met again.
Her lips parted and our tongues touched. Slowly, I found myself pushing deeper into
her mouth and pulling her body close against mine. Minutes later, when we
stepped apart, the night air held too little oxygen. Susan said, "I haven't made out like
that in years. Jeez. High school at the drive-in." I was glad she couldn't see my face.
"Is that good or bad?" "Ohhh. That's good." As she
pulled me to her, she said, "I liked high school." We kissed again, and I pulled back to look
at her eyes. The pupils were dilated, which could have meant she was interested
or even aroused if we hadn't been standing in the dark. But, interested or not,
I thought I saw a few too many emotions playing across her face. I realized it
had been years since she had kissed anyone but her husband, and, if my guess
was right, it had been eight or nine months with no one to kiss or hold since
he had died. I turned and led her across the moonlit
yard to the back door. When we entered the kitchen, Susan said,
"Come on. I want to show you something," and led me away from the
living room and toward the back of the house. "What is it?" "Just follow me." Susan led me down the hall to a bedroom
door. She pushed it open and reached inside to flick on the light. I asked, "Why are we going into a
bedroom?" Susan gave me a look and said, "You
wish." She stepped inside. "I want you to see something Carli
did." I followed Susan into the room and looked
around. Taped to the vanity mirror, scattered on the bed, and stacked on the
bedside table were a total of maybe twenty drawings. I walked over to the
vanity and looked. My charcoal image looked back from a piece of lined notebook
paper taped there. I said, "This isn't a stalker thing,
is it?" Susan shook her head. "We really do
think a lot of ourselves tonight, don't we? No. She's done drawings of all of
us. And some of the house. And some of Loutie's flowers. I wanted you to see
how good they are." I walked over to the bed and picked up a
pencil drawing of one of the trees in Loutie's backyard. "They look good
to me. But I'm not much of a judge. How good are they?" Susan had walked over to squint at Carli's
picture of me. "Well, they're not professional. She's not the next Picasso
or anything. But they're good. Probably on the level of an undergraduate art
student." Suddenly I felt uncomfortable.
"Should we be in here? This is her private stuff." Susan looked around. "Probably not. I
just wanted you to see what your client can do. That she's not just some little
tramp in a wet T-shirt." "I never thought anything like that.
Or, if I did, I understand why she's the way she is." Susan just said, "Well, you're
probably right that we're invading her privacy here. Let's go," and we
left Carli's bedroom. Back in the den, Jimmy Stewart spied on
Miss Lonely Hearts as she served dinner and made conversation with a
make-believe date. Joey sat on the sofa massaging Loutie's feet. Carli sat cross-legged
six feet from the television screen. She said, "This is a good movie. It's
got Princess Grace in it. She was like the first Princess Di." Joey grinned at us and said, "Did you
two get the dishes cleaned up?" I said, "Yeah. Susan did." He kept grinning. "Take the trash out
to the alley?" I said, "Uh-huh." "Mmmm. You find anything else
interesting to do out there in the yard? Under the stars, moonlight bouncing
off the flowers, soft spring breezes blowing through your hair..." Loutie said, "Shut up, Joey." He was chuckling. "Yeah, I was
gettin' a little misty myself. And I gotta go anyway. It's been four or
five days without much sleep. I need to get home and hit the hay." Everyone but Carli was tired, so Joey and
I thanked Loutie for having us and wandered out into the night. As we walked
between rows of purple flowers toward the street, I said, "You're a real
asshole. You know that?" Joey was still laughing to himself when he
climbed into his Expedition and shut the door. chapter eleven Bright sunshine poured through French doors
and tilted a warm rectangle
of light across the white sheet where it covered my legs. I squinted at the
alarm clock, rubbed my eyes like the fat kid in "The Little Rascals,"
and squinted some more. It read 7:78. For the first time in months, I had slept
for six straight hours, and I felt like kissing someone. Again. Since late fall, the red-dotted numbers
over my bedside table had become more of a gauge than a reminder to get up and
face the day. They were a gauge of how long I had dented sheets and tossed
covers without sleeping. Then they were a gauge of how long I had slept before
waking up more tired than when I went to bed. More than anything, they had
become a gauge of how screwed up my life had become since my difficult—some might say criminal—younger brother
caught a thirty-aught-six round in the neck one September night on the Alabama
River. I had been too busy to deal with Hall's bullshit when he was alive,
which meant that—for the past six months—I'd been lying awake every night feeling like a jerk for failing
to salvage a life that was ultimately unsalvageable. But something had happened now. And I
guessed it had a lot to do with the widow Fitzsimmons and even more to do with
some sort of absolution that my subconscious seemed to have tied to Susan's
playful intimacy. Whatever the reason, for the first time in six months, the
sun was up on that bright Saturday morning before Tom McInnes was. I decided to lie there and think about
making out under a magnolia tree and smile. Around nine, Kelly called to let me know
her Coast Guard captain had phoned. She got a date out of it. I got bupkus.
According to the boyfriend, all vessels leaving foreign ports must go through
customs when arriving back in the United States. But, between ports, they can
pretty much wander around the Gulf of Mexico—or anywhere
else they want—without telling a soul. The young captain
explained that a private yacht, for example, could have left Brazil, sailed
along the Central American coast, and cut over to Apalachicola Bay without
filing a report or leaving any record of its route. Also, that same yacht could
pull into Tampa two days later and no one would ever know where it had been—only that it left Brazil and then entered the United States a
certain number of days later. After saying good-bye to Kelly, I padded
downstairs and scrambled three eggs, which tasted better than I remembered eggs
tasting. Later, as I swirled orange juice in my mouth like wine, I punched in
Joey's number on the kitchen phone. We spoke briefly before I hung up and
called Loutie's. Carli answered. I said good morning, made polite conversation
about Hitchcock and Grace Kelly, and asked for Susan. When Susan picked up, I said, "Good
morning." Susan, I thought, sounded pleased. She
said, "Good morning to you. Is this call one of those Southern things that
Midwestern girls like me don't know about?" "What are you talking about?" "You know. Calling your conquest the
next day to let her know you still respect her." "Cute. Unfortunately, it wasn't much
of a conquest, which is not to say that I will not always think fondly of
emptying the trash." Susan laughed. I said, "The reason I called is
that I've tried every way I can think of—short of going
to Apalachicola and renting a boat—to find out who
may be cruising from South America to Dog Island with merchandise and refugees
on board. Monday morning, Kelly's going to start checking customs in Panama
City, Mobile, and Tampa to see if anything jumps out at her, but that's really
a hope-we-get-lucky tactic. I think I'm going to have to head down to the
islands and ask a few questions and maybe rent a boat or a plane." "Yes. Last night, you said you might
do something like that. Do you want to stay at my house while you're down there?
It's a little shot up at the moment, but I've already had the real estate
company—you know, the people who handle renting
out the place when I'm not there—I've already
had them clean up the mess and nail plywood over broken windows and that kind
of thing. So, if you're interested, you're welcome to it." I said, "I think I'd rather stay
someplace where the Bodines haven't already tried to kill us." "Good point." "I think I'll try to rent something
on one of the islands. Probably on St. George, since Joey already has Dog
Island covered. He's going to keep watching Haycock and let me know when he
goes out to meet another boat. That way, I can check around with some of the
local fishermen or maybe rent a boat the next morning. If I can get out there
before our smugglers weigh anchor, I should be able to get a name or a
registration number off the boat." Susan was laughing again. "Weigh
anchor, huh?" I didn't answer. She gave me the name of her agent so I'd
have someone to help me find a rental, and asked, "Are you going to come
by before you leave?" "No. I hadn't planned to. Do you
think I should see Carli and explain what I'm doing?" There was a brief silence. "No. No,
that's okay. I think she's fine." Now there was a short silence on my end as
my sad little brain kicked in. "I slept like a baby last night." She said, "Okay," but what she
meant was, Why are you telling me this? "Since my brother died last fall, I
haven't been able to sleep a whole lot. Hell, I see the sunrise so much I've
gotten tired of looking at it." I said, "I just wanted you to know
that last night, for the first time in months, I slept through the night and
didn't wake up until after seven." "If you're this happy about sleeping
in till seven on Saturday morning, you must have been having problems.
So, I'm glad. Whatever the reason." She hesitated and said, "For
whatever it's worth, last night had the opposite effect on me. I tossed and
turned for an hour before finally drifting off." I thought of how I had pulled her against
me in the moonlight, and I recalled the emotion in her eyes. I decided I had
gone too far. She obviously missed her husband and wasn't ready for another
relationship. "I'm sorry, Susan. I know it must be
hard." She giggled, which was something I had
never heard her do. I had heard her laugh, chuckle, and even guffaw on one
occasion, but I had never heard Susan Fitzsimmons giggle. She said, "Tom?
You really don't get it, do you? For me, the only hard thing about kissing you
was stopping. And, oh yeah, then trying to go to sleep in what I can
only politely describe as a thoroughly unsatisfied condition." "Oh." Susan repeated back, "Oh." I promised to call from the beach and to
come by the minute I got back in town. I put the receiver in its cradle and
found myself sitting at the breakfast table, smiling idiotically at an empty
glass of orange juice. The house Susan's agent found for me was
not in The Plantation. Based on past experience, I decided that the fat guy at
the gate was not an insurmountable obstacle to people who wanted to kill me.
And there was always the consideration that Susan was footing the bill. Unless
I stayed in Susan's house, which seemed like a monumentally bad idea, I would
be looking at a couple-thousand-plus a week for a rental house inside that gated
community. But just a few hundred yards away, on the low-rent side of The
Plantation's guarded gate, I found a beachfront Jim Walter home on hurricane
stilts for a mere eight hundred. Inside the little house, pastel
upholstery, pastel curtains and blinds, and pastel prints filled the house with
faded ocean motifs. There was a "master bedroom," which meant, if you
were careful, you could actually walk around the bed without bumping into the
wall or the dresser, and there was a "guest bedroom," which meant, in
there, you couldn't. The kitchen occupied a back corner of the living room,
which boasted two double sliding glass doors that provided the requisite Gulf
view and led out onto a weathered deck. I threw my canvas duffle on the guest bed
and rummaged around until I came up with running shorts and shoes and a Grand
Hotel T-shirt with a faded nautilus shell on the front. After stuffing my new
house key and two fifty-dollar bills into the inside pocket of my shorts, I
left through the roadside door, circled back under the house, and walked out
onto the beach. Small whitecaps lapped the sand ten feet
below a wavering line of gray and white shells that marked high tide. A hundred
yards offshore, a striped-sail catamaran skidded across blue-green swells.
Seagulls hovered over my head like graceful beggars, and, as far as I could see
in each direction, no more than a dozen bodies interrupted the soft flow of
sandy beach. The island was between seasons. The end of
spring break had emptied the beaches of young, nubile bodies; winter had fled
New England and the Midwest, pulling hoards of not-so-young and not-so-nubile
snowbirds back to their native climes; and the summer vacation trade had not
yet begun to flood the beaches with sun-blistered families. I turned toward the
center of the island, in the direction of a cluster of buildings that serves as
the island's downtown, and began walking. With every step, pockets of powdery
sand squeaked like baby seals beneath my feet. I could feel the muscles in my
thighs and calves and a thousand tiny fibers in my ankles and knees stretch and
work and warm. I started to run. Twenty minutes and a little more than two
miles later, the mustard walls of the island's only motel jogged by on my left.
I slowed to a walk and turned toward the restaurant-slash-bar just east of the
motel. A wooden walkway stretched over grassy dunes and connected to an outside
dining area furnished with plastic tables and chairs and a freestanding bar
roofed with palm fronds and surrounded by four huge Tiki masks. I tried to
imagine why Hawaiian kitsch had been used to decorate a bar in North Florida.
If nothing else, the Seminoles should complain. I ordered iced tea and fried crab claws
and struck up a conversation with my blonde, nut-brown waitress. Summer sun had
bleached her as white and burned her as brown as a person can bleach and burn
in the tropical sun. A yellow metal button on her left breast told me her name
was Lauren. In fifteen years, when Lauren turned forty, she would look fifty.
But, for now, she looked pretty damn good. It was midafternoon, and the restaurant
was as deserted as the beach. Lauren took my order, and we talked. After she
put a basket of steaming crab claws on the table, I asked her to sit. Lauren told me about life on the island
and about the fishermen and about the pleasure boats that anchored and dropped
speedboats full of yachtsmen who dined and drank and tipped like nobody's
business. And, most interesting of all, she told me about an old fishmonger—a local legend named Peety Boy who had known everything and
everyone on the island since the dawn of time. Lauren went back to work, and I trotted
over the walkway and down the beach to the waterline, where I pulled off my
shoes and shirt and dropped them in the sand. Cold surf swirled over my toes
and ankles and then my legs. A deep breath, and I dove into a wave. I didn't
wait thirty minutes after eating, but then I didn't plan on deep-water
swimming. I just needed cold water on my face. I needed to think. A few laps back and forth parallel with
the shoreline, and I staggered out covered in chill bumps. I donned shirt and
shoes and walked back up along the wooden walkway and past the restaurant. As I
passed, Lauren waved and flashed a friendly smile. It was time to find Peety Boy. According
to my new friend Lauren, every day of the week the old man parked his wagon
next to the public basketball court near the center of the island. She said I
couldn't miss it, particularly since Peety Boy's rolling store bore the logical
name of "Peety Boy's Seafood." I was assured that word on the island
was: If Peety Boy didn't know about it, it didn't happen. I hung a right on Gorrie Drive, the main
road along the Gulf side of the island. The public beaches' parking lot where
Carli had parked with her date that fateful night came up on the right. Across
the road, a basketball hoop protruded at a downward angle from a dejected
backboard. The goalpost sprouted from a slab of sand-powdered pavement that sat
in the middle of a small grassy field. On the far back corner of the grass sat
Peety Boy's Seafood. The boxy trailer looked homemade but well built. It was
the size of one of those pop-up things that retired people haul from state to
state, but this one was square and white, with a long service window cut into
the side. Painted plywood hung down by chains to form a counter that, come
nightfall, would swing back into place and close the window. Above the opening,
Peety Boy had stretched a striped awning. Above the awning, he had painted the
name of his business. As I approached, an elderly man with thick
white hair, sun-wrinkled skin, and a paucity of teeth, said, "Good day to
be alive!" I said, "Yep. This is a beautiful
place." Peety Boy turned to toss a couple of fresh
fillets in the icebox and stepped back up to the window. The store sat on truck
tires, so he looked down at me. "Most beautiful place on God's earth. Been
here my whole life. Never moved an inch, 'cept for World War II. Helped whip
the Germans in France. Then came on home and thanked God for gettin' back and
bein' back." I said, "They trained around here
somewhere for D-Day, didn't they?" Peety Boy looked pleased but, probably
because of his missing teeth, smiled more with his eyes than his lips.
"Not many folks know that nowadays. Yessir. Down close to Carrabelle, at
Lanark Village, six divisions, 'bout forty thousand troops, got what they
called amphibious trainin'. A couple dozen drowned tryin' to learn it. Walter
Winchell, he called Carrabelle 'Hell by the Sea.' But it ain't. Everywhere is
hell when you're trainin' to fight a war." Peety Boy wiped fish blood on
his white apron, and changed to a businesslike tone. "So. What can I do
for you today? Got some beautiful jumbo shrimp. Got the prettiest oysters you
ever saw. Come right out of Apalachicola Bay. Just got 'em in this
mornin'." "I'm trying to get some
information." Some of the openness faded, and Peety Boy
looked doubtful. He said, "Well, I guess that's all right." "I'm trying to locate someone who
would know whether the boat of a friend of mine has been around here recently.
I don't think my friend came ashore. But I'm pretty sure he laid up off Dog
Island for a few days last week." Peety Boy put his hands on the counter and
leaned forward. Fish blood stained his thick nails and work-scarred fingers,
and, as he put weight on his hands, hard cords of muscle jumped and strained
beneath thin parched skin on his forearms. He said, "You say this is a
friend of yours?" Peety Boy's watery black eyes drilled
through my face and into my thoughts. Country isn't stupid. Uneducated isn't
stupid. Peety Boy had my number. I said, "No. It's just easier to say a
friend than to tell everything I know to everyone I ask. I'm looking
for a large boat, probably a yacht, that was in the area last week. It's for a
real friend. A young girl who's in trouble." The old man's face relaxed. He
straightened up and reached over to pull a wooden stool up to the counter. He
perched his thin rump on the stool, poked a Camel non-filter between a pair of
dry chapped lips, and lit the end with a Zippo. Through a cloud of gray smoke,
he said, "That's fine. How long you been lookin'?" "A few days. But this is my first day
here on the island." He chuckled, but there wasn't much
pleasure in it. "You go around askin' questions like that 'un, and it'll
probably be your last day here too." He paused and looked out across the
basketball court and the parking lot at the Gulf of Mexico. "Tell you
what. I'm gonna fill you in, and I'm mostly doin' it 'cause you're gonna get
messed up if I don't. And, the way I see it, if you're lookin' after a friend,
that's the right way to go. So listen up. Don't ask nobody else about this
stuff, and don't tell nobody you talked to me. If you promise that, I'll tell
you who I think can help you out." "I can do that. I'm not looking for
trouble." Peety Boy looked out at the water some
more, then he said, "Get in your car and drive over to Eastpoint. You just
go back across the causeway and take the first right. There's a line of little
seafood houses over there. Places where they buy the catch off the boats and
sell it to tourists. Same thing I do, only they ain't as particular about how
old some of it is. You go to a place called Teeter's and ask to talk to Billy
Teeter. Tell him I sent you. Don't tell nobody else. Just tell Billy. If he
ain't there, you ask when he'll be back. You got that?" I told him I had
it and thanked him. He said, "Well, that's all right." I pushed two fingers inside my waistband
and fished out a wet fifty from the inside pocket. As I looked up, I noticed a
bumper sticker over Peety Boy's cutting board for the first time. It read, God
is love. I said, "Can I pay you? Believe me, it's worth it to
me." He looked down at my wet money and said,
"No, sir." I thought for a few seconds and said,
"Can I buy fifty dollars' worth of shrimp from you?" Peety Boy looked doubtful. "Yessir.
You can do that. How you gonna get it home?" "I'll come back for it." He
didn't look like he believed me. I said, "I'm going to be on the island
for a few days. If there's any way possible, I'll stop on the way home and pick
up the shrimp. If I ran into trouble or I have to return home in a hurry, then
next weekend I want you to give fifty dollars' worth of seafood to the next
young couple who comes by. Is that a deal?" Peety Boy thought a bit and said,
"Yessir. That's all right." And I felt good—for about ten seconds. chapter twelve As I stood there trying to convince Peety
Boy to take my money, I had
unrolled the soaked fifty and pressed it against my T-shirt with my palm. I had
squeezed a rectangle of water into my shirt and managed to flatten the bill
back into shape before pressing it into Peety Boy's hard palm. That felt good.
Seeing Deputy Mickey Burns cruise by when I turned to leave did not. Burns' cruiser moved at that intimidating
snail-pace cops use to make you feel like you're under surveillance and like
you've done something wrong, if only you could remember what it was. I waved
and got the universal cop nod in response. I decided to jog back to my pastel
palace along Gorrie Drive where I would be in plain view of the island traffic,
which, as it turned out, consisted of one four-wheel-drive convertible with two
dark-suited, Hispanic-looking businessmen inside, what appeared to be an old lady
trudging along deep inside a straw hat, dark glasses, and a flowing dashiki,
and three dogs. Two of the dogs barked and growled and chased me for a few feet
to spice up their day. Otherwise, the trip was uneventful. I had reached the top of the wooden steps
and was fishing inside my waistband for my rented key when I saw him step out
from the tall space under the house. Sonny, the almost mute, eye-jumping
painter walked up the stairs behind me. When he was four steps away, he hung
back like someone who had been kicked down stairs before. "Go on inside.
It ain't locked." As Sonny spoke, he swiveled his right hip
toward me and showed me the butt of a handgun sticking out of his pocket. The
movement looked a little effeminate. I decided not to tell him. I pushed open the door and stepped inside
my own little pastel hell. A familiar-looking man sat in a rattan chair padded
with green and peach puffs of printed seashells. Carli had given me a pretty
good description. He did in fact look like a weight lifter or an ex-jock going
to fat. My young client didn't know it, but she had seen a pretty famous guy
shoot another man in the mouth. Leroy Purcell, former All-American running back
for the University of Florida, used gridiron-scarred, oversized hands to push
out of the chair. If I hadn't known he'd taken out a knee his last year with
the Cowboys, I don't think I would have noticed that he favored it getting up. Purcell seemed to be trying for a Florida
resort look. He wore a blond crew cut—waxed straight
up in front—and an expensive set of golfer's duds. His
problem was that the wardrobe didn't much go with the scarred gash across his
chin, or his twenty-inch neck, or the overwhelming sense of controlled violence
that seemed to radiate from every pore. He rose to his full height and said my
least favorite sentence in the English language. "Do you know who I
am?" I said, "You used to be some kind of
jock, didn't you?" Purcell looked disgusted. "My name is
Leroy Purcell. And, yeah, I was some kind of jock. I was the kind who played
tailback for Florida and spent five seasons with the Dallas Cowboys." I really did not like this guy.
"Congratulations. What can I do for you?" He turned deep red. "I'm not used to
being talked to that way." And, I thought, I'm not used to entertaining
murderers. I said, "I didn't invite you here. You and Harpo broke in
because you wanted to see me, and you think I'm supposed to be impressed by who
you are. Fine. I'm impressed. Now tell me what you want." This, I thought, is not going well. Over the past week, I
had been shot at; Susan had been shot at; her house had been vandalized; my
life, Susan's life, and Carli's life had been turned upside down; and a
frightened, abused teenage girl had been traumatized beyond description. It all
came pouring in on me. I breathed deeply and tried to regain control. I repeated, "What do you want?" I was not the only one starting to lose
it. Leroy Purcell said, "You're not exactly impressing the shit out of me
either, McInnes." I looked at him. "I came here to talk
business." "So, talk." "Are you this big an asshole with
everyone, or do you think you know something about me in particular?" "I'm this big of an asshole with
everyone." "Well, asshole, we're going for a
little ride." "I don't think so. You want to shoot me, then shoot me.
But I'm not going to get in a car and go anywhere with you two." "I could have Sonny make you." I turned and looked at Sonny. His eyes
were bouncing around the room, never really looking at me but keeping me in
view somehow. I said, "I doubt it," and Sonny's eyes stopped
ricocheting and focused. Purcell said, "I know about you,
McInnes. I've taken the time to know about you. I hear you're some kinda minor
league hard-ass. But old Sonny here is major league. You might say he's a professional."
I shrugged. Purcell smiled, but it wasn't pretty. "You need to come with
us. If you do, you'll be fine. We're just going up to The Plantation. If you
won't come, Sonny's gonna put a bullet in your ass." "I guess I'll come then." Purcell said, "I thought you
would." "In case you're wondering, it was
that 'bullet in the ass' line that did the trick. That sounds like it would
hurt." No one thought I was funny. Purcell drove my Jeep—he already had the keys—while Sonny and
I sat in back. The back windows on a Jeep Cherokee are tinted dark. Sonny had
drawn his hip gun and was keeping it leveled at my rib cage. As we approached
the gate, Sonny took off his cap and placed it on the seat. Then he used his
free hand to pull an old-fashioned switchblade out of his left hip pocket. He
pressed the point of the blade deep enough into my side to just break the skin
and then put the gun away and placed his cap over his knife hand. Behind tinted
windows, no one outside would be able to tell I was a flick of Sonny's hand
away from a punctured lung. Purcell was right. Sonny seemed pretty
professional. The guardhouse came up on the left, and
Sonny said, "Don't say nothin'." The overstuffed guard's uniform shuffled
to the car, was visibly and loudly impressed with Leroy Purcell's presence, and
waved us through. I assumed Purcell or one of his capos had a house on the
island and that was where we were going. I was wrong. We went to Susan's beach
house, and I was relieved not to see an old Ford pickup sticking out of the
carport. We trudged up the wooden steps single
file, and Sonny kicked in Susan's front door while Purcell and I watched. When
the door splintered and swung open, Sonny limped to one side, and Purcell
strutted in ahead of us like an African chieftain at a war council. Sonny said, "Inside." He had his
gun out again, and it was pointed at me. I sighed and followed Purcell. Purcell said, "This is more like it.
Where does she keep the liquor?" I didn't answer, which seemed to upset
Sonny because he rapped me on the shoulder with the butt of his revolver. That
was enough. I turned and hit Sonny on the bridge of his nose with a straight
right that had six months of anger and frustration and wanting to hit someone
behind it. Sonny went down. Then he came up again with blood pouring from both
nostrils and every intention of killing me where I stood. Purcell yelled,
"Stop!" Sonny looked pleadingly at Purcell, who
said, "Did I tell you to hit him?" Sonny shook his bloody face and
dripped red on the carpet. "I told you I wanted to talk to this man, and I
wanted to impress him that we are serious. When I need your help impressing
him, I'll tell you. You got that?" Sonny nodded this time and dripped more
blood on Susan's rug. I said, "Can he sit up and beg?" Purcell looked pissed. "Shut the fuck
up, McInnes." "It's your party." Leroy Purcell walked over to the kitchen,
snatched a roll of paper towels out of its holder over the sink, and tossed it
to Sonny. While Sonny put pressure on his flowing red nose, Purcell located a bottle
of bourbon and mixed it with ice and Coke from the refrigerator. He walked over
and sat in a chair with its back to Susan's bright view of the Gulf. He said,
"Sit down." I didn't see any reason not to, so I sat on
the sofa and looked out at the beach. Purcell said, "Now, this is more
like it. That fucking place you're staying is for shit." He gestured at
the room. "These people got some goddamn taste." He sipped his
sweetened bourbon. "Tell me, McInnes, what do you think you know about me
that makes you so pissed off?" I looked at him. "What does Susan
Fitzsimmons tell you about me?" I said, "Who is Susan
Fitzpatrick?" "Funny." He said, "Susan Fitzsimmons
owns this house, and she's a client of yours. And I think that you think
she and that white trash waitress from the Pelican's Roost may have seen
something last Wednesday night at a house down the beach from here." He
stopped for me to agree with him. I picked up a throw pillow and put it behind
my head. He said, "I'm here to work something out. I really don't know
what your clients saw or didn't see. I'm just here for some friends who don't
want any trouble. What I want is to meet with Fitzsimmons and the girl and
straighten this out." "Explain the problem to me. What are
you going to straighten out?" "Then she is your client." I repeated, "What are you going to
straighten out?" He didn't answer. I said, "You know what I think? I
think you're scared shitless because you think someone saw you up to no good,
and you don't know how to find them. Look, I admit Susan Fitzsimmons has been
both my client and my friend for a long time. If you've got half a brain, you
could find that out in an hour anyway. But she's never laid eyes on you, and,
if I have anything to say about it, she never will." "So you're not going to let me meet
with her?" "Nope." Purcell rose up out of the chair.
"Maybe I should convince you." "Maybe you should kiss my ass." He walked toward me. I sat still. The
former football hero stopped a foot from the sofa and took in a deep breath.
"McInnes, all I want is a meeting. And all you gotta do is say yes. It'll
save your client a load of grief down the road. And it'll save you an ass
whipping right now. Think about it." He smiled. The man was thinking about
hurting me, and it seemed to put him in a better mood. "Hell, McInnes, I
can see you're a pretty good-sized guy. Probably push around the Nautilus machines
pretty good. Probably in a spinning class down at the fags-are-us sportsplex.
But you caught Sonny by surprise. If I hadn't stopped him, you'd be dead now.
And you need to understand that, even if you think you're tough, I got fifty
pounds of muscle on you and Sonny." I said, "You've got fifty pounds
hanging over your belt," and, as soon as I got the words out, I realized I
might have gone too far. I could feel the violence arcing like
static electricity between Purcell and Sonny over my head. I could see him
breathing hard, trying to regain control. Purcell raised his glass and downed what
was left of his drink in one swallow; then he turned and threw the empty glass
at the kitchen sink from across the room. The crystal tumbler hit dead center
on the stainless steel sink and exploded on impact. Purcell's eyes moved around the room and
over Susan's things. He was thinking; he was breathing deeply and thinking.
Finally, he said, "You don't understand what the fuck you're in, McInnes.
You may not believe it, but me and Sonny are about the most reasonable people
you're gonna meet on this thing." "Yeah." I said, "You and
Sonny got reasonable written all over you." Purcell huffed and shook his head.
"Boy, there's tough and there's bad and there's just plain evil. Old Sonny
there is tough. I'm tougher, and I got a Super Bowl ring to prove it. But we
can bring somebody into this thing who—believe me—would scare the living shit out of the toughest sonofabitch I ever
saw on a football field. I make a phone call and say it's out of my hands,
you're gonna get to meet a mean-ass spic who'll slice you open and play with
your guts while you're still alive and watching. Crazy fuck'll do the same and
worse—perverted sex stuff with knives and
spikes, shit like that—to the Fitzsimmons woman and that
trailer-trash girl." He paused before he said, "This is your last
chance to settle this normal." Purcell paused again to let me think about
that. And I did, but the whole thing sounded like a lame horror story concocted
to scare me into bad judgment—not to mention my concerns with Leroy
Purcell's definition of "normal." The threats were over the top. They
were ridiculous. But... Purcell said this alleged boogeyman was Hispanic, and
the cold puffy stare of the fat guy on Dog Island kept haunting me. I shook it off. "Bedtime
stories." Purcell looked surprised. "Huh?" I explained. "You're full of
shit." Leroy Purcell pulled a nickel-plated Colt
.45 out of his waistband and chopped at my face with the barrel. I ducked and
he missed, and it occurred to me that maybe I should have let him hit me. Maybe
it would have been better to let him vent some violence without pulling a trigger. Purcell raised the .45 again but not to
swing it. He pointed the muzzle at my face and cocked the hammer. The room grew
still. Purcell breathed hard against an adrenaline rush, and in the short
eternity between his breaths—when I waited for the bullet aimed at my
eyes—the only other sound was the soft hum of
Susan's refrigerator. The room faded. I was focused on the gun
in Purcell's giant hand, and my only conscious thought was to wonder why I
hadn't noticed the refrigerator noise before. The moment passed, and a dark mist seemed
to lift. The battle-scared ex-jock rolled his shoulders to relax the muscles in
his thick neck. He said, "Sonny?" "Yessir." Sonny sounded excited
now. "You got the lighter fluid?" "Yessir." "Use it." Sonny appeared in the corner of my eye. I
kept looking at the volcanic muzzle of Purcell's .45. Sonny moved to the wall
opposite Susan's circular stairs and stopped in front of Bird Fitzsimmons'
wall-sized painting of seashells. Now I looked. Sonny pulled a yellow and blue
squeeze can of lighter fluid from his back pocket. "That painting's worth a fortune. The
artist is dead." It was a stupid thing to say, but it was what I said. I
looked up at Purcell. He had backed off a step and lowered the muzzle to point
at my chest. The Saturday cookout smell of charcoal lighter fluid filled the
room, and I looked over to see Sonny squirting the painting in big dripping
circles. Purcell said, "We're done here. You
can leave if you want to." I sat still. He walked over to the painting and
pulled a Zippo from his pocket like the one Peety Boy had used to light his
Camel. "Just remember, all you got to do is set up a meeting with the
Fitzsimmons woman and the waitress. We'll work everything out, and they'll be
safe." He spun the little black wheel on the lighter with his thumb and
turned the flame all the way up. "You tell 'em. Nobody's safe. Nothing
they got is safe until we work this out." And Leroy Purcell, former All-American
tailback for the University of Florida, set fire to Susan's most cherished
remnant of her dead husband's talented life. I shot off the sofa and ran toward the
deck, and they let me. Sonny and Purcell were already on their way out the back
when I got the double doors open. Behind me, flames shot eight feet in the
air, scorching the walls and threatening the house. The painting was engulfed
in fire. Unable to grasp it bare-handed, I grabbed a lamp and swung it in a
hard upward arc against the lower edge of the painting. The flaming square flew
off the wall and crashed onto the carpeted floor as I jumped out of the way.
The top left corner was untouched. I gripped it and ran across the carpet and
through the doors and swung a double handful of flames over the railing and
onto the sand below. Back inside, the carpet smoked, and the
wall was too hot to touch. I splashed pans of water on everything and called
the fire department. Then I called Susan. chapter thirteen The flirtation was gone. Susan sounded dead
inside. "I know it's
just a painting, Tom. And I'm so thankful that you're okay. But... oh God, Tom.
What do we do now?" "Well, we damn sure don't agree to
let you and Carli meet with him. I'm going to put Joey on it. We'll bug
Purcell's house and where he works and every other damn thing we can think of
to find out what he's up to. And, if he even gets close to hurting you or
Carli, we'll kill the sonofabitch." Susan didn't respond. I was mad and
getting carried away, and Susan understood and let me do it. It's what angry,
overwhelmed males do instead of crying. I took a few breaths. "Susan, I
know and you know you're reacting to more than a ruined painting. Even if it
was one of Bird's best. So go ahead and feel bad for a while, and let me take
care of this. I know it doesn't look like I'm doing much of a job so far. But
every time I stumble into a mess, we know a little more." I stopped and
tried to focus. "I'm going to get off and call Joey now. Take care of
yourself and take care of Carli. I'll see you in a few days. And, by the way,
I'm going to take you up on your offer to stay in your house here on the
island. I don't seem to be especially invisible in my little house down the
beach, and it'll save us eight hundred a week for me to stay here." She
agreed, and we said good-bye. It was past five, so I decided it was okay
to locate a bottle of scotch and pour some in a glass. I sat on the sofa and
waited for the Apalachicola Volunteer Fire Department. Thirty-two minutes after
I dialed 911, half a dozen barbers, merchants, and mechanics came rushing
through Susan's kicked-in door in full fireproof regalia. We talked. A couple
of them felt the wall. One checked out the electrical system, as best he could.
We talked some more, and I almost told them about Leroy Purcell. But I realized
it would be my word against his. And it occurred to me that the worst he'd face
was financial responsibility for what he would almost certainly claim was an
accidental fire. Whether it made sense or not, I decided to
hold off inserting the law into my relationship with Purcell. So I told the part-time
firemen of Apalachicola that I'd been trying to remove a smudge from the frame
around the painting with some cleaning fluid I had found under the kitchen
sink. I said I'd stopped to light a cigar and the whole thing went up in
flames. That seemed to satisfy them. They got to give me a lecture, and I got
to keep my run-in with Purcell private. After the firemen departed, I sat and
sipped my scotch and realized that maybe I didn't want anyone to know that I
wanted Leroy Purcell dead. Right then—at that moment—I wanted and expected something terrible to happen to Purcell in
the future, and. when it did, I didn't want anyone looking too closely at me. Joey answered his cell phone on the second
ring. "Yeah?" I said, "It's me." "What's wrong?" "How'd you know something was
wrong?" An edge had crept into Joey's voice. It
was as close as he ever got to sounding panicked. "Are the women
okay?" "Oh. Yeah. Yeah, Loutie and her
guests are fine. I'm over on St. George at Susan's house. I had some
trouble." "You sound like your puppy died. And
I thought you were gonna stay away from Susan's house. Hell, you should've
known they'd be looking there, Tom. I mean, shit, I'm guessing you're okay, or
I wouldn't be running off at the mouth. You are okay, aren't you?" "Yeah, Joey. I'm fine. I'm about as
pissed off as I've ever been in my life, but I'm fine." "As pissed as you've ever been is
pretty pissed." I didn't say anything. "What do you need?" "Is our boy Haycock in his
cottage?" "He's there, and he's got a little
stringy-haired woman in there with him. I sneaked up to the house and checked
on 'em a little while ago and was sorry I did. The two of 'em were buck naked
and tangled up, banging away like a couple of stray dogs. I'm telling you,
after seeing that, I need to go watch some hogs humping to put the romance back
in my life." "So it looks like he's staying put
for a while?" "Yeah," Joey said. "I don't
think he's going anywhere tonight." "Come over, then. We've got a lot to
talk about." I hadn't thought about the ferry and
whether Joey could even get off the island. More than an hour after Purcell's
and Sonny's exit, I was still pumping too much adrenaline to think about much
but murder. So I wasn't surprised when Joey walked into Susan's charred living
room. I was sitting in the chair Purcell had
used. Joey stopped in the middle of the room and surveyed the black mess where
Bird Fitzsimmons' painting had hung. "What the hell happened?" I
raised a glass of scotch, tipped it at him, and took a swallow. "Damn.
When you told me you had some trouble, I figured you got your ass whipped or
something. What'd they do? Try to burn the place down?" "You ever hear of a prick named Leroy
Purcell? Used to play for the Cowboys." "Yeah. He's a scumbag." My giant
friend paused and looked stunned. "Purcell was here? He did that?" "Yeah. He was here, and he set fire
to Susan's favorite painting by her dead husband. And came real close to
burning the whole place down. It's supposed to be a lesson about what he'll do
to everything Susan owns if she and Carli don't meet with him to discuss the
guy he murdered in front of Carli." Joey stood and walked to the kitchen. When
he came back he had a glass full of ice cubes, which he covered with amber
whiskey from my half-empty bottle. "Shit, Tom. I've been hearing rumors
about Leroy Purcell ever since he left the pros. It's pretty much common
knowledge he likes to hang out with hoods and gamblers and that he's gotten ass
deep in a lot of shady deals down here in Florida." Joey stopped to turn
up his glass. He was not a sipper. Joey drank scotch the way he drank beer and
orange juice and everything else. He swallowed a mouthful of whiskey and said,
"The guy had about a million opportunities to make an honest living when
he came back from the pros. They love the bastard down here. But, word is, he
likes the action. Likes the dangerous reputation." Joey clinked the ice in
his glass and looked out at the night. "So it was Purcell who Carli saw
shoot that guy in the beach house?" "Yep." Joey cussed, and shook his head, and drank
more scotch. I asked, "Can you let go of watching
Haycock for a few days?" "I can do whatever you need me to
do." "I want to know what Purcell's doing.
I want to know who he talks to, where he goes, and who he's sleeping with. I want
to know everything I can about what he's up to. Because we've got to know if
he's getting close to finding Susan and Carli." "I'll bury him in bugs. Get his house
and his car. Tap his phones. But I'm gonna need to pull Loutie off guard duty
to help with this if you want me to keep covering Haycock. I can put another
man on Susan and Carli if you want." "Yeah. Do that. The whole point is to
keep them safe. In the meantime, we've got to find a way to stop Purcell for
good." Joey looked up. "Short of killing
him." I didn't say anything, and Joey noticed. He seemed to think about
that, then he asked, "Did you report him setting the fire?" "No." Joey thought a little while longer.
"Does anyone know you two had this run-in?" I said, "Just the guy who helped him
set it," and Joey slowly nodded his head. Joey knew that Susan didn't need
or deserve any more pain in her life. If it came to it, Joey would snap
Purcell's neck without thought or regret. Now, though, as the idea of
murderous revenge turned real, I began to hope it wouldn't come to that. Joey shook his head. "Ain't this some
shit?" Joey was eloquent, and he was right. This
was indeed some shit. I said, "You think your buddies on the Panama City
force could tell us whether Purcell is mixed up with the Bodines?" Joey stood and walked to the kitchen
phone. He punched in a number and spoke quietly into the mouthpiece. A fresh whiskey and I walked out on the
deck. Bird's seashells were ash, but their charcoal frame drew a black square in
the sand where it had landed and burned. Small flaps of charred canvas ruffled
and skitted down the beach ahead of the breeze and disappeared into the dusk.
Leaving my drink untouched on the railing, I wandered back inside as Joey was
thanking Detective Coosa for his help. I looked at him. "Well?" "The rumor is Purcell runs the
Bodines up there around Panama City. Coosa didn't know anything about
Apalachicola." "Okay, then see if you can find out
who runs the Bodines down here. We need to know whether Purcell is the King
of the Jethros or just one of several. I want to know if he's messing around in
somebody else's backyard. Can you do that?" "Probably. One way or another."
Joey sat back on the sofa. "Look, I got something else to tell you. I got
a name on the fat guy Haycock smuggled in." He paused to drain his drink.
"It took a few tries to get to the desk at Captain Casey's Inn without
somebody around, but last night I checked out the card file—they ain't even got a computer. It's gonna turn out to be some
kinda alias, but the guy's name on the card was 'L. Carpintero.'" Joey
spelled the last name. "Mean anything to you?" "Nope. But I'll make a note. It may
fit in somewhere if we find out something else." Joey got up to leave, and I walked with
him to the door. He asked why he hadn't seen my Jeep outside when he drove up.
I told him about Purcell commandeering the vehicle, and he offered to get me a
car. I shook my head. I could have one brought over in the morning. At the door, Joey hesitated. "It
never would've entered my head that Leroy Purcell would be blowing people away.
I thought he just liked hanging out with hoods. Trying to look tough." "Murder and arson with Sonny the
Psycho to back him up. Not to mention him threatening teenage girls. Not
exactly what I'd call tough." I said, "A real All-American,
huh?" Joey said, "Yeah, a real All-American
asshole." Susan had abandoned her house in a hurry.
The bathrooms were ready for the morning shower she took instead at Loutie's
house after fleeing killers in her own home. I lay on Susan's bed and breathed
in the smell of her and tried to think. Outside, through the windows I had
stood before while Susan slept, the sunset splashed the horizon with oranges
and pinks and purples and streaked the ocean with jagged ripples of molten silver
and gold. I rolled off the bed, stripped, walked into the bathroom, and turned
on the shower. As the water began to heat and steam clouded the ceiling, I
looked at the guy in the mirror. I wasn't impressed. The shower felt good, and it kept on
feeling good until Susan's water heater was drained and tepid. I found a box
with some of Bird's old clothes in it and put them on. My stuff was back on the
guest room bed at pastel hell, and I didn't feel like hiking. Back downstairs, I found my unfinished
drink and poured it over the weathered banister and into the sand below. Sharp
white pricks dotted the eastern sky above a smudged black horizon, and the
approaching night washed the sky with charcoals that faded overhead to the soft
gray tones of summer flannel. In the west, the last thin blue tint of daylight
hung in a crescent-shaped curtain above the horizon. I went in search of a hammer and nails,
which I found in a combination laundry and storage room under the stilted
house. After nailing Sonny's kicked-in door shut, I went to bed. Susan's pillow
held the soft feminine scents of her shampoo and cologne and makeup and some
other girl smell I couldn't identify. An overwhelming loneliness enveloped me
like a physical presence, and I fell asleep. I was up before the sun with more than
four hours sleep, but less than I'd had the night before. It was as if my mind
were signaling that my level of screwed-upness had digressed, but not to the
depths I had occupied before finding some sort of redemption in helping Susan
and Carli. I washed my face, ate a few bites of a
hard aged croissant from Susan's refrigerator, and stuck out along the bright
morning beach in the direction of my pastel palace. Purcell had returned my
Jeep to the parking space beneath the house. Inside, I half expected the place
to be stained somehow with Purcell's intrusion, but everything was the way it
had been since I arrived. I changed out of Bird's clothes and into a pair of
jeans and a faded red pullover. I traded sandy running shoes for New Balance
cross trainers, packed up, and left. My plan was to drive over to East-point
and look for Peety Boy's friend Billy Teeter. I tossed my duffel in the backseat. The
keys were in the ignition, and an envelope had been snapped under the windshield
wiper like a parking ticket I was inside the Jeep when I saw it. Stepping out,
I pulled up the wiper and lifted out a white business envelope gone floppy with
salt spray from a night facing the waves. The moist envelope tore easily and
unevenly. It held a single sheet of copy paper. Report on Carli Monroe (alias) Name: Carli Poultrez Age: 15 Hair: Black Eyes: Brown Approx: 5'4", 110 lbs. Poultrez is a runaway minor from
Gloucester, Massachusetts. (Address: 2128 Cleaverhead Road.) She has a record
going back three years as a repeat runaway. Her father, Russell (Rus) Poultrez,
owns and operates a fishing vessel out of Gloucester. Rus Poultrez Contact Report That was it. Before making the copy,
someone had placed two large Post-it notes over the rest of the page,
including, I guessed, the name and signature of the investigator. Also, I could
see the outline of a smaller Post-it at the top covering a letterhead. I removed my keys from the ignition and
went back inside to call Susan with more bad news. When she answered, she
sounded a little better than she had the night before. I asked, "How's Carli?" Susan said, "She seems fine. But
then, she always does. This has to be wearing on her, though." "How are you?" "A lot better. Thanks. I'd kind of
like to see you, even though I know that's not really in the cards right now.
But I wanted you to know that I want to. Losing 'Scattered Shells' was
difficult for me because I'll always love Bird. But that doesn't mean I'm not
ready to see you and enjoy being with you." She hesitated. "Unless
I'm taking too much for granted." "You're not." And she wasn't,
but, for some reason, she was making me uncomfortable. I retreated into the
business at hand. "I'm sorry to do this to you, but I'm afraid I have some
more disturbing news. Purcell knows who Carli is." "Yes, you told me that last night.
You said he's looking for both of us." "No. You don't understand. He knows
who Carli really is." I told her what the report said. I also
suggested that I'd rather deliver the news to Carli in person, so I could
advise her on how to proceed. "Are you coming back then?" "Probably tomorrow. Today, I've got
to go find an old shrimper named Billy Teeter." "There's a seafood shack over in
Eastpoint called Teeter's." "That's the guy." "You may as well go get some
breakfast then. The places over there that open on Sunday don't open until one.
You know. Church." I told Susan again I'd see her Monday or
Tuesday, and hung up. The island had five restaurant-slash-bars,
and they all had signs advertising Sunday brunch. I chose the Pelican's Roost,
where Carli had worked. Susan said it was good, and I thought that I probably
needed to look around the place sooner or later anyway. So I turned in and
parked in the gravel lot and stepped back out into the warm morning air. A pair of plateglass windows stared
blankly out at the parking lot from either side of the front door. I turned the
knob and stepped inside. The waiting area was the bar, but there was no wait.
Another nut-brown waitress—this one with long brown hair and crow's
feet—led me up narrow steps to the second
floor, which was furnished with a dozen or so round tables and two long picnic
benches hidden beneath plastic, red-and-white-checked tablecloths. Wide,
crank-out windows lined both long walls, and a door in the short front wall led
out onto a small balcony or deck overlooking the parking lot and a crowded
queue of beach houses across the way. Ocean breeze wafted in through open
windows on one wall and out through matching windows on the opposite wall. All in all, the place was simple and more
pleasant than it sounds. Seven or eight people were scattered among
the tables. My suntanned waitress smiled and patted my back in a mildly
flirtatious way and suggested that I might want to eat out on the deck. I said
okay, and she led me out and deposited me near the right front corner where I
had a narrow view of the water between two rows of anorectic, architecturally
strident sliver-houses. After she left, I looked out at the distant
wedge of water for a while. I moved on to an examination of the skinny vacation
houses and the mostly deserted street. I watched a bouncing, tube-topped jogger
until she was out of sight. Finally, I glanced down at the parking lot. This was not going to be an enjoyable
meal. There, in the driver's seat of a Cobra convertible, sat gun-toting,
knife-poking, paint-dribbling Sonny. And he was watching me with those jittery,
psychotic eyes of his. chapter fourteen Either Sonny was scaling new heights of incompetency, or I was supposed to know he was following me. The Cobra's top
was down, and he had parked only ten or twelve feet from my Jeep in an
otherwise empty section of the lot. So, considering how rattled I guessed I was
supposed to be by Sonny's blatant disrespect for my privacy, I had three
obvious alternatives. One, I could get mad and beat him about the head and
shoulders, which would net me either an arrest or an ass whipping. Two, I could
respect his wishes and panic, which was what Purcell was counting on. Or,
three, I could decide to mess with him. Sonny may have been a professional thug,
but he still looked like a dumbass to me. When my waitress returned, I ordered steak
and eggs with an English muffin and a double order of cheese grits on the side.
Contrary to popular belief outside the South, if properly prepared and eaten
while steaming hot, cheese grits are actually pretty damn good and almost
identical to polenta, which every pseudo-sophisticate in the country likes to
see piled next to grilled medallions of veal. But in this instance, I didn't
much care whether the grits were well made, and I purposely let them chill into
a thick glutenous mass while I forked beef and eggs into my mouth. I was full. Time to make grit bombs. I
pulled four paper napkins from the dispenser on my table and put
three large dollops of cheese grits on each napkin. My waitress came out and
gave me a concerned look. I said, "Saving them for later." She smiled
the way people smile at paranoid schizophrenics in Central Park and went back
inside. As I pulled the napkins' four corners up
and around each grit wad and twisted the ends together, Sonny looked up and
gave me a self-satisfied grin, and, for the first time, I noticed the blurry
prison tattoo Joey had described. On Sonny's left arm was a large, deep-blue
dagger with three letters above its handle and three more beneath its point. I
couldn't make out the initials, but they had to be the R.I.P. and R.E.T.
Joey had seen on Haycock's partner that violent night in the parking lot of
Mother's Milk in Apalachicola. I smiled back at him. Good to see you
too, asshole. Something seemed to catch the corner of Sonny's eye, and he
turned toward the bike path running next to the street to check out a plump
blonde in a thong. As he turned away, I completed my first package by dunking
it in ice water just before I stood, took aim, and literally creamed him behind
his left ear. The man said some really bad words. While he screamed, I dunked the second
grit ball. He ducked. This, I thought, is fun. I let him duck.
This sticky handful was headed for the center of his shiny black hood. It hit
with a deeply satisfying thud and splattered like a baseball-sized wad of
pelican droppings. Sonny jumped up from behind the dash to see what had
happened. I was waiting. Damn. I missed him and sent a thick schmear of
cheese grits across his leather seats. Sonny went nuts. The car door flew open,
and he jumped out onto the gravel parking lot, screaming, flailing his arms,
and generally cussing a lot. His sentences were liberally sprinkled, I noticed,
with the words "kill" and "dead" and seemed to be directed
at me and those I hold dear. I dunked the last grit ball and let it fly. He
tried to catch it—no doubt intending to send it back my way—but you can't really catch a wet paper napkin full of grit paste.
It exploded in his hand, splattering a nicely formed pattern of cheese grits
across his face, neck, and chest. That just about did it. Sonny charged the
restaurant through the front door downstairs. I had already dropped twenty dollars on
the table. No reason to stick around now. I picked up my steak knife, stepped
over the railing, and carefully dropped eight or nine feet to the ground. My
knees would pay later, but now I was too pumped to care. Pulling keys from my pocket, I sprinted
over to Sonny's forty-thousand-dollar Mustang, plunged the serrated steak knife
into the side of his tire, twisted with all my strength, and left it there. I
had turned back toward the Jeep and had just shot the doors open with the
remote when I heard a murderous yell from the restaurant deck. I caught a blur
of Sonny jumping as I scrambled into the Jeep and jammed the key in the
ignition. Good Jeep. It cranked and, flooring the gas even before I
found reverse, I spewed a dusty semicircle of bleached gravel and broken shells
across the parking lot. As I dropped the transmission into drive, I hazarded a
glance at what I was sure would be Sonny crouched in a shooter's stance,
unloading a full clip in my direction. What I saw instead was Sonny rolling on
his back in sand and gravel, holding his left knee in the air and gripping it
with both hands. His mouth gaped open, his face burned red, and tendons
strained beneath the thin skin on his neck. He seemed to be screaming, but by
then I was gone. I was looking at maybe forty-five minutes
to an hour before Sonny reported my escape to Purcell. First, the pain and the
anger would have to subside to a point that would allow rational thought, or
whatever Sonny used instead. Then Sonny would have to think of a way to explain
to his boss that I got away by attacking him with an arsenal of cheese grits. Hell, it might take more than an hour. Only a hundred yards down, I swerved right
onto the causeway and backed off on the gas. I didn't think Sonny would or even
could follow, but, whether he could or not, a two-lane road with deep, choppy
water on each side is no place to play chase. Better to be caught, I thought,
than wind up breathing salt water with my headlights buried in the sandy
bottom. But he didn't catch me or, as far as I
could see, even try, and after four miles of glancing back and forth from the
wide pavement ahead to the narrow strip of blacktop in my rearview mirror, I
rolled onto the mainland—tailless. Less than a quarter mile in, a
county road angled off to the right. I followed it through stands of scruffy
coastal pines into the quintessential shrimping village of Eastpoint. The right side of the road was perfect—jumbled, rusting, ramshackle, and everything a seafaring town
should be. Tinroofed seafood shacks and shrimp-processing
plants fronted the street and backed up to long, concrete docks that reached
out into Apalachicola Bay like gray fingers separated by oily water and a
scattering of white shrimp boats with red and blue trim. Unfortunately, across the road from the
local shrimp entrepreneurs, the place got ugly fast. A plastic orange Citgo
station squatted next to a new brick-and-plateglass Piggly Wiggly, which led to
a blue plastic gas station that offered a free car wash with each fill-up. I
decided Peety Boy's friend Billy Teeter would have a place on the water—as much because that's the direction I wanted to look as anything—so that's where I concentrated my search. Although, considering
that one can drive completely through Eastpoint in less than five minutes,
"search" may be a more impressive description than the process
warranted. Maybe two minutes after leaving the
causeway, Teeter's came up on the right. I wasn't much worried now about Sonny.
Even if he had recovered from his hurt knee and stabbed tire, he would assume I
had turned west toward Apalachicola, Panama City, and Mobile. Just to be sure,
though, I checked the mirror once more for his psychotic presence before
pulling up onto a sandy parking area just deep enough to hold the Jeep without
donating a bumper to passing traffic. Teeter's seafood shack was just that—unpainted, weathered boards beneath a rusted tin roof and a
sagging front porch made for sitting. Two aluminum patio chairs flanked the
door. A youngish woman sat in one. An old man suitable for casting in Captains
Courageous lounged in the other. With miles of sapphire waters, distant
islands, and endless blue skies stretched out behind them, these locals spent
their days watching traffic pass in front of a Citgo station. I cut the engine, stepped out onto the
sandy yard, and walked two steps to the bottom of Teeter's three wooden steps.
The woman spoke. "How you doin' today?" I told her I was just fine, and that
seemed to genuinely please her. I said, "Peety Boy sent me over
here." The old man perked up. "Me and Peety
Boy grew up together." He smiled, and a mouthful of tobacco-stained teeth
peeked out shyly from the thick brown and gray brush that obscured his face
from the nostrils and cheekbones down. I asked, "Are you Billy Teeter?" "Yessir, that I am." The young woman said, "You got the
right place. Peety Boy sends folks over all the time when he ain't got
something they want. You just come on inside, we got fresh shrimp off the boat this
morning. Fresh oysters. Crabs. Crab legs. And we got some frozen crab cakes
that taste like something you got off the menu at a restaurant." I smiled. The old man looked happy to sit
and talk, but this young one was looking for a sale. I said, "I might be
interested in looking at that in a minute, but Peety Boy sent me over here
because I need some information about who might have been out on the bay the
other night. He said Billy Teeter would be able to help if anyone could." The old man looked at the younger woman
and said, "Go on in and shuck some of them oysters. We're gonna have
plenty of folks coming by after church." But, before he had even spoken,
the woman was on her feet and headed inside. I couldn't decide whether she
intended to confer privately or just didn't want to be part of what we were
going to talk about. The old man said, "What'd Peety Boy volunteer me
for?" As he spoke, Billy Teeter sat forward in his chipped metal chair,
pulled off his Bubba Gump Shrimp cap, slicked a few long strands of gray
hair back over his spotted bald pate, and resettled the cap. "Mr. Teeter, Peety Boy didn't
volunteer you. He just said you were somebody I could ask about boats in
Apalachicola Bay without getting into trouble for asking. "My name is Tom McInnes, and I'm from
Mobile. I'm trying to find out if any boats just up from Central or South
America might have been laying off Dog Island one night last week." Teeter
harrumphed. I've always read about people harrumphing, but never knew exactly
what that was until that old shrimper did it. I was losing him. When I had
become nothing but a memory for the old man, he would have to go on living
there on the Gulf. He would have to keep living among men and women who might
work in a little contraband when the fishing got slow and who wouldn't
appreciate Teeter discussing that embarrassing sideline with an outsider. From
his viewpoint, there was no reason on earth to tell some rich-looking city guy
about things that weren't anybody's business. I decided to get very honest.
"Peety Boy sent me because I'm trying to help a young girl in trouble.
Leroy Purcell's mixed up in it, and he's got some crazy-looking sonofabitch
named Sonny following me around. Now, I know all that sounds like a really good
reason to go inside your place there and leave me alone, but I need help. I can
take care of myself, but there's a teenage girl in a world of trouble, and I
don't know how else to get her out of it but to figure out what's going on down
here." Billy Teeter leaned back in his chair and
studied me. I shut up and let him. Teeter shifted his weight to one hip and
fished a mashed pack of Kools out of the back pocket of his khakis. He shook
two brown filters out of the pack with a practiced flip of his wrist and
extracted one with small nicotined teeth. Then he winked at me and motioned
with his hand at the door the young woman had gone through. "Julie don't
like me to smoke these." Teeter paused to fire the end with an
old-fashioned chrome flip lighter. As he clicked the lighter shut and pushed it
down inside his hip pocket, I glanced at a worn brass Marine Corps
globe-and-eagle insignia on its side. He said, "What she don't know ain't
gonna hurt her, is it?" I thought about the absurdity of a still
hard-as-nails World War II marine having to sneak a smoke on his porch, and,
without really wanting to, I thought some about getting old in America. Oddly,
I thought about it quite a lot in one of those autopilot flashes of connected
thoughts that race through the brain in the midst of doing other things. I agreed with him. "It won't hurt her
a bit." He asked, "What night?" "Last Thursday." "Off Dog Island, you say?" I
nodded, and he thought some. "No way to know where somebody's coming from.
See a fancy yacht anchored out there, you don't know if it's coming from Tampa
or Timbuktu. So, there ain't no way to know if a vessel that might've been out
there come in from where you're talking about." Teeter put the soles of
his salt-crusted work boots up on the two-by-four railing and rocked up onto
the back legs of his chair. He was killing the flattened Kool a quarter inch at
a time, pulling thick lung-fulls of menthol smoke down into his chest and
shooting them out through his mouth and nostrils. "Yessir, I was out on
Thursday, and there was one of them fancy fiberglass motor yachts out off Dog
Island. Couldn't tell you where it come from, and it didn't have no name that
you could see." I was quickly becoming a big Billy Teeter
fan. I motioned at the empty chair on the porch and said, "Mind if I sit
down?" "Don't mind a bit. Take a load
off." Teeter lowered his voice to a conspiratorial level. "Want a
cigarette?" I smiled. "No. Thank you." Then
I asked, "How can you remember so much about a no-name yacht you just
happened to see one night last week?" " 'Cause of just what you said. It
didn't have no name. My grandboy, Willie, named for me, he seen this hellacious
big motor yacht laying up off Dog Island when we was out last Thursday. We had
pretty much called it a night. So me and Willie made up our minds to cut over
close to the thing and get a good look at it. You don't see many like that
around here. Down around Tampa and Miami, sure. Hell yeah, you see 'em all the
time. But not too many up this way, if you see what I'm saying. Anyway, we
cruise over thinking maybe we'll look her over, maybe see some rich guy
drinking champagne and lookin' at the stars." Lowering his voice again,
now. "Willie, he's only nineteen, he thinks he might see some little rich
girls in bikinis, you know. I told him it was too cold, but hope springs
eternal, as they say." Now, Teeter raised his voice back to its normal
level. "Anyhow, me and Willie pull up pretty close alongside, and, once
Willie figures out there ain't no half-naked girls running around the deck, he
sees that the vessel ain't got no name painted on it. I look, and he's almost
right. Now, what it was was that somebody had taped a sheet of white plastic or
something over the name." Billy Teeter flipped the butt of his Kool
out into the sand. Then he looked back over his shoulder at the door, and
whispered, "Reckon I'll smoke one more." I waited while he got it going. "You
said the yacht had its name covered?" "Yep. That's right. Had it covered
right up. So, you know, we figure they're up to no good, and Willie says we
better get out of there. So, I take a turn around the thing and head
home." I was thinking this was all a little too
neat. I said, "I guess Peety Boy sent me to the right place." Teeter pulled hard at his Kool and let the
heavy smoke puff out of his mouth and nose as he spoke. "Peety Boy already
knew all this. Him and me talked about it last week the morning I got in. I
reckon he just didn't figure it was his business to be telling you about it. He
done the right thing by sending you over here, though." "Mr. Teeter, I appreciate your
telling me this. I don't know how it'll help my young friend yet, but every
little bit helps." I stopped to think and said, "Can you describe the
boat to me? I know it'd be a long shot, but I need to try to identify it if I
can." He smiled. "Sure. I can do that, but
it ain't really necessary. What with the name covered up and all, I copied the
registration number off the hull." He motioned inside. "I got it in
the back there with the records of the catch that night." I said, "You're kidding." "No, sir." I asked, "Why on God's green earth
would someone cover a boat's name and not its registration numbers?" " 'Cause of the Coast Guard."
Teeter said, "Everybody names boats, but you don't have to. It ain't a
law. People just do it. But you gotta register a boat, and you gotta have its
registration numbers prominently displayed, as they say, on the hull. That's
the law. So, a fella could get by with covering over the name, if that's what
he wanted to do. But you cover over the registration numbers, and you're pretty
much gonna get yourself boarded by the Coast Guard, if the ATF or the
immigration folks don't get to you first." "Will you give me the number?" "I reckon. But listen, I know you say
you're helping a little girl, and I believe you and all. But it wouldn't hurt
my feelings none if you thought that number was worth a few dollars." Strange. Peety Boy wouldn't take money
when I offered it, and Billy Teeter had come right out and asked for it. But,
if pressed, I couldn't tell you which was the better man. Different people have
different rules and different needs. I pulled out my wallet and found a
fifty-dollar bill. Teeter put his calloused hand out, and I pressed it into his
palm. He said, "I appreciate it." Then he stood and walked inside.
When he came back, he handed me a scrap of brown wrapping paper with a dozen
numbers and letters written on it in ballpoint pen. He said, "I copied it
off for you. I need to hold on to the paper I wrote it on the other night. Got
other stuff on it I need." "How much money do you make in a good
night on the water?" Teeter looked guarded, but not offended.
All he said was, "Depends." I said, "If I paid you, say, two
hundred dollars, would that be enough to get you to lay off shrimping for a night
and take me out?" "It'd be enough, depending on what
you wanted to do when you got out there." "Same thing you did last week. Just
get a look at whoever's out there." Teeter's eyes narrowed. "Two
fifty." I laughed out loud and walked over to
shake his hand. "It's a deal. I'll give you as much notice as I can, but
it may be a last-minute thing." Teeter took the brown paper from my hand,
pulled a ballpoint out of his shirt pocket, and jotted down a phone number. He
said, "Just call me. If I'm here, I'll do it. If I ain't, that means I'm
probably out working, and you'll have to get up with me when I get back
in." I thanked him again and trotted down the
three wooden steps to my Jeep. As I pulled open the door, Teeter called out.
"Mr. McInnes!" I stopped and looked at him. "You said a couple
of names when you first got here." "Leroy Purcell and Sonny?" He nodded. "I don't mean to be
talking out of school. But you be careful of them two. You hear me? You're
messing around with people who'll cut your throat for looking at 'em wrong. And
if you're getting in their business, you're asking for a heap of trouble." "Why are you helping me then? Aren't
you scared of them?" Billy Teeter—seventy-something
ex-Marine and secret menthol cigarette smoker—smiled
the smile of the toughest kid in the Franklin County class of '42 and made two
knowing syllables of one short word. "She-it." The drive to Mobile was excruciatingly,
perhaps unnecessarily, long. Visions of Sonny lying in wait along the
Panhandle's famous Highway 98, holding—in my
imagination—a scoped sniper's rifle, encouraged me to
find my way home along a network of interconnected county and state roads until
I was out of Florida. Pelting Sonny with grit bombs had been stupid, but fun. This scurrying along back country roads to
avoid his wrath was even dumber, no fun at all, and more than a little
humiliating. It was nearly nine when I finally parked
beneath a thick-branched water oak on Monterey Street next to Loutie's brick
walkway. Stepping out into the spring night, I breathed in the old neighborhood
smells of azaleas, bougainvillaea, wisteria, and the first grass clippings of
the season. Aromatherapy. All thoughts of Leroy Purcell and psychotic Sonny
dissolved and floated away on the soft mix of nostalgic scents as I walked
across the bricks to the front door and rang the bell. I felt wonderful, right
up until I felt the metallic press of a gun barrel in the small of my back. chapter fifteen "Put your hands behind your head,
please." It wasn't Sonny. It wasn't Purcell. I did
as instructed. A hard hand clamped my fingers together
behind my neck as another hand moved quickly and expertly down my sides, over
my pants, and inside my waistband. The hand lifted my wallet. Five seconds
later, my fingers were released, and the voice said, "Sorry, Mr. McInnes.
Joey described you, but he also told me not to take any chances." I turned
around. "Here's your billfold." The man who had pressed a gun into my
back was little more than twenty. He stood about five six and had the spare
muscular build and close-cropped hair of a military man. I asked, "Who are you?" "Randy Whittles. I work for Joey when
he needs somebody protected. I do some investigating sometimes if he needs me,
but I'm mostly just protection." I smiled at the idea of this mighty mouse
working as hired muscle. But I knew that if Joey thought someone was tough,
they were by God tough. I asked, "Can I go inside now?" "Yes, sir. Sorry, sir. Here." He
slipped a key in the door and opened it. I stepped inside. Randy called out,
"It's okay ma'am," closed the door from the outside and, I guessed,
went back to his hidey-hole. Susan and Carli walked into the living
room. I looked at them and said, "That was interesting." Susan said, "Loutie says he's a Navy
SEAL. Our Mr. Whittles is one very serious young man." Carli said, "I call him G.I.
Joe." "Good. That he's serious, I mean. Not
that you call him G.I. Joe." I said, "Joey says he needs Loutie to
handle some, uh, surveillance I asked him to do." Susan said, "Carli knows Purcell paid
you a visit." I asked, "Does she know about the
investigator's note?" Susan shook her head. I said, "Come on. Let's
go back to the kitchen where we can get comfortable and talk." Carli asked, "What's going on?" I said, "We've got a lot more
information now. A lot of it's helpful, and some of it's disturbing. Come on. I
need to fill you in." We sat at the table, and I talked. Susan
had steeled Carli for the involvement of Leroy Purcell, and my young client
had, it seemed, come to terms with Purcell knowing about Carli Monroe. She was
less prepared to hear that Purcell knew about Carli Poultrez. As I
described finding the investigator's report under my windshield wiper, blood
drained from Carli's lips. When I placed the report on the cream tablecloth in
front of her, the rest of her face lost color. Her small ears, visible because
she had swept her dark hair back in a ponytail, turned fiery red and made her
face look even paler. She said, "What's this mean at the
bottom? 'Rus Poultrez—Contact Report.' There's nothing after
it." Carli's voice caught in her throat. "It means they found my
father and talked with him, doesn't it. Isn't that what it means?" "I think it means Purcell wants us to
believe his investigator met with your father. It could be nothing. Just
something to make us nervous. To make you do something stupid." She shook her head from side to side as I
spoke. "The name's right. The address is right." I couldn't think of
anything useful or comforting to say about that, so I pushed on and reported my
dialogue with Billy Teeter. It didn't help. Carli's eyes grew larger, and the edges of
her eyelids turned bright red. "What's that stuff got to do with me? I
don't care if Leroy Purcell is smuggling drugs or people or anything else. I
just want him to leave me alone." Tears were streaming down her cheeks
now. Her voice cracked as she spoke. "Tell him. Tell him I don't care
about what he does. Tell him to just leave me alone. I'll go away. I'll go out
west somewhere and forget I ever heard of him." Susan put her hand on Carli's back to
console her, and Carli pushed it away. My young client thought we had failed
her. And, at least for the moment, punishing Leroy Purcell—doing the right thing—became far less
important to her than staying alive. We were quiet for a while. I tried to
think. Carli's movements grew less frenetic. Her shoulders relaxed. She wiped
away the tears. The central air cycled off, and the quiet hum fell away to
reveal a chorus of crickets beneath the kitchen window. When the tears had stopped, I said,
"The reason you can't just tell Purcell you'll leave him alone is that—the way he looks at it—he never knows
when you'll show up and blackmail him to keep quiet. And, Carli, the fact that
you'd never blackmail him is irrelevant. He'd do it, so he figures you would
too." Carli looked down at the tablecloth, but
her eyes were focused a thousand miles away. I glanced up at Susan and went on.
"Carli, even if we somehow got Purcell to say he'd leave you alone, you
couldn't trust him. He's the kind of man who'll make a deal, and then stick a
knife in your stomach while you're shaking on it." Carli began to cry
again, and Susan gave me an angry look. "I'm sorry, Carli. I'm sorry to
say it that way. But you have to understand who you're dealing with. You cannot
convince yourself that you can end this with a phone call or a meeting. And,
right now, we don't have enough evidence to get Purcell convicted of the murder
you witnessed. We could get him arrested. Maybe. But he'd never go to jail based
on what we've got. Now, under normal circumstances, we could report the crime,
put it on the record that you witnessed the murder, and make it hard for
Purcell to retaliate without getting in more trouble. But Carli, these aren't
normal circumstances. I'm afraid Purcell would worry about getting rid of
witnesses first and how to deal with your obvious disappearance down the road
somewhere. "Remember, Purcell is a violent,
explosive man. He's where he is because he's crazy enough to do things that
even other criminals won't do. Sooner or later, it'll catch up with him. A man
can't go on forever killing and setting fires to settle disputes. But for now,
he's kind of bullet proof because he is so damn crazy." Carli had stopped crying. Tears had drawn
dark trails down her cheeks to her jawline, just as they had the first time I
spoke with her. She said, "You said he's bullet proof, but he's not. I
know what you mean, but he's not. A bullet would kill him." I looked at Susan, who raised her eyebrows
as if to say, Who can blame her? I let the subject drop. Carli left to wash her face. I found bread
in Loutie's wormwood cupboard and roast beef, mayonnaise, mustard, and farmer's
cheese in the stainless steel refrigerator. Susan said that she and Carli had
eaten. I built two sandwiches for myself and had eaten one and started on the
second by the time Carli came back in the room. It was a few minutes after ten
now. Carli said, "I'm tired. This is a
lot. I mean, it's a lot to think about. I'm just gonna go to bed." And she
left Susan and me alone in the kitchen as the air conditioner cycled on again,
deadening the mating calls of the crickets in Loutie's shrubbery. "She does that a lot." "What?" Susan said. "When things get bad, she goes to
bed. Nothing wrong with it I just noticed it. People in prison do that." "Go to bed early?" "No. Not just that. They sleep all
the time because they can't stand where they are. It's like temporary suicide.
If you're not conscious, you don't have to feel bad. I read about it for the first
time after Watergate. Ehrlichman, I think it was, commented in an interview
that all these white-collar crooks in minimum security slept their time
away." I asked, "Has Carli been sleeping much during the day?" "Some. Well, come to think of it, she
takes a nap every afternoon. I just thought she was bored." "Maybe she is. I'm just armchair
shrinking to avoid some unpleasant thoughts of my own." I motioned at the
door Carli had gone through on her way to bed. "It must be tough for
her." Susan said, "It's been a tough couple
of days for you too. What do you say we go veg out in front of the TV? We won't
even watch Nightline. We'll watch Leno or Letterman." "It's Sunday." Susan grabbed my hand and pulled me up and
toward the living room. "Then we'll find a great old movie and forget the
real world is even out there." Rear Window and Get Shorty were still on top of
the VCR from two nights earlier. Susan said, "Loutie was saying
the other night when you rented Rear Window that she already had it.
Apparently, she's a Hitchcock nut." Susan opened a narrow painted-pine
cabinet next to the converted antique chifforobe that held Loutie's TV and
said, "Look." Every Hitchcock I had ever seen, along with a few I
didn't know existed, was lined up on rows of shallow shelves. Hitch had his own
ordered space on the top three racks. Loutie's other videos were there, but
they were out of order and clearly subservient to Sir Alfred's body of work.
Susan said, "What about Dial M for Murder?" I said, "Pop it in," and she
did. Instead of previews, the tape started with
a film lesson on Alfred Hitchcock and his penchant for upper-crust-looking
blondes. Susan disappeared. I watched Janet Leigh, Tippi Hendren, Grace Kelly,
Doris Day, and Kim Novak take turns looking horrified. Three or four minutes of
that went by, and Susan reappeared holding a cold bottle of Chardonnay, two
tulip-shaped glasses, and a corkscrew. She said, "All part of the program.
Watch what's-his-name, um, Robert Cummings, and Grace Kelly smooch, drink a little
wine, and see where it leads." "You do know that there's kind of a
grisly murder in the movie too?" She said, "I can take it if you
can," and sat on the sofa next to me. I performed the oddly satisfying job
of cutting and peeling foil from the bottle's neck. The cork came out in one
piece, and the slightly greenish spirits flowed into both expectant glasses
with minimal mess. We settled back and sipped some of the buttery Chardonnay.
I'm not much of a white wine drinker, but you don't tell a woman who has surprised
you with a romantic gesture that you'd just as soon have red wine, or maybe
even a little scotch if she has it. We settled into the cushions as an
oversized finger began to dial an old-fashioned rotary phone. Hitch showed the
mechanical telephone machinery jump and shudder in response to the movements of
the finger. And there she was. Grace Kelly. And she was kissing Robert Cummings
of all people. I said, "Now, explain this to me. She's got this dashing
former-international-tennis-star husband at home, who's a prick, but she
doesn't know that—not to mention that she could get pretty
much any other man she wants—and she decides to go after Bob Cummings.
What the hell is that about?" Susan cleared her throat, and I turned to
look at her. She gave me a sidelong look that said, you're ruining the mood,
dummy, and took in a small sip of wine. I turned back to the movie, and,
for the first time, noticed the warmth of Susan's thigh and knee against my leg
where she had turned ever so slightly my way and ever so casually rested her
leg on mine. Oh. And she had been resting her empty hand on my shoulder
in what I thought was a friendly and comfortable way. Oh, again. I can
take a hint, so long as it's sufficiently obvious and prolonged. Susan was wearing a simple white pullover
with short sleeves, a crew neck, and a squared shirttail that hung untucked
over blue shorts that sort of looked like a miniskirt until you realized they
were shorts. I shifted the glass to my right hand and casually, I hoped, placed
my left hand on Susan's leg in what I also hoped was an intimate, as opposed to
a blatantly horny, gesture. When I did, she lifted her hand from my shoulder
and began to stroke my hair. It felt wonderful. It felt relaxing. And I felt
sleepy. Yawn now and you're a dead man. Instead, I leaned toward Susan,
and she took away any chance of awkwardness by folding into me so that our lips
met perfectly and softly. I wasn't sleepy anymore. Time floated as we kissed
gently. We parted, and I looked for any caution or concern on her face. She
looked happy. Susan hummed. "Mmmm." I put my glass on the coffee table and
smiled. "You're pretty vocal, aren't you?" As Susan leaned her face in close to mine,
she said, "You have no idea." This time our mouths and tongues melted together.
We pulled closer, and I moved my hand over her thigh just to feel the silkiness
of her legs. As I did, Susan reached down and placed her hand over mine. I said, "Sorry." Susan smiled. She pulled my hand up and
inside her shirt and cupped it over her left breast. I caressed her through a thin layer of
cotton and, as we kissed again, slid my hand down and then back up inside her
sports bra. Her breast felt hot and firm, and I could feel the tiny, rhythmic
thuds of her heart beating. I desperately wanted, even needed, to move my mouth
down and across her neck and collarbone and shoulders, to kiss her breasts and
hold her nipples inside my mouth. I kissed her throat, and she pulled away just
enough to click off the lamp on the end table, pull her shirt and bra over her
head, and toss them aside. She lay back against the pillows and pulled me on
top of her. I pushed into her mouth and moved my hands over her breasts. Susan shoved gently against my chest and
tugged at my shirt and dropped it on the floor. Skin to skin now, I kissed her
mouth and her nipples and every inch of skin in between. We lay there on the
sofa with Dial M for Murder playing in the background and made out and
touched and breathed in each other like teenage sweethearts with no bed to go to. Susan guided my hand again, this time to
her legs and over her impossibly warm smooth inner thigh and inside the blue
cotton shorts. As I pushed her panties aside and my fingers found the silky
places where she wanted to be touched and I wanted to touch, Susan began to
unbutton my jeans. Suddenly, she pushed away. "Come on." I sat up,
and whispered, "Is something wrong?" Standing now next to the sofa in
nothing but a pair of miniskirt-looking shorts and framed by Hitchcock's glow, she
said, "Let's go to the bedroom." My brain's usual blood supply was
otherwise engaged, and I was a little dazed by the past half hour and by the
sudden interruption. I looked at her and blinked. She said, "Hurry." And I did. Then I didn't. Someone, somewhere out there, rapped on a
door. It went away, and then started again. This time, the rapping pushed sleep
away and grew louder. Susan called out. "Carli?" Randy Whittles' voice said, "It's me,
Mrs. Fitzsimmons." "Yes. What is it, Randy?" "I gotta go home and catch a few hours'
sleep. Loutie's supposed to be back around eleven. And, with Mr. McInnes in the
house, I thought it'd be okay." He hesitated and said, "You guys must
have had a late night. Nobody's up yet." I looked at my watch. 10:24.I smiled and
showed it to Susan. She moved her eyebrows up and down like a lascivious
Groucho Marx, and spoke to Randy. "Go ahead. We'll be fine." Randy yes-ma'amed her and departed. I said, "Wow. I haven't slept this
late in six months." Susan said, "I haven't slept this
well in longer than that. This is delicious. Lying in bed on a Monday morning,
enjoying the... the what, maybe the afterglow if that doesn't sound
ridiculous." "Sounds perfect to me." Susan leaned over and kissed my lips.
Then, as she turned and reached to click on the bedside lamp, she said,
"Nowhere to be and nothing I have to do. And you absolutely deserve a day
off." When she had leaned over to turn on the
light, the sheet had fallen to her waist, and I was conducting a thorough and
thoroughly satisfying study of her breasts. I said, "You know what we
could do?" Susan gave me a look. "We could go
check on Carli to make sure she's all right." "Yeah. That's what I was going to
say." Susan laughed and rolled off the bed and, from my perspective, made
a very nice job of walking to the bathroom. I sat up, swung my feet to the
floor, and pushed up. My jeans were in a tangle against a baseboard ten feet
from the bed. I pulled them on and went to the living room with the intention
of retrieving my shirt and Susan's bra and shirt before Carli found them. Randy said she wasn't up yet. I still had
a chance to be discreet. The faint hum of Susan's shower dissipated
as I moved down the hallway. On through the hall and the study and then into
the living room, I found nothing but quiet. I had gathered up our clothes and
started back when, for some reason, I stopped in the study and listened. And
there was nothing. Almost too much nothing, and I was overwhelmed by the
feeling that Susan and I were in the house alone. I trotted across the study floor, turned
away from Susan's room, and hung a left down a second hallway. Carli's paneled
door was on the right. I knocked. Nothing. I knocked again and called her name.
Still nothing. "Carli? Carli! Answer me! I'm coming
in now. So, cover yourself up or whatever you need to do." The knob twisted in my hand, but the door
stood immobile. I called out again and remembered my own pseudo-shrink comment
that constant napping and sleeping like Carli had been doing was a form of
temporary suicide. I thought about kicking the door in but decided that might
be an overreaction. And I wasn't even sure I could do it. That was two inches
of antique oak between me and Carli. I ran to get Susan. Thank God, the bathroom door was unlocked.
Inside, Susan sloshed in the shower, and I could barely see through all the
billowing steam stuffed into the small tiled room. I said, "I need the key to Carli's
room. She's not answering." Through fogged glass, I could just make
out Susan scrubbing suds out of her hair and rinsing foam off her face. Two
beats passed while she washed away soap and shampoo, and she said, "Maybe
she's just sleeping hard." But, even as she spoke, Susan stepped out of
the shower and grabbed a terry cloth robe off a hook on the door. I am ashamed
to say that, even then and even under those circumstances, I was struck and
aroused by all that beautiful wet skin. I am pleased to say that I did not
pause to enjoy either the view or the fantasy. Susan wasn't running, but she was moving
fast. She said, "Go back and try again. Loutie keeps all the keys on hooks
in the kitchen. I'll be right there." I didn't have Susan's self-control. I
sprinted, as much as anyone can sprint in an old house full of antiques, back
to Carli's door. Still, nothing but quiet. I banged and called and banged some more.
And, out of nowhere, Susan was beside me, pushing an antique skeleton key into
the lock. She swung the door wide, and we stepped into the room The bed was
made. The window was open. And Carli was gone. chapter sixteen We stood, stunned. When we moved, Susan ran
to the window, and I
performed the same lame searches I had the last time Carli's bed had been
unexpectedly empty. She wasn't in the closet or under the bed this time either,
and neither were any of her things. But there was a penciled note on the
vanity. I called Susan over, and when she turned to face me, white showed all
around her bright blue irises. The note was on the same notebook paper
Carli had been using for all her drawings. On the top half of the page, Carli
had sketched a picture of Susan's antique step-side pickup with tall grass all
around and what looked like a rosebush covering the front wheel. On the bottom
half, she had simply written, Thanks—Sorry—Carli. When Susan spoke, her voice fluttered just
above a whisper. "It looks like she took off last night after she left us
in the kitchen." "Probably. But after Randy left this
morning would've been the best time to get away unnoticed, and she could've
gotten up and made her bed before slipping out." In contrast to Susan's
strained syllables, my voice sounded loud and uncouth in the abandoned bedroom.
I self-consciously lowered and calmed my voice. "It had to take some time
to draw this, assuming she drew it at the same time she wrote the note. She may
have just picked up an old drawing and written on it." I said, "Go
out front and check the sidewalks. I'll check in back." Susan turned and flew through the bedroom
door. I pushed the note inside my hip pocket, put my feet through the bottom
half of the tall, open window, and sat on the sill. Turning and sliding, I
caught the sill with both hands and dropped the last few feet to the ground. A
teenage girl could easily have done the same thing. And she had. The mud-grip
tread of Carli's sport sandals was pressed neatly into the soft earth of a
flower bed. She had barely missed stomping the freshly planted tulip bulbs
Loutie had assigned to her care when she first arrived. Textured footprints moved off the bed at
an angle. The few, diluted drops of Creek blood flowing through my veins didn't
help me track her steps. I followed the angle but, after that, couldn't really
tell what she had done. It seemed likely, though, that Carli had moved parallel
with Monterey Street, crossing three contiguous back lawns, before being forced
by a tall privacy fence to turn back toward the street and hit the sidewalk. If
Randy had been focused on the street and alley, he never would have seen her
scurry away. Following my guesswork route, I circled
around to the street and met Susan trotting down the sidewalk. She halted in
front of me. Her wide eyes had narrowed with focus. I asked, "Have you got
your pickup around here somewhere?" Susan's voice was clear now. "It's
parked around off the alley out of sight." "You'd better get it. She's probably
long gone, but it'd be stupid not to split up and cover the streets around
here." We turned and walked hurriedly toward the house. Inside, Susan got
dressed in less than a minute, shedding her robe, pulling on panties, jeans, and
running shoes, and sliding a green T-shirt over wet hair which she didn't
bother to brush. I put on last night's clothes, grabbed a mouthful of Scope,
sloshed a little, and spit in the sink. As Susan turned the key in Loutie's front
door, I said, "Just drive up and down the streets looking. And take a good
look at any parks you come across. I'll cover the bus stops and work my way
toward downtown." I asked, "What's the code on Loutie's answering
machine?" "I don't know. Why?" "I'm trying to figure out how one of
us can let the other one know if we find her." I handed her my cell phone.
"Here. I'll find a phone and call you in an hour. If one of us hasn't come
across her by then, it'll be time to get Joey on it." Susan said, "Tell me his number. I'll
call him now." And she was right, of course. I told her Joey's office and
cell phone numbers. As I climbed into my Jeep, Susan strode through Loutie's
side yard toward the alley. Her face was pale and concentrated as she punched
buttons on the tiny gray flip phone. An hour later, I called. We agreed to keep
going. An hour after that, even over cell phone static, I could hear defeat in
Susan's voice. Randy Whittles and Joey were inside
Loutie's house when I arrived. The air crackled with tension, and Randy's ears
burned as red as Joey's face. I could have sworn there had been yelling in that
room. I sat and explained everything I knew
about Carli's disappearance. Randy added nothing. He hadn't seen anything. After Susan arrived and joined us in the
living room, Joey leaned forward in his chair and propped his elbows on his
knees. He looked at the piece of hardwood floor between his Hush Puppies for a
few seconds and then up at me. "Letting a teenage girl slip out of
here under our ... under my nose is ... shit. Anyway, after I got
Susan's call this morning, I called Randy and then got a few men out looking. I
told Randy here to fix his fucking mess. But, hell, it's my fault. I should
have been here myself." Susan scrunched up her eyebrows. She
looked at me and then at Joey and then back at me again. I rolled my eyes and
said, "It's nobody's fault, Joey. And nobody—not even
you—can be everywhere. "Now, about little Randy here."
I noticed that Randy Whittles sat up a little straighter and glared at me when
I called him "little." Any man who has gone through what it takes to
become a SEAL deserves not to be insulted. I said, "No offense, Randy.
It's just that you look like a kid to an old man in his thirties." Randy's
chest unswelled a little, and he turned the bass down on his glare. "Joey,
Randy was assigned to keep people out of this house, not keep them in. And you
know as well as I do that those are different things. And, on top of that,
Carli may have taken off this morning after Randy was gone." Joey said, "Except that Randy had no
business leaving here without my okay." I said, "Well, Randy works for you,
not me." And Joey nodded, as if to say, Damn right he does. "But
I'm not blaming you for anything, and I'm sure Susan isn't either." Susan piped in on cue. "You're the best.
Anyone else would be making excuses or covering up, but you're here pointing
out nonexistent mistakes and taking full blame." She walked over and
squeezed his huge hand. Joey said, "This turned touchy-feely
all of a sudden, didn't it?" Susan laughed and slapped him lightly on the
top of his head. I said, "Now that everything's cuddly
again, we need to figure out where our client is." Joey said, "I've got somebody at the
bus station. And I've got someone at the airport, even though I doubt Carli's
got the money to take a plane to the nearest hub. By the way, how much money does
she have?" Susan knitted her eyebrows again and shook
her head. "I don't know. Carli probably had some tips from her last night
at the Pelican's Roost, but I never asked her. Loutie gave her some clothes and
bought her a few more." Joey asked, "Have you checked your
purse?" Susan said, "I don't think Carli
would ever..." "I'm not saying she's a crook, Susan.
The girl was scared. Scared shitless of Leroy Purcell from what Tom tells me.
Just go check your purse." Susan pointed at an antique sideboard
against the back wall and said, "It's right there on the table." She
walked over and looked inside. "My whole wallet's gone." She sounded
tired. I said, "Call MasterCard and American
Express and whatever other cards you've got. Check on recent purchases. Tell
them your daughter sneaked off with your cards. Say you don't want the police
involved, but you want to know if someone tries to charge anything." "Will they do that?" Joey said, "Sometimes. Not always.
How much money is missing?" "I don't know. Somewhere between two
and three hundred dollars." Joey stood. "I'm gonna go call my man
at the airport. On Southwest Airlines, that little girl could fly just about
any-damnwhere Southwest goes for three hundred bucks." As he
stood, he added, "Randy. Go fix this mess." Joey walked out, and, in
quick order, Randy stood and marched out the front door without uttering a
word. Susan said, "Testosterone
poisoning." "That's more than a little insulting,
you know." Susan looked taken aback. I said, "If a man, every time a
woman acted stupid or vain, said she was suffering from estrogen poisoning,
he'd be drawn and quartered by every woman and half the men in the room." Susan said, "Okay. You're right. But
why are we arguing about this?" I said, "Because I'm ticked off about
Carli and Sonny and Leroy Purcell, and I want to argue with someone." "Feel better?" "Yeah." "Good. What now?" "I think I'm going to go mess with
Leroy Purcell." "Why on earth would you do
that?" "Because it seems like the only time
we learn anything in this case is when things get stirred up. And I'm tired of
the other guy doing all the stirring. This is something I've been giving
serious thought to. I want to give Purcell something to think about besides
looking for you and Carli. So, I'm going to try to mess with his mind a little
and see if I can split his attention and maybe even get him to make a
mistake." Susan said, "Can I help?" I said, "Yeah. I think you probably
can." chapter seventeen I awoke Tuesday morning in a strange room
in Seaside, Florida. A pale
blue ceiling floated over the bed. Two sandy yellow walls angled together and
formed a square with another right angle of walls painted the blue-green color
of shallow Gulf water on a summer morning. The bed's driftwood headboard
swirled with hand-painted shells and fish and mermaids. Found-object sculptures
decorated only one sand-colored wall. All other walls were left blank to catch
the sunshine and the changing shadows of outside vegetation projected through
oversized windows. The room, in short, was horribly and expensively whimsical. A soft tangle of brunette hair lay on the
pillow next to my own sandy head. The covers had fallen away to reveal one
perfect female shoulder and a strong, firm rib cage that flowed into that
wonderful woman place where narrow waist meets the beginning swell of hips. I
ran my hand over the exposed, cool curve of her hip and circled her waist with
my arm. My hand moved over the dimple of her navel and stopped at her ribs to
pull her warm back against my chest and stomach and her rounded bottom against
my thighs. I kissed her shoulder. She stirred and yawned, and Susan turned on
her back to look at me. I propped up on my left elbow, rested my
head in my hand, and said, "Good morning." Susan said, "Morning." Her voice
came out soft and husky with sleep. I studied her. A friend of Loutie's had
visited the house on Monterey Street Monday afternoon and dyed Susan's hair a
surprisingly realistic dark brown. The petite, frizzy-haired magician had even
tinted Susan's eyebrows to match. Susan pulled the sheet up to her neck and
laced her fingers behind her head. She smiled. "What are you looking
at?" I've never quite known what to say when a
woman asks that. So, I just said, "You." Susan said, "I think you're enjoying
this." "You're right." "No. I mean sleeping with a blonde
one night and a brunette the next." I sat up and put my feet on the floor.
Smiling, I said, "Yeah, I knew that's what you meant." I heard her
weight shift on the bed, and I should have gotten out of the way. Susan swung a
playful but solid fist into my right shoulder blade. I yelled, "Ow,"
more from surprise than pain and jumped up. Susan was laughing and looking
inordinately proud of herself. She said, "Watch it." I said, "Jeez. Consider it
watched." Susan sat up, hooking the sheet under her
arms, and looked at me. "Most people over thirty look better with clothes
than without them. But you happen to look very, very nice naked." As I walked toward the bathroom to take a
shower, I said, "Then I guess you'd better watch it too. It'd be a shame
to have to deny you all this." Susan smiled, it seemed, with more
indulgence than amusement. Twenty minutes later, I was showered and
outfitted in clean jeans and shirt. After finding my way down an open teak
staircase, over nubby carpet and Mexican tile, and through an oversized
hexagonal doorway into the kitchen, I found Loutie sipping tomato juice and
fiddling the knobs on an impressive array of electronic equipment that had been
spread out on an artistically chipped slab of granite the owners had intended
to be the breakfast table. "Good morning." Loutie frowned at a graphic readout and
held a black foam rubber knob attached to one side of a tiny headset to her
ear. She said, "Hey," and tossed the
headset on top of a graphite-colored box. I asked, "What's Purcell up to this
morning?" "Sleeping." Loutie motioned at
the refrigerator with her thumb. "There's muffins. Orange juice and tomato
juice. Coffee's still okay. Been on the burner a while, though." She wasn't exactly testy. But Loutie had
become very ... focused. I asked, "Is anything wrong? I mean, anything I
don't know about?" "No. I'm just keeping tabs on
Purcell. Joey's back on Dog Island watching Haycock." I said, "And Carli's out there alone
somewhere, and Joey's pushing everyone because he thinks he's supposed to be
perfect." Loutie shrugged and sat in an awkward, designer dining chair
made of four sticks of chrome and two swatches of mauve leather. Susan walked in, running her hands through
damp hair. New, dark mascara made her eyes appear bigger and an even lighter
blue than usual; earth tones powdered her eyelids; and dark lip gloss and blush
gave her tanned complexion a decidedly olive cast. Together with her new dark
brown hair and eyebrows, it was a pretty amazing disguise. I said, "Who the hell are you?"
And Susan smiled. Loutie told her about the muffins and
juice. Susan found a glass in the cabinet next to the sink and poured some
orange juice in it. Loutie turned to me. "Joey said to tell you he's still
working on who runs the Bodines down around the islands." I asked, "Does that mean it's not
Purcell?" "No. I think it just means he still
hasn't found out who runs what. Could be Purcell. Could be somebody else. All
the cops could find out is there's a rumor that the young Turks, as Joey put
it, may be trying to take over from the old guard. But Joey says that's not
exactly earth-shattering news since somebody's always trying to edge out
somebody else when business is good. You know, criminal business." "And that's all?" "That's all." So much for that. I came back to the task
at hand. "Anybody else in Purcell's place?" Loutie shook her head. I
asked her how to find it, and she told me. I gave her my cell phone number. As
I tapped a series of four buttons on the tiny gray keypad, I said, "I'm
turning off the ringer and setting the phone on vibrate. If Purcell wakes up or
somebody else shows up, give me a call. I won't answer unless I'm clear of the
house, though. So don't worry if you can't get me." Susan frowned. "You sure you know
what you're doing?" I said, "Nope. But, I'll be careful." I
lifted my shirttail to show her the butt of a Browning 9mm automatic I had
gotten from my father in the aftermath of my brother's death the previous fall.
The sight seemed to scare her more, not less. I found a khaki cap with a blue
visor and Seaside, Florida stitched across the front, and put that on
along with a pair of overpriced, purple-mirrored, Revo sunglasses a client had
given me. Quaint pathways passed beneath bright sky
and beside white picket fences, perfect pastel vacation homes, and decorator
bird-houses that seemed to be the object of some kind of cuteness competition.
If my Jim Walter house on St. George had been pastel hell, then Seaside,
Florida certainly was pastel heaven—if banal,
architecturally angular homogeneity is your idea of heaven. Seaside is, in the
best and worst senses, a planned community. Mostly, it was planned to provide
new-rich Chardonnay-Southerners a tidy—some might say
sterile—place to vacation far from the unwashed
throngs who sunned and sloshed and guzzled Budweiser along the rest of the
Redneck Riviera. The place looks so unreal and unlikely
that Hollywood used Seaside as the fantasy town that could only exist on
television in the Jim Carrey film The Truman Show. It's a small place. Nothing in Seaside is
very far from anything else. And no more than a hundred yards from our modestly
ostentatious rental, Leroy Purcell's beach palace occupied a sandy, picketed
lot just one left and two rights from our own canary-yellow front door. I was
not surprised to see that our ail-American hero owned one of the larger chunks
of aqua blue siding in Seaside, which is saying something. Neither was I
surprised that parked behind his house was one of the longest, reddest
Cadillacs I have ever encountered. Spring break revelers had trudged back to
class, and the arthritic flocks of sun-browned snowbirds who took up winter
residence on the Gulf had pointedly migrated north even before the spring break
crowd had arrived. So, as I moved among the clapboard canyons of Seaside, I had
encountered only a few lonely, sandy-bottomed souls. Now, standing outside
Purcell's million-dollar beachfront, I saw no one. I waved and jogged across Purcell's lot as
if attempting to catch up with a friend. Acting 101. As I came up on his
fiery Caddy, I stumbled and knelt down to retie a perfectly tied Reebok. More
acting. From inside my hip pocket, I pulled out a small black box with a
tracking device on the inside and magnets on the outside. Following Joey's
earlier instructions, I reached under Purcell's Caddy, felt for the steel
frame, and clicked the box into place. I stood and squinted into the western sky
before jogging out to look longingly down the beach at my departed, imaginary
buddy, whoever he might be. Turning away from the surf, I had started
up the beach on the way back to Susan and Loutie when my flip phone vibrated,
not unpleasantly, in the hip pocket of my jeans. I hesitated before realizing I
would look suspiciously out of place on the beach at Seaside only if I didn't
occasionally confer with unseen minions by cell phone. I pulled up the tiny
antenna and opened the phone. Loutie said, "Joey called. He needs
you in Apalachicola." "Is he all right?" Loutie sounded surprised. "Joey's
fine. He has somebody he wants you to meet." "Who is it?" "He just said somebody with
information about Purcell. Call him, okay?" I said, "okay," and ended the
call. A recorded female voice full of misplaced
emphasis told me the cellular customer I was calling was unavailable. I looked
around some and tried Joey's number again with the same result. I walked back
along manicured, sandy paths to Susan and Loutie and the rented house with the
canary door. Long morning. Loutie listened to Purcell
listen to ESPN; Susan read the complimentary copy of USA Today she had
found on our steps that morning; and, between unsuccessful attempts to return
Joey's call, I glanced at whatever pages Susan wasn't reading. I was
absentmindedly looking at a four-color pie chart with a line of Zorro masks
next to it—something about crime going down—when the phone rang. Joey sounded excited. He had been tailing
the guy he wanted me to meet, trying to decide whether the man really wanted to
talk or maybe just wanted to do us bodily harm. I asked, "So, what do you
think?" I could hear Joey's radio playing softly
as he spoke. "I think we ought to meet with him. Coosa—the cop in Panama City I've been working with—says he's okay. I mean, he's a fucking snitch, which means he's
basically human shit, but, for a snitch, he's okay." "How'd you find out about him?" "Like I said. Coosa. I guess he
figured we weren't getting much for our money, so he just called me up and gave
me the guy's name and address and stuff." Joey was happier about this than I was. I
asked, "Does that seem strange to you?" "Yeah, a little." "But you still want to meet with
him?" "Sure. It's better than sitting
around waiting. And the only trap I'm worried about is one I don't see coming.
I figure we're gonna learn something whatever happens. The boy's either gonna
tell us something useful 'cause he wants to or 'cause we make him. Doesn't make
much difference to me." I said, "You do know that you're not actually
immortal?" "Mother's Milk at ten tonight." "Mother's Milk?" He repeated, "Mother's Milk,"
and hung up. chapter eighteen Mother's Milk was a cinder-block edifice deposited on a stretch of stunted
timberland north of Apalachicola. A mercury light hanging from a tall creosote
post cast an ugly bluish illumination across the parking lot where, days
before, Joey had relieved Haycock and his accomplice of the tools of their
trade. Halfway down the light post, the proprietor had suspended a Coca-Cola
sign—the kind country stores get for free—with the bar's name painted in green across a lighted white panel.
I pulled into the lot and found a place among the pickups, Z-28's, and
Firebirds. As I clicked off the headlights on my newly
rented Bonneville, Joey startled me by tapping loudly on the passenger window.
I jumped hard enough to bang my knee on the steering wheel. I popped the locks, and Joey climbed into
the passenger seat. He said, "You're early." "Wasn't sure I'd be
able to find it." Joey nodded at Mother's Milk. "Pretty, isn't
it?" The rusted metal roof drooped, and once-white paint had flaked off
the concrete exterior in irregular patches, revealing a soiled pea-soup color.
In addition to the lighted Cola-Cola sign hanging from the light post, the
bar's name had been painted in red script across the front wall, which bore the
pockmarks of a hundred rifle and pistol shots fired over the years from passing
cars. I said, "It looks like a good place
to get killed." Joey looked thoughtful. "I don't
guess we'd be the first." "You think that's a
possibility?" "Hell, it's always a possibility.
It's a possibility you're gonna get creamed crossing the road. It's a
possibility you're gonna catch a cramp one of these days while you're out
swimming in Mobile Bay." "Yeah." I said, "That's
just what I wanted. I wasn't worried about somebody sticking a knife in me
tonight. I wanted to have a philosophical discussion about life's inherent
uncertainties." "Just trying to put things in perspective."
He looked over at me. "You ready to go?" "Yeah. But, before we go in, mind if
I ask why you chose this particular establishment?" "I didn't. The snitch—Squirley McCall—he picked it." I smiled. "Squirley?" "And Detective Coosa says it fits him
like his momma knew he was gonna grow up to be a snitch. Anyway, he wanted to
meet here. I guess it's his usual watering hole." "So I guess he'll have some buddies
around in case something goes wrong." Joey shook his head. "Snitching ain't
a team sport. Boy's taking his life in his hands every time he sells some
information. So I don't think we gotta worry about him having backup. He
probably just wants lots of people around." Joey reached over and put his
hand on his door release. "You ready?" I stepped out onto the dirt parking lot.
Joey led the way as we mounted the small porch and walked in through the open
front door. At six foot six and two hundred forty
pounds, Joey is used to other men getting out of his way, and that's what they
did as we entered the bar. Unfortunately, I'm not quite so intimidating a
presence. And, as I stepped inside, a patron with a black, mountain-man beard,
a yellow Caterpillar cap, and rolls of cellulite hanging from his exposed
underarms put a hand across the little entry hall, blocking my way. "You haven't paid the cover
charge." I looked at him. "My friend didn't
pay either. Neither did the two people ahead of us." The cellulite mountain man smiled and
looked around to make sure his buddies were watching. "Shit. I guess they
snuck in when I wasn't looking." He tried to mock my voice. "Let's
see that's two people ahead of you, your friend, and you." He cut his eyes
back to check out the appreciative laughter of his friends. "I guess
you're gonna have to pay for all of 'em. Let's see. It's a ten-dollar cover.
Ain't that right, Louis?" One of his buddies laughed and said,
"Hell, Jimbo, I believe it was twenty." Jimbo said, "Naw. That'd be greedy.
Tell you what. You just make it a even twenty for you and your boyfriend
there." I could see Joey over Jimbo's shoulder. He
caught my eye, and I shook my head. I said, "Excuse me," and pushed
Jimbo's arm out of the way. Jimbo didn't know when to quit. He grabbed
the front of my shirt and said, "Goddamnit, boy. Don't put your fucking
hands on me." I brought my right hand up fast, clamped
his trachea between my thumb and fingers, and shoved him hard into the wall.
Jimbo hit with a thud and lost balance. I pinned him to the wall by jamming my
fingers into his chubby neck and squeezing hard enough to make him wheeze and
squeak trying to breathe. I heard cussing and caught movement out of the corner
of my eye as his friends started to move forward. Joey stepped in front of them, and cussing
turned to mumbling. I looked into Jimbo's eyes. He let go of my
shirt and aimed his right fist at my head. I blocked the punch by spearing his
forearm with my left elbow and slapped him hard across his ear in the same
motion. A high-pitched squeal came through his pinched throat. I said, "You want some more of
this?" He shook his head, and I let go. Jimbo
staggered out onto the small porch holding his throat. I stepped outside and
spoke quietly to him, then came inside and walked with Joey to a small table
covered in plastic with wood grain printed on it. When we were seated, Joey said,
"What'd you tell him outside?" "That he asked for it, and
embarrassed is better than dead." "You be a dangerous man, huh?" "Actually, I'm pretty much full of
shit. But Jimbo doesn't know it. Or, at least, I don't think he does—choking makes you feel pretty helpless. Anyway, I was just trying
to keep him from waiting for me out in the parking lot with a gun." "He may do it anyhow." I said, "Yeah, well, you can get
killed crossing the street." "Wish I'd said that." Joey said,
"You know why he messed with you, don't you?" "Yeah." "You got on a diving watch costs more
than most of these boys make in a month. Polo shirt and L. L. Bean khakis. You
were asking for it." "I believe I told you that I knew why
he did it." "Just making sure." We were sitting in the back right corner,
well away from the plywood bar that ran half the length of the wall on the left
side of the room. A spring training game out of South Florida flickered bright
green across the televison behind the bartender. Next to the TV, a Playboy
centerfold that someone had blown up into a poster stretched four feet across
the pressed-paneling wall. As our eyes adjusted, we could see a sampling of
thirty or forty other centerfolds from the past thirty years taped to the
walls, and, on the backs of the draft beer taps, the owner had glued a series
of life-sized plastic breasts. I pointed at the plastic boobs and said,
"Mother's Milk." Joey said, "Lot of thought went into
that." I nodded. Joey looked around the room.
"Something else I was thinking about. There aren't a hell of a lot of bars
where you can half choke a man to death at the front door and nobody seems to
notice." "Probably happens too much to worry
about." "Probably." A dishwater blonde came over and asked
what we wanted. We said we wanted beer, and she went away. I said, "I guess you don't see
Squirley." "Nope. Told him to look for me." "You stand out in a crowd." Joey nodded. I had been studying the centerfold for
March '77, trying to decide what she probably looked like twenty years later.
The waitress brought our beer, and I drank some. Joey said, "You notice on these
centerfolds how the old ones were photographed without any nookie showing. Then
they started showing it. Then they started shaving the stuff they started showing.
It's like we thought we wanted to see it, but we really didn't." I closed my eyes and rubbed the bridge of
my nose. I heard a new voice. "Joey?" I looked up at a man standing next to our
table. Joey said, "Squirley. Sit down and
have a beer." The man nodded his head by repeating a
birdlike ducking motion, like someone trying to swallow peanut butter. I noticed that Squirley wobbled a little
as he sat. I also noted that he hadn't been squandering his hard-earned snitch
income on soap or razor blades. Joey looked irritated. "You already
drunk?" "Working on it." He held up his
hand and snapped his fingers at the waitress. She flipped him a bird and walked
to the bar. Squirley jerked his thumb at me. "Who's zis?" "I'm Tom." "You buying, Tom?" I said, "Sure," and motioned to
the waitress. She came over with a fresh beer balanced
on her tray. "Somebody gonna pay for this? I ain't giving it to him till
somebody pays for it." I put three ones on her tray, and she put
the glass in front of Squirley. He drank half of it and said, "I don't
usually do business here." Joey said, "You picked it." Squirley nodded gravely and drank the rest
of his beer. "Gimme another three. I'll just get me one more beer, and
we'll go outside and talk." I looked at Joey. He nodded, and I counted
out three ones. Squirley McCall gathered them up and wove his way to the bar,
where he pushed his way roughly through a small group of Latino men. Squirley
waved at the bartender, who pretended not to see him. Squirley almost shouted.
"I got the goddamn money. Gimme a beer, Leonard. I say I got your goddamn
money." Joey sighed. When Squirley finally got his draft, he
turned his back to the bar and leaned one elbow on the edge while he took in
the first gulp. He looked around at the small band of Latino patrons and said,
"Lucy, you got some splaining to do," and began to laugh uncontrollably.
One of the men said something I couldn't hear. Squirley grinned and said,
"How do you get 148 Cubans in a shoe box? Tell 'em it floats." And he
laughed so hard he gave himself hiccups. I decided to go fetch our snitch while
there was still enough left of him to snitch with. As I stepped through the men
Squirley had just insulted, I said, "Excuse me," and grabbed one of
his arms. One of the men stepped in front of
Squirley. "We are not Cuban. We are Peruvian. Not everyone who lives south
of this country is from the same place." Squirley smiled. "Who gives a
fuck?" The man turned to me. "Does your
friend want to have his heart cut out?" "He's not my friend." "He should leave." I said, "Sounds about right." Joey had wandered over in case my rescue
of Squirley turned into a war. Now he grabbed the snitch's other arm and we
started for the front door. Squirley said, "Other way. Other way.
Go out back and talk." Joey looked at me. I said, "Guess
he's got his reasons," and gently steered him as he staggered to a doorway
in the back wall and then led us through a filthy kitchen and out a back door.
Once outside, Squirley walked over and leaned against a particularly foul-smelling
Dumpster. Joey looked disgusted. I said, "You really think this idiot
knows something?" Joey shook his head. "You never know.
Almost every snitch is a drunk or a junkie or both. You pretty much gotta find
somebody who'll sell out his friends for fifty bucks if you want information,
and that usually means somebody who needs a bottle or a fix." He motioned
at Squirley with his hand. "That, unfortunately, is your basic
professional snitch." "But who would tell that dumb-ass
anything?" Joey said, "I don't know. But Coosa
says he's pretty reliable." Squirley perked up. "I can hear you
talkin'. You don't want help? Fine. Fuck off. I got better stuff to do."
Joey and I walked over and stood in front of Squirley. He was still mad about
being hauled out of the bar in front of the Peruvians. "Bunch of fucking
Ricky Ricardo spic assholes. Buying up the whole fucking coast. Motherfuckers
coming up here outta South Florida. Already ruined it down there for real
Americans, and, much as I care, they're welcome to it. Fucking Margaritaville.
We don't need that shit up here." I said, "Who's buying up the
coast?" Squirley seemed to sober up a little. He
shifted his eyes from side to side, checking for spies, signaling that he was
about to impart confidential information. He said, "I'm gonna tell you,
just to let you know that old Squirley knows what he's talkin' about, you know,
that old Squirley got his finger on the place." His breath fogged the air between us,
competing with the Dumpster's aroma—stench layered
on stench. I nodded encouragingly. "There's a buncha rich cigar spics,
call themselves 'Pro-Am,' like that golf show. They own all kinda shit around
here. Houses, boats, some of the businesses in town. Most people don't know
that shit." Joey said, "They got a leader?" "I guess they do. Don't know many
names, though." Joey just looked at him. Squirley seemed to shrink a little inside
his skin. His husky, alcoholic voice cracked when he said, "I thought you
was bringin' some money." Joey handed him a twenty. Squirley turned it
over in his fingers, examining both sides like he wasn't used to dealing in
such small denominations. "Not much." I said, "That's just for starters. To
see if you know anything worth paying for." Squirley raised his eyebrows, dropped open
his mouth, and held his palms in the air with the twenty protruding from
trembling fingertips. He tried to look hurt, to look put-upon. The snitch said,
"You called me. So you know..." Joey said, "Give us the fucking
name." Squirley stopped to think. As he did, he
popped the knuckles of his right hand, one at a time, snatching them with his
thumb. "Martillo is one." He pronounced it Marr-til-oh. "And
another one I heard is something like Carpet Hero, but I think that one's a
nickname." Joey sounded disgusted. "Yeah. I bet
that's it." Squirley looked at us and blinked puffy,
bloodshot eyes. I said, "What's Leroy Purcell doing
down here?" He grinned. "You know a little
somethin', don't you? I'll tell you what Leroy's doin'. He's pissin' in the
wrong pond. That's what he's doin'. And I reckon you know he's the one brought
the spics in here." I asked, "Whose pond is this down
here?" "Well, you see, that ain't exactly
clear." Joey said, "What's that mean?" "Could mean lotsa things, couldn't
it? I reckon it mostly means I wanna see some more green before I tell you what
it means." I said, "A hundred. If we don't
already know what you know." "I don't do business like that. You
hand over the goddamn money..." Joey stepped forward and hit Squirley with
an open right, and the putrid little bigot spun and hit the wall behind him
face first. He hung there a moment, as if hurt or dazed. Joey's .45 auto
appeared, and my giant friend pressed the muzzle behind Squirley's left ear. I jumped. "Whoa, Joey..." Joey kept looking at our drunken snitch.
"Drop the knife." Squirley hesitated, and Joey cocked the hammer on
his Colt. Slowly, the drunk's right hand moved out
from the space between his stomach and the wall. It held a hunting knife with a
six-inch blade. Squirley lifted his blade to the side and dropped it in the
gravel. Joey said, "Put your hands on the
wall and spread 'em. That's right. You've done it before." Joey patted him down and told him to turn
around. Squirley looked scared. He said, "Do
I still get the hundred?" Joey shook his head and laughed. I said, "Tell us what you know." Squirley licked dry, cracked lips, then
snorted hard down deep in his throat and spit on the gravel. He was getting
ready to talk. "There's a hell of a mess goin' on.
On the one side, you got old men been running things down here—some of 'em since after Korea. On the other side you got a buncha
mean-ass kids tryin' to take over. Startin' to get bad, too. These young 'uns,
they don't give a shit about nothin'. Kill you for nothin', for fun. Don't give
a shit about jail. Nothin'." I said, "Where's Purcell come
in?" "Old Leroy thinks he's gonna come in
and take over while there's a war goin' on. But he's fuckin' up. Shoulda picked
a side and cut some kinda deal. But, hell no, fuckin' football hero wants it
all. Word is he wants to set up one of them cartels like they got down in
Spicland. Old Leroy wants to be king shit of smugglers. Kinda do for guns and
military stuff what the spics did with coke." He paused to turn his head
and spit into the gravel. "Shit. You ask me, Leroy's fuckin' up big time.
Now, he's got the old boys pissed—and they been
doin' this shit a long time—and he's got the young 'uns pissed—and, like I said, they just don't give a shit. Kill your momma for
a dollar." I said, "We need names." "You're asking shit that's gonna get
me killed if anybody finds out I talked." Joey said, "How about if we give you
our word that we'll be as careful with your reputation as you are?" "You tryin' to be a smart-ass?"
Joey shrugged, and Squirley flinched. He turned to me. "Your boy here
don't know how to do business. Now, you look smart." I said, "Uh-huh." "All I'm saying is, if you want
names, I gotta see that hundred." I pulled some folded bills from my hip
pocket, peeled one off, and handed it to Squirley. He smiled. He beamed. It wasn't pretty. Our inebriated informer pushed the bill
deep inside his pocket, and a dark shape hit him flush in the mouth. Squirley
McCall fell back onto the wall and slid to the ground. I spun around. Joey already had his .45 trained on a
group of three men. The one in the middle was casually tossing half a brick
into the air and catching it. Joey said, "Put it down." The man caught the brick, turned his hand
upside down, and let it drop. The same man looked up and said, "Time for
you two to get on out of here." Joey said, "I was just gonna say the
same thing to you. Seeing how I'm the one with the gun and all." The brick thrower smiled and walked away
followed by the other two. Joey said, "Let's go." I grabbed Squirley's elbow and said,
"Get the other arm." "Why?" "Because they're going to kill him if
we leave him here." Joey said, "They're gonna kill him
anyhow for talking to us," but he grabbed the other arm and helped me get
Squirley to my car. After dropping Squirley at the emergency
room, I took a few minutes to talk over the night with Joey. Then I headed back
to Seaside. I needed to spend some time in front of a laptop while my little
adventure at Mother's Milk was fresh in my mind. For the first time, the loose ends were
beginning to weave themselves into an indistinct but vaguely recognizable
fabric. chapter nineteen I shut down my new Dell laptop a little
after one, trudged up the
rented teak stairs of our Seaside cottage, and climbed under the covers beside
Susan, who stirred and murmured half words whispered low and found sleep again.
I lay there listening to the widow Fitzsimmons' rhythmic breathing and let
panic take hold the way it does when it finds you exhausted and unsettled and
uncomfortably awake in the hours between midnight and dawn. I got up and drank some water. Got back in
bed. Got out again and straightened the covers. Again Susan stirred, and I lay
still. Much less time went by than it felt like, and I drifted into a fitful
sleep. That morning, I slept late but not well. Downstairs, Loutie was manning the
listening equipment. Susan was on the phone; she put her hand over the
mouthpiece and said, "It's Joey. He needs to talk to you." I took the phone, and said, "Kind of
an interesting night." "Yeah. That's one thing you could
call it. Might've been more interesting if Squirley had turned loose of a
couple more names before eating a brick." I walked over to the cabinet and found a
glass. "Go see him in the hospital. We left him the hundred. He still owes
us the names." As I spoke, I filled the glass with ice and water. Joey said, "Too late. Squirley
McCall's a goner." "He died from getting hit in the
mouth with a brick? That doesn't make sense." "Hell no. He just hauled ass. The
orderly took in his breakfast, and old Squirley had taken a powder. And his
clothes were gone. So it looked like Squirley just got dressed and slipped out.
I wouldn't put it past him to just be trying to stiff the hospital, but,
considering last night, I'm guessing he's hiding out somewhere for a while. You
want me to try to find him?" "No, I don't think so. Tell me if I'm
wrong, but I think you need to watch Haycock, and I need to keep an eye on
Purcell." Joey agreed and got off the phone. I made
a detour upstairs for a quick shower and clean clothes and, after donning my
cap-and-sunglasses disguise, strolled over and loitered on the beach outside
Purcell's pastel mansion. Everything looked the way it had the day
before. The sky was blue and the Cadillac was red. I had just gotten there when my phone
vibrated. It was Susan. "He's up. Get out of there." "I didn't know he was down." "Yes. He was still in bed." "I'm on the beach. I can see the
house, but I'm nowhere near it." I waited, feeling a little silly, while
Susan conveyed my position to Loutie. Susan repeated, "He's up. He just
got a call from a man who didn't identify himself. And Tom, the guy said he
was, quote, 'bringing in Poultrez.'" "Shit!" "They've got her, Tom. The only good
thing is they're bringing Carli here, to Purcell's house." "That's strange. I've been operating
on the assumption that Purcell would want to maintain a veneer of
respectability around here." I thought. "Another good thing is that
if they're bringing her here she's probably okay. I don't think they'll let her
come in kicking and screaming, but I don't think they'll want to unload any
unconscious teenage girls in broad daylight either." I heard Loutie speaking in the background,
and Susan said, "Loutie's coming over. She says stay on the beach side of
the house. She'll hang around in front. She says if you see her move, to come
running and to have that gun of yours ready." I said, "Let me talk to her." Loutie came on. "Tom. Just stay where
you are. The man who phoned Purcell said he'd be pulling into Seaside in
fifteen or twenty minutes. Like Susan said, I'll stay on the side of the house
away from the beach. If a car comes up, I'll be in sight. Just follow my
lead." "You're kidding. You want to have a
shoot-out in the middle of Seaside at nine in the morning?" Loutie's voice was tense with the strained
patience of an older sister explaining life to her none-too-bright sibling.
"No, Tom. I don't want that, and neither will Purcell. He lives here. But
if we want any chance of getting her back, we better do it now. They won't be
expecting an ambush outside Purcell's driveway. And we'll all be in the open
and in clear view of the neighbors, and they won't want to shoot. No. This is
as good as it's going to get, Tom." She paused and said, "Are you
with me?" I didn't like it, but I said, "I'm
with you." "Good." "Have you talked with Joey?" "Yeah. I called while Susan was on
with you. Looks like something's happening with Haycock, and he couldn't get
here in time to do anything anyway. He said to handle it." I said, "Then I guess that's what
we'll do," and pressed end. I walked down to the surf's edge and
looked both ways. The closest humans were little more than distant dots on the
beach. Facing the water, I eased the 9mm out of my waistband and held it close
against my stomach while I chambered a round and checked the safety. I put it
back. Suddenly the breeze and the sun were
irritating, the sand in my shoes ground uncomfortably into tender, sockless
feet, and I noticed seaweed and dead jellyfish marring the beach. Shit,
shit, and shit. I walked up the beach to a small dune behind Purcell's
place and pretended to collect driftwood. As seconds and minutes ticked by, I
walked back and forth along a small section of startlingly white beach
collecting smooth brown sticks one at a time and placing them on a neat pile
next to the dune, also one at a time. I was trying to stretch a two-minute job
into twenty. Finally, when I had exhausted the stick supply, I took a minute to
walk up and look for Loutie. Nothing wrong with looking for a friend who
promised to join you on the beach. No reason to hide. When no one had arrived at Purcell's by
nine-thirty, I plopped down on the dune, wiggled a butt-shaped seat into the
warm sand, and began to sort my sticks by size and color. It was stupid, but no
one Would be looking that hard. And, even if they did, people do stupid,
slow-motion things on the beach. The poor fella's on vacation, Marge. Let
him play with his sticks in peace. A black Chrysler pulled up and parked next
to Purcell's Caddy. Okay. Now what? How do I get close enough to do
anything? I picked up the carefully sorted sticks in my left hand and
cringed to think I was leaving my "gun hand," for God's sake, empty
and ready to shoot. I tried to look relaxed, to look like a
tourist, to look proud of my sticks. I was near the cars now, and the
Browning's heft and its steel ridges chafed my side. Loutie materialized around
the front corner of the house. She didn't look relaxed. She looked ready to
kill someone. The car door opened. Tim, Sonny's painting partner at See Shore
Cottage, stepped out of the driver's door and slammed it shut as the passenger
door swung open. An enormous man stepped out and gaped at his monied
surroundings like a Baptist in a titty bar. He had dark Mediterranean skin and
hair and, judging from a distance, looked to be maybe six four and close to two
eighty. He looked like more of Purcell's muscle, but something about the guy
bothered me. Something about him tugged at a memory. I waited. Carli had to be in the backseat
or maybe in the trunk. The men went inside, but I knew there could be someone
else hiding in back, someone holding my client hostage and waiting to shoot
anyone who came near. Loutie approached a ground floor window of
Purcell's mansion and peered inside. Then she motioned me forward with her hand
and pointed at the Chrysler. I nodded and trotted over next to the trunk. I
glanced back at Loutie. She gave me a thumbs-up. I peeked inside at empty seats
and then pushed the door release button and eased open the back door. My phone
vibrated. The backseat and the floorboards were indeed empty, and my phone
vibrated. I opened the passenger door, found the trunk release, pushed it, and
my phone vibrated. Carli was not in the trunk. I raised my shoulders and shook
my head at Loutie, and my phone vibrated. Loutie motioned for me to follow her, but
I shook my head and walked back out onto the beach and sat on my dune, all the
while wondering who was vibrating my hip. Of course, it was Susan. "What is it?" I may have sounded
a little terse. Susan said, "You didn't answer." "Bad timing. I'm fine. What is
it?" "They're not bringing Carli here.
They don't even have her." And I had it. I said, "That's her
father, isn't it? That's Rus Poultrez." "How'd you know?" I didn't
answer. I was trying to think this through. Susan went on. "I heard them
over Loutie's equipment. They brought him in to help find Carli. They're
talking money now. Sounds like they had some kind of agreement, and now
Poultrez is trying to squeeze more money out of Purcell. I've heard the numbers
thirty thousand and fifty thousand." I felt sick. "Who would sell his own
daughter for thirty thousand dollars?" Susan said, "The same guy who would
rape and abuse his daughter instead of protecting her or even ignoring her. Someone
disgusting and worse. Someone evil." I cussed and kicked some sand into the air
that blew back in my face. I told her I was returning to the house. For most of the next hour, Susan, Loutie,
and I listened over hidden mikes as Poultrez bitched about how much money he
was losing by sitting around Seaside instead of staying home to work the seas
off New England for cod. Every now and then, as Poultrez paused to savor a
particularly salient argument, Purcell would say, "If you don't want the
thirty thousand, go back home." Purcell didn't get to be king redneck just
by being the biggest nut on the tree. As Poultrez tried to work him for more
money, Purcell was demonstrating surprising control and even glimmers of
limited intelligence. He knew Poultrez had put his fishing business on hold and
flown all the way to Florida based on an offer of thirty thousand. The
fisherman would take more if he could get it. But Poultrez had come for thirty,
and, in the end, he would happily sell his daughter's life for that amount. In contrast to his host, Carli's father
kept pushing after all hope and most of Purcell's patience had evaporated.
Poultrez proceeded from financial arguments to threatening to get on a plane,
and Purcell told him to do what he thought best. Poultrez tried anger, and
Purcell gave the same answer. Finally, Poultrez tried threatening Purcell, and
the football-hero leader of the Bodines offered to kill Poultrez, chop him into
edible chunks, and leave his butchered carcass scattered over a saltwater marsh
for the crabs and alligators. That was pretty much the end of that. Poultrez still tried to sound tough, but
he mostly just sounded defeated. "This is bullshit. Over the phone, you
said thirty for sure and probably more if I came. That's what you said. 'Probably
more.' And now that I hauled my ass down here to the middle of nowhere, you
just say take the thirty. Shit. I lost my temper threatening you the way I did
before, but... shit." A feminine voice with a heavy Latin accent
announced lunch. Joey's bugs were so good we could hear the springs on the sofa
creak as someone stood. A few seconds later, Purcell's voice said, "Sit
over there," and we could hear even better than before. I whispered to Loutie, "This is
amazing." Loutie said, "They're not two-way
mikes, Tom. You don't have to whisper." Of course I knew that. It just seems like
you should whisper when you're eavesdropping. But explaining would have been
worse than nothing, so I said, "Oh," and Susan pretended not to notice. Chewing, slurping, and swallowing sounds
emanated from Purcell's and Poultrez's mouths and buzzed into our rented
kitchen through black-screened speakers. Loutie said, "There's a bug under the
table and one in the light over it." More masticating filtered through the
speakers, and Purcell said, "Thirty's all you get for Carli. You wanna
make more, you gotta do more. There's a lawyer named McInnes, Tom McInnes,
who's mixed up in this. I personally took the time to try and reason with him,
but the guy's a prick. Attacked one of my men by throwing food at him like some
dumb-ass kid and then stabbing his tire and running away like a chicken
shit." Purcell paused to gulp something and emit a barely stifled belch.
"Like I said, I gave him a chance to be smart. He screwed it for hisself.
So, here's the deal. I want you spending your time looking for the girl. That's
first. But, if you come across McInnes while you're doing it, and if you put a
bullet in his head, I'll add twenty thousand to the thirty thousand finder's
fee I'm offering for Carli." Poultrez's greed had new legs.
"Twenty's not much for killing somebody. Hell, back home, up in
Boston..." Purcell said, "Do I look like
somebody who gives a rat's ass what people in Boston-fucking-Massachusetts
do?" Poultrez didn't answer. "Twenty's the same deal I'm giving my
own men. One of 'em nails McInnes, I'll pay the twenty. You nail him, you get
the twenty." The room swirled—just a little—and I realized I was breathing too fast.
Shallow gusts filled the top shelf of my lungs and gushed out again under their
own power. I blinked and focused on breathing deeply and slowly. Two strong
hands squeezed my shoulders, and I jumped—again, just a
little. Susan was standing behind me, meaning to comfort me. I said, "That's interesting." Loutie looked unfazed. She said,
"Yeah. It is." chapter twenty Susan tried to put the best face on my
impending death. "Tom.
In a way, this is good. Isn't it? I mean, we've got Leroy Purcell on
tape." She looked at Loutie. "It is on tape, isn't it?" Loutie
nodded, and Susan turned back to me. "So, we've got him on tape taking out
a contract on your life. We can take that to the police and get them to do
something." I said, "Do what?" "Arrest him or something." "We illegally bugged Purcell's house,
Susan. Down the road somewhere, the tapes may or may not be admissible in
court, if we get that far. But, for now, we've got all kinds of problems with
them. Just to start, Joey and Loutie committed breaking and entering, which is
a felony, to hide the bugs. Joey would lose his investigator's license, he and
Loutie might do some jail time, and I'd expect the State Bar to question my
fitness to continue practicing law, since Joey and Loutie planted the bugs at
my direction." Susan said, "But if it'll save your
life." "Susan, if I knew turning over the
tapes would save your life, Carli's life, or mine, I'd turn them over to the
cops today. But it wouldn't work. It's only our word that that's actually
Purcell on the tapes. He'd claim we manufactured them. And he's connected down
here and we're not. Who do you think they're going to believe? The guy's scum,
but he's still a hero to a lot of people in Florida because of his football
days." Susan's eyes scanned the room, lingered on
the window, and came to rest on the listening equipment. She was completely
focused, trying with everything she had to find the good in what we had heard.
I was touched by how hard she was working not to think about what it really
meant. I said, "We're a long way from dead,
Susan. The tapes aren't important. What is important—the good part—is that we know about Purcell's plans
ahead of time." Susan brightened. "Yes, that is good.
Now you know to stay out of his way and not to go wandering around his house
again like you did this morning. Now we can figure out what to do." I've always read about people in danger
smiling bravely. That's what I tried to do. While Susan rummaged in the refrigerator
and began putting out cold chicken salad and sliced fruit for lunch, I trotted
upstairs and packed. Purcell's conversation with Poultrez had let me know one
thing. It let me know to get as far as possible from anyone I cared about; it
let me know that Susan's dyed hair wouldn't do much good if I was around to be
seen and shot at and, more or less, murdered. Purcell had never seen Susan—particularly outfitted with her new brunette persona. My presence
in the house would be a neon sign for Purcell and his tattooed toadies. The phone rang as I was packing my razor
and other bathroom stuff. Someone downstairs answered. I tossed the small
toilet kit into my duffel and carried my little hobo bundle down the rented
teak stairs and put it next to our canary-yellow door. Susan glanced at the
duffel and looked confused. Loutie held out the telephone receiver and said,
"It's Joey. I filled him in. He wants to talk to you." I put the phone against my ear and said,
"It's been a fun morning." Joey said, "Sounds like it. You get a
look at Rus Poultrez?" "Yeah. He's big. Not as tall as you,
but he weighs more. I thought he was some of Purcell's hired muscle when he
went in, if that tells you anything." The line was quiet for a few beats. Joey
said, "I hear somebody wants you dead." I didn't say anything.
"I wouldn't worry too much about it, Tom. But I do think you ought to come
down here with me. We can watch each other's back." "Not to mention that Susan and Loutie
will be safer with me gone." "Not to mention that." Joey
said, "Listen, the reason I called is our buddy, Thomas Bobby Haycock,
looks like he's getting ready to do a little smuggling. Maybe commit a felony
or two." "How can you tell?" "Just been watching him so much I
guess. I don't know if there's a list of reasons I think he's going out, but I
think he is. You know, he doesn't have any of that swamp trash nookie hanging
around. He gassed up the truck. And hell, I don't know, he just has the look
about him." "I'll call Billy Teeter and see if I
can rent his boat." "I'm thinking I should come with you
on the boat. You could run into some trouble out there." "No." I said, "I want you
to get over to the mainland and be ready to follow Haycock's truck when he goes
over tomorrow morning." Joey started to argue. I said, "We can tiptoe
around protecting each other, or we can figure this mess out and maybe bury
Purcell and his people." "I don't like it." "But I'm right." "Yeah," Joey said. "I
guess." And he hung up. I placed the receiver in its cradle, and
Susan's voice, unnaturally quiet, came from behind me. "Where are you
going?" I turned to face her. Loutie said,
"He's not running away, Susan." Susan said, "I know," but it
sounded like a question. Loutie said, "Tom's the only one of
us Purcell and his men have seen, Susan. If he's here and they want to kill
him, then..." Her voice trailed off. I said, "Joey says Haycock's getting
ready for another shipment tonight. I'm going back down to the island and get
Billy Teeter to take me out and have a look around." Susan said, "You packed before Joey
called about Haycock." I was stunned. Susan really did think I was running
out on her. Loutie quietly left the room. I walked over and put my arms around
Susan's waist. She placed her hands on my shoulders but not around me. She felt
stiff in my arms. I asked, "Do you really think I'd run
out on you because I'm scared?" Susan said, "I've been dealing with a
lot by myself for a long time, Tom. I kind of thought that was over." I
said her name. She shook her head and kept talking. "I'm not eighteen. I
know that just because we feel the way we do... Well, I know lust, or whatever
this is, doesn't always last. But I care about you, and I thought you'd be
someone to get through the bad stuff with even if we didn't last as
lovers." "I thought the same thing, Susan. But
I can't stay here like some kind of murder beacon to bring the Bodines down on
you and Loutie." Susan said, "I don't think you're
running out and leaving me at Purcell's mercy. I think you're being a noble
ass. You're going to leave here and get killed, and I'll get to go through
another six months of guilt and misery and hell like the ones after Bird
died." I said, "Oh." Twin crescents of tears filled Susan's
lower lids above the uncharacteristic, spiky shelves of dark mascara. Loutie
and I had both read her wrong. Susan wasn't upset because she thought I was a coward.
She was getting mad at me in advance for getting killed. I smiled. "Jeez, Susan, just go ahead
and kill me off, why don't you?" I kissed her and tasted salt. She pushed
away, then stood on her toes and put her arms around my neck. I said, "I'm
kind of a resourceful guy. I'll be fine. And remember, Joey will be around, and
I'm not sure Joey's someone who can actually be killed. And, as for you,
you couldn't ask for better protection than that scary chick in the other
room." From the living room, Loutie said, "I
heard that." Susan laughed, and I kissed her again.
This time, she kissed back. Loutie Blue and I walked outside and,
after I opened the trunk of my rented, silver-blue Bonneville and tossed my
duffel inside, we stood by the car and talked. Loutie wanted to follow Rus
Poultrez when he left Purcell's place. I wanted her to stay in Seaside, keep an
eye on Purcell, and keep Susan safe. The bottom line was that Joey worked for
me and Loutie worked for Joey. So, in the end, I more or less insisted, and she
stayed with Susan. I cruised into Apalachicola a few minutes
before four. A soft breeze ruffled the fronds of tall palms lining the main
drag; housewives steered station wagons and four-by-fours in and out of the
Piggly Wiggly parking lot; a bony-tailed real estate type taped new listings on
a plateglass window; and twenty or thirty cars and pickups cruised the streets
with aimless intent. I curved hard in the air, circling the marina, and
followed the suspended pavement over the bay and out of town. Fifteen minutes
later, I turned right toward St. George and then left onto the narrow county
road leading into Eastpoint. I had called ahead. I was expected. Billy Teeter's partner-in-seafood, Julie,
was planted in the same porch chair she had occupied the last time I was there.
I parked and stepped out onto the narrow, sandy parking area. I said,
"Hello," and she nodded. She just nodded. Julie's features stayed
noncommittal. I asked, "Where's Mr. Teeter?" "Around back." "I need to park off the street."
Julie just looked at me. I added, "You know, out of sight." She said, "Drive around back,"
as if any fool would have known to do that. I steered over faint wheel tracks leading
across the ragged yard and around the left side of Teeter's Seafood and pulled
in close to the back of the shack. A sandy pathway led down the shoreline past
a series of commercial docks where blue-gray pelicans perched atop two of the
creosote pilings that stuck up above concrete walkways. Diving bunches of ugly,
mottled gulls picked at mounds of discarded shellfish that held just enough
decaying flesh to keep the birds interested and to fill the air with the bitter
stink of sea animals dying on land. Twenty yards west of the shack, Billy
Teeter's bear-like form rose above the deck of a shrimp boat so perfectly
maintained that it looked like it had just come out of dry dock. I waved, and
Billy parted his scruffy, bearded face into a surprisingly welcoming smile full
of nicotined teeth. Down the path and out on the dock next to
the Teeter Two, I called out. "Hello!" Teeter said, "You gonna need a coat
out on the water." I told him I had one and went back to the rented
Pontiac to get it out of the duffel. Back on the dock, I said, "Am I
supposed to ask permission to come aboard?" Billy Teeter smiled, put one foot on the
gunwale, and reached out a hand. "Get on up here, boy." Most
white-collar types would never believe a human hand could get that hard. I
thought about what my own soft lawyer's hand must have felt like to Billy as he
pulled my hundred and ninety pounds over the gunwale and into the boat with no
more effort than most men would expend pulling a child into the family van.
Billy said, "It's good to see you again, Tom." I reached into my
pocket and came out with two hundred fifty dollars, and Billy shook his scruffy
brown and gray chin. "No, sir. I ain't done the work yet. You pay when we
get back." I held out the money. "You better
take it. If I fall in the water out there and drown, you may not get
paid." The old man looked into my eyes before
shifting his glance to my hand as he took the money and pushed it deep inside
his hip pocket. In a matter-of-fact voice, he said, "You think you're
kidding." I smiled. He didn't. Billy turned and
called out, "Willie!" A nineteen-year-old version of the captain
emerged from the tiny bridge. Billy's namesake stood about five ten. He had a
football player's overdeveloped neck and the thick back and shoulder muscles of
a shrimper. Brown hair stood erect on the boy's tanned head in an old-fashioned
crew cut, and his square chin and jaws were smudged with a dark stubble of
Teeter family whiskers. If young Willie had grown a seaman's beard, his
resemblance to old Billy Teeter would have been almost comical. Captain Billy said, "This here's Mr.
McInnes." Willie didn't speak. I reached out and shook a limp, calloused
hand; and I was struck, not for the first time, by how softly most men who work
with their hands shake hands with other men. Maybe it's just something that
people outside the white-collar world don't do in the ordinary course of their
lives, so they never get very good at it. Or maybe they're just afraid they'll
hurt you. "Call me Tom." Billy said, "Get Tom a life jacket.
He's gonna be wearing it soon as we leave the dock." I doubted that the
Teeters bothered with life jackets while shrimping, and that doubt was verified
by young Willie's amused expression. Billy saw his grandson's face too. He
said, "Straighten up, Willie. Tom's a paying passenger. It's gonna be your
butt gets kicked if I see him with that jacket off." Willie said, "I'll keep an eye on
him, Granddaddy," but he kept smiling. Over the next two hours, the three of us
talked over the best way to proceed. Billy sat on a crate, Willie sat on the
gunwale, and I sat cross-legged on my bright orange, oddly emasculating life
jacket. I described the location on Dog Island where I thought
the smugglers would land around midnight. Billy and Willie discussed channels,
oyster beds, and other things I didn't know a lot about. Finally, Billy said he
knew all he needed to know. He said we would wait until nine to leave. "Be
black dark by then. And we don't want to be floating around out there too long
without putting nets in the water. It'd look wrong if anybody cared enough to
pay us any attention." With three hours more to kill, Willie
found a deck of cards and we played stud poker to pass the time. The kid had
grinned a little too broadly about Billy sentencing me to spend my hours on the
water in a life jacket, so I played a little harder than I should have against
a nineteen-year-old and ended up with eighteen dollars of his money. It was not
a mature exhibition. My only saving grace was that I let his grandfather win
most of it back. By 8:40, my playground honor felt mostly restored, and we were
ready to get under way. I walked back to the stern, away from the shrimpers,
and placed a call to Susan. There was no news of Carli. Willie cast off while Captain Billy fired
the diesels. As we nosed away from the dock, young Willie walked up holding my
orange flotation device by one finger like it was a dainty thing disdainful to
his gender. I took it and tied it on. chapter twenty-one Inside Apalachicola Bay, black water
chopped against the hull in
jarring stutters. Captain Billy moved west along the buoy-marked intracoastal
waterway, steering a course parallel with the shore before turning toward the
dark silhouette of an ancient lighthouse on Little St. George Island. A fine, stinging rain began to fall as we
cruised through the mouth of Bob Sikes Cut a few minutes after nine. Gray
boulders held the edges of the narrow passage between St. George Island to the
east and Little St. George to the west. Both islands are long, narrow strips of
land, especially thin near the cut, and a strong man could come close to
throwing a rock from one end to the other and from one island to the next.
Inside the cut, stuttering chop turned smooth and then rose to a deep, steady
roll as the boat pushed out into the Gulf. Our bobbing bow cut a line to the moonlit horizon,
which seemed to roll up and down and side to side in an ever-changing figure
eight with no sense of balance or equilibrium. It was fascinating to watch
until I felt the queasily familiar pressure on the sides of my throat, the
beginning flow of saliva, and the thick ropes of nausea crawling inside my
stomach. I stepped outside the bridge cabin and washed away most of the nausea
by leaning my head back, opening my mouth, and letting rain pellets splatter my
face and neck and tongue. Captain Billy called out. "Boy, you
gonna get cold later with that rainwater down your shirt." I decided I'd worry about later when it
came. I hadn't had dinner, and the thought of dry heaves made a little freezing
rain seem comforting by comparison. I yelled over the engines. "How
far?" "Be there in thirty minutes or so. Taking
the long way around. We got plenty of time." The shore was a dotted line of lights now,
and, in the distance, lightning began to splinter the horizon. Slowly, the
ropes of nausea uncoiled and settled, almost comfortingly, into one small
corner of my stomach. Then Billy turned east toward Dog Island. Heading
directly into the waves had provided me with one sort of challenge, but now we
steered a course parallel to the shore and the rolling swell gave the boat a
whole new disconcerting movement and personality. As we moved back and forth,
side to side, up and down, and sometimes, it seemed, round and round in a
horizontal kind of way, my mind searched desperately for distraction, and I
thought of an old joke about a young boy who married an older woman. After his
honeymoon, the boy's father asked if the girl had been a virgin. The boy
responded that he thought the up-and-down had come naturally but the
round-and-round must have been learned. I smiled, then leaned out over the
gunwale and emptied Susan's chicken-salad-and-sliced-fruit lunch into the Gulf
of Mexico. The rest of our trip to the waters off Dog
Island proved to be personally difficult, gastronomically repetitive, and a
source of genuine amusement to the Teeter men. But, at first, it appeared to
have been worth it. As we neared the island, Captain Billy called out my name.
I loosened my death grip on the railing that had seen so much of my inner
workings and looked up. He pointed at a short row of white lights suspended
beneath a bright blue dot in the distance. I yelled, "What is it?" "Big pleasure boat." "How can you tell?" Billy looked concerned about my faculties.
He yelled, " 'Cause it looks like one." Obviously he saw something I didn't, but
that wasn't surprising. Billy Teeter had spent the better part of fifty years
on those waters, much of it shrimping at night. I had to assume that he knew
what he was talking about. It was close to ten. Billy cut the engines
to an idle and came out to stand beside me. He was wearing full yellow rain
gear like a fisherman in a children's story. "Whatcha wanna do?" I asked, "How suspicious would it
look for us to just sit here and watch them for a while?" "Probably be fine. Depends on how
jumpy they are. The captain's gonna know shrimpers set still all the time to
rig nets or check the water or just decide where to head next. With this rain
comin' down, anybody who knows boats is likely gonna figure we're tryin' to
figure whether to head back in." "So we're fine here for a
while." "Yep." At exactly 11:00 p.m., a blue spotlight flashed three times on the deck of the
yacht. Young Willie had joined us; he was outfitted in a green plastic poncho.
I told the Teeter men about the signal Joey and I had seen a week earlier at
midnight on a deserted stretch of beach on Dog Island. And we waited. Willie
said, "I reckon they're not too worried about us if they're givin' the
same signal." Through silver streaks of rain, a pair of
headlights flashed three times on shore, and I said, "It doesn't look like
it. It looks like they're going to go ahead with the drop-off." Young Willie was jumpy. I could almost
hear the adrenaline pumping inside his poncho. A smaller blue light flashed
midway between the yacht and the shoreline, and Willie pointed and said,
"Look! Look at that. What're they doing?" I said, "That's the drop-off boat.
They're taking whatever they're smuggling to shore." Willie said, "Cool," and Captain
Billy shook his head. Another set of blue flashes was answered by
headlights. I said, "The men in the drop-off boat are armed. We better
cruise over now and check out the yacht. I'm guessing there'll just be one or
two men left onboard. They've got to be figuring that any trouble is going to
come onshore." Billy climbed into the bridge cabin and
eased the engines into gear. We had started our rolling approach when a loud
hum approached the stern out of the night. I called Billy and pointed into the
dark rain. Billy squinted at me and then at the piece of night I had pointed
into and then at me again. I stepped up next to the small door leading
into the covered bridge. "Somebody's out there. I hear a loud motor, like
a speedboat or something." "Whatcha wanna do? It's your
dollar." I said, "Keep moving as fast as you
can." Just as Billy pushed the throttle wide
open, a spotlight swept a silver path through the rain and came to rest on the
bridge. A twenty-foot cigar boat pulled up alongside. Billy called out.
"We ain't gonna outrun that." I said, "Turn away from them,"
and Billy spun the chromed wheel. The speedboat shot past us and quickly began
to circle back. I pulled the 9mm out of my back waistband,
and Billy said, "Whoa. I didn't sign up to shoot nobody. Put that thing
back where you got it." "What if they shoot at us
first?" "Then you can take it out." He
reached up to pat a twelve-gauge pump hung from two brass stirrups above the
front glass. The rear stock had been sawed off and shaped into a pistol grip.
"Somebody points a gun at this boat, and I'll blow their ass out of the
water. You don't worry about that." Billy was a tough old bird, but I held on
to my Browning. The cigar boat was alongside again. Its narrow spotlight swept
the deck, stopping on young Willie who gave them a one-finger salute through
pouring rain that shone like tinsel in the light's beam. A loud, sharp crack
cut the night air, and Willie went over the side. I screamed at Billy. "Stop!
Stop this thing. Willie's in the water." Billy yanked down on the throttle
arm. The shrimp boat dropped its nose into the surf, and, once again, the cigar
boat shot past. I shouted, "I'll go after Willie. Use the shotgun." As I turned to run, Billy's leathery hand
closed painfully on my bicep. "Stay still. You get out in the water, and
they'll run you down or shoot you too. We can't do nothin' for Willie till we
take care of that boat." We could hear the speedboat coming back. Billy
said, "Get down. I'll try to hit the spotlight. You unload that pistol
into whoever's drivin'." I nodded and wondered if I'd have that much sense,
that kind of balls, if someone I loved was flailing around in the night ocean
with a gunshot wound. The speedboat revved and then cut to idle
as it came near. A yellow beam hit the bow, and Billy waved me
back. I ran doubled over to the stern and hunkered down behind a pile of nets.
The light swept back over the deck and then forward again to the bridge cabin.
Without warning, automatic gunfire splintered Billy's bridge into bits of glass
and wood that spun and flashed across the light like lethal fireflies. Shit.
I popped up and put three shots as close to the light as I could,
considering that I was firing from the deck of one rolling boat to another. The
light spun toward me, and I hit the fiberglass-coated metal deck just before
automatic gunfire made the netting pop and dance above my head. A loud boom interrupted the fast crack of
automatic fire, and the spotlight blew, spewing electric sparks into the night.
Two more booms came in quick succession. Billy was unloading on the boat. I
rolled away from the netting and jumped up. Two dark bodies moved inside the
cigar boat. I took aim at the form behind the wheel and had fired six jarring
shots before the shadow jumped and fell sideways. Two more booms echoed across
the water, and flames shot out of the oversized motor next to the larger man
who had fired the automatic weapon. The big man dove forward. I pumped three
rounds into the speedboat and the windshield fell and twisted like a gleaming
mirror reflecting fire from the engine. Something heavy splashed, and the big
man was in the driver's seat. The torched engine roared. The boat hooked hard
to port, and its bow shot out of the water as the stern scraped the hull of the
Teeter Two. I was on my feet screaming into the night,
emptying my clip into the flaming cigar boat. I stared hard through the rain to
see who had done this, to see who Billy Teeter and I would have to kill when we
got home. The bullet-shaped boat skipped down the larger boat's hull and, just
before roaring away, the driver looked across the gunwale directly into my
face. Then Carli's father, the New England cod fisherman, literally fired off
into the night. Billy stood beside me. I cussed. Billy
grabbed my arm. He said, "He's going the wrong way. Watch him. He's gonna
hit." Poultrez zoomed toward shore trailing
flames and thick smoke like a jet afterburner. I said, "It's going to
blow." "Won't need to. Watch." A loud, mechanical ripping noise echoed
across the water, and Poultrez's flaming bullet boat shot into the air, tucked
its fiery tail under, and slapped top down into the surf sending a gush of
black seawater into the air. I said, "What the hell?" "Oyster beds." Billy said,
"Let's go find my grandboy." While Billy cleared broken glass off the
bridge and got the boat going, I found a flashlight and examined the hull
section scraped by Purcell's cigar boat. It was going to need some woodwork and
paint—and I was going to pay for it—but, as far as I could tell, we weren't in any danger of sinking. Billy was working his spotlight back and
forth across the water, steering carefully toward the place where Willie went
over. The old man was slowly and rhythmically clenching his jaw with each
swivel of the lamp. I moved up to the bow. I heard Billy using his radio,
calling for help. Then I heard something else—a voice,
thin and distant. I held up my hand. Billy pulled back on the throttle and
stepped out to look. I said, "Cut the engine. I think I
hear something." The old man reached inside the bullet-riddled bridge
cabin and twisted a key, and the Gulf fell silent. I said, "Move the
light. See if you can see him." The spot swept across rolling waves, and
the thin voice came again. "He's seeing the light. Stop!" Sixty yards off the starboard bow, an
eerily white head bobbed in the waves. I pointed, and Billy turned over the
engines and moved the right way. I lost Willie twice in thirty yards. Then we
were on him, and I dropped over the side. The Gulf in March was still cold enough to
take my breath when I hit the water. Willie's pale head seemed to float toward
me as I paddled in place. His eyes were open, his lips blue and trembling. I
managed to slide my arm under his and grip him across the chest. I kicked hard
and seemed to paddle in place again while, this time, the boat floated toward
me. Billy had a ladder over the side. I perched Willie on the bottom rung, held
on with my left fist, and pushed his hypothermic mass up into Billy's strong
arms with my right hand. I hung there trying to catch my breath and quickly
realized the water was sapping my breath and my strength. I made it up the
ladder alone. On deck, Captain Billy had Willie on his
stomach, alternately pressing his upper back and lifting his underarms. It's
what the United States Marines taught in 1942, and it works, just not that
well. I said, "Move," and was surprised when Billy complied. I
flipped Willie onto his back and checked his pulse and breathing. The first was
strong. The second was weak and shallow. I put a hand under Willie's neck to
cock his head back and swept the back of his tongue with my fingers to check
for blockage. Then I placed my lips over his clammy, whiskered mouth and pushed
a lung full of air into his chest. Willie gurgled and choked the air back out.
Again, I breathed deeply into the young man's lungs; and he vomited violently
into my mouth. Reeling backward, I spit out Willie's mess and then puked the
last few morsels of my lunch across Willie's chest and onto the deck. He was breathing strongly on his own, so I
began checking for gunshot wounds. There weren't any. I looked up at Billy.
"He's not shot. He got some water in his lungs when he hit the water. You
got any blankets?" Billy immediately pulled off his coat and put it over
his grandson. A few seconds later, he was back with a silver emergency blanket
and two large sheets of opaque plastic. I got Willie as comfortable as possible
on the rolling, rain-soaked deck while the old man throttled up and headed for
shore. God and nature protect teenage boys.
Willie began to come around before we hit the bay. Captain Billy had radioed
ahead for help, and an ambulance met us at the dock. Willie, complaining loudly
now, got lifted onto a stretcher and loaded into the ambulance. Billy climbed
into the front seat next to a paramedic, and the white van screamed off into
the night. I was left standing on the dock, checking
the lines, surveying the damage, and generally feeling like a complete asshole
for involving the Teeters in a death match with Carli's father and the Bodines.
I would pay for the damage. I would give Captain Teeter one hell of a bonus.
I'd even pay for Willie's medical bills. But none of that was going to make me
any less of a prick for having involved them. It was past midnight and cold. My
saltwater-soaked clothes felt hard and rough on my skin. I opened the trunk and
pulled out my duffel. No one was around. I found clean underwear, a shirt and
chinos. I had stripped and, thankfully, pulled on dry boxers when Billy's
partner, Julie, came around the corner of the shack. I started to apologize; then
I saw the two men behind her. They wore dark suits and ties, and they had the
look of men you run from in the night. I pulled on my pants. I smiled. I spun on
the balls of my feet and ploughed into the widest human being I have ever had
the displeasure of meeting. chapter twenty-two The human wall looted like an Hispanic Odd
Job, minus the decapitating
bowler. This one just had a gun, which he used to tap me on the head until he
had my complete attention. He didn't say much. One of the other men, one of the
ones with Julie, spoke. "Come with us, please." "Where?" It seemed a reasonable
question. Odd Job said, "Move," and gave
me a shove. I turned and looked for my 9mm inside the Bonneville's open trunk.
It was there, no more than a foot from the bumper where I could easily grab it
as I walked by and, if I were really lucky, click off the safety, chamber a
round, and shoot one of these guys before the other two pumped me full of
little pieces of metal. And, at that moment, standing in the shadows behind a
shrimper's shack at midnight with a twenty-thousand-dollar bounty on my head,
it didn't seem like a particularly bad idea. Fortunately, Julie saw me look.
She stepped forward into pale yellow light from inside the trunk, picked up the
Browning, and fixed me with a look of such hatred that I thought she was going
to shoot me herself. Instead, she turned and handed my gun to one of her
escorts. Odd Job bumped me on the head again and repeated, "Move." "Mind if I get a shirt?" He pushed me aside, rummaged in my duffel
while keeping his narrow black eyes trained on my face, and handed me a
sweatshirt. More precisely, he shoved the wadded shirt against my chest with
enough aggression to leave no doubt that he enjoyed his work, and, as he
manhandled me, Odd Job repeated his last instruction. "Move." I wanted to stick a fist in one of his
nasty little porcine eyes—eyes that looked like someone had slit his
dark meaty face with a razor to reveal onyx marbles—but the man had a gun and he outweighed me by a hundred pounds, so
what I did was move. The two suits led the way. Julie followed
them. I followed her, and Odd Job brought up the rear. We circled Teeter's
Seafood, mounted the porch, and walked in through the front room where, during
the daytime, customers bought shrimp and fish and frozen crab cakes so good
they "taste like something that came off a menu at a restaurant." We
walked through a doorway into a back room that looked like an old, single guy's
idea of a den. A wood-burning stove squatted in the back right corner beneath a
crooked length of stovepipe that angled out through the rough paneled wall. The
front right corner held an abused television in a stained and chipped wooden
cabinet. Opposite the stove and the television, antlered deer heads, plaster-filled
fish with lacquered scales, and worn fishing tackle hung from the walls. Below
the trophies and spinning rods, a collection of upholstered chairs and sofas
waited in varying states of distress. As we entered, a dark, slender man in a
two-thousand-dollar suit rose effortlessly out of an orange Naugahyde chair and
stepped forward. "You are Thomas McInnes?" I was a little overwhelmed and more than a
little afraid, and I didn't answer right away. Odd Job took offense and tapped
me once again on the crown with the barrel of his automatic. I found my voice,
"You want to talk to me, tell Odd Job to quit hitting me on the
head." The dark man held up his palm at Odd Job,
and, with the quiet authority of someone who was used to being obeyed, he said,
"Please." Then he nodded at the door and my head tapper walked out,
turning sideways to navigate the opening. The dark man turned back to look into
my eyes. "I apologize, seсor. Please sit down." He motioned at a
used-up La-Z-Boy upholstered in mustard hopsack and punctuated with exposed
tufts of almost matching foam rubber. I sat. One of the suits, the one who had
spoken, moved to the far wall and watched. He held what appeared to be an UZI
in one hand. At least, it looked like what I imagined an UZI would probably
look like. The second suit left the room, I assumed to help Odd Job secure the
perimeter or some such thing. The dark man was attired with the
formality expected of a business executive in Europe or Latin America. Thick
black hair swept back from a narrow forehead and would have curled if he had
been the sort of man to allow such lack of control. He said, "Are you comfortable?" "No." He smiled. "No, seсor. Yours is not a
comfortable situation." He sat back and studied me. "You like
cigars?" "Sure." He reached inside his coat and produced a
black alligator cigar case. As he opened it, he said, "Would you like
one?" "No." He didn't appear surprised or offended. He
pulled a huge, unwrapped cigar from the case, glanced at the foot, which had
already been cut, and put it in his mouth. The UZI guy walked forward, reaching
into his pocket with the obvious intention of lighting the cigar. The dark man
held up his palm, just as he had earlier, and the UZI guy stopped and returned
to his corner. I said, "Got 'em trained with hand
signals." "Seсor?" "Nothing." He lit his cigar with a match, and he took
a while doing it. When he had it going, he said, "My name is Carlos
Sanchez." "Nice to meet you. I'm John
Smith." Once again, he smiled. "Yes. I see
what you mean. But it is something to call me. We have business to
discuss." A.k.a. Carlos Sanchez smoked his Havana
the way only Central and South Americans smoke them, drawing the thick, pungent
smoke deep into his lungs and then letting it out through his mouth and nostrils.
He said, "You are an intelligent man. Or, more precisely, you are 'smart.'
That is the word we hear about you. "Tom McInnes is smart.'" "I feel so good about myself
now." "Seсor?" "What do you want?" "We want you to leave Leroy Purcell
and his group alone." I said, "What?" and he started
to repeat. "No, I hear you. I just don't believe what I hear. Your buddy,
Leroy Purcell, has taken out a twenty-thousand-dollar contract on my life. He's
trying to kill a young girl who's a client of mine, and, I'm not certain, but
he's probably got a contract out on another woman who's a better person than
you and me put together." Sanchez simply said, "Susan
Fitzsimmons." I looked at him. "And Carli Poultrez. Daughter of
Russell Poultrez of Gloucester, Massachusetts." I kept looking at him and thought some
more before I spoke. "Are you offering an end to this? Can you guarantee
the safety of Susan and Carli if we agree to walk away from Purcell and his
people?" "I can try to arrange these things. I
cannot guarantee. Seсor Purcell is an unpredictable and
dangerous man. But I believe I can arrange for your safety and that of Seсora
Fitzsimmons." "And Carli?" Sanchez shook his head. "Are you saying Carli's not part of
the deal?" "I'm afraid she is not. That part has
gone too far. But I can arrange..." I interrupted. "Who are you? I've
been sitting here talking with you, basically humoring you, because there's a
guy with a gun over there. But it looks like you know everything about me and
my clients and ... Who the hell are you?" Sanchez rolled his cigar between a
manicured thumb and a set of fragile-looking, tanned fingers, then raised the
moist foot of the Churchill to his lips and turned the ash red as he pulled
smoke into his lungs. He was thinking. Considering. He reached inside his
tailored coat, once again pulled out the alligator case, removed the cap, and
held out the cigars. "Please." This time I took one—maybe I needed a prop too—and he lit it
for me with a wide, flat match. As he replaced the case in his inside pocket,
Sanchez said, "I work with a group of Cuban patriots who are pursuing a
number of goals. None of which are in any way contrary to the interests of the
United States. Please understand that. It is most important. We have great
respect for the United States and wish to see many, if not all, of its ideals
emulated in a free and democratic Cuba." He stopped to smoke and look at
the UZI guy. Some unspoken communication passed between them. He went on.
"You, Seсor McInnes, and your two clients have become involved, through no
fault of your own, with something that could become quite ...
unmanageable." He paused to give me a chance to comment
on that. I didn't. He said, "I am told that either Susan
Fitzsimmons or Carli Poultrez witnessed a murder last Wednesday night on St.
George Island. Is that correct?" I looked at him some more. Sanchez said,
"We have a problem. Your clients are in danger because of what one or both
of them saw, and, of course, because they want to go to the police and see
justice done. Unfortunately, I cannot allow them to take that action." "You can't allow that, huh?" "No. I'm afraid I cannot. You see,
Leroy Purcell did kill someone that night." "Who?" "Seсor?" "Do you know who he killed?" "Not that it should matter to you, Seсor McInnes, but no. I do not. It was, as they say, an internal
matter." "Is that what Purcell says?" "That is precisely what he says. So,
you see, other than the understandable shock of witnessing such an, ah, event,
it was a bad ending between two men who both worked in the kind of business
where such things are, if not foreseeable, at least they are not unexpected. In
any event, you will never prove that anyone died inside that cottage. All
evidence has been obliterated, and, if it becomes necessary, your clients will
disappear along with the rest of the evidence." "Is that how Cuban patriots do
business?" "We will protect our interests. It is
that simple. We will take any and all necessary actions, however distasteful,
to pursue and protect our interests. As far as 'doing business,' as you put it,
we do business with Mr. Purcell and his organization because, at this time, it
serves those interests." "With the Bodines." He smiled. "Yes. I believe that is
how they are known by the police. In any event, they perform essential services
for me and my organization. And I cannot allow you to cause the authorities to
investigate the murder on St. George Island." "How do you plan to stop us? I mean,
other than killing me, which, just so you'll know, won't stop anything." "It is very simple, Mr. McInnes. If
you cannot promise to cease your attempts to jail Mr. Purcell and guarantee
that you can control your clients, then we will kill you and everyone else who
is involved." He paused, and then said, "Tonight." "But Carli's not part of the deal,
right? Keeping a teenage girl alive isn't something that serves your
'interests.'" He shook his patrician head. "Seсor McInnes, we are interested. The Bodines are not. They do not
trust the girl—this runaway who works as a waitress—to keep silent." "And if I can't agree to
that..." I needed to think, to stretch out the conversation and run
Sanchez's offer around in my head. I said, "These are decent people you're
talking about murdering." "That is why we are talking." "And I think I should point out that
I have a few friends who are kind of hard to kill." Sanchez said, "The white giant and
his associates? Yes. That is another reason we are talking." "Well, that's honest." Sanchez
struck another wide match and held it out toward me. I hadn't realized my cigar
had gone out, since I hadn't really wanted the damn thing to begin with. I
leaned forward and let him relight the ash. I said, "The family on the
beach on Dog Island the other night. They were some of your people, weren't
they? Purcell smuggles in illegal immigrants. People fleeing Cuba? Hot people
from other places?" He didn't answer, but then I really didn't expect him
to. I was thinking out loud. "Whatever. The guy who came in with his
family is kind of famous, I guess." Again, Sanchez didn't respond, but he
couldn't stop a small ripple of surprise, maybe even panic, from moving across
his handsome features. And I thought, not for the first time, that there seemed
to be much more to the chubby illegal immigrant with the pretty wife and the
cloned son than just another "patriot" seeking a better life in Los
Estados Unidos. I registered Sanchez's discomfort and made a mental note to
remember the tender spot. I said, "I guess South Florida has gotten too
hot. So now you're bringing in warm bodies through the Panhandle. And nobody
does illegal business on the Panhandle without going through the Bodines." Now Sanchez spoke. "We do business
where we please." "But it's easier to work with an
existing operation than to set up your own from scratch." Sanchez was letting me think. He nodded
slowly. "It is easier." I decided to float some of Squirley
McCall's information and see if I could get a reaction. "Is it easier to
do business with an arms smuggler?" Sanchez didn't answer. I took a
different tack. "And is it easier to work with someone who wants to kill
three or four innocent people than it is to get rid of one criminal who's
turned a spotlight on your group? And he'll do it again. Leroy Purcell is a
bomb waiting to explode in your face." Sanchez said, "I'm sure you are a
talented lawyer. But we are not bargaining." "Then explain about Carli. You said
she's not part of the deal. Why is that? Why is it you can't protect a teenage
girl who's more willing to forget all this than I am?" "It has gone too far. Arrangements
have been made. Payments have been accepted, and, unfortunately, emotion is
involved. Arguments from you will not help. I have made those same arguments to
no avail. The feeling is that a point, an, ah, example, must be made. Too many of
the Bodines know of her involvement. This problem, seсor, has digressed into notions of honor and control in ... in some
minds." "That doesn't make any sense. Why do
I get to walk away? Why does Susan get to walk away? They've already tried to
kill her once at her beach house." "First of all, you, Seсor McInnes, did not actually witness anything. You are an
attorney, a professional, and, in Leroy Purcell's view, something of a
mercenary. He, therefore, believes that your actions are motivated by considered
self-interest. He believes that if it is better for you to keep quiet, then
that is what you will do." "That's funny. I thought he wanted me
dead." "He and I engaged in discussions this
evening that I am certain have influenced his view." "What about Susan?" "Seсora Fitzsimmons is an adult. She
is well-off and has much to protect. Also, Purcell is aware of a long-term
relationship between the seсora and yourself. He believes that your silence
will be guaranteed by including her in the offer." Sanchez paused to
relight his cigar and fill his chest with smoke. He said, "Which brings us
to the issue of Carli Poultrez. She is young. She is frivolous, and she is from
the peasant classes. Even I would not expect her to control her tongue.
Purcell, of course, feels even more strongly on this point. And, as I have
said, he believes an example must be made. It is, he believes, important to his
position with the Bodines. In his mind, the Poultrez girl is the obvious choice
for that example." "And I'm expected to just turn my
back on her and walk away?" "Seсor McInnes,
that is exactly what Purcell expects you to do. In your place, he would do so
without a second thought." My mind raced. I could, I thought, react
loudly and emotionally and get myself and a handful of my favorite people
killed, or I could accept Purcell's deal—protecting
Susan's life and my own—and take steps to find Carli and get her
to safety, assuming I could find her before the Bodines did. But that option,
while immeasurably superior to the first, still left Carli with a lifetime of
looking over her shoulder, waiting for a bullet or a knife or just a quick
shove at a busy intersection. His quiet voice startled me. "You are
thinking." It was a statement. I nodded. "Do you
care what I do, so long as my actions do not expose your operation or bring the
authorities into the equation?" Sanchez just smiled at me through a
curtain of cigar smoke. I said, "I will not go to the police.
Neither will Susan Fitzsimmons." Sanchez stood and walked to the door. He stopped
and said, "You have chosen a proper path, seсor. Thank you for your time
and for... the intelligence of your response." I studied his spare,
intelligent features. He said, "Be careful, Seсor McInnes. We have, for many reasons, gone to great lengths to
avoid bloodshed. It is the right thing to do, and it is the smart thing to do.
But, please make no mistake, just causes such as ours produce zealots—useful men who believe the greater the violence, the greater their
commitment to the cause. So, as I said, please be most careful." He
paused, and, as if mentioning an afterthought, said, "And you should know
that a deputy sheriff in Apalachicola, a Mickey Burns, has been asking
questions about you." Sanchez turned to leave. I said, "One
more thing," and he paused in the doorway. "Your buddy Purcell
threatened me with, in his words, 'a crazy, mean-ass spic' who likes to cut
people up and play with their guts. Purcell said all he'd have to do is make a
phone call." Sanchez's eyes narrowed, and small muscles knotted in his
slender jaw. "That wouldn't be the kind of 'zealot' you're so proud of,
would it?" Sanchez opened his mouth to answer, then
closed it again without emitting a sound. He cocked his head to one side as if
physically rolling thoughts around in his skull. Finally, he said, "I will
control my people, and I think Leroy Purcell can control his. But," he
hesitated, "some people, some ... forces are beyond reason and
control." "And one of these forces—one who likes to play with knives and other people's guts—just may turn up if I don't walk away. Is that the bottom
line?" Sanchez met my eyes and held them before
turning and walking out of the room, followed closely by the UZI man. I looked around the room at the
decapitated deer and glass-eyed fish and felt a certain kinship. Sanchez's cigar tasted heavy and bitter. I
stood and walked over to poke it through the mouth of the cast-iron stove
before leaving. In the front room, perched on a red commercial cooler with Coca-Cola
written on the front, sat Julie the seafood woman. I stopped to look at
her. She looked back. I put two dollars on the counter and said,
"I'd like a beer." She said, "I ain't giving you nothing." I walked around the counter and stood in
front of her. She sat on one of the cooler's two chrome doors. I opened the
other one and found a cold Coors. Julie looked furious but didn't move to stop
me. I asked, "What did I do to you?" "You come close to getting Willie
killed tonight for one thing." "What's the other thing?" "Huh?" "What else have I done to get you so
mad?" "You done enough. You mess with one
of us down here and you messed with all of us." "Is Captain Billy one of you? Is
Peety Boy?" Julie's face flushed. She looked at the
floor and muttered, "You messed with Sonny." Now, she had my full
attention. "Made him look bad to his boss. We ain't gonna put up with
that." "What's Sonny to you?" Julie
didn't answer. I said, "He's on his way here, isn't he?" Now she smiled. Sonny was coming to kill
me. chapter twenty-three "I know you want me to stick around
and get dismembered by Sonny,
but I'm leaving. Sorry." As I spoke, Julie put her right foot against the
counter, blocking my path by creating a bridge with her leg between the red
cooler and the Formica counter. I said, "You've got to be kidding,"
and turned to put my left buttock on the counter to swivel my legs over and
leave. But Julie really had not been kidding. I
glimpsed an amber flash just in time to dodge an unopened bottle of Budweiser
swung hard at my left ear. A violent breeze swept the tip of my nose as I
jerked my head back and pivoted over the counter. Julie seemed to feel deeply
about not wanting me to leave. I, on the other hand, felt just as deeply that
rolling around the floor trading punches with a female fishmonger would
irreparably damage my self-image—particularly if
she won. So, as soon as my bare feet hit floorboards, I sprinted through the
open front door and into the night. Julie's longneck exploded against the door
frame behind me, but I was gone. Not only did Julie decline to chase me, which
would have been undignified for both of us, but she also confounded
expectations by failing to pelt my windshield with bottled beverages as my
rented Pontiac spun around the front corner of the shack and screeched onto the
road. I could only guess that she was busy calling Sonny or maybe looking for
one of Captain Billy's old shotguns. This, I thought, is not why I went to law
school. A mile or two west of the causeway to St.
George, a speeding Apalachicola Sheriff's Department cruiser met me on Highway
98, going, I suspected, where I had come from. I couldn't tell for sure whether
the uniformed driver was my old compatriot Mickey Burns, since, speeding at
eighty miles an hour through the night, one black-and-white looks pretty much
like the next. I watched the deputy's red taillights recede in my rearview
mirror until they faded from sight; then I reached over to switch on the radio
and noticed my Browning 9mm on the passenger seat. Bless Carlos Sanchez. The
clip was full and the chamber was empty, just as they had been when Julie
lifted it out of the trunk. Following a quick stopover in Panama City
at an all-night truck stop with a Hertz franchise, I pulled into Seaside a few
minutes after sunrise in a newly rented, dark-blue Taurus. I parked in back,
stepped out of that peculiar rented-car smell, and walked around to the front
of the cottage. Loutie Blue answered the door. I said hello and searched her face.
"Can you tell me what's going on with Carli?" Loutie shook her head. "Sorry, Tom.
There's nothing to tell. As far as we know, they're just still looking." When we were seated in the kitchen, she
said, "Purcell's gone. He left late yesterday to meet with 'the Cubans,'
whoever they are. Susan's fine. She's still asleep. Kelly's been calling you. Three
times last night. She said she needs to talk to you as soon as possible." I stood and walked to the refrigerator. "The
Cubans are a group of self-described 'patriots' who waylaid me last night
to give us our lives back. According to their leader—at least I think he's their leader. Anyway, I wouldn't bet my life
on it, but it's possible that Purcell no longer longs for my demise. I'll fill
you in on the details later." I looked inside the fridge at eggs and
cinnamon rolls and bagels and realized I was too tired to eat. I closed the
door. "I'm going to bed. If anything happens, come get me." "Kelly found out something about that
yacht's ownership. The one the Teeter guy told you about seeing the other night
when you and Joey were on Dog Island. It belongs to some corporation in
Tampa." "Would you mind calling her for me?
Ask her to check out the company. Find out if there's any Cuban-American
management or ownership." "There's Cuban-American owners or
managers in just about everything in South Florida, Tom." "I know. Just ask her. And call Joey
and ask him if he can turn loose and meet us here ... What time is it? Six-twenty?
Ask him if he can make it around three or four this afternoon." "No problem." Loutie said,
"Go to bed. You look like hell." I trudged up the stylish staircase and
hesitated outside the room where Susan slept. It was the same room where she
and I had made love two nights before. I liked her. She liked me. We had slept
together and liked that too. But climbing into her bed at daybreak to catch up
on lost sleep, that—I don't know why—but that seemed too intimate, as if I would be taking too much for
granted. Maybe it was the way we had parted. Maybe it was the fear that her
idea of us was different than mine. Maybe it felt too, almost, married. Maybe I
was just tired. I walked a few steps farther down the hall
and found a room no one was using. The mattress was bare. I spied a yellow
blanket with satin trim stuffed onto a shelf in the closet. I put my head on a
purple, ruffly pillow, pulled the nubby blanket up to my chin, and felt sleep
soak into my body like a warm bath. Someone sat on the bed. A woman's voice
said, "Tom, Joey's here now, and Kelly's been here for a couple of hours.
They're waiting downstairs." It was Susan's voice. And I felt no ambiguity
whatsoever about how glad I was to hear it. I pushed the twisted blanket away, rolled
onto my back, and said, "Nice to see you." Susan smiled. "You too. Wash your
face and come on down. Everyone's waiting." And she left the room. I walked out into the hall and through
Susan's room to the bath, where I had a look in the mirror and was greeted by
swollen eyes, red pillow marks on one cheek, and, I was pretty sure, breath
that would melt paint. I turned on cold water in the shower, took off my shirt,
and leaned over the tub and let the frigid spray run over my face, neck, and
hair. I needed a real shower, but people were waiting, so I did what I could.
After toweling and combing my hair and making vigorous use of a toothbrush, I
felt more or less like myself again, and I headed downstairs. Once again, everyone had congregated in
the kitchen. I said, "I'm getting tired of looking at this kitchen. Can we
do this in the living room?" Joey said, "Did we wake up grouchy
from our nap?" I said, "Bite me," and walked
into the living room. Joey, Susan, Loutie, and Kelly followed. Loutie came in
carrying something that looked like the kind of miniature radio my father used
to listen to at football games. As she walked, she worked at poking a tiny
black foam knob into her ear. I looked at her. She said, "Mobile
monitor," and sat on the sofa next to Joey. Susan sat in an upholstered
chair next to mine, and Kelly came in a few seconds later and put a glass of
Coke on the table next to my chair. I said, "Bless you," and drank
half of it right away. "Who wants to start?" Susan said, "Loutie says you said
something about Leroy Purcell not wanting you dead anymore." "That's what this Cuban guy wants me
to think." My stomach felt queasy, and I realized I
hadn't eaten in almost thirty hours. I took another swallow of Coke. Joey said,
"You trying to be dramatic? Tell us the frigging story." "Oh. Sorry." I said,
"Actually, I'm trying not to throw up again. It's been a while since I
ate. Yesterday at lunch. And I managed to lose most of that on Billy Teeter's
boat last night." I looked at Susan. "I'll back up and fill you in
later on Teeter's boat and the yacht off Dog Island and all that, but the
bottom line is that Carli's father, Rus Poultrez, is dead." All Susan got out was, "How?" I told her. Susan said, "I can't believe how
happy I am that another human being is dead." "Something else," I added.
"I met with some kind of Cuban revolutionary last night who claims to do
business with Purcell and the Bodines. He also claimed he's convinced Purcell
to leave you and me alone. He didn't offer the same deal for Carli." Joey said, "Why the hell not?" "He said Purcell wants to make some
kind of example out of her. You know, 'don't fuck with Leroy Purcell' or some
equally eloquent sentiment." Susan stood. "Kelly, tell Tom what
you told us about the yacht. I'm going to get this poor guy something to eat.
Don't let him say anything else until I get back." I said, "Thanks. Just not that
chicken salad and fruit we had for lunch yesterday. I saw a little too much of
that on the boat." Susan said, "Yuck," and left the
room. I picked up my Coke and turned to look at Kelly. She said, "The yacht Billy Teeter
spotted the night you and Joey saw the drop-off is registered to a corporation
in Tampa called Products Americas, Inc." Just as a good legal secretary
should, Kelly pronounced Inc. "Ink," rather than saying
"incorporated," as most people would—a
distinction that matters only to people who try lawsuits or draft contracts for
a living. She said, "They are sort of an import-export business. I called
around and found out they sell American machinery in half a dozen South
American countries, and I guess they buy mostly agricultural stuff down there
and sell it here. "Anyway, after Loutie called this
morning and said you wanted to know about Cuban owners or managers, I started
calling again, and you were right on the money. The chairman and the president
and three other senior officers are 'of Cuban descent,' as they put it. I found
that out from the company itself. The investor relations department.
Apparently, I wasn't the first person to ask. I guess other Cubans like to
invest in Cuban enterprises or something. Whatever the reason, they weren't shy
about telling me." Joey interrupted and said, "Tell him
about the guy in Tallahassee, Kelly." Kelly said, "Okay. So, after I got as
much as I could from the investor relations woman, I asked who I could talk to
about this yacht the company owned. That kind of rattled her. Not, I think,
because some manager in investor relations would know about illegal activity on
the company yacht. What I think was that she didn't want to catch a lot of
grief from an investor about expensive perks for the president or something
like that. Anyway, she said she didn't know anything about any boats the
company might own, and she referred me to their outside PR guy." Joey was literally on the edge of his
seat. He said, "Listen to this," as if I might have been napping
through the rest of it. Kelly said, "Be quiet, Joey. It's not
that dramatic. I just called the guy. It's a man named Charles Estevez.
'Charlie,' he says. He's one of those guys who wants everyone to call him by
his first name. This Estevez has a lobbying and PR firm in Tallahassee, and I
found out before I called him that he has a pretty good reputation. I also
found out that he is the point man in the Florida legislature when it comes to
lobbying for anything having to do with Cuban refugees, or like relations and
trade with Cuba, that kind of stuff. "So, I get him on the phone and ask
about Products Americas, and he starts babbling a mile a minute about what a
great company it is and how wonderful and civic minded the management is. "Then I ask about the yacht, and
suddenly Estevez just doesn't have that kind of information about his clients.
So I give him the registration number and tell him the Coast Guard has verified
that the boat belongs to Products Americas. And, guess what. He seems to
remember something about the yacht. Suddenly, he even remembers being on it one
time for a cocktail party or something. Then, get this, he just volunteers that
the boat is, quote, 'really just a marketing tool for the company.' He says the
thing is used mostly for entertaining customers who are in Tampa on business,
and that it, quote, 'hardly ever leaves the Tampa Bay area.' Which, I don't
know about you, but I thought that seemed like kind of a strange thing to just
volunteer out of the blue. So Tom, you weren't around to ask, so I just told him
the yacht was spotted in Apalachicola Bay on such and such a date, just to see
what he'd say. I hope that was okay." "That was fine. This isn't a
walk-on-eggshells kind of case anymore. What did he say?" Kelly smiled and looked endearingly proud
of herself. "He said he had another call coming in, and he'd have to call
me back." Joey and I laughed as Susan came in the room and put a plate
with two sandwiches and a handful of chips on the table next to my Coke. I
thanked her, and she got comfortable in her chair. Loutie frowned at the floor and pressed
the foam knob further into her ear. I ate some sandwich. Kelly said, "A
little over an hour went by, and the phone rang. All of a sudden, Estevez knows
all about you and wants you to call him. 'Personally.' I tried to get
more information, but he insisted on talking to you." I asked, "When was this?" "I called Products Americas
yesterday. My conversation with Estevez was this morning." "This is getting
interesting," I said. "Last night I get briefly kidnapped by a Cuban
revolutionary who knows all about Carli and Susan and Joey and, especially, me
and Purcell. And the discussions he said he had with Purcell took place
yesterday morning. I guess after you called Products Americas. I wondered why
Sanchez showed up out of the blue last night." Everyone seemed to pause and think about
that for a beat or two; then Susan said, "Okay. Now tell us about the
Cubans and Purcell not wanting you and me dead and why he won't leave Carli
alone." So I did. I started with chugging out into
the bay with Willie and Captain Billy and finished with every detail I could
remember about my forced meeting with Carlos Sanchez. When I was done, I asked
Joey, "How close are we to finding Carli?" "We're not." I said, "Damn." "Yeah. I know. Randy Whittles is
killing himself, and I've got a couple of guys helping him. But, like you said,
damn." Joey shook his head and went on. "I did find out where our
buddy Thomas Bobby Haycock has been taking his illegal shipments, though." I asked, "Where?" Joey said, "You're not gonna believe
this shit, either." Loutie Blue interrupted. "Joey. Come
in the kitchen. I've got a female voice at Purcell's place." chapter twenty-four Susan asked the question. "Is it
Carli?" Loutie pressed the tiny foam knob against
her ear and waved Susan off as she left the room. We all hurried into the
kitchen where Loutie turned up the volume on the speakers. A feminine voice
said,"... not that hungry. Sorry I'm late. I thought Jim was never going
to leave." "That's not Carli," Susan said.
"Sounds like little Leroy has a hot date." Loutie agreed. "Sounds like it. I'm
going to stay in here and listen." We looked at her, and she explained.
"If there's any kind of conversation, we need to listen. You never know
what might come out." She looked around. "And it would be easier if
the rest of you went somewhere else." Back in the living room, Joey returned to
his story. "So, getting back to Haycock. I followed him this morning from
the ferry landing in Carrabelle. He headed west up 98 and then hung a right on
65 toward Tallahassee, and I figure he's planning to fence the stuff in the
city. But just a few miles up, he turns off into a place called 'Tate's Hell
Swamp.' No shit. That's actually the name of this frigging place on the
map." Joey looked at Susan and Kelly and then at
me. I was anxious for less color and more useful facts, and I think it showed. He said, "So anyway I follow Haycock
into the woods. About four miles in, the woods turn into swamp, and it's just
this one pissant logging road. And if somebody decides to come out, there's not
much I can do but try to get out of their way. So I'm getting pretty nervous
about being able to keep tailing him without anybody seeing me. "About that time, I come around a
curve and Haycock's truck is stopped dead in the middle of the road. So I slam
on the brakes and damn near wreck sliding into a little gully there." I said, "Joey, this is a fascinating
travelogue. But you're here, so we know you got away. Can we cut to what you
found at the end of the road?" "I'm getting there, but you gotta
hear this. I'm off in the gully where Haycock can't see me, and I can't see
him. I roll down the windows and hear his track start up again, and I'm hoping
he hasn't turned around. But, if he has, I don't wanna get caught like a
sitting duck, so I pull back up on the road. And, guess what, Haycock's gone. Disappeared." Susan asked, "Where'd he go?" I said, "Don't encourage him." Joey smiled. "Took a while to figure
it out. Haycock had driven off through this tall grass next to the road.
Stuff's like rubber. Just pops back up after you drive over it. But he just had
turned off, so I could still see his tracks. I followed 'em three or four
hundred yards across this field and then hooked a left into some trees. And I'm
telling you, he took me through some of the nastiest-looking shit I've ever
come across. Black, scummy water up to my axle most of the time. "I could see on the trees where the
way was marked with cuts in the bark, like somebody marking a land line. A few
hundred yards of that and I'm back on a road that just picks up in the middle
of nowhere. "I follow the road up around this
little curve where the road rises up to a bridge over a creek, and I can see up
ahead. About two hundred yards off, there's four metal buildings, and Haycock
was just pulling up to 'em. "I shit you not. These guys got a
frigging compound out in the middle of the swamp. Like an island or something.
It's this piece of solid ground slap-ass in the middle of Mosquitoville. I'm
telling you, the place is nothin' but mile after mile of fuckin', I mean
friggin', snake heaven. I saw four alligators on the way in. No shit. Four
alligators." I tried to get him back on point.
"You said you could see Haycock pull into the compound?" "Yeah. Haycock's unloading his truck
and taking the stuff into this big warehouse-looking building. And there's a
guard. The guy just stands there holding some kind of short weapon—it was too far away to tell what kind of firearm it was—and he spends his time watching the road for trouble." "Did you see anything else?" Joey said, "I sure as hell did,"
and paused for dramatic effect. "I saw that dark, chubby guy Haycock
picked up on the beach the other night. You know, the Carpintero guy they
smuggled in with his wife and kid." I asked, "What was he doing?" "Just talking with Haycock. Looking
through the boxes and stuff in the truck, and, it looked like, maybe telling
Haycock where to put the stuff he was unloading." "Anything else?" "Nope. That's about it. I needed to
get out ahead of Haycock. So, after I checked things out and made a little map
and a diagram and took some pictures, I got the hell out of there." For a few seconds, I wasn't sure I'd heard
right. "You took some pictures?" "Sure." Joey grinned. "When
Carpintero came out, I went back to the car and got my camera and popped a
three-hundred-millimeter lens on it. I clicked off a roll of film, mostly of
Carpintero, but I got the buildings and Haycock and the boxes and stuff
too." I said, "You're a genius." "Ain't that the truth. I haven't
gotten it developed yet. Overnighted it to a guy in Mobile. He'll turn 'em
around in an hour, once he gets 'em." "Good." I said, "Let me ask
you something. Did the chubby guy from the beach—Carpintero—did he look familiar somehow? I mean, familiar from somewhere
besides Dog Island." Joey stopped and looked at the floor for a
second or two and said, "Nope. Why?" I shrugged. Joey looked amused. "Did he scare
you?" "He gave me the creeps, is what he
did." I turned to Kelly. "Have you got
Charles Estevez's number?" She said, "Sure," reached down
to get her purse, and fished out a thick Day-Timer bristling with business
cards, pink phone message slips, and a couple dozen yellow and pink Post-its. I
said, "Come on. Let's go give Charlie a ring." Kelly tagged along as
I used the phone in Loutie's bedroom. Estevez had gone home for the day. I left
my cell phone number with his answering service, and less than five minutes
later, he called. He admitted "knowing of Carlos Sanchez." I
felt him out, discussed the various uses of beachfront properties, dropped a
name or two, and got off the phone. Kelly said, "What did he want?" I said, "He wanted to make sure that
I'm more afraid of Sanchez than I am Purcell, which I am. And he wanted to,
quote, 'open up the lines of communication.' No kidding. That's what he
said." Kelly smiled and asked, "Well, are
they open?" I said, "I think maybe a little more
open than he had in mind." The weather had become less fickle outside
our aggressively cute beach house, and bright spring sunshine glinted off sand
and water in one direction and white impatiens, pink and purple azaleas, and
faux-Victorian gingerbread in the other. Susan opened the blinds to let in the
late afternoon sun, and, for the next two hours, we rehashed stories and
theories. I still had a young client with a death
sentence, and even if we did find her first I'd have to figure out what to do
about Purcell. Carli was a juvenile with little education and fewer skills, and
we weren't going to be able to simply send her to Europe or South America and
expect her to fend for herself. Carli would want to stay in this country. And,
sooner or later, she was going to call her mother, if she had one, or her
sister, if she had one of those, or her best friend from junior high. And, when
she did, Purcell would have her. Around seven, I drifted into the kitchen.
"What's Purcell up to?" Loutie said, "Screwing." It was not an answer I had expected. So I
said, "What?" Joey said, "Screwing, Tom. You know,
rubbing uglies, choking chubby, grounding the gopher..." Loutie sounded like a disappointed mother.
"Joey?" "...bumping monkeys, pounding the
puppy, squeezin' squigley, polishing the Jag..." Loutie sounded, at once, amused and
exasperated. "Shut up, Joey." Joey grinned. "I know a lot
more." Loutie said, "We don't care." While my giant friend wasn't exactly
drunk, he wasn't exactly sober either. But after long days and sleepless nights
of crouching between a pine tree and a gritty sand dune forcing himself to
focus on every insipid detail in the life of an eighth-grade dropout turned
criminal, Joey was entitled. I looked at him, and he grinned some more.
I turned to Loutie. "Have you heard anything useful?" Loutie said, "Other than entertaining
Joey? No. Some doctor's wife came over when her husband left to take their kids
back to Atlanta. Apparently, she wanted to stick around for a few more days of
sun, and whatnot." I wandered back into the living room and
plopped down on the sofa next to Susan. Kelly sat on the carpet. She had pulled
down a seat cushion and leaned it against the front of her chair to make a
floor-level lounger. The two women were watching an attractive female anchor on
CNN who looked disturbingly like a vampire. A report on one of Princess Grace's
randy kids ended just as I was snuggling my backside into the linen cushions.
The vampire anchor rearranged her smiling eyes and glistening red lips into a
somber expression as a photo of a petite, bookish woman appeared over her
shoulder, and she began to read a story about an Iraqi physician with an almost
Teutonic genius for exploiting horrific diseases. A few minutes of that was more than enough
reality, and we switched over to HBO and watched a Bruce Willis,
everything-gets-blown-up movie until we were bleary-eyed. Kelly got up to go to
bed, and Susan went with her to help find sheets and blankets. When Susan came
back, she said, "I'm tired, Tom. I'm going on up." And, suddenly, I didn't quite know what to
say. It occurred to me that the problem with having avoided Susan's bedroom
earlier in the day was that my actions might have damaged the assumption that
it was still my room too. In other words, now that I had gotten out, I wasn't
quite sure how to get back in. I said, "Where's Kelly sleeping?" Susan said, "She's in the yellow
bedroom." "The yellow bedroom? Is that the one
I took a nap in today?" "I'm not sure I'd call seven hours a
nap, but, yeah, that's it It's the only empty room we've got. Joey will stay
with Loutie, assuming she ever goes to bed. She's listening to that black box
every night when I go upstairs and every morning when I wake up. So I'm just
assuming she actually goes to sleep at some point." Susan yawned and
stretched her arms over her head and arched her back in a maneuver that caused
her knit shirt to pull across her breasts in an interesting way. Of course, it
would have been hard for me to imagine anything about Susan's breasts that
wasn't deeply and profoundly interesting. She said, "Good night." "Susan?" She said "Huh?" And I hesitated.
Actually, I choked. Susan smiled and said, "You're still invited. Is that
what you're hemming and hawing about?" "I wouldn't exactly call it hemming
and hawing." She rolled her eyes and said, "Come
on. Let's go to bed." A blinding light filled the room.
"Tom! Susan! Get up." It was Loutie. "They've got Carli." I bolted up in bed. "Where? Where is
she?" Loutie said, "I don't know where. But
she's still alive. Purcell got a call from some guy named Rupert about five
minutes ago saying they found her. We gotta move. Joey's downstairs listening.
Get up. We've got to be ready to follow Purcell when he leaves his house." A thought hit me. "You sure Joey's
ready for this?" "Joey's fine. The man's got the
metabolism of a racehorse. He sobers up like nothing I've ever seen."
Loutie said, "Now, come on. Move it." Susan was already on her feet and dressing
while I was sitting on the bed talking to Loutie. She went into the bathroom
while I got dressed, and, as we hurried downstairs, I noticed that she had run
a wet comb through her hair. I glanced at my watch. It was
seven-fifteen. We had gotten more sleep than I thought. Down in the kitchen, Joey's massive frame
was perched on one of the fragile-looking chrome and leather chairs that seemed
to have been designed more for looking at than sitting on. He said, "Go
brush your teeth and get dressed for some outside work. Purcell's not going.
Not now anyhow. He's got that little doctor's wife in his bed, and he ain't
going anywhere anytime soon. He told this Rupert guy who called to just hold on
to Carli, quote, 'on the island,' and he'd meet them there around noon." Susan said, "Do you think they're
talking about St. George, or did they actually bring Carli to Dog Island on the
one night you weren't there?" Joey and I together said, "Dog
Island." Susan looked confused. "How do you
know?" Joey said, "Makes sense." "Why?" Joey looked pleadingly at me. I said,
"I guess they could mean any island within driving distance, Susan. But
Dog Island is hard to get to; they've got an isolated cottage there; they're
used to doing business there; and there aren't any cops on the island." Susan said, "Okay." "None of that means we're right. But
I think we are." I looked around. "Where's Kelly?" Loutie said, "Still asleep. She
hasn't got any business in this. She works for you, Tom. But that's what I
thought." "You thought right. Kelly needs to
get back to Mobile. And I guess Joey and I need to head for Dog Island. Try to
beat Purcell there." Joey said, "Yeah. And Loutie, you get
on over to Purcell's place. Hang around outside. Don't let him out of your
sight." Joey turned to me. "Tom, did you get
that tracker box stuck under Purcell's Caddy?" "Yeah, the first day here." Joey caught Loutie's eye to make sure
she'd heard me and then looked at Susan. "Can you handle the listening
equipment?" Susan said yes. "Okay, then you stay here and listen and
work the phones. Tom and I will keep you up on what we're doing. Loutie, you do
the same. I mean, you keep in contact with Susan to let her know what you're
doing." He stopped and looked around the room and smiled. "I never
been around such a bunch of gloomy people. We know where she is. This is the
good part." chapter twenty-five After two days without a decent bath, one
of which was spent hurling
digestive juices on a rolling shrimp boat, a hot shower was not a luxury. I
made a quick job of it, left Susan upstairs getting dressed, and met Joey
downstairs. He had loaded his Expedition with guns, blankets, and food—what he described as his "rescue kit." Loutie would stay
by the listening equipment until Susan came down; then she would head over to
watch Purcell. By eight, Joey and I left the strained
charm of Seaside behind. Neither of us spoke much. Joey pulled out
a paper sack of Dolly Madison cinnamon rolls and canned drinks, and we made a
breakfast of that as we listened to the news on NPR. On the eastern side of
Port St. Joe, as we neared Apalachicola, Joey said, "I called about a boat
while you were in the shower. Susan knew somebody. We don't need to be trying
to ride a ferry with all these guns in the car, and we sure as hell don't need
to be standing around waiting for the ferry after discharging firearms into the
locals." I asked, "You really think that's
going to be necessary?" "Never know. I sure as hell hope not.
We have to kill a couple of those Bodine boys, and you're gonna have to take up
the life of the hunted again." I said, "The life of the
hunted?" And Joey smiled. He drove straight through Apalachicola and
Eastpoint to a marina called "The Moorings" in tiny Carrabelle,
Florida. It was where we had caught the ferry when we went out to watch Thomas
Bobby Haycock. As Joey put his vehicle in park and pulled
the key, he said, "Why don't you wait in the car? After your adventure
with the Teeters, you're probably a minor celebrity around here." And he
closed the door. So I hunkered down in the seat feeling a
little embarrassed to be left behind but lucky not to be going—like a child waiting for his father to come out of the liquor
store. Four interminable minutes passed, and the door locks snapped as Joey
shot them with his remote. He opened the door and stepped in. He said,
"Got it," and backed the Expedition out and pulled around the side of
the marina. Dozens of luxury sailboats and motor
yachts were huddled so tightly around a maze of concrete docks that it looked
as though the first guy in would never leave again. But then, no one seemed to
be leaving. Retired couples in baggy shorts and slouch hats polished brass or
coiled ropes between trips to other boats to talk sailing or diesel motors or
maybe a little fishing with someone from Wilmington or Bar Harbor or some other
place where money intersected with seacoast. Our little Boston Whaler was tied up among
the working boats, which were kept well away from the yacht trade, and we had
clear access to the waterway leading out into the bay. Joey popped the hatch on
his Expedition. The food was in a cooler; the blankets were loose; and the
firearms were discreetly zipped inside a fatigue-green duffel bag. As we loaded
the blue-and-white Boston Whaler, Joey and I looked like nothing more than a
couple of friends out for a day of fishing, except maybe for the complete
absence of fishing equipment. Joey said, "You know how to drive one
of these things?" "Well, yeah. On a lake. I thought you
were in the Navy." "We didn't spend a lot of time
tooling around in pissant fishing boats in Naval Intelligence." I looked
at him. He said, "How hard can it be? Crank it up. The guy in the marina
told me how to get to the island. Hell, it's just over there. Soon as you pull
around that place there where the land boops out you can see the damn
thing." "Boops out, huh?" Joey ignored me. I asked, "Did he tell you where all
the oyster beds are too?" "I asked about that." "That was nice of you." "He said they're not too bad between
here and Dog Island. Just don't drive too fast." "Like Rus Poultrez did?" "Just like that." While Joey rummaged in the cooler for
additional sustenance, I puttered the boat away from the dock. Then, ever so
gently, I steered a course in the general direction of Dog Island. The
sour-sweet, almost carnal scents of the coast swirled in the spring air as a
persistent chop paddled the hull and sprayed us with salt mist. Thirty minutes
out of Carrabelle, I judged that we were not quite halfway there. I asked,
"How far is it supposed to be out to the island?" "The guy in the marina said seven
miles." "It didn't look that far when we came
out into the bay." "You can't tell lookin' over water.
Everything looks closer. The way to tell is you gotta turn around and bend over
and look across the water through your legs." I said, "Uh-huh." "No shit. It works. An old forester
taught me that. One summer in high school, I worked on a survey crew cutting
land lines through the woods. We'd hit a stretch of swamp every now and then.
The only way to tell how much wading you were gonna have to do was to bend over
and look through your legs." I said, "Uh-huh." Forty minutes later, we were maybe a
hundred yards off the narrow strip of island, and Joey said, "Hook around
the left end of the island there." It took another half hour to putt around
the tip of the island and land the boat on the same desolate stretch of beach
where I had parked my Jeep a week earlier as we hunkered in the dunes watching
Haycock's place. I had been working at keeping things light—trying to behave as though none of this bothered me. But, as Joey
unzipped the green duffel and pulled out some kind of machine pistol, I could
feel the morning grow cooler as light perspiration covered my face and neck and
hands. Acid churned my stomach and adrenaline fogged my mind, and I had to
concentrate to follow what Joey was saying. "This is a Tech 9. It holds twenty
rounds in the clip, plus one in the chamber. This is the safety. Up is on. Down
is off. Push it down to fire." "I've got my nine millimeter." Joey said, "That's fine. You're used
to shootin' it, so you should stick to it if you can. But we don't know what or
who's waitin' for us. If six guys come around a corner with guns, you're gonna
get your ass shot off if you count on that Browning. The Tech 9 is automatic,
or at least the way I've got it set up it is. Pull back like this to chamber
the first round and then just hold down the trigger. It'll squeeze out four
rounds a second. So don't waste 'em all on one guy. Spread it around if you
have to use it." Joey pulled out two black shoulder bags and tossed one to
me. "Put it in there till you need it. We could run into somebody." Then
he pulled out an identical weapon for himself, which he put in his black nylon
bag. He also dropped in a Glock 9mm before zipping it up. Finally, he produced
a tiny Walther PPK .380 and put it in his hip pocket. As Joey worked at readying assault weapons
in the morning sun, knot-kneed sandpipers scurried in and out with the surf,
poking spindly beaks into quartz-white sand in search of sand fleas and baby
shrimp. Above our heads, black-headed laughing gulls spiraled in the air,
begging frantically for food. The gulls' shrill calls sounded in sporadic
bunches, and with each shriek the abdominal muscles south of my navel clenched
my gut like a nervous fist. I said, "Somebody's been feeding them
bread or something." Joey glanced up at the birds and then back
at me. "You ready?" "Not really." Joey looked at me for a second or two and
said, "Look, why don't I just go in by myself? It's probably just Haycock
and the Rupert guy watchin' Carli and waitin' on Purcell. Tell you what. Let me
go look around. If it's bad, I'll come back for you." "Nope." Joey shrugged. I took in a deep breath and said,
"Let's go." "Okay, hot dog. But as soon as we
take the first step, I'm in charge. You do what I say. You got it?" I nodded. We moved crouched over, running awkwardly
across dry sand, filling our shoes with grit and our pant legs with
cockle-burs, and finding inadequate cover first behind one sand dune and then
another. When we were about two hundred feet from Haycock's cottage, Joey waved
me toward the trees we had used for shelter on stakeout. I turned and trotted
to the scraggly clump of wind-tortured pines. Joey waited. When I got there, he
made a hand motion that usually means "Hold it down." I dropped to
one knee. He nodded and moved behind a dune. Minutes dragged by, and I saw him
near the house on his stomach. Joey was crawling commando-style toward the back
window, and he looked like he knew what he was doing. I watched him crawl, and
I watched too long. Tim the painter was only thirty feet from
the front door when I saw him. Adrenaline flushed through my brain and muscles
with such violence that I almost yelled out to Joey. Think. Joey was out
of sight in back, and, so far, Tim seemed oblivious to our presence. Then he
seemed to hear something. The man stopped, and I fell onto my stomach as he
turned to survey the dunes and trees and scrub. I could just see his head. He
was very still and seemed to be listening, more so than watching, for trouble.
Then he swiveled his head toward the cottage. Now, he knew Joey was there. I moved. Keeping low and quiet, I circled
behind the painting Bodine and watched as he unclipped a small walkie-talkie
from his belt and spoke quietly to someone. Shit. Joey was coming around
the back corner, shaking his head and looking for me among the pines. Tim was
too close to the cottage to see Joey—the angle was
wrong—but he heard him. In one efficient
movement, Tim gently dropped the radio to the ground and pulled a machine
pistol from a shoulder holster. He dropped to one knee and waited. The Tech 9
was still zipped inside my shoulder bag. The zipper would make noise, and I
didn't really know how to use the damn thing anyhow; so I eased it onto the
sand and reached back inside my windbreaker and pulled out the Browning and
clicked off the safety. Joey was going to walk around the corner
and get shot in maybe two seconds. I tried to sound official. "Hold it
right there, asshole." Tim froze. Slowly, he began to raise his
hands, and I began to breathe again. Joey was still out of sight. I said,
"Drop the gun." The gun moved and, for one fleeting
instant, I thought he was putting it on the ground. Then he spun on his knees
and landed on his back. The man took aim with both arms stretched out toward me
in a rigid wedge and both hands steadying the pistol. I fired. Tim's pant leg
popped out at the knee as if some unseen hand had snatched the cloth, and a
second shot from the other direction followed so quickly that it sounded like
an echo of the first. Tim the painter's face exploded with his eyes fixed on
mine. Joey was standing next to the house,
holding the Glock on the man whose face he had just blown off. I called out,
"He's dead," and Joey and I began to approach the body from opposite
sides. Joey's hollow-point had entered through Tim's crown and blasted out
through some part of his face. Standing over the body in a kind of fascinated
and repulsed shock, I couldn't tell much more than that. There wasn't enough
face left to tell exactly where Joey's mushroomed bullet had exited. I managed to say, "He had a
walkie-talkie," and to point at the tiny communicator where Tim the
painter had dropped it. Joey leaned over and picked it up. He
said, "Let's get the hell out of here." "What about Carli?" "Get your bag." I looked at him.
He snapped, "Get the goddamn weapons bag you dropped back there." I ran back and retrieved the shoulder bag
with the Tech 9 inside. As I returned, Joey grabbed my jacket and pulled me
roughly along as he retreated behind the house. As I stumbled behind him, Joey
said, "Carli's not here. Nobody's here. We're in the wrong place. Or
somethin' worse." I looked at him. He said, "Let's get to the boat.
Keep your eyes open. That guy wasn't talkin' to himself." Joey took off
toward the beach, running in his tucked-over stance, and I followed. Voices floated across the sand. Joey kept
moving. I sprinted to catch up and slapped him on the back. As I did, I said,
"Down," and Joey dropped even before I did. "You hear
that?" Joey moved his chin from side to side and
sat still. The only sounds were the surf and the wind and the sporadic, shrill
cackles of laughing gulls as they fished the waves and fought for trash along
the shoreline. Then the human voices came again. Joey turned and pointed at my
chest and then at the ground. I nodded, and he left me there sitting on one
knee in the sand between a grassy dune on one side and a gnarled clump of brown
and green brush on the other. Male voices ebbed and flowed among the
sounds of surf and wind, and Joey reappeared and motioned for me to follow. We moved
away from the beach. A hundred feet in, Joey stopped and spoke quietly. He was
breathing heavily, more, I thought, from fear or excitement than effort. He
said, "One man at the cottage. Two on the beach. Spread out. They're
watching the boat. Waiting." I asked a stupid question. "For
us?" Joey nodded. And he looked scared, which
was one of many emotions I had never seen on his face. I tried to think, to
concentrate, and then wished I hadn't. I said, "They knew." My
oversized friend didn't answer. He was scanning the beach. Then he whispered, "Call Susan,"
and my breathing turned fast and shallow. I found my cell phone and punched in the
number of the beach house. No one answered. I asked Joey how to get Loutie and
punched in her number. She answered on the second ring. I said, "Where are
you? Are you at the beach house?" Loutie sounded surprised. "No. I'm in
Mobile. Purcell's taking the doc's wife to some kind of party here. Brunch or
something." I interrupted. "Susan's not
answering." "Maybe she's..." Again I cut her off. "Carli's not at
the house on Dog Island. They may have been waiting for us." Loutie said, "How would
they...?" And her voice trailed off. I said what she was thinking.
"Purcell may have found the bugs. We're on the island, and you're following
him around Mobile. And Susan's not answering." Joey reached for the phone, and I let him
take it. He said, "Loutie? Haul ass back to Seaside. Keep trying Susan.
The Bo-dines have got our boat staked out, and Tom and I are gonna have to find
another way off the island." He stopped to listen and said, "Call the
goddamn second you know something." chapter twenty-six Bright sunshine radiated across blue sky,
glinting off sugar-white sand and suddenly consuming the world in blazing light that blocked out everything
except the tiny black cell phone in Joey's hand and the tortured thoughts
racing through my mind. I grabbed the phone from Joey and once again dialed the
beach house in Seaside. Still no one answered. I hit the end button and
punched redial, and Joey said my name. I listened to the phone ringing
in our whimsically sterile Seaside cottage, and Joey said my name again.
Finally, I said, "What!" "That's not doing any good, Tom.
You're just gonna use up the battery." "I don't really give a shit if I use
up the battery." "Loutie's calling. She's in her car.
So she can call all day without running out of juice. If we run out, Loutie's
not even gonna be able to call and tell us if there is news." I could feel my heart thumping against my
sternum, and coursing blood sounded inside my ears like boots running in mud. I
tried to control the erratic rhythm of my breathing. Slowly, shapes began to
emerge from the blinding glare, and other sounds floated back to me. Wind
sighed across the island, and gulls filled the air with shrill chatter. Joey looked out across glowing sand
dappled green and brown with undulating sea grass and streaks of coarse
underbrush. He said, "You see what I mean, don't you? We gotta stay calm
and wait on Loutie. She's as good as they get, Tom. You couldn't ask for
somebody better if—and I'm just saying if—Susan's gotten in trouble." I flipped the phone shut and pushed it
inside the pocket of my windbreaker. I looked out at the idyllic landscape,
searching now for human shapes, and asked, "You said the men are spread
out?" "The two at the beach are spread out
maybe a hundred feet apart hiding in that tall grass and stuff between the
dunes." "What about the guy at the
cottage?" "Standing around cussing about the
one we shot when I saw him. Could be hidden by now. Or I guess he could be down
at the beach with the others." I stopped to think and said, "But
he's probably covering the road between here and the ferry." Joey said, "Yeah. I guess. I hadn't
thought of that, but it makes sense." "Because their job is not to let us
get out of here alive." "That would be it." "So, can we take out the ones
watching the boat? I mean, if they're spread out, couldn't we just take them
out one at a time?" Joey stopped scanning the land between us
and the Bodines and looked at me. "You okay with killing two more
men?" "I didn't say kill anybody. We could
just knock them over the head or something, couldn't we?" Joey returned to scanning the surrounding
countryside as he spoke. He said, "Not unless you know something I don't.
And I know how to take somebody out without making a sound. That's
something I did learn from the Navy. But you don't do it by 'knocking
'em on the head or something.' You do it with a knife." "That's not an option. I shot the guy
back there because he was trying to shoot me. We are not going to start cutting
throats." Joey said, "It's not really a cut.
It's actually more of a stab and twist thing." "Joey." "I know. I wasn't arguing to do it.
I'm just explaining that you can't sneak up and bop a man on the head with the
butt of a gun like on Mission: Impossible and expect him to fall over
without a sound and wake up later with a bump and tiny little headache. You hit
a guy hard enough to knock him unconscious and you're probably gonna kill him
anyway. And if you don't hit him pretty much hard enough to kill him, he's
gonna squawk and bring in his buddies, who will shoot you full of little
holes." "I got it, Joey. The horse is dead
and beat to hell." "Just trying to be helpful."
Joey said, "So, what now? You're supposed to be the smart one." Joey was talking too much, and he was
doing it for a reason. He was—none too subtly—trying to keep my mind off Susan, and, even though some part of my
brain was able to analyze the conversation and realize what he was doing, it
was still kind of working. I said, "Well, I'm not an old Naval
Intelligence man or an ex-cop, but it seems pretty obvious to me that the
Bodines are going to be watching the road and the ferry. If we wait
until dark, we can probably get by whoever's watching the road. By then,
though, the ferry will quit running. Which doesn't really matter, since, like I
said, they'd be watching it anyway. And we can't just run into the motel and
scream for the cops, either. First of all, there aren't any. Second, we're the
ones who killed someone out here today. These guys haven't done anything but
look for us. All of which means we wait until dark, head toward the other end
of the island, and see if we can find an unguarded boat along the way." I
paused. "At least, that's what I think. You got a better idea, I'm all for
it." Joey said, "You're a very analytical
person." I looked at him. He said, "And you're probably right." An hour passed. The sun shone directly
overhead now, and Joey trotted off to check out the beach while I did
reconnaissance on the road and Haycock's cottage. It wasn't easy, and, if I
hadn't grown up hunting in the tangled forests along the Alabama River, I might
never have picked out the outline of a lone man crouched in thick cover along
the roadside. But I did pick him out, and I started to feel pretty confident
that Joey and I could circle around him and get out well before sunset. And
since it was just past noon, that was not an inconsequential discovery. A little over thirty minutes after we
split up, I returned to our hiding place nestled between a tall sand dune and a
cluster of wild azaleas. Joey was waiting. I told him about the man guarding
the sandy road leading away from Haycock's cottage and how I thought we could
circle him in daylight. He agreed. Then the phone vibrated in my pocket. I flipped it open and said,
"Loutie?" "Yeah. It's me. Let me talk to
Joey." I asked, "Are you in Seaside?" She said, "It'd be better if I talked
to Joey, Tom." And my face turned cool and clammy just as it had earlier
when we were stuffing automatic weapons into little black bags. "What happened?" She didn't
answer. I said, "Goddamnit, Loutie. What happened?" Joey reached for
the phone but took his hand back when I met his eyes. Loutie said, "It's Susan, Tom. Looks
like they waited till we were all gone and sent somebody in here." "She's gone. Is that what you're
saying?" Loutie paused, and I listened to three or
four seconds of mild static. Then she said, "I'm sorry, Tom. Yes, Susan's
gone, and it doesn't look good. The house was shut up. I could still smell
gunpowder when I came in. And, I'm sorry, Tom, but somebody lost a lot of blood
in the kitchen." She paused again and said, "There are drag marks,
like feet or legs, from the blood in the kitchen to, well almost to, the front
door." My face and hands felt sleep-dead, and I
lowered the phone. Joey pulled it from my hand, and, as if from a distance, I
could hear him talking with Loutie. My cheeks pricked with numbness, and a
cruel claw began to stir my guts. I felt movement and looked up to see Joey
walk away to leave me to grieve in private. Time passed, a lot of time, and
sickness turned to anger and then quieted into stunned withdrawal, and I came
to realize that Joey had been gone a very long time. I was just rising to go in search of my
friend when he stepped into view. Joey walked toward me, standing straight now,
and said, "Let's go to the boat." I looked at him without comprehending. He said, "Come on, Tom. Let's
go." I asked, "What about the men? Are
they gone?" Joey was silent, and I looked into his face. Surface calm
masked pure rage. Joey said, "They're dead." I studied his face. "How many?" As Joey turned in the direction of the
beach, he said, "All of 'em." This time Joey drove the open boat, and he
gave me some time before he spoke again. We were a hundred yards off Carrabelle
when Joey said, "Just so you'll know. I paid cash for the boat, but the
guy at the marina knows we took it out and were headed for Dog Island. Not much
we can do about that." I didn't feel like talking, and I didn't. He went
on, "Not much to worry about, though. There's just one cop in Carrabelle.
They don't even have a police station. The place is kinda famous for that. This
cop just hangs around a phone booth and waits for it to ring." I looked at
him. "No shit. The town was famous for about five minutes twenty years ago
when Johnny Carson talked about it on The Tonight Show." Joey was trying, once again, to make me
think about something other than Susan. I said, "You think we could talk
about this later?" He gave up and concentrated on steering a course to The
Moorings, which was fine with me. The marina was open. We did not go back
inside. We tied up the boat, loaded the Expedition, and left. Two hours later,
as we cruised through the unsightly jumble of Panama City, Joey turned north
onto Highway 231 and drove away from the coast. I asked, "Where are we going?" "Mobile. But right now, we're making
a big damn circle around Seaside." Until then, I had thought of nothing but
loss. Now, my mind conjured the too-vivid image of Susan lying in a pool of
blood in that tacky designer cottage. I asked, "What about Susan and
Loutie and the cottage?" "Loutie's taking care of everything.
By tonight, nobody'll ever know we were there. Rented under an alias. Loutie's
doing cleanup." Cleanup. What a nice, descriptive term. I said,
"Why don't we just call the cops? As far as I'm concerned, all bets are
off. Sanchez didn't protect anybody. What's he going to do? Threaten to kill
me? The hell with him." "We don't need to do anything right
now, Tom. We gotta get somewhere and think this mess out. You gotta realize, it
ain't Sanchez or Purcell killing you I'm worried about. I mean, you know, that
wouldn't exactly make me happy, but we got other problems too. We just left
four dead guys piled in a beach house on Dog Island. What're we supposed to
tell the cops? We were in a shoot-out, and they lost? Hell, three of 'em aren't
even shot. How do you figure we're gonna explain two guys with their jugulars
knifed open and one with a broken neck?" He turned to look at me, then
turned back to watch the road. "Shit. I don't know. Maybe that is what we
wanna do. But I'd kinda like to think about it before we volunteer for the
electric chair." I thought out loud. "Second degree or
manslaughter. Wouldn't be the electric chair." "Huh?" I said, "Nothing," and closed my
eyes. "Turn around." "Why?" I opened my eyes and looked out at the
strip-mall and fast-food mess scattered across the north side of Panama City.
"I want to go to Seaside." Joey slowed, but he didn't stop.
"That's a bad idea, Tom. You sure you wanna do it? 'Cause some
major-league bad shit has happened today, and we need to put some space between
us and..." "You going to turn around?" Joey mumbled, "Well, just fuck
me," but he pulled into the parking lot of a Chevron station and circled
back out heading south. Less than an hour later, we pulled up next to Loutie's
car outside the rented beach house in Seaside. I knocked on the canary door. No one
answered. Joey called out, "It's us, Loutie. Open the door." Immediately, the door swung aside, and
Loutie motioned for us to hurry inside. She said, "You're not supposed to
be here." Joey looked down and shook his head from
side to side. "Tell him that." Loutie said my name, but I had already
walked out of the room. In the kitchen, the gray metal boxes full of
eavesdropping equipment had vanished. Our food was gone. Our presence had been
erased, and so had Susan's—or, hopefully, someone else's—blood. I turned around and saw Joey and Loutie standing in the
doorway, watching me. Joey said, "There's nothing to see,
Tom. We all need to get out of here fast." I looked at Loutie. "Is Purcell still
in Mobile?' Joey cussed. Loutie didn't answer. "Answer my question, Loutie. Where's
Purcell?" Loutie sighed and said, "He got back
a little over an hour ago. I heard him come in before I unhooked the
equipment." I started out of the room, and Joey
stepped in front of me. "Tom, let's talk about this a minute." "Move." Joey put his hand on my shoulder. He did
it in a friendly way, but it was meant to stop me. "Let's just sit down..." I looked up and met his eyes. "Get
your hand off me, Joey." He smiled, but he didn't move the hand. "You
can move, or I can move you." Joey's eyes narrowed. "You sure you
can do that?" My hands trembled with adrenaline and
rage. None of it was aimed at Joey, but he was in the way. I said, "Step
aside, Joey." Joey dropped his hand from my shoulder and
surrendered with a grin. "Be a hell of a fight. I'll say that much."
He stepped to one side. "If you're gonna go, mind if I go with you?" I said, "That's up to you," and
walked through the living room and out through the front door. I didn't look at beaches or birdhouses or
pastel architecture. I watched my feet strike sand for a hundred yards, and I
was on Purcell's front stoop. The knob twisted easily in my hand. The door
swung open, and I stepped inside. The huge beach house was quiet. I pulled the
Browning from my waistband, chambered a round, and clicked off the safety; then
I started in. Purcell's living room, dining room, and kitchen were all clean
and cool, well-lighted and empty. The last room on the ground floor was his
study, which was where I finally found what was left of the former University
of Florida football great. Closed blinds blocked out the afternoon
sunshine. The only illumination was a cone of yellow light radiating from a
brass ship's fixture suspended over the desk. Beneath the fixture, Purcell's
lifeless form and the attendant handiwork of a deeply sadistic person stood out
in sharp relief beneath the single lightbulb. chapter twenty-seven Purcell hadn't been dead long, so the
smells inside his
air-conditioned study were the slaughterhouse odors of fresh blood and
butchered meat. Whatever horrible things the man had done during his first
forty years on the planet, he had paid for many times over during his last
hour. The heavily muscled ex-jock lay
spread-eagle across a cherry partners' desk that had been cleared off and used
as an operating table. Yellow seams of fat and jagged clumps of gray muscle
protruded from a gaping incision extending across his belly; thick ropes of
intestines had been pulled from the wound and draped over his sternum where
they lay in a mass of thickening fluids. A blood and saliva-soaked hand towel
had been stuffed inside his mouth to muffle his screams. Even as I wondered if the killer was still
in the house, I found myself edging closer. Strange. The corpse was empty and
flattened somehow, like a snakeskin nailed to a board to dry in the summer sun.
And I could see now that that was close to the truth of it. The tortured body
had been restrained by forty or fifty ten-penny nails driven through the skin
of his arms and legs and through the outside of his rib cage. Under the glow of
the overhead light, his thick neck shone like melted wax where the skin had
been stretched out like gills on either side and nailed to the desktop. I
gagged and gagged again as I stepped back away from the blood-soaked carpet.
Stomach acid burned in my chest and against the sides of my throat. I heard footsteps on the carpet behind me.
I turned and saw Joey spin Loutie around and shove her out the door before
closing it tight. He came up beside me. All he could say was, "What
the..." "I guess he didn't take Susan." "I guess not." Joey took a
tentative step forward before recoiling. "Shit, Tom. They even nailed his
nutsack to the desk. Who would do that?" Joey didn't expect an answer, but I said,
"He called him a 'mean-ass spic'" "Huh?" "Nothing. I don't know." Joey raised his voice. "Well, can we
please get the fuck out of here now?" "Let's go." Joey moved out ahead of me, pushing Loutie
ahead of him and pausing only twice to wipe two doorknobs clean of our
fingerprints on the way out. Back inside our rented beach house, we
stopped in the living room to catch our breath. I was numb. Loutie looked like
she was going to be sick. Joey's face had grown pale and hard, and his hands
trembled at his sides. Loutie said, "I've never seen
anything like that." It was a stupid comment—none of
us had ever seen anything like that—but stupid is
what shock does to you. Joey walked into the kitchen and came back
with a glass of water for Loutie. She took a small sip. Joey looked at me. "We need to
go." I asked, "Is the place clean?" Loutie nodded. I looked at the tough ex-stripper and
asked, "Are you going to be okay? Can you drive?" She nodded. I said, "Joey. Drive her. I'll see
you back at Loutie's house in Mobile." Loutie shook her head as if trying to
shake off the image from Purcell's study. "No. My car's jammed full of
equipment and stuff. There's no room for Joey even if I wanted him to come with
me, and I don't. I'll be fine. You two get out of here. I'm going to give the
place a final once-over and I'll be right behind you." Joey said, "We're not leaving you
here." "Fine. Then wait. I'll be done in
three minutes." And she was. Loutie turned the key in the
lock, climbed into her car, and pulled out ahead of us. Joey and I climbed into
his Expedition, and he steered back onto Highway 98. Miles of scruffy beach vegetation droned
by, and exhaustion poured over me. I was drifting into unconsciousness when the
phone began vibrating against my hip. I reached into the wind-breaker's side
pocket, fished out the phone, and handed it to Joey. It was probably Loutie. Joey said, "Hello," listened
some, and handed the phone back. I looked at him and put the tiny gray
receiver against my ear. "Hello?" "Mr. McInnes, this is Charlie Estevez
in Tallahassee. We must talk." "No shit." "There has been a death." My stomach tightened, and I prepared to
hear the worst about Susan. "Who is it?" "Leroy Purcell." I let out a breath I didn't know I was
holding. "How do you know?" "I don't understand. Were you
involved? We believed you weren't. If you were, then we have nothing else to
discuss." "What the hell are you talking
about?" Estevez said, "I'm calling on behalf
of Mr. Sanchez. He wanted to warn you. One of our people found Leroy Purcell
murdered not five minutes ago. Mr. Sanchez was concerned that certain people in
Purcell's organization might suspect you." I tried to sound a little more surprised.
"What happened?" "Somebody knifed him. He was... I'm
sorry, but I don't know how else to put this. As it was described to me,
Purcell had been ... well, gutted. And, ah, something worse than that." Estevez wanted to tell me the lurid
details. But he wanted me to ask. Instead, I asked about the doctor's wife from
Atlanta who had been with Purcell that morning in Mobile for brunch. Estevez said, "She's fine. Reports
are that there was some kind of argument, and Purcell walked out and left her
at the party." I thought it was kind of soon to already
have "reports" on Purcell's date that morning. I said, "Well,
that's good," and decided it was time for an awkward pause. I was getting on Estevez's nerves. He
wanted to tell me about Purcell's death, and I wanted to get off the phone. Almost five seconds passed before Estevez
said, "Purcell had been ... Our man found him spread-eagle on the top of
his desk with a bunch of nails hammered through his wrists and the skin on the
sides of his neck and, pardon the detail, but..." I interrupted. "I got the
picture." Once again, Estevez paused. I asked, "Anything else?" "That's not enough?" I said, "More than enough." Joey slowed to a respectable speed as we
crossed the state line and followed Highway 331 through the fruit-stand-lined
streets of Florala. Just a couple of car lengths ahead, hard tropical sunshine
bounced off the back window of a red Saturn, partially obscuring our view of
four sun-streaked ponytails that bobbed and bounced with animated conversation.
The Greek letters for phi mu clung to the red, rear-window brake light,
and one of the girls had draped a shapely, suntanned leg out of the front
window on the right side. The leg's owner wiggled her toes in the warm wind as
she sipped dark cola from a liter bottle and adjusted her sunglasses. Joey said, "That's what Carli ought
to be doin' at her age." I looked over at him and nodded. He said, "It's not gonna happen, is
it? We get her out of this, and—after what her father did to her and
everything else—she still ain't ever gonna be like those
little sorority girls." The scene back at Seaside had gotten to
him. For Joey, this was pouring his heart out. I put my hand over the cell
phone mouthpiece and said, "Not like them. No. But one day she'll make it.
Look at Loutie." Joey was through talking. He was studying
the girls. I refocused my attention on the cell phone and on Charlie Estevez,
who had been patiently waiting for me to respond to his news about Purcell. I said, "Tell Sanchez I need to see
him right away." Estevez cleared his throat. "Mr.
Sanchez is a very busy man. I'm not even sure where he is, ah..." "There have been other, connected
deaths today. Do you understand?" Estevez didn't answer. I said, "And
that's all I'm saying over the phone about that. Sanchez needs to know, though,
that somebody's making a move on everyone involved, and up until now I thought
it might be him. That's why I wasn't real polite when you told me who you were.
But, if it's not your patriots, you better tell Sanchez to call me in a
hurry. This is all spinning out of control, and somebody's going to pay. You
got that?" Estevez let a few seconds pass before
answering, but when he spoke he sounded more thoughtful than irritated. "I
have it. Will you be at this number?" "Yeah. Unless my battery gives out.
If it does, I'll call you back in one hour." I said, "By the way, we
learned something interesting today about who my client actually saw with
Purcell in See Shore Cottage that night. One of Jethro's cousins—if you follow me—told my partner that all this started over
some Cuban, in his words, some 'Castro' getting whacked." Estevez was
quiet. I said good-bye and pushed the end button. Joey said, "By any chance, am I the
partner who heard about the murder?" "Yeah. You are." "Just when exactly did I hear
this?" I said, "I haven't decided yet,"
then tossed my phone on the seat and pulled Joey's out of the clip on his dash
and called Kelly. I explained to her, somewhat cryptically since we were
talking over airwaves, what had happened, and told her to check into a hotel or
go visit her mother for a few days. Kelly promised to get out of town. When I finished, I filled Joey in on
Charlie Estevez's side of our phone conversation, and Joey said, "Gimme
that," and took his phone out of my hand. He called Randy Whittles, Navy
SEAL and loser of lost girls, and checked on his progress finding Carli. Joey
filled Randy in on what was happening and told him to be available in Mobile
that night for a meeting. Joey put the phone back in its dashboard
holder and said, "We gotta get everybody together tonight and figure out
what to do about all this." I said, "I'm not going to vote on it,
Joey. I'm going to find out who took Susan and ... and cause somebody some
pain." Joey looked miserable. "I know it
doesn't look good, but we don't know what the hell happened with Susan
today. And, Tom, I like Susan too. Not like you do. But she's my friend too.
Believe me, if we find out somebody hurt her, I'm gonna skip the pain part and
go right to killing the sonofabitch." Bright sunshine glinted off the hood and
burned a fiery oval into my retina. I closed my eyes and rubbed hard at them
with the heels of my hands. I could still see the blazing dot. Joey said,
"There's a pair of sunglasses in the glove box." I put them on. I said, "You remember telling me
about that dagger tattoo on the arm of one of the guys who jumped you outside
the bar the first night you were in Apalachicola?" "Outside Mother's Milk. Yeah. I
remember." "You said there were initials over
and under it." Joey rubbed his jaw. "Yeah. I
remember it said R.I.P. Rest in Peace, I guess. And it had something like
initials too." "R.E.T." "I'd have to check my notes." "It's R.E.T. I remember. And I saw
the tattoo myself on Sunday." Joey glanced over. I said, "Sonny. Purcell's
guy who was one of the painters. It's the same asshole who burned Susan's painting." Joey smiled a little for the first time
since leaving Seaside behind. "The one you threw grits at." I nodded. "And the one Billy Teeter's
partner, Julie, called to come kill me after Willie fell in the water off Dog
Island. Look, I was thinking. There are obviously a hell of a lot of names that
start with T, but the arm stamped with this particular T is tied to Julie and
the Teeters. So, I was thinking that maybe we could make another donation to
your friends on the Panama City force and find out if they have any record of a
convicted felon named R. E. Teeter. You said it looked like a prison
tattoo." Joey sat and thought about that for a few
seconds. "It was definitely one of those shitty homemade jobs like people
get in prison. Can't be sure, though. Nowadays, street punks give themselves
fake prison ink to try and look tough, but..." He picked up his cell phone
and dialed up Detective Coosa in Panama City. When the conversation ended, Joey put his
phone back in its clip on the dash and said, "He'll call back." Twenty minutes later, the phone rang. It
was Sanchez. We set up a meeting at my office that night in Mobile; then Joey
called Randy to make arrangements for that evening. An hour went by before Detective Coosa
called. Joey listened, made phone noises, and hung up. He said, "Rudolph
Enis Teeter." I said, "Not a really
dangerous-sounding name." Joey grinned. "Damn if I wouldn't
wanna be called Sonny too." "What did he do time for?" "Assault with a deadly weapon,
attempted murder, and resisting arrest." I said, "Tough guy." Joey said, "Or just a dumb-ass." chapter twenty-eight We pulled into Mobile at rush hour and
slowly made our way to
Loutie's house. As we turned down her comfortable, tree-lined street, Joey
said, "You sure this is a good idea? Your buddy Carlos could be behind
this whole thing." "Maybe, but I don't think so. I think
he's the catalyst." "What's that mean?" "A catalyst is..." "I may not be a lawyer, Tom, but I'm
not a moron. How is Sanchez a catalyst?" "I'm not sure yet." Joey said, "Thanks. I'm glad I
asked." "But it's got something to do with
the fat guy on the beach and whether somebody thought Leroy Purcell stepped
outside his territory or overstepped some kind of bounds when he started
smuggling and shooting people on the islands." Petite, dangerous, and nervous, Randy was
waiting inside when we arrived. Two of his men kept watch on the street and the
alley. Loutie Blue wasn't home yet, and Joey was having a hard time hiding his
concern. Finally, he called her and found out she was caught up in traffic. Randy had picked up Chinese takeout, but I
skipped the egg rolls and rice and found a bottle of Dewar's. After two
whiskies, I thought I was better. After the third drink, I could feel the tense
tingling pressure that, since I was a child, has always closed in on the sides
of my throat when I'm going to lose it, and tears began to fill my eyelids.
Without excuse or explanation, I left Joey and Randy in the kitchen shoveling
Mongolian beef into their mouths and pretending not to notice that there was
another grown man in the room who was crying—sort of. I
walked through the house to the room where Susan and I had made love while
panic had gripped Carli and sent her climbing through a window to escape into
the night. Inside the bathroom, I twisted the
shower's ceramic crosses and stripped and stepped into the steaming spray. Hot
water poured over my face and scalp and shoulders, and I tried to think. If
Susan really was dead, well, there would be time to grieve. But, right now, I
had to work on the premise that she and Carli were alive and well and out there
somewhere in desperate need of help. I stood there beneath the stinging spray
until it turned warm and then cold, and I stood there some more to let the
frigid water run over my face. It didn't help. I checked my reflection in the
mirror while drying off, and I still looked awful. I didn't necessarily look
like I had been crying, which, I admit, was what I was worried about, but I
still, unarguably, looked, as Joey would say, like shit on a lollipop. When I was dressed, I took a deep breath—and a lesson from Loutie Blue—and pushed the
hurt and anger down deep where, I hoped, I could use them when the time came. Back downstairs, Randy and his men had
left to recon my office building and take up positions. Joey and I climbed into
his Expedition and followed. Twenty minutes later, we pulled into the deck of
the Oswyn Israel Building and stepped out into the oppressively dark concrete
structure. As we walked toward the entrance to my building, I whispered.
"Somebody's here." Joey spoke even more quietly than I had.
All he said was, "Yeah." "Is it Randy's men?" Joey shook his head and whispered.
"No idea," but I noticed the Glock 9mm had moved out of his shoulder
holster and into his hand. I used my key card to open the double
glass doors and work the elevator. The hall was lighted, and my office door was
open. Odd Job waited, appropriately enough, in the waiting room. As we entered
he tried to pat me down. I pushed him away, and, with surprising speed, Odd Job
pulled a gun from inside his coat. But before he could level it, something
white flashed across his face and he hit the floor shoulders first. I looked
over and saw Joey massaging his right fist with his left hand. His gun was on
the floor. Joey said, "I figured you didn't want
him shot." I said, "Knocked on his ass is
good." We found Sanchez waiting in my office. He
stood and nodded. "Good evening." Joey said, "Not for Sumo Joe out
there." Sanchez looked puzzled and stepped out of
the office. We followed. Sanchez very nearly tripped over his
three-hundred-pound bodyguard, who lay unconscious on the floor opposite the
front door. Odd Job, a.k.a. Sumo Joe, was breathing heavily, and a small
rivulet of blood trickled from the corner of his mouth. Sanchez asked,
"What is this about?" I said, "He behaved badly at the end
of a bad day." Sanchez looked a little disgusted, but I
couldn't tell with whom. He turned and walked back into my office and sat in
the upholstered guest chair he had been using when we came in. Then he
casually, almost gracefully, crossed his legs and said, "It also was a bad
day for Leroy Purcell." Joey said, "We don't really give a
shit about Leroy Purcell's day." Sanchez shrugged and turned to me. "I
cannot sympathize with whatever difficulties you encountered today because I do
not know what you are talking about. On the telephone, you told Seсor Estevez
that there have been other deaths. That is all I know." I looked at Joey, and he raised his
shoulders. Tell him if you want to. So I leaned back in my chair, put my feet
on the desk, and told Carlos Sanchez about our day on Dog Island. As I talked, Sanchez pulled out his cigar
case and placed a long, thin Montecristo between his small, white teeth. As he
put the match to the end, he said, "They knew about the listening
devices." I said, "Yeah. It looks that
way." He said, "I am sorry about Seсora
Fitzsimmons, uh, missing. As you know, I wanted very much to avoid anything
like this." I looked at him. "Actually, you
assured me that Purcell would leave me and Susan alone." He held up open palms. "We did all we
could to control the situation. Leroy Purcell is... was too ambitious
for his own good. I imagine his death was no great loss to anyone." "No shit." He paused. "You said there was an
attempted ambush. People died." "We had to kill them to escape." "Where are the bodies?" I said, "In a house used by the
Bodines on Dog Island. A man named Thomas Bobby Haycock has been living
there." He said, "Do you expect me to clean
up your mess? Is that why you are telling me this?" I said, "Yep." Sanchez said, "No," and Joey's
Glock 9mm appeared. Sanchez said, "Do you plan to kill me also?" Joey shrugged. I said, "If I thought you had
anything to do with Susan, you'd already be dead. But I don't think you would
have come here if you had. So we have to decide how we're going to move
forward. Joey and I are working on the assumption that you and your group are
either going to be with us or against us. In other words, we don't see you
sitting on the sidelines while we get slaughtered. And if you're not willing to
help, that means—and I'm just guessing here—that you will probably try to kill us to keep this mess from
getting any messier and to keep the cops out of your business. And Mr. Sanchez,
or whoever the hell you are, if you're going to try to kill us, well, we have
to figure we've got a better chance of staying alive long enough to find Susan
if we shoot you right now." Sanchez let thick, gray smoke drift out
through his nostrils. He said, "I could simply lie and kill you
later." "That's true. But I don't think you
will. Something's going on with the Bodines, and I think you need to know what
it is. Your contact man, Leroy Purcell, just had his guts cut out by
someone." I said, "The man had a long list of enemies, but it's too
much to believe it's a coincidence that he got killed the same afternoon when
someone was busy kidnapping Susan and trying to kill Joey and me. It's all
connected somehow. And since you didn't do it, and since Joey and I don't have
a frigging clue, it stands to reason that killing us isn't going to solve the
problem." I paused, and Sanchez remained quiet. I said, "So, in
short, someone's drawing a lot of attention to the Bodines in a way that's bad
for you and for us. We don't want to go to jail for defending ourselves on the island,
and you don't want your fellow patriots to rot in South America while you try
to set up a new operation. And you sure as hell don't want to get yourself in
the newspaper or on the evening news." Sanchez looked from me to Joey and back
again. He said, "I expected more. That is a weak argument, Seсor McInnes." This time, I shrugged. He inhaled deeply from
his Montecristo, blew a long, narrow plume of smoke at the ceiling, and said,
"If the bodies have not already been discovered, we can take care of the
cleanup on Dog Island." My stomach tightened as I heard cleanup used
the same disturbing way for a second time that day. "But understand that I
am making what I believe is the logical choice under the circumstances. Please
do not fool yourself that you can deal with us through threats." And he
rose to leave. As he passed Odd Job, he stopped and looked down. Joey said, "I got 'im," and
walked over to drag the unconscious bodyguard outside. Sanchez turned back to look at me.
"You told Charlie Estevez that one of the Bodines you saw today said
something about your client seeing Purcell kill a Cuban." "Nope. He said, as nearly as Joey
could remember, that, quote, 'all this mess started over a fucking Castro
getting whacked.'" Sanchez said, "What else did he
say?" I said, "As far as I know,
nothing." I hesitated and said, "There was something else, but it
didn't make much sense." "What was that?" "This guy, I think it was the one who
ended up with a broken neck, tried to bargain with Joey. He said he could tell
us about 'the fat spic in the swamp.'" I stood and looked at him.
"Does that make any sense to you?" A.k.a. Carlos Sanchez looked at the floor
and shook his head as if giving the question great thought and coming up empty;
then he walked out the door. When Joey came back in, I asked if Sanchez
had tried to talk to him in the hallway. He shook his head and said, "You
think you talked him out of killing us?" "I don't know. I think, probably
yeah, for the time being." "It was kind of a weak-ass
argument." "Yeah. Well, you'd be right except
for one thing." Joey looked puzzled. I said, "Sanchez's front group owns
the house on Dog Island where you just left a pile of dead guys. And he's
scared to death somebody's going to find out." chapter twenty-nine We headed back to Loutie Blue's house, making sure, we thought, that no one was
tailing us. As we came through the front door, Loutie came downstairs, and I
heard the back door close a few seconds before young Randy Whittles strode into
the room. He said, "We made two in the alley and two on the street." Loutie nodded. "That's what I saw.
There's probably at least one more waiting with their car, wherever that is,
but two and two is all I could see." I asked, "Who are they?" Randy said, "No way to be sure. But
probably the Cubans. They're not doing anything. Just watching the house, and
my men are watching them." Loutie glanced at me and said, "Let's
go talk in the kitchen. Tom needs to eat something." I said, "I'm not hungry," and
everyone walked out of the room in the direction of the kitchen and left me
sitting alone. My choices seemed to be either to sit in the living room by
myself or to go in the kitchen and let Loutie shove food at me. Randy's take-out feast was spread out
across the kitchen table in little white boxes with red pagodas printed on the
sides and wire handles looped across their tops. I sat at the table, and Loutie
put a clean plate in front of me. I said, "I don't want anything,"
and she started piling steamed rice on the plate. I said, "Damn it,
Loutie, I told you I don't want this stuff," and she began to spoon
Mongolian beef over the rice. I gave up and turned to Randy. "What have
you found out about Carli? Do you think she's still on the Gulf
somewhere?" Randy managed to look both embarrassed and
a little impotent. He said, "Loutie says we can't talk until you eat
something." I exploded. "This is childish
bullshit. Susan may be dead. Carli's missing and God knows in what kind of
trouble." I turned to look at Loutie. "We do not have time for this
crap." Loutie said, "Then I guess you better
eat something." I looked at Joey with the intention of
reaming him out. But he just grinned and raised his shoulders as if to say,
"Whatcha gonna do?" So I picked up a fork and ate a mouthful of
lukewarm beef and onions and rice. Loutie smiled and walked to the
refrigerator, where she poured a glass of iced tea and put it down next to my
plate. I said, "You going to burp me when
I'm done?" Loutie looked unfazed. She said, "If
you need it," and sat down. Now that I was actually eating, I was kind
of hungry. I chewed while Randy talked. "Carli went from here to a bus
stop three blocks east. Around five a.m.,
she caught a bus to the main terminal downtown and left there for Biloxi
at seven-twenty. She got off the bus in Biloxi at their main terminal
and was spotted later in the day, just after lunch, hitchhiking about forty
miles northeast of there on the road to Meridian." Randy looked down at
the table and flexed his jaw. He said, "That's it. That's all we
know." Joey said, "Tom. I don't wanna sound
like an insensitive prick here, but now that Purcell and Rus Poultrez are dead,
how much difference does it make that we can't find her? I mean, I know it's
bad for any fifteen-year-old to be out running around the countryside by
herself, hitchhiking and all, but... Hell, you know what I mean." I said, "You're right. At least, you
probably are. Some of Purcell's boys may still be out looking for her, but I'm
guessing they're more interested in finding who killed their boss. Not to
mention jockeying around to see who's going to be the next King of the
Jethros." Randy said, "Don't you think they're
gonna blame you for killing Purcell?" "Probably." Randy was not a complex personality. He
said, "What're you gonna do?" I stood and raked half the food Loutie had
given me into the garbage disposal and put my plate in the sink. My bottle of
Dewar's was on the counter. I found a glass, put some ice in it, and poured
some whiskey over the ice. Loutie wrinkled her nose a little, but didn't say
anything. I sat down and said, "Randy. I'm going to have to think about
that. But right now I'm thinking that we're going to need almost an army to get
the Bodines off our backs." Randy chuckled. "We don't exactly
have an army, Tom." I said, "No. But Carlos Sanchez
does." At 11:47 that night, the hero of New Cuba
knocked on Loutie's door. This time, Odd Job had been replaced by the UZI man
who had guarded Sanchez in Captain Billy's trophy den in Eastpoint. Now, he
seemed to have lost interest in me. Joey's fame had preceded him, and the UZI
man made a point of staying close to Sanchez and watching Joey the way a
rattler watches a king snake. I said, "I guess those are your men
outside." Sanchez said, "They are." "Planning to hurt somebody?" Sanchez walked over and sat in an
upholstered chair. He said, "The matter on Dog Island has been taken care
of. The men are buried, and the house has been cleaned and stripped of fabrics." "Sounds like you've done this
before." Sanchez just looked at me and waited. I said, "Thank
you." "You still have problems," he
said. "The Bodines do, indeed, believe you killed Purcell." "They think I slaughtered him like
that?" "The Bodines know about your
brother's criminal activities before he died. And I am told that you personally
and violently drowned the person responsible for his murder." I was getting angry. "It was ... not
how it sounds." Sanchez nodded. "I am sure." He was working me, probing the ragged
edges of my guilt to maneuver me into doing something—much the same way I was doing my best to maneuver him by feeding
him small bites of information, mixed with out-and-out lies, designed to drive
a wedge between his group and the Bodines. I just didn't know yet what he
wanted me to do, and it was becoming clear that, whatever it was, he wasn't
going to just come out and tell me. I asked, "What do they want?" Sanchez said, "They claim to
want you dead." "Claim?" "Well, there is a man—very young, very ambitious—who is not
unhappy that Purcell is out of the way. The problem is that he sees killing you
as the final step in becoming the new leader of their organization. You see, he
feels that avenging the death of their football-hero leader will make him
something of a hero to his unwashed brethren." "Then I guess I better find out who
really killed him." Sanchez looked off into the distance.
After a time, he said, "I'm not sure that would make much difference. Your
death would be symbolic. This is not a court of law. It's not justice he wants.
It is the appearance—or, I should say, the reputation, if you
will, for violence and revenge that is important here." "So this new wanna-be leader doesn't
really care who killed Purcell?" "No." "He just wants to be known as the man
who took out somebody for doing it?" "Yes." I looked over at Joey and asked, "You
got anything to say?" Joey had locked eyes with Sanchez's bodyguard, and
he didn't speak. He just slowly shook his head. I looked at Sanchez. "I
don't think they like each other." Sanchez smiled. "They are a different
sort of man than you and I." I said, "You think you and I are
alike?" "No. Or I should say, I do not know
you well enough to have formed an opinion." He motioned to Joey and his
bodyguard. "Except that I suspect we are alike in that—while we are capable of violence if provoked—we are not drawn to the sort of primitive, visceral violence that
comes so easily to men like these." Joey said, "You might wanna watch
your mouth, Carlos." Sanchez smiled and continued to look at
me. "My people have done enough. I do not wish to adopt you, Seсor McInnes. So I would like to know how you are going to handle
your problem with the Bodines without going to the authorities." "I'm a lawyer. You're going to tell
me who this new leader is, and I'm going to find out something he wants and
make a deal." Sanchez shook his head. "You're not going to tell me?" Sanchez said, "No. At least, not now.
There are many people watching or, I should say, looking for you. My group, we
are watching. The rest look. And I have no plans to turn you over to anyone.
But, Seсor McInnes, I quite frankly do not expect you to make it." I said, "And you're not interested in
tying yourself to a dead man." "No." Sanchez stood and said,
"By the way, what has become of your young client?" "I wish I knew." I asked,
"Have they found Rus Poultrez's body?" "Seсor?" "After the crash the other night off
Dog Island. I thought you knew. Rus Poultrez flipped a speedboat over an oyster
bed and slammed upside down into the water." "I knew of the accident, but Poultrez
is not dead." I felt sick. "How do you know
that?" As Sanchez walked toward the door, he
said, "We know. You do not need to know how." He turned and looked
into my eyes. "Who do you think killed Leroy Purcell?" I said, "Are you saying that...?" He answered before I finished the
question. "I am saying only that Purcell is dead and Russell
Poultrez of Gloucester, Massachusetts, is alive. The rest is simply what I
think, what I... surmise." And he walked out the door followed by the UZI
man. I looked at Joey. "Do you think
Poultrez killed Purcell?" He said, "Yep." "Why?" "Beats me. I guess I surmised it." chapter thirty I stood in the living room and felt pure exhaustion soak into my muscles and begin
a warm ache in my neck and shoulders and back, even in the tiny joints of my
fingers. I didn't sit for fear that I wouldn't want to stand up again. So Joey
and I stood there looking at each other, at the floor, at whatever until Loutie
and Randy appeared and informed us that Sanchez had departed, taking his
business-suited soldiers with him. I said, "I'm about to drop, and I
know the rest of you probably are too, but we've got a lot to do. I'm sure as
hell open to suggestions, but I can't see us waiting until morning to get
started. With Rus Poultrez out there, we all know he could find Carli any
minute. And I don't even want to think about what she might be going through
while we're catching up on sleep." Loutie said,' "And there's Susan.
It's been about, what, twelve hours since she came up missing?" "Close to that." "Well, we may not want to think about
it, but if that blood on the floor was hers, she needs somebody to find her
fast and get her to a hospital." I said, "Even if it wasn't her blood
...," and my voice trailed off as images of Purcell's tortured and
mutilated body flashed through my thoughts and I left the obvious unspoken.
"Anyway, Randy, I'd like you to split up your people—hire somebody if you need to—and put at
least one good man looking for Carli and another looking for Rus Poultrez. And
I'd like you to concentrate your own time on the father. That's the key
with Carli. She's a tough kid. We can deal with her living on the road. She's
done it before. The danger to Carli is her father." I turned to Loutie and
said, "I'd like you to find Susan." And I knew any further
instructions or suggestions would be pointless. With Loutie, the thing to do
was just point her and pull the trigger. Everything else was self-guided. Loutie -said, "It might help if you
told us what's going on." "What do you mean?" Joey said, "Loutie thinks you're
smarter than the rest of us." He looked from me to Loutie. "She's
probably right." I said, "Loutie, I'm not even sure I
know what I know. I'm mostly still guessing." Loutie put her hands on her
hips and locked eyes with me. I gave up. "Okay, I haven't wanted to waste
time on theories, but... here's what I think I know." Against my
better judgment, I walked over and sat on the sofa. "The murder that
started all this took place in a house called See Shore Cottage, and that house
is owned by a group called ProAm Holdings Corp. I found that out pretty early.
Then the name came up again when Joey and I were trying to get information out
of a snitch in Apalachicola called Squirley McCall." Joey interrupted. "Said it was the
name used by a bunch of what he called 'cigar spics,' who are buying property
on the coast. He claimed Purcell brought them into the area." I said, "So we know that ProAm is
buying land, that it's a Cuban-American enterprise, and that they owned See
Shore Cottage. Also, I checked, and the same company owns the house on Dog
Island where Haycock was staying." Loutie said, "Products Americas.
ProAm for short, I guess." I said, "Holding company." "Oh. Okay. That's the company Kelly
found out about that owns the yacht they used to smuggle in the fat guy and his
family." "Yep. L. Carpintero." I said,
"What's the name sound like?" Joey shrugged. "Think about it.
Change the 'L' to 'EL' and it literally means 'the carpenter.' I didn't get it
either until Squirley said one of the Cubans' leaders was called Martillo and
the other one was nicknamed 'Carpet Hero.'" Loutie said, "Carpintero." "Uh-huh. When Squirley mentioned the
name along with Martillo, it finally rang a bell. A couple of Mexican-American
carpenters remodeled my new office when I left Higgins & Thompson last
year, and I was in there trying to work while they were still nailing up
molding. They learned 'hold it down' from me and I learned, among other things,
that martillo is Spanish for hammer." Loutie said, "The fat guy killed
Purcell." "Looks like it." Randy said, "I'm not following." I said, "El carpintero is 'the
carpenter.' Martillo is hammer, and Purcell was..." "Nailed to his own desk," Randy
said. "But that doesn't make sense. You're saying that Purcell brought the
Cubans, including this Hammer guy, into Apalachicola. Why would he turn around
and kill Purcell?" "I don't know. But I do know that
Purcell threatened me early on with a 'mean-ass spic,' who he said would do
something like slice me open and play with my guts while I was alive and
watching. I thought he was just making up a scary story—and not a very realistic one—to get me to
turn over Susan and Carli." Loutie said, "Purcell probably just
pissed this crazy guy off. Somebody psychotic enough to do something like that
I'm guessing isn't really weighted down by normal human emotions like loyalty
or gratitude." I said, "Yeah, and Purcell could piss
off the pope." Joey looked confused. "I thought we
thought Rus Poultrez murdered Purcell." I took a deep breath and stood up.
"As far as we know now, he did. This hammer stuff may be reaching. We're
just guessing it's some kind of street name for a sadist with a nail fetish.
For all we know, the guy's last name is Carpintero or Martillo or Hammer, and
they're just playing word games with aliases. Poultrez may still be the
killer." I looked around. "But, I don't think so. Poultrez hated
Purcell. But—unless somebody else made Poultrez a
better offer—Purcell getting dead means Poultrez has
lost any chance of making money on Carli, which is all he cares about. And
earlier tonight Carlos Sanchez made a not-very-subtle point of trying to point
us at Poultrez for Purcell's murder." Joey said, "He surmised it." I ignored him. "It just doesn't make
sense for Poultrez to kill the golden goose. No, I think all this is happening
because Carlos Sanchez, Charlie Estevez, and Products Americas are throwing way
too much money around, and we've blundered into a gang war over control of
the smuggling trade in and around Franklin County, Florida. And I think that
Carpintero, or whatever his name is, killed Leroy Purcell mostly because he
needed to and—considering what he did to him—at least partly because he enjoyed it." Everyone was quiet for a few beats. I said, "I guess the only other thing
is about Susan. There's no reason I can think of why somebody would want to
kill her, except maybe to get to the rest of us. Or I guess she could have
surprised someone." Joey cut in. "She ain't dead. We
don't need to stop pressing now." "I know. You're right, and it's what
makes sense. If the Bo-dines killed her by mistake or on purpose they would've
left her there. Think about it. There was too much blood for them to think they
were covering something up. No. No, I think somebody took Susan, and
they took her for one of two reasons. Either we're going to get a
'leave-us-alone-or-we'll-kill-her' call or somebody out there needs her
help with something—and, as far as I can see, the only thing
she could help with is finding Carli or finding us." Joey said, "And nobody's called any
threats in or dropped by to shoot at us." "Yeah. So, I'm thinking that somebody—Sonny or Poultrez or some other asshole—grabbed her to help find Carli." Joey reached up and scrubbed at his scalp
with both hands and then looked off into the distance. No one spoke for a few
seconds until Joey said, "Okay. Tell me if I got it. Purcell was connected
with both the Cubans and this sick Carpintero bastard. The Bodines are
smuggling for the Cubans, and one of the things they smuggle is the fat guy and
his family, who are holed up in the middle of a swamp. So, both the Cubans and
Purcell know about the fat guy, and it looks likely that the fat guy is this
nail-hammering asshole." I said, "Yeah, it looks like it. I
guess we can't be sure, but when there's a guy around named El Carpintero and
somebody gets nailed to a desk..." Loutie said, "And it looks like
Carli's father—this Rus Poultrez—was busy grabbing Susan..." I said, "If he's the one who
did it." Loutie nodded. "Yeah, well, bear with
me a second. Let's say Poultrez took Susan 'cause he needs her to help find
Carli. He was grabbing Susan at pretty much the same time this Hammer guy was
wailing on Purcell. So, unless it was one hell of a coincidence, it looks like
there was some coordination there between Carpintero and Rus Poultrez." I said, "And even if it wasn't
Poultrez, the fact that Susan's kidnapping and Purcell's murder happened the
same afternoon leads us right back to Carpintero." Joey said, "So, if Poultrez took
Susan, looks like he was working with—or at least
coordinating with—Carpintero. And if Carpintero took Susan
... Well, shit, it all leads back to the fat prick with the hammer, doesn't
it?" I said, "Yeah. It looks like it. Of
course, as logical as it sounds plotted out like this, it could all still be
wrong." "Yeah," Joey said, "but it
makes sense." I said, "And it gives us a place to
focus." Joey flipped his head to one side and
cracked the tension out of his neck. "Damn right. We focus on finding this
Carpintero asshole and see how bad he is with his hammer stuck up his
ass." Vertical lines formed between Loutie's
eyebrows as she processed the conversation. When the room grew quiet, she
asked, "Is that it?" I said, "That's all the facts and
most of the guesses," and she left the room. Randy hung around for another minute or
two, staring into space and working it out in his head, before leaving by the
front door. Joey and I were the only ones left. I didn't know what I looked like, but he
looked beat. His tanned complexion had gone pale except for dark smudges over
his cheekbones. Everyone involved was tired, but it was Susan's blood-trailed
disappearance that was devouring Joey and me. I asked, "Did your people get a good
picture of Sanchez tonight?" "They got him. We gotta wait to see
how good they are, but we took a shitload of shots." "What about the shots of
Carpintero?" "A buddy of mine at the ABI has
already got 'em. He's checking Carpintero's shots against their files."
Joey stopped to rub the back of his neck. "Randy'll send over the shots of
Sanchez when they're ready." I thought for a minute. "That's just
a criminal check though, right?" Joey nodded. I said, "Well then, get a set of
prints to Kelly too, with a message to run them by somebody at the newspaper.
That's not a problem is it?" Joey said, "That is not a
problem," and walked over to Loutie's phone. After conveying instructions
to Randy, Joey replaced the headset. He tilted his head back and looked up at
the ceiling. "So this Carpintero or Hammer or whoever he is is the
key." "Looks like it." "I guess you and me are going to
Florida." "Yeah." I said, "Tate's
Hell Swamp." I hadn't been home for a week, and I
needed clothes and waders, a flashlight and field glasses. Our choices for
procuring these things at two in the morning were to either stop by my beach
house on Point Clear or burglarize a sporting goods store. Joey had a pair of
binoculars, camera equipment, and camouflage clothing—your basic private investigator stuff—for himself. But I needed my things, things not made for the big
and tall. My white gravel driveway shone like snow
in the moonlight. I rolled to a stop a hundred feet from the front steps and
shoved the rented transmission into park. Joey had disconnected the Ford's
interior lights, which was one of his private investigator stealth specialties,
and we were able to leave the car with minimal fuss. With the empty car left
idling on the driveway, Joey moved quietly toward the front of the house, while
I trotted around to the bay side and stopped short of the open beach to look
and to listen for something wrong or different. Deep purple clouds with silver edges sped
across the sky, and warm breezes flowed across the choppy, charcoal bay,
rustling sea grass, and sharp black pine needles. On the house, squares of
white trim floated, suspended in air, as cloud cover rendered weathered siding
invisible. I closed my eyes because I once read that assassins wait outside
dark rooms with their eyes shut so their vision will be adjusted to the dark
when they go in to kill. And I listened. Closing one's eyes in a dangerous
place is unnatural; so I listened hard during the long seconds I was able to
last. And when I reopened my eyes, I actually could see a little better in the
night. I watched the home where, for six months
of endless nights, I had tossed and turned and wandered the beach, and I began
to make sense of the shadows, separating shades of charcoal into familiar
shapes and objects. I knew every sound and smell and look of that fragment of
the world—even at 2:00 a.m. And there was something wrong. I crouched closer to the sand and flipped
open my cell phone and punched in Joey's number. Somewhere on the front of the
house, his pocket vibrated, and I put the phone away and waited. He did not
respond, which meant either his side was clear or he was incapacitated. But,
inasmuch as I hadn't heard a cannon go off, the likelihood of his incapacity
was, I thought, pretty close to nil. I studied shadows because those were what
bothered me. Everything looked fine. Only it didn't look the same, and I wasn't
really sure why that was. I jogged across the beach, sending little
half-circles of powder puffing out in front of each foot as it struck dry sand.
Ten yards in, I stopped by a clump of tall, black grass that I hoped would
break up my silhouette. And again something was out of place, something near
the first-floor deck in back. Then he moved. Too small and too thin at the
waist to be Poultrez, the man had thick shoulders, and he was holding a long
weapon. He was waiting inside a deep shadow beside the deck. He was just
waiting. Maybe he understood now that no one was inside the idling Taurus, and
he was scared. Maybe he was just patient. I decided to test my virtue against his
and settled in for a long wait that wasn't. No more than three minutes passed,
and he couldn't stand it. The strong man with the narrow waist had to have a
look around, and he moved left toward the near corner of the house. As he
moved, I saw new movement at the other, far corner and recognized Joey's
hulking shadow. I circled left, matching my pace with the armed man's, then
stopped and waited some more when he halted two paces from the corner and, it
seemed, turned to look out at the beach. Shadows from the eaves blanked out his
head and body, but now the moonlight found his arms and the tip of his nose,
and I knew he had seen me. The long gun came up to his shoulder, and I dove
into the sand as the hollow boom of a shotgun blast pounded the beach. And then
nothing. Nothing but wind and the redundant sigh of water lapping sand. I
rolled onto my back and pointed the Browning with both hands the way Tim the
painter had done just before he died, and I waited for the shotgunner to come
inspect his kill. Phantom boots jogged through wet sand
inside my head; the hard tang of copper flooded my mouth; and Joey called out
my name. I waited. If the shotgunner was near, answering would give him a
target. Then Joey's voice came again. "Tom! Answer me. I got the guy.
Answer me!" I called out, "I'm here," and
got to my feet, dusting sand out of my shirt and pants. "You okay?" "Yeah. Fine." I could see Joey
now, standing near the spot where the shotgun had gone off. I shouted,
"Who is it?" "Don't know. Never seen him
before." As I approached, I saw Joey standing over
a vaguely familiar form lying prostrate on the sand. I asked, "Is he
alive?" Before Joey could answer, a voice said,
"Mr. McInnes, it's me." And young Willie Teeter sat up and looked at
me with the moonlight now full on his face. "What the hell are you doing
here?" Willie sounded scared. "Granddaddy
sent me. Julie said you and her had a run-in, and Granddaddy couldn't get you
on the phone, and he sent me up here to find you. Make sure you're all
right." I said, "Stand up," and Joey
reached down and lifted the nineteen-year-old shrimper by one arm. The boy's
feet actually dangled in the air for a second before Joey put him down. Willie seemed
impressed. When Joey released his arm, the boy turned and studied the big man's
face. I asked, "Did your Granddaddy tell you to come up here and blow my
head off too?" "No, sir. No, sir, he didn't. I was
supposed to wait around for you and let him know, you know, whether you're
okay. But I heard the car and got scared and hid around back here." Joey said, "You bring that shotgun
along to shoot possums while you were waiting?" Willie turned to Joey and looked up into
his face. "No, sir. We knew Sonny was pissed off at Mr. McInnes. And you
don't know Sonny, but he's crazy. Been in prison half his life. Kill anybody.
No shit. He'd just as soon kill you as look at you. I thought that's who I was
shooting at. I seen a shadow, and I could see what looked like a gun, you know,
kind of outlined against the beach. And I shot." He turned back to me.
"I'm sorry as hell, Mr. McInnes. I was scared." I looked into the boy's face but couldn't
read anything there. Maybe it was the dark. Maybe not. I asked, "Have you
checked out the house?" Willie said, "Just through the
windows, but I been here a long time. I'm pretty sure there ain't nobody in
there." Willie waited in the yard while Joey and I
went in fast. The alarm was set. Everything was just as I had left it. I
punched in the alarm code, called Willie, and told him to go in the kitchen
with Joey. I ran upstairs, pulled together a loose stack of clean clothes, and
located my fishing gear. Joey would be amused. I laid out a pair of Orvis
Gor-Tex waders with inflatable suspenders and a pair of Russell Moccasin custom
wading boots with felt soles. None of which was exactly what one might call
swamp gear, but they were what I had and they fit. I emptied out an old nylon
dive bag, put my clothes and gear inside, and threw a pair of quick-focus Nikon
binoculars and a black-rubber Mag-Lite flashlight on top. When everything was packed down and zipped
up in the dive bag, I closed the door to my bedroom and made two phone calls.
The first, which took less than a minute, was to the information operator for
the area code covering Florida's Panhandle. The second was to a number in the
quaint fishing village of Eastpoint, and that one lasted much longer. Joey and Willie were drinking from glasses
filled with something clear and carbonated when I came into the kitchen. I looked
at Joey—he was holding Willie's shotgun now—and said, "Let's go." Willie's eyes perked up. "Where are
you goin'?" Joey caught my eye and, almost
imperceptibly, shook his head. I said, "We've got business to take
care of. Sorry, but if you want that drink, you're going to have to take it
with you." Willie put his glass on the kitchen
counter. "Alright then." He turned to Joey. "I need my shotgun
back." Joey just said, "Nope." The young shrimper flushed red.
"That's an expensive gun. It's mine and I want it back now." Joey glanced at me. He'd had about all he
wanted of Willie Teeter. I said, "Willie, I'll get the shotgun back to
your grandfather. You already tried to shoot one person tonight. I don't think
we'd be doing you or Captain Billy a favor to let you leave here with that
thing." Willie glared at the floor; then he said,
"Well, fuck both of you," and walked out. Joey said, "Somebody ought to explain
to that kid that the innocent good-old-boy routine don't exactly fly if it's
sandwiched between shooting at you and telling you to fuck off." "Who's going to go get him?" Joey sighed and walked outside. The muffled sound of Joey calling Willie's
name floated in on the night air. I set my duffel on the floor and fished keys
out of my pocket as I walked through the living room to my study. Inside the
study, I unlocked the dead bolt on the heavy closet door and stepped inside to
retrieve my Beretta Silver Pidgeon over-and-under and an old humpback Browning
twelve-gauge. I heard Joey and Willie come in the front door and called out for
them. They entered the study just as I was emerging from the closet with an
armful of fly rods. Joey said, "I told Willie we changed
our minds about sending him off by himself." Willie smiled and tried to look
appreciative. As I dropped the tackle on a leather sofa,
Joey said, "Tom, you got everything you need out of there?" I said, "Everything that's worth
anything." A dim bulb seemed to light in Willie's
eyes, and he just managed to get out, "What the...," before Joey
clamped one hand on the back of Willie's neck and another on the boy's belt and
sent him hustling into my gun closet. Joey slammed the door and wedged a foot
against the bottom to keep it shut. I walked over and turned the key in the
lock. I looked at Joey. "Not very smart, is
he?" Joey said, "Doesn't look like
it." And Willie started screaming a furious
line of insults, curses, and threats, the gist of which was that he wanted out
of the closet. Joey and I left the room. I retrieved my duffel while Joey went
outside to get the car. But when I stepped onto the porch and closed the door,
the car was there and Joey wasn't. Before I had time to worry, I heard what
sounded like the roar of a race-car engine coming from the beach, and Joey came
tearing around the side of my house in a mud-splattered four-by-four pickup
mounted on elephantine circus tires. He skidded a little when he stopped; then
he rolled down the window. I said, "What are you doing?" "We're headin' into the swamp. That
little Ford over there might make it where we're going, and, then again, it
might not. This thing was built for it. Get in." I tossed my dive bag into the truck bed
and stepped up and slid onto the passenger seat. I noticed a couple of spliced
wires hanging down next to Joey's right knee. I said, "I guess you didn't
ask Willie for the keys to his truck." As Joey backed around to head down the
gravel driveway, he said, "Didn't see where I needed 'em." Minutes later, as we swerved onto Highway
98, I asked, "Have you got a good friend in the Baldwin County Sheriff's
Office?" Joey said, "How good?" "I don't want Willie breaking out of
that closet and trashing my house. If you know somebody who could go by and
pick him up, the key's on the kitchen counter." Joey nodded and fished a phone out of his
pocket. As he punched in the number and then cajoled some deputy into picking
up Willie, I rolled down the window and reached out to adjust the oversized
outside mirror so I could watch the road behind us. When Joey ended his call, I said, "Do
you believe his grandfather got him out of bed or maybe even out of the
hospital to come up here and check on me?" I noticed Joey was also keeping an eye on
the rearview mirror. He said, "Nope." "You think someone else we didn't
know about could have been back at the house?" Joey looked again at the rearview mirror. "Nope." I said, "But you're not sure there's
not someone following us, are you?" Joey concentrated on the road ahead.
"No," he said, "I'm not." chapter thirty-one A gray ribbon of pavement unwound beneath the yellow wash from our headlights as
Joey sped toward Tate's Hell Swamp and a confrontation with a refugee sadist.
He pushed Willie's ridiculous, steroidal truck hard, anxious to confront
Carpintero and squeeze the truth out of him. I, on the other hand, wasn't much
looking forward to meeting the man who had tortured and eviscerated Leroy
Purcell. I was doing what I had to do to find Susan and Carli Poultrez. Joey interrupted my thoughts. "The
shotgun was kind of a giveaway." "What?" Joey motioned over his shoulder with his
thumb, pointing at the window rack where he'd hung Willie's shotgun. "The
kid—Willie Teeter—he screwed up bringing the gun to your house. It's kinda hard to
believe his granddaddy sent him up to check on you armed with a shotgun." "He didn't plan on having to explain
it. He could have killed both of us." I said, "We were lucky." "That's the trick in this business.
Don't let anybody kill you, and stay lucky. Something usually turns up."
Joey scratched his jaw. "I guess that's two tricks." Relieved to think about something—anything—other than Carpintero, I said, "You
know, Willie does have the same last name as Rudolph Enis Teeter." "Huh?" "Sonny." "Oh, yeah." "And one of the guys who came after
Susan and Carli on St. George—the one who blasted out the picture window
downstairs—used a shotgun." Joey flicked on the high beams. "Be
hard to find a house on the Panhandle that doesn't have two or three shotguns. Something
to think about though. Most men who wanna kill you from close up tend to bring
a pistol. Not many professionals use a shotgun, but the ones who like 'em won't
use anything else. Course, as far as we know for sure, the only profession
Willie's got is shrimping." I turned to study the shotgun Joey had
lifted from Willie. "What kind of gun is that? It looks like it's made out
of plastic." "The stock's some kinda polymer. It's
a Benelli. Loutie's got one at her place." "Isn't that a riot gun?" Joey said, "Can be. Some people use
'em for hunting. With interchangeable chokes, it's a pretty good all-around
shotgun. They use 'em in Mexico and down in South America where doves are so
thick they don't have any limits on how many you can kill. You can run forty
boxes of shells through one of these things without it jamming. Regular hunting
guns like a Remington or a Browning aren't made for that." He looked at
me. "But, a Benelli like this one is really designed to be an
assault weapon." I said, "Oh," and reached down
to feel the outline of a switchblade in my hip pocket. It was the
yellow-handled knife Joey had taken from Haycock at Mother's Milk, and it's
sharp outline imparted a strange sense of comfort as we sped over that lonely,
dark strip of highway. I leaned against the door and closed my eyes. Some time later, a bump or turn or maybe
nothing at all jerked me out of a deep sleep. My legs jumped, my chin bounced
off my chest, and I said something along the lines of "Ooobah." "Huh?" I looked around. "Where are we?" "Just passed the turnoff to St.
George." A few miles past Eastpoint, Joey hung a
left on 65. Minutes later, he pulled off onto a strip of sand next to a sign
that read North Road. We were five miles into the swamp, still
on solid logging roads, when Joey accelerated around a curve, cut his lights,
and turned into a side road. I started to speak, and Joey said,
"Wait." Fifteen or twenty seconds passed, and one
set of headlights passed by on the road behind us. I asked, "Were they following
us?" Joey shrugged. "I'm not sure. People
do live up in here. Not many, though." I noticed his hands twisting
nervously on the steering wheel. I smiled. "I thought you were good at
this." Joey turned the truck around and pulled
back onto the road. He said, "I am good at it. But I'm a hell of a lot
better in daylight. Out here at night, one set of headlights half a mile back
look pretty much like the rest of 'em. Just keep your eyes open." More than an hour after leaving the
blacktop, Joey stopped the truck. "We gotta turn over that way through
that field for a pretty good ways. Three or four hundred yards." I asked, "Is there a road?" "You see the grass?" I said that I did indeed see the thousand
or so acres of grass extending out in front of us. "That's all there is. Saw grass. And
it's not like a field, really. The stuff grows in mud. And the mud can be a
couple inches deep or it can be deep enough to swallow your ass up. Like
quicksand." "You've driven over it before. Right?
When you spotted Carpintero at the compound." "Yeah. That was daytime, and I was
followin' somebody, but... When you don't have a choice, you just do it,
right?" The ground wasn't a problem. Finding the
turnoff through the brackish water surrounding the field was. But an hour
later, as the first rays of sunlight preceded the sunrise, Joey spotted the
machete marks on a pair of ancient cypresses that marked the entrance to the
invisible road beneath the swamp. As we moved from the field to the thick
swamp, the beginning glow of sunlight we had been enjoying disappeared and was
replaced by almost total blackness. Fifty yards in, the road descended into two
feet of brackish water and disappeared from sight, and the machete marks on
cypress trunks that Joey had followed in daylight were now invisible. The
trees themselves were almost invisible. I grabbed a flashlight and tried using it
from the window. Twenty yards later, I crawled out through the passenger door
and into the truck bed, where I moved the flashlight's beam back and forth like
a poacher spotlighting for deer. When I managed to find a machete mark high up
on a tree, I'd bang on the top of the cab. It worked pretty well—right up until the truck pivoted right as if sliding on oil, and
the rear axle dropped into four feet of water. A loud thump echoed across the swamp, and
I realized the sound was my back pounding into the metal truck bed. The jolt
sent me rolling into the tailgate, where I did a one-eighty into the swamp. I
was under. Cool, black water engulfed me. The fall had knocked the wind out of
me, and I could feel my diaphragm spasming. Seconds passed when I couldn't tell
which way was up, until my feet hit the quicksand bottom. I pushed hard and
felt the mud take hold of my feet and suck me down as I pushed away. I pushed harder, and the cold suction of
sludge reached up to my calves. Blood thumped in my ears, and I concentrated on
choking off the hard spasms in my chest. I reached down to pull at my knee, and
only pushed the other foot deeper. Mud and algae leaked into my mouth, and I
gagged and gagged again. Stretching to reach high over my head, I
felt my fingers break the water's surface. I turned my palms out and pulled two
handfuls of water in hard, downward arcs, and my legs came free. Another sweep,
and my head popped through the surface. I kicked hard and clamped one hand over
the tailgate. Joey was standing inside the truck bed.
Black mud covered him from chest to toe, and the giant man's eyes were bright
with fear. He reached over the tailgate, and pulled me into the bed. I
scrambled to my knees and sucked in a lung full of air; then I bent double and
honked. Breathe, honk. Breathe, honk. And, all the while, Joey just stood there
looking at me. Finally, he said, "I couldn't see
where you went in." I nodded and breathed deeply. "How
long was I down there?" "I don't know. As soon as we stopped,
I jumped out on the roadbed and lost my feet and fell into this shit up to my
armpits. I got up and climbed back here as fast as I could. You came up seven
or eight seconds after I got back here and started looking." I said, "It feels longer when you're
drowning." "Yeah. I guess it would." He
turned around to survey our mess. "You okay?" "I'll live." "You ready to get out of here?" I stood next to Joey. "The engine's
still going. It's a four-wheel-drive, and two tires are still on the roadbed.
It's worth a try." Joey reached forward and grasped the open
driver's door. As he stepped over the side of the truck bed and swung a leg
inside the cab, he said, "Get your ass inside." And I thought that sounded like a hell of
an idea. While I scrubbed dark swamp mucus out of
my eyes, Joey dropped the transmission into low and revved the engine. The roar
choked and caught and the back bumper eased out of the muck, sending an oily
gray cloud of exhaust into the still, dank air. Joey yanked on the parking
brake to hold his ground while he spun the steering wheel to get us off a
diagonal and headed back in the direction of the road. With the clutch engaged
and the transmission in low, he gunned the engine again to build up torque and
reached for the parking brake release as exhaust fumes billowed across the
black water and the roar of the engine echoed through thick stands of cypress. And if it hadn't been for the fumes and
the roar—if Joey hadn't been looking back at the
submerged rear tires and I hadn't been rubbing muck out of my eyes and trying
to shake off the delayed confusion of nearly drowning—we might have heard the growing rumble of another monster truck
hurtling toward us like a freight train. chapter thirty-two I heard Joey shout and cuss, and the world
exploded into swirling bits
of glass and flying metal. Every bone and joint, every muscle and organ seemed
to smash in one crashing millisecond of pain, and I was flying against the open
passenger door and somersaulting once again into the swamp. Penetrating cold
enveloped me, and I fought against the black ooze like a drowning animal. This
time, I came up fast and banged the top of my head on the truck's
undercarriage. I hooked throbbing fingers over rusted steel and hung on, not
out of conscious thought but in the way a drowning man will grab another
swimmer and pull him down with him into death. So strong was my need for something solid
to hold on to, if the truck had gone under in that hurt and dazed second after
the crash, I would have held on and gone with it. But it stayed. It stayed
bottomed out across the submerged roadbed with just enough air between the
swamp and the rear axle for one scrambled head and ten locked fingers. I blew
the swamp out of my nose and mouth and let go with one hand long enough to wipe
at my eyes and face. And the world fell back into place. Muffled voices carried across the water. I
was on the left side of the roadbed, and my feet could touch something more
solid than quicksand. My arms and hands worked; my legs and ankles ached but
moved freely enough to rule out fractures or puncture wounds. I moved my neck
to see if I could. And the voices came again, and I thought of Joey. Using Willie's oversized rear tire for
cover, I moved hand over hand to the side of the truck facing the vehicle that
rammed us. An old, two-tone Chevy Blazer, mounted, like Willie's truck, on
tractor tires, sat solidly on the roadbed. Its grill was smashed and separated
by three or four feet from the decimated, left front quarterpanel of Willie's
truck. Above the Blazer's buckled hood, two men were visible inside the cab.
And they were screaming at each other. The larger man sat in the passenger seat
but had turned and leaned in toward the much smaller driver, whose shirtfront
was gathered inside the big man's fist. The windows were up, and the words
inaudible. But the sounds of the two contrasting voices were fury answered with
fear. Turning away from the Blazer, I slid my
hands along the rear axle to the other side to put the truck between me and
what I assumed were a couple of homicidal Bodines. The passenger door I had
shot through like a stream of tobacco spit was still open, and, if it hadn't
been spun into the swamp by the collision, my Browning was on the seat or in
the floorboard or somewhere inside the cab. Moving around the right rear tire,
I crawled up onto the roadbed and had raised up onto my knees in the shallow
water when I heard one of the Blazer's doors open. Up on my toes and staying low now, I
scurried to the open passenger door of Willie's wrecked truck and popped my
head up over the seat. Joey sat crumpled against the steering
wheel. Blood covered the side of his face and neck and ran in a viscous stream
from his right ear, and shiny bits of glass stuck to the splattered blood
covering his head and shoulders. I whispered his name. "Joey?" Nothing. His left arm appeared to be wedged between
his ribs and the driver's door; his right was tucked in front of him, pressed
between his stomach and the steering wheel. Water splashed as one of the Bodines
stepped out onto the roadbed, and I could hear his voice clearly. "Okay,
damnit. I'm going." Feet sloshed through water, and I began
frantically scanning the inside of the cab for my Browning automatic. But
nothing was where it had been. The seat where I had been was clear, except for
thousands of diamond-sized shards of windshield glass. The floorboard was
strewn with shattered bits of plastic and metal, with fragments of electronics
and heating and air-conditioning parts. Even Willie's riot gun was gone—shot through the rear window, taking the gun rack with it. A door slammed, and I pulled up onto the
side of the truck bed and peeked inside. Willie's twelve-gauge Benelli lay
propped against my dive bag like the hand of God had placed it there for me.
All I had to do was get to it without catching a bullet in the process. I caught a flash of color and dropped down
as the smaller Bo-dine came around the front of his smashed grill and
approached Joey's window. "This one, the driver, looks
dead." I heard another door open, and the larger
man's voice came from inside the Blazer. "Which one is it?" "It's the big sonofabitch." Water sloshed as the bigger Bodine stepped
out onto the road and then slammed his door shut. "What about the
lawyer?" The little man said, "He ain't here.
Looks like he got slung out when we hit 'em." "No sign of him?" "None I can see. Probably on the
bottom of the swamp." "I told you to slow down. We didn't
need to wreck both goddamn trucks to stop 'em." The little one wanted to argue some more.
"You said ram 'em. You didn't say bump 'em a little, and I'm tired of you
riding my ass about it." The big man cussed and said, "Well,
pull him out of there, and let's get the road cleared." "The hell with that. This guy's
bigger than you are. You come up here and pull his big ass out." I heard the big man sloshing toward the
truck. "You're a useless little shit. You know that?" The water
sounds stopped. "He is big, though, isn't he?" "I told you." The mechanical click of the door handle
being lifted sounded unnaturally loud in the still swamp, and a deep moan came
from inside the cab. The small man yelled, "Shit! He's
alive." I reached up and grabbed the top edge of
the truck bed and sprang up out of the water with all the power left in my
aching legs. My knees caught on the side, and I spun into the truck bed and
scrambled for the twelve-gauge. One of the men screamed like a woman. My
hands found the shotgun, and I jumped up to see the big man spinning my way
with a short double-barrel. I lowered the Benelli to fire, but the
double-barrel exploded first as Joey's door flew open and slammed into both
men, sending a load of buckshot straight up and knocking both men over backward
into the water. The big man managed to lift up his shotgun and blindly blast
one of Willie's tractor tires before he sank out of sight. I stood in the truck bed with the Benelli
trained on the swirling water. I called out, "Joey?" "Yeah." His voice sounded tight
and strained. "You okay?" "I'm not dead." Seconds passed before the two men surfaced
ten or twelve feet from where they'd gone in. They had been trying to swim away
underwater. Now they gasped in air and spun in the muck looking for me and the
shotgun. I called out. "Where the hell do you think you're going?" They
didn't answer. "You've got nowhere to go." The smaller man yelled, "Help." Joey's strained voice came again.
"Help yourself, you little prick." I said, "I'm not going to shoot you.
Swim to the road." The smaller man almost cried. "I
can't make it." I said, "Then don't," and jumped
down out of the truck bed and sloshed up to Joey's open door. Joey was sitting back now. His pale gray
eyes were shining through a mask of blood and windshield glitter. I said, "I thought you were
dead." "Thought same thing about you."
He spoke with his teeth clenched. "Better keep watchin' the water." I nodded and turned to watch the two men
flail around in the swamp. I asked, "How bad are you? Looks like a broken
jaw." Joey's voice sounded even weaker than
before. "Yeah. And something's wrong with my left leg. Can't move
much." I nodded. "We'll take the Blazer. Get
you to a doctor." "You gonna drive right over Willie's
truck?" Willie's monster truck was completely
blocking the only way out. I said, "We could try to push it out of the way
with the Blazer, but we could end up with both trucks underwater." Joey
was quiet. "I guess there's probably somewhere to turn around along here,
but..." I looked back, and Joey just shrugged. I went on, "...we don't know where it
is." "And we been having enough trouble
just staying on the road in here." "So, I guess we load you into the
Blazer. And, since the road's underwater and we don't know anywhere to turn
around, I get to try to drive backward through this mess until we hit dry
land." Joey tried to smile and grimaced instead.
All he got out was, "Sounds pretty stupid." "Yeah." Joey motioned toward the Bodines, who had
made it up onto the road and were sitting in water up to their chests and
catching their breath. "What're we gonna do with those two?" I said, "I thought I'd tie them up
and toss them in the back of Willie's truck and leave them here." Joey said, "Now that's a good
idea." Three hundred yards and thirty minutes
later, I backed the Bodines smashed and smoking Blazer onto dry land. After pulling
up onto the sandy roadbed, I put the Blazer in park and turned to check on
Joey, who was laid out on the backseat. When I turned, Joey had his hand down
the front of his pants. I said, "Bored?" Joey just unzipped his pants and said,
"Turn around." "Would you two like some
privacy?" "Fuck you. Something's trying to hook
on to my unit." "Leech?" "Yeah." "You okay?" "Do I fucking look okay?" "I don't know. You made me turn
around. Not that I really want to get a good look at this." I heard Joey
roll down the window and flick something out. "You get it?" "Yeah." I was laughing. "Well, can I turn
around now?" Joey said, "You know, it really ain't
funny." I turned around and said, "Actually,
it kind of is." "You know," Joey said, "you
were in the water a lot more than I was." I stopped laughing and got out of the
Blazer. After a short inspection, I climbed back in and said, "I tried the
flip phone. It's a goner. I don't know what else to do but try to get to a
phone or maybe a CB at Carpintero's compound and see if I can get a Life-saver
Helicopter or a boat to come out here and get you." Joey just nodded. "You got a better idea?" Joey reached up to rub at his eyes. "Nope." "How far is it to the compound?" "Not far. You can keep driving until
just before you get to this little bridge. There's a place there you can pull
off and hide the Blazer." I guess he saw the worry on my face because he
added, "I ain't gonna be any safer here than I am there, and you'll have
the vehicle close by." I turned around in the driver's seat and
maneuvered the rickety gearshift into first. "So," I said, "I
guess it's time to meet the Hammer." chapter thirty-three It was almost eight o'clock when the little
bridge came into sight. I
pulled off into a stand of scrub pine, and Joey told me as much as he could
about the compound's layout. I left my cut, bruised, and broken friend
stretched out on the backseat of a stolen vehicle with Willie's Benelli
twelve-gauge across his chest. I took Joey's little Walther PPK and
started out through the underbrush to the camp's perimeter. Joey told me there
would be one guard at the entrance. So I circled around to the side of the
compound and, keeping a huge Butler Building between me and the road, moved
into the clearing. Running low and feeling ridiculous, I
checked out the buildings for communication equipment. One warehouse was just
that—full of machinery, firearms, and rum and
more cigars than I thought were in the world. The cavernous metal building was
stuffed with all the things the Bodines had been smuggling in, things in demand
on the black market. The second warehouse was the weird one. Padlocks secured
both doors, but large windows had been mounted in opposite walls, and morning
light flooded the place. It looked like a high school chemistry lab full of
long tables with beakers and test tubes and electronic machinery. From the
window, I could see three desktop computers. Besides the warehouses, there were two
smaller buildings. One looked like a makeshift home, with a porch across the
front and a vintage Mercedes and a new Explorer parked out front. An old
air-conditioning unit droned in a side window. The other smaller building had a porch,
too, but looked empty—if it's possible for a building to look
empty from the outside. But that's how it looked; so that's where I went. And
that's where I found an unlocked door, four filing cabinets, a metal desk, and
one beige telephone. I placed a long-distance call to Loutie in
Mobile and made sure the first words out of my mouth were that Joey was going
to be fine. As I was downplaying his injuries, Loutie interrupted. "Tom. I
know you'll take care of Joey, but you need to know something. Joey's buddy at
the Baldwin County Sheriff's Office called." "About Willie?" Loutie sounded scared. "Don't interrupt,
Tom. Somebody could be after you right now. When the deputy got to your house,
Willie was gone. And he didn't break out. Somebody had used your key to let him
out." I said, "So he wasn't there
alone." "Doesn't look like it." "And they could have been behind us
all the way. Is that what you're saying?" Loutie said, "I'm saying they could
be watching you right now." I said, "Loutie. About Joey. We need
to get somebody out here..." I froze in midsentence as the door to the
shack swung open and Willie Teeter pointed an autoloading shotgun at my gut. I put the phone back in its cradle and
said, "Hello, Willie. I was just talking about you." Then a strange thing happened. Willie
pulled a silver whistle from his hip pocket and blew a shrill, piercing blast. Through the door over Willie's shoulder, I
saw three young men—all about Willie's age—sprint out of the woods and onto the cleared grounds of the
compound, where they dropped to their stomachs and pointed guns at nothing in
particular. I asked, "Playing army?" Willie was back to his tough-guy mode.
"Let's go outside." I said, "There's a guard out
there." Willie smiled. "Not anymore. Move." As we passed through the doorway, a big,
baby-faced, football-player-looking kid stepped up onto the porch. I said, "So.
I guess you're the young Turks." Willie smiled again. "No. We're 'The
Sequel.' You know, better, bigger, even more explosions." "Cute." The pie-faced football player said,
"Cute ain't the word for it, asshole. The Sequel is your worst fucking
nightmare." "My worst nightmare is about getting
lost in a department store." Pie Face looked puzzled. Willie said, "Let's go," and
stepped up to take the gun out of my hand. I walked out into the yard ahead of
Willie. "Where are we going?" Willie just said, "Stop." So I
stopped. "Down on your stomach. Hands behind
your head." This was not going well. I said, "You
going to shoot me in the back of the head, Willie?" And he hit me in the
stomach with the butt of his new shotgun. I lay on my stomach and laced my fingers
behind my neck. Willie stepped a few feet away and blew
three sharp blasts on his whistle. Seconds later, three more men—college age but not exactly college material—came running. Willie said, "Simon and Rooter?" One of the boys, a thin kid with acne scars
on his cheeks, said, "Got 'em set up north and south." "Okay. Good. Looks like the only
people here are in that house over there with the Mercedes parked in front. The
two big buildings are like warehouses. One's got whiskey and cigars and other
stuff Purcell smuggled in. The other one may be a meth factory." Pie Face spoke up. "They're ours
now." The others guffawed and said things like,
"Bet your ass," and "Fucking A." Then I heard Willie blow his whistle
again. One long blast. Nothing happened. Willie cussed and blew again. Still
nothing. He said, "Don't those morons know the signal?" Pie Face said, "Maybe they see
something. They ain't gonna come if they're watching somebody." Willie said, "Go see," and Pie
Face trotted off in search of Simon and Rooter. Minutes passed during which the grumbling
from Willie's posse grew louder. Finally, he blew his whistle again. And, once
again, nothing happened. I had seen Willie and Pie Face and two
others. Two more, Simon and Rooter, had been standing watch on the north and
south ends of the compound. Now, the lookouts were unaccounted for, as was Pie
Face. There were three left, including Willie, and they were all standing over
me. I said, "Something's wrong,
boys." Willie said, "Shut up." Two rifle shots split the air, and I heard
the soft thuds of bodies hitting dirt. I eased my hands to the ground and
looked up. Willie's two buddies squirmed in the grass. One cussed. The other
sobbed like a child. Each boy gripped his thigh and tried to keep blood from
pumping out. A voice came from the trees. "Put
your gun down, Willie." Willie stood his ground. "Granddaddy?" "Put the shotgun on the ground,
boy." Willie hesitated before answering, and the
cussing and sobbing of the two leg-shot boys filled the air. "Granddaddy, what're you doing? Mr.
McInnes is fine. We didn't hurt him. We just stopped him. They're working with
Purcell. Come on out here where we can talk about it." I yelled out. "Don't do it,
Billy." Willie lowered his voice. "You wanna
get shot in the back of the head? Shut your mouth." "You going to shoot your own
grandfather, Willie?" "Shut up." "You can still walk away from this.
Put the gun down. Let your grandfather come up here and take care of you." Willie said, "I can take care of
my..." An engine roared. Willie spun around, and
I sprang to my feet as the Mercedes that had been parked outside the only
occupied house in the compound threw a cloud of dust into the air as it rounded
the small warehouse and headed for the road. I ran for cover behind the empty shack and
felt the first shotgun blast in my chest, but it was the percussion I felt and
not the load. I glanced back and saw Willie firing at the speeding car, leading
the driver's window the way you lead a dove flying over a field of Egyptian
wheat. Three more explosions shattered the morning air, and the car swerved and
burst into flame and crashed into the porch. I dove to the left to avoid the
car and any shots that might be coming my way. I landed and rolled in the sand and sat up
facing Willie. He was reloading. Without thinking, I jumped up and ran hard at
him. Willie saw me when I was ten yards away. The swamp was silent except for the wind
gushing in my lungs and the blood pulsing inside my chest. The barrel arced
slowly upward from the ground to point at my stomach, and what Willie's hands
were doing became very important to me. The blunt, gnawed fingertips of his
left hand gripped the front stock. His right fingers flipped out and away from
his body like someone slinging water off his hands, and Willie tossed three red
spinning shells into the air. His right fingers moved back to the checkered
lever on the side of the housing, and he pumped the first round into the
chamber. I dove under the barrel at his ankles and found nothing. Willie still moved like the high school
jock he had been. And I skidded across clipped saw grass as he skipped out of
reach. I rolled onto my back and looked up. Willie smiled. He had seated the
stock against his shoulder and just taken aim at my face when a rifle shot from
the brush snapped Willie's head forward and dropped him face first into the
dirt. For a time, I could see only the boy's
face pressed into soft earth; I could hear only my own breathing. Then
conscious thought floated back and brought with it the soft whimpering of
leg-shot teenagers, the muffled pump of running feet in sand, and the hiss of
fire. Peety Boy reached me first. He held a
carbine in his left hand. He used his right to pull me to my feet. "You
all right, son?" I didn't answer, and he repeated the
question while shaking me by the arm. "Yeah. Yeah, I'm okay. Who shot
him?" "I did. Didn't figure his own
granddaddy ought to have to do it. Somebody had to." Peety Boy looked over
at the flaming car. "Who's that?" I looked over at a curly black, lifeless
head hanging from the side window. I said, "It's L. Carpintero. The
Hammer." Peety Boy seemed to think about that for a
few seconds. His leathery forehead wrinkled, and he worked his nearly toothless
jaw. Then he said, "Who's that?" While Captain Billy stood watch, Peety Boy
and I loaded Joey into the cab of his truck and tossed the four hurt members of
The Sequel into the bed alongside the two Bodines that Peety Boy had already
retrieved from the wrecked truck in the swamp. The old fishmonger headed out
for the hospital emergency room in Apalachicola. Back in the compound, Captain Billy
crouched on one knee beside his dead grandson and wept. I walked over to examine Carpintero and
the wrecked Mercedes. On the leather seat beside him were an automatic pistol,
a black leather briefcase, and a nail gun with a portable compressor next to
it. I walked back and stood over Captain Billy
Teeter. The old man got to his feet. I said, "I never meant for anything
like this to happen." Billy looked up at the sky with pale wet
eyes. "When you called me last night, I knew it was gonna get bad. The boy
took a shot at you then, and he was gonna kill you just now. I reckon I didn't
know the boy, 'cause the one I knew couldn't a done this." Then he added. "Didn't
have no daddy and not much of a mother." "I'm sorry, Billy. But I've got to
get moving. The young girl I was trying to help is missing now. And a woman, a
good friend, is missing too and may be hurt." Billy wiped tears from his eyes with the
veined back of a calloused hand. "The house over there where the car come
from, that the only one with anybody in it?" I nodded. "Better check it over again. We could
still get shot out here." And the old man picked up his carbine and
started off. I retrieved a thirty-thirty that one of the leg-shot boys had
dropped and followed Billy's path. When I arrived, the old man had his back
pressed flat against the outside wall next to a window. He held up a palm to stop me. Then he
pointed at the house, nodded his head, and made an opening-and-closing motion
with his thumb and fingers to indicate someone was talking inside. I retreated around the corner of a
warehouse. Minutes passed. Billy listened, and I
waited. Finally, the old shrimp boat captain waved me over. "There's a
woman and a little kid in there. Maybe somebody else. But, if there is, he
ain't saying nothing. You think you can kick open that door?" "You cover me through the window, and
I'll kick it in." The old man had aged a decade since Peety Boy, his
childhood friend, had shot his grandson and namesake in the back of the head.
Tears still clung to his gray eyelashes, his wrinkled-leather face had turned
sallow, and his thick hard hands trembled on the stock of his carbine. But
Captain Billy Teeter was functioning. He was still helping a man who was
arguably responsible for getting his grandson killed because it was the right
thing to do. He said, "Go." chapter thirty-four This was not an oak security door on a
million-dollar beach house.
One hard kick buried my shoe in the veneer surface and sent the door hurling
inward. I jumped inside, minus one shoe that now hung from a footprint-shaped
hole in the open door, and pointed my gun at nothing. The room was empty. I snatched my shoe
from the door and pulled it on. A single door led to a back room. I walked
toward the door, being careful to stay to one side, and tried the knob. It
turned. Keeping to one side, I pushed it wide. Three shots spit through the
opening and splintered wood across the room. Shit. I tried, "You're surrounded,"
and realized it sounded even dumber out loud than it had in my head. No answer. "You've got nowhere to go. Toss out
the gun. We don't want anyone else hurt here today." Three more shots hit the other side of the
wall that my back was pressed against. One blasted out a light switch and
snapped my shirt against my ribs. The hell with this. Lots of handguns
are six-shooters; a lot aren't. I took off my shoe and flipped it into the
room. I heard the clack of a firing pin
striking a spent casing, and I went in fast. So fast and so scared that I
almost shot the dark pretty woman from the beach on Dog Island. She was
fumbling with the cylinder of a snub-nosed revolver. I yelled, "Stop!" She didn't. Trembling fingers with
manicured nails pulled spent rounds from the chamber and reached for a box of
cartridges on the bed beside her. "What are you doing? Stop, damnit. Uh,
alto. Alto!" She had a fresh bullet now, but she was
fumbling as frightened eyes darted from me to the empty chamber of her
revolver. "Shit! What's the word?" My mind
raced back fifteen years to Seсora Stippleman's Spanish I. Some half-forgotten
vocab test floated in. "Pare!" She glanced up at that one. She glanced up
as trembling fingers clicked the bullet home. I raised my carbine. "Pare,
goddamnit. Pare!" The dark beauty had one bullet and five
empty chambers. She swung the cylinder into place, and I tightened my finger
against the trigger. I couldn't do it. "Shit!" I let
go of the front stock and whipped the carbine at the wall to divert her
attention. Before the gun hit, I was moving. Three steps and I dove as Seсora
Carpintero leveled the snub-nose at my chest and pulled the trigger. I heard the metallic clack of the
firing pin snapping an empty chamber as I hit her full force and jammed the gun
into the air with my right hand. She fought, and I had to twist her wrist
harder than I wanted to wrest the gun from her grip. I plucked the revolver off
the bedspread where it had fallen and scrambled to my feet. The seсora rubbed her wrist and watched me
with narrow wet eyes. I popped open the cylinder on her handgun and let the one
good bullet drop to the floor. When I did, she sprang off the bed and ran for
my discarded rifle. She almost made it. I got a handful of blouse and spun her
back onto the bed. "Stop! Jeez, lady, it's time to give
up. I'm not going to hurt you. It's okay. You understand? It's okay." She sat and watched. I called out for
Captain Billy before realizing he was standing four feet behind me. He said,
"You okay?" I was trembling as much as the tiny woman
on the bed. "I'm not shot. Do you speak Spanish?" "Nope. She think you were gonna rape
her or somethin'?" I looked around. "We just killed her
husband." "Oh." "And she's got a kid around here
somewhere. That's who she's trying to protect." Billy walked up to stand beside me.
"Want me to have a look in the closet?" "No. I want her to calm down first.
If she thinks we're looking for the boy to hurt him, I'm afraid we'd have to
shoot her to keep her from scratching our eyes out." Billy was quiet for a few beats; then he
said, "I seen what you done. Been easier to shoot her. Didn't want to, did
you?" "Would you shoot her for defending
herself and her kid?" Billy said, "Might. If it was me or
her." "Bullshit. Come on, let's get her out
of here. See if we can get her to calm down some." Captain Billy handed me his gun and walked
over to the bed. He held out his hand and parted his Brillo-pad beard into a
brown-toothed smile. Seсora Carpintero didn't take his hand, but she did stand and
walk toward the door. She was leading us away from her child. We let her. Unfortunately, just down the road, her
husband lay dead in a wrecked Mercedes, which didn't seem to be a recipe for
either calm or cooperation. I stopped her in the outer room, which was kind of
a living room, dining room, kitchen combination. I pointed at a green sofa, and
she sat down. I said, "Billy, go stand by the front
door," and I walked to the sink. On the plywood counter, four glasses had
been left upside down to drain on a red striped washcloth. I picked one up,
turned it over, and filled it with water from the tap. After handing the glass
to Seсora Carpintero, I pulled over a folding director's chair from next to the
dining table and sat down. "Do you speak English?" She sipped the water and searched my face
with her black eyes. I repeated my question. "Sн. Un poco. A little." Ah
leetle. "Good. We do not want to hurt you. Do
you understand that?" She said, "I understand the
words." I smiled. "You have a son, uh, hijo.
Sн?" The seсora's eyes grew large and her arms
tensed. Then, just as suddenly, the muscles in her face and arms relaxed a
little. "You are the man from the beach? La isla?" "The island. Yes. I am the man who
spoke to your son on the island." She said, "There were shots."
And she pointed at the open door leading outside. "Yes." "The doctor, ah, he is the
dead?" "You mean your husband?" She nodded her head. "Yes. He's dead." Now all the tension seemed to drain from
her body. "You kill him?" I said, "No," and she simply
nodded her head. "It was, como se dice? Destino?" "Destiny?" "Sн. Destino. My husband, he go
with violent men." I watched her eyes. She seemed neither
happy nor sad that her husband was dead. She accepted it the way people accept
the death of the old and sick. She seemed to say, Perhaps it's better. "We know your son is here. Do you
want to bring him out?" She looked less-than-genuinely surprised. "Que?" I smiled. "Fine. Can we take you
somewhere?" "The four-wheel. It is outside
still?" I nodded. "You will leave it for me?" I nodded again. A weak smile turned the corners of her
full lips. She saw hope for her son. I asked, "Can you help me? I'm
looking for a friend. I believe your husband knew where she is. Now he cannot
tell me." "No. Now he cannot." "Can you?" "I am the wife. My husband did work
not... I have no understanding of his work." "My friend will die. She does not
deserve to die." "My husband, he deserved to
die?" I didn't answer. Seconds ticked by. Seсora
Carpintero said, "Your friend, she is granjero?" I raised my
palms in the air and shook my head. Her face brightened. "Farmer. She is
farmer?" "Yes. She has a farm." "Then she is with a man who is the
fisherman. That is all I know." "Is anyone else with them? A young
girl? A teenager?" She repeated, "That is all I
know." "What do you know about why your
husband, the doctor, was here?" She went back to, "I am the
wife." "Yeah. I got that. You are the wife.
But I don't think even a South American wife boards a boat with smugglers and
lands in a new country in the middle of the night without a pointed question or
two for her husband." "Que?" Wonderful. We were back to Spanish again.
I tried a more direct path. "Is that your husband's laboratory out
there?" "Yes." "What's he been cooking up? Meth? Coke?" The seсora's high cheekbones burned red.
"My husband was a medical doctor, expert in tropical disease. He was not
the drug lord." I started to ask more, but decided it was
a lost cause. Or maybe I was a little afraid of Seсora Carpintero. Billy Teeter and I left dark, beautiful,
dangerous Seсora Carpintero—or whatever her name was—sitting on the green sofa in the living room of a metal house deep
in the bowels of Tate's Hell Swamp. After taking a cursory look into the
doctor's lab, I retrieved Joey's Walther PPK from Willie's corpse. Captain
Billy and I loaded his grandson's body onto the air boat that The Sequel had
used to tail us to Carpintero's compound. Billy climbed into the high chair in
front of the fan. I sat at his feet as he steered away from the compound and
skidded across miles of flooded saw grass. We didn't talk. I didn't kill Willie. I hadn't even gotten
him killed. Not really. Willie got killed playing tough guy. It was his choice.
If it hadn't been that day, it would have been another. Sooner or later, he
would have met up with men who don't play tough, the kind who make money by
taking it away from wanna-bes. Billy Teeter and I would not be friends.
And, from that day on, neither would he and Peety Boy—the childhood friend who had fought Hitler in France. And won. Marina was too complimentary a term. It was a gray-weathered shack
with sodas and bait inside and a ragged dock outside. Billy was using the pay
phone. I waited with Willie's corpse. A bass boat pulled up and two men climbed
out and walked over to look at Willie's body. "Goddamn. What happened? Who
is that?" I looked at the men, who looked excited.
To them, this was a story to tell, something to spread around work the next
day. I said, "Show some respect."
They ignored me, so I tried another tack. "Get the fuck out of here." One of the men—he wore a slouch hat with fishing flies stuck in the sweatband—said, "What's your problem?" I stepped into the boat and picked up one
of the carbines. The men moved off. When he thought he was out of earshot, the
one with the flies called me an asshole. Captain Billy walked out onto the small
dock. "Ambulance is on the way. I talked to the other boys who got shot.
Told 'em to say somebody shot them and Willie from a bridge. Told 'em which one." "Cops going to buy that?" The old fisherman shrugged. "Thank you." Billy sat on the dock with his feet
hanging off the side and rubbed at his eyes with the thick muscles at the base
of his thumbs. "Way I see it. You didn't kill Willie. You might've got him
killed a little sooner than he should've been. But you called me up on the
phone last night to tell me what'd happened, and I told you me and Peety Boy'd
cover your back." The old man wiped his palms on his pant legs. "Naw.
You didn't kill him, Tom. But my grandboy did try to kill you. Twice. I owe you
something for that." I said, "You didn't owe me anything.
But I appreciate what you did." Billy looked out across the water. "Yep." "I don't guess you want to see me
again, though." "No, Tom. I don't." chapter thirty-five The ambulance bearing Willie Teeter's young
body pulled into the
emergency entrance of Apalachicola Memorial Hospital more than an hour after
Captain Billy placed the call. No need to hurry. The EMTs off-loaded the gurney
with its lumpy, sheet-covered cargo and wheeled it inside. Billy followed along
to the morgue, and I went in search of Joey. I found him in a private room on
the third floor. A clear bag of something dribbled through a tube into his arm;
silver wires peeked out through his lips; and he was seriously sedated. I went in search of a doctor, then a
nurse, then another living soul. Lots of patients, but no healers in evidence.
Finally, I just reached over the nurses' station and helped myself to Joey's
file, which was hanging on a rack with the rest of the patient histories. I had
just hooked the file folder and flipped it open when a nurse appeared as if by
magic. "What are you doing?" "Trying to find you." She said, "Did you think I was hiding
inside that private folder," and took Joey's chart out of my hand. I smiled. "It was the last place I
looked." She didn't return my smile, which was kind of a shame. Nurse
Ratched wouldn't have been a bad-looking woman if she smiled or maybe just quit
looking quite so pissed off. "The patient is a friend of mine. I wanted to
find out how he is." "Are you family?" "If I were family, I would have used
that word. I just want to know how he's doing." So much for charm. She flipped open Joey's chart. "Your
friend has a fractured nose, multiple hairline fractures of the left orbital
globe, and a dislocated jaw. His left shin has been fractured." She
skimmed the page. "He also has a minor concussion. He has been
sedated." I said, "Thank you," and turned
to walk away. Nurse Ratched said, "This is a
hospital. The way you live is your business, but you shouldn't come in here
covered in filth." Nice lady. I found Joey's room again and placed a
credit card call to Loutie. She promised to be in Apalachicola as soon as
possible, and I promised not to leave Joey's side until she got there. I sat down in the hospital's idea of an
easy chair—a metal frame holding foam rubber cushions
covered in tan plastic—and tried to get comfortable and think.
The swamp water had evaporated out of my clothes, leaving my pants and shirt,
even my underwear, crisp with dry sand and sludge. My mouth tasted like mud; my
hair felt like steel wool; and, in every little out-of-the-way, never-seen
crevice of my body, I could feel small, crusty remnants of my morning dip in
the swamp each time I moved. Two long nights had gone by now without
sleep. I put my head back and tried to concentrate. Somewhere, buried deep in the foggy
recesses of my mind, I knew that I knew where Carli was, if only I could reach
in there and pull it out. I started with her good-bye note and tried to work
forward. The room got kind of shifty. Shadows floated and blurred, invisible
weights pressed on my eyelids, and I fell into a dark pit of unconsciousness.
When a woman's hand finally shook me awake, I was vaguely aware that I hadn't
dreamed or turned or even moved my hands for more than four hours. "Tom?" It was Loutie Blue's
voice. I think I said, "Umphum." "You okay?" I sat up and moved my head around, trying
to roll the crick out of my neck. "Fine. Just tired." Loutie stepped into the bathroom. I heard
water running, and she came back out with a wet washcloth. She wiped my face
with the warm cloth, like a mother waking a toddler from a nap. She asked what
had happened and I told her, starting with Joey's condition
and then looping back to our encounter with Willie at my beach house and coming
forward. When I was finished, Loutie said, "We
have news about Carli, but we haven't found her yet." "What news?" "She's back in the state. A
pulpwood-truck driver reported seeing her either yesterday or the day before,
hitching outside a little town called Pine Hill. There's a big pulp mill there..." "Yeah. I know." And there was
the thought again. Loutie had moved over by Joey's bed and
was squeezing his huge thumb in her hand. She cocked her head at me. "What
is it?" I reached back to massage the stiffness
from my neck. "It's just... I keep thinking I know where she is. It's in
the back of my mind somewhere, and I can't get to it." Loutie looked down at Joey. "Go grab
a quick shower. I've got clean clothes for you and some for Joey when he needs
them." I stood there trying to think. She said, "Go! I'm here with
Joey now, so you're free to go find Susan. Get in the shower. Wake up. It'll
come to you." And fifteen minutes later, as I toweled
the water out of my hair, it did. With more than three hundred dollars in
her pocket, why hadn't Carli grabbed the first bus or plane to Denver or Tucson
or Los Angeles? Why head west and then turn back toward the northeast? And why,
in the first place, did she write a cryptic good-bye note on the bottom of a
sheet of notebook paper where she had sketched Susan's old Ford pickup sitting
in a hay field with rosebushes covering the front wheel? Simple. But everything seems simple after
you finally get it. I should have had it sooner. On some level, Carli had
wanted to be found even before she dropped out of Loutie's guest-room window. Susan's farmhouse—a place set among rolling hay fields and nestled inside swirls of
holly and boxwoods and rosebushes—was empty. And
Carli knew it. She had traveled to Biloxi by bus to throw off her father. Then
she had started her real journey when she began hitchhiking northeast toward
Meridian. And that's when I really did have enough information to have found
her, if I had just been able to put it all together. My father owns a sawmill just outside a
small town on the Alabama River called Coopers Bend, which, as it happens, is
about two hours drive due east of Meridian, Mississippi. If you drive to the
side of town opposite the mill, cruise a few miles up a county highway called
Whiskey Run Road, and turn down a narrow dirt road and follow that for four or
five hundred yards through cow pastures and stands of loblolly pine and water
oak, you will come to a mailbox that marks the entrance to the farm that Susan
Fitzsimmons had shared with her crazy artist husband before he was murdered. It
was where I first met Susan, and I was now sure that it was where Carli had
been headed the minute she climbed out of the window in Loutie Blue's guest
room. I should have had it figured out a second
time back in Tate's Hell Swamp when Seсora Carpintero had asked if Susan was a granjero—a farmer, and then said Susan was with "the fisherman."
My third bite at the apple came when Loutie reported that Carli had been
spotted in Pine Hill, which is almost dead center between Meridian and Susan's
farm in Coopers Bend. The only question now was whether Rus
Poultrez—"the fisherman," as the seсora
had called him—had both women, or only Susan. It was
possible that Carli hadn't yet made it to Coopers Bend. It also was possible
that Poultrez was holding Susan somewhere else and that Carli would find the
safe haven she had been seeking at Susan's farm. These things were unlikely,
but still possible, which is why I didn't call the state police, the FBI, or
even a few bad-ass boys I went to high school with to rush out there and take
care of Poultrez. Instead, I pulled on clean clothes and went out to hurriedly
explain things to Loutie. Then I placed a call to the Sheriff's Department in
Coopers Bend and spoke at length with local law enforcement. As I replaced the receiver in its cradle,
Nurse Ratched came in. "What are you doing in here?" I wasn't in the mood. "What is
it?" The nurse looked like she had just sucked
a crawfish head. "Are you Tom McInnes?" "Yep." "Then you have a phone call at the
desk." Nurse Ratched turned and marched out, and
I followed. A beige receiver was lying on a raised, white-Formica platform on
the horseshoe-shaped nurses station. I picked it up. "Hello?" "Hi. How's Joey?" It was Kelly's
voice. "He got smashed in the face, and he's
got a broken nose, a dislocated jaw, and some hairline fractures. But he's
going to be fine. They've got him doped up for the pain." I was glad to
hear Kelly's voice, but I also wanted to get off the phone and get on the road
to Susan's farmhouse. The sheriff was checking it out, but... "Thanks for
calling, Kelly. Sorry, but I've got to go. Call back later if you want. Loutie's
in Joey's room with him." "I found out something about L.
Carpintero." I said, "He's dead. Is it something
that still matters?" Kelly hesitated. "I'm not sure. I
just kind of know who he is, or I guess who he was." I didn't speak. She
went on. "The reason you thought his face looked familiar but you couldn't
place it was that he looks like someone else. A lot. His uncle was the military
dictator of Panama. He's in prison here in the states now. His name..." "Yeah, I know who he is. Damn, it's
obvious once you know it. Take away the general's acne scars and about thirty
years and they're twins." "Yeah. I didn't get it. The lady in
the newspaper morgue saw the resemblance, and once we had that we were able to
find out who he is. He's got the same last name as his uncle. And he was mixed
up in his uncle's drug business." "Which, I remember, was supposed to
have a Cuban connection." "That's it." Nurse Ratched walked over and glared at
me. "That is not a public telephone." I turned my back. "And that's
everything you found out?" Kelly said, "That's all so far. Nothing,
by the way, about him having any nicknames like Carpintero or hammer or
anything like that. I'll keep looking, though. But," and Kelly paused for
effect, "I did find out Carlos Sanchez's real name." "Who is he?" "We found a picture of him at a
Republican fund-raiser in Mobile. The paper ran the shot a few months ago
because the picture also included the son of a former president. Sanchez was
kind of looking down and holding a glass in front of his face, but you could
tell it was him." "Kelly!" "Okay, okay. You know how you never
see Superman and Clark Kent in the same place? Well, guess who Carlos Sanchez
really is." I said, "Charlie Estevez." "You're no fun at all. How in the
world did you figure that one out?" "I had a suspicion." "Well, so much for my bombshell.
That's all I've got." I thanked her and got off the phone. Ten minutes later, I was speeding north in
Loutie's cherry-red GTO convertible. Four hours of road time stretched out
ahead, and my contact with the world—my little
Motorola flip phone—was a goner. Slopping through Tate's Hell
had taken care of that. I stopped at a quick mart in Panama City and called
Sheriff Nixon in Coopers Bend. Deputies had been dispatched to check out the
farmhouse. No report. An hour later, I stopped in Florala and got the same
message. A little over an hour after that, I pulled over in Monroeville and
made the same call. This time Nixon was in. "Nobody's there." I had been scared and nervous, worried
about what might be happening to Susan and Carli while I was on the road. Now I
was just scared. If they weren't at the farm, if all the clues I had stringed
together were nothing but snippets of a larger picture that I was missing... Nixon's hard voice cut my thoughts short.
"You hear me? Are you still there?" "Yes, I'm here. I was thinking. Are
you sure no one was there?" "Well, I didn't go out there myself.
But two deputies did and said they looked around pretty good. Looked for cars,
knocked on the door, even looked in the windows as best they could." "They didn't go inside, though?" "Hell, Tom. We can't just break in to
somebody's house without a reason." I grasped at straws. "Did they check
out the barn in back?" Nixon sounded like he'd had enough of
this. "They checked the place out. You want to go out there and look some
more, help yourself. I got other things to do." And he hung up. Nice guy. I climbed into Loutie's classic
convertible and pulled back onto the blacktop. Before I had just been worrying.
Now I was driving slower and thinking more, and I wondered if I had imagined
all the clues and coincidences pointing to the farm. I ran everything over in
my mind, turned it around, and pulled at it from as many different sides as I
could find. The bottom line was that Carli had to be either at the farm or damn
close to it. Susan—if the dark and dangerous Seсora
Carpintero could be believed—was with Rus Poultrez ... somewhere. I jammed down the accelerator. Either I
was right about everything and everyone coming together at Susan's farm, or I
didn't have a frigging clue. chapter thirty-six According to the fluorescent lines on my
diving watch, I turned onto
the dirt road leading to Susan's farm a few minutes after 7:30 that evening.
The sun had fallen beneath the horizon, but the western sky still glowed with
sunset colors that cast long shadows across new-green hay fields. Pecan trees,
post oaks, and cedars grown from bird droppings interrupted kinked lines of
barbed wire that stretched along both sides of the right-of-way. Susan's
mailbox came up on the right, and I clicked off the headlights. I pulled off
onto the gravel shoulder and stepped out. The shrill of crickets filled the fields
and woods, and a bullfrog on one of Susan's ponds bellowed at whatever they
bellow at. I turned down the gravel driveway and found myself trotting then
jogging then running full out. I forced myself to stop. With my back pressed
against the thick trunk of a pine, I got quiet and tried to listen. Crickets
made music. A light wind rustled the pine needles and oak leaves overhead, and
my heart thumped like a fist on the inside of my sternum. I breathed deeply,
forcing my mind to calm, and started once again down the driveway. Staying close to cover along the roadside,
I walked slowly around the last small curve of gravel and dropped to one knee
when the house came into view. Susan's classic white farmhouse seemed to float
above the ground on a soft black cloud of shrubbery. No lights showed through
the dark-shuttered windows in front. To the right of the house, the small,
whitewashed barn Susan used for a carport seemed empty, but inside the barn was
shadowed black, and I knew that a car or even Rus Poultrez himself could be
hidden deep inside. I had a choice to make. The driveway leading to the farmhouse
passes between two ponds. One is higher than the other, and water pours from
the higher pond to the lower through large white pipes beneath the roadbed. I
could reach the house in less than a minute, maybe thirty seconds, if I stayed on
the road and crossed between the ponds. And, if I did that, I would make one
hell of a nice target. On the other hand, I could circle one of the ponds, stay
in thick cover, and get to the house in ten or fifteen minutes. No question
about it. Circling made more sense. But on the other hand, I thought... Screw
it. I crept to the pond's edge, took three deep breaths, and sprinted
across the roadbed in full sight of God and possible killers and anyone else
who wanted to watch. Joey's Walther PPK was in my right hand,
and I used it to pump as I raced into the night. Ten seconds of eternity passed
as it felt as though my knees were flying up to my chest and my heels brushed
the back of my head. Ten seconds, as it turned out, of nothing—nothing but running and breathing and terror. The far bank of the
lower pond passed by on my left, and I dove off the driveway and landed in a
base runner's slide, tearing down the bank with my right knee tucked under and
my left toe pointed. Gravel ripped my pants, and I felt the sharp sting of
small stones grinding away at flesh. It was a shallow ditch, and I hit bottom
quickly. I tried to hold very still and listen for sounds other than my own
heavy breathing. I clicked off the Walther's safety and
eased back up to the roadbed on my belly. The house was still dark. The carport
was dark. Nothing moved. But there was something. In back, just visible
through thick azaleas and boxwoods and holly trees, a pale light framed a porch
swing hung from the limb of an oak tree. It could have been a security light or
the reflection of moonlight off a second-story window. It could have been a lot
of things. I made another quick scan of the house and
the carport and the grounds; then I worked my way through the ditch to a row of
thick brush lining the fence. Minutes later, I was pressed against the wall of
the huge red barn in back of the farmhouse, and I was looking up at the lighted
shade of a bedside lamp in one of Susan's upstairs bedrooms. Okay. Now what? I watched. I watched for what seemed a
very long time. And nothing happened. But finally I did notice something new.
Through one of the back windows on the ground floor, I could just see the top
of a doorway that I could have sworn led into Susan's study. And, I realized,
there was no reason on earth that I should have been able to see the outline of
an open door inside a dark house. The opening seemed to be lighted by a faint
glow from the other side, from inside the study. I needed a better view. Circling around
the back of the barn, I made it to the other side of the yard and paused to
pick out a shadowed path to Susan's wide, wraparound porch. Another quick look
around the moonlit yard, and I took off, staying low and silently cringing as
each footfall crunched through dried layers of leaves and pine needles that had
accumulated while Susan was away. Next to the back edge of the banistered
porch, I had just hooked left to head for the side steps when my left foot
struck something that felt like a sack of loose dirt. My front foot faltered and
twisted as the other foot slid backward across loose leaves. I lost balance and
hit the ground chest first. Something dull and hard gouged the side of my neck.
Wind rushed out on impact, and I made an involuntary "Oomph" sound. I grabbed for the stick that had gouged my
neck and pushed. It moved, but in a strange, organic, rolling motion. It was
attached to something, and that something was a leg. My hand was wrapped around
the dirt-caked toe of a cowboy boot. And I was lying full across someone's corpse. Shuddering and rolling, I cleared the lump
of flesh and pressed my back against the porch. I held the Walther automatic
against my chest and listened. But I looked at nothing but the dead body at my
feet. It was a man. Thank God. He lay on his back with one narrow cowboy
boot pointing up and the other lying flat. His head was twisted at an unnatural
angle that buried his face in grass and leaves. But I knew who he was. I
recognized the short, light hair; I recognized the build and even the clothes.
I reached down and yanked up his left sleeve and found the tattoo: an ugly blue
dagger with R.I.P. over it and R.E.T. underneath. Rudolph Enis
Teeter, a.k.a. Sonny, had a bullet hole through his left side and, from the
looks of it, a broken neck to boot. I had just leaned forward to check his
neck when I saw the shadow. A shovel with a tombstone-shaped head smashed into
my right wrist, and the Walther PPK spun off into the dark. The giant black
shadow of Rus Poultrez loomed over me. He didn't speak. He didn't laugh. He
just raised the shovel back up over his head and aimed the metal spade at the
top of my head. I was crouching. I came up fast, burying
my head in his gut, clamping his legs with my forearms, and driving with my
legs. Poultrez managed to bring the shovel down in an excruciating blow to my
lower back that shot hot waves of pain from my butt to my shoulder, but I had
him off balance. The big man went over on his back as I jammed my head and all
the weight behind it into his belly. I somersaulted over his chest and landed
just over his head. My right hand was numb. I jammed the fingers of my left
hand into my hip pocket and came out with the switchblade that Sonny Teeter had
donated to Joey in the parking lot of Mother's Milk. Poultrez was big, even bigger than Joey,
but he didn't have Joey's speed. My fingers found the chrome button on the side
of the yellow knife handle, and I felt the blade click open as I spun around
and slammed my right elbow into the big man's face. In the same instant, the
long thin blade protruding from my left fist found the soft flesh of his neck.
And, just as Joey described on Dog Island, I jammed it in up to the hilt and
twisted with all my strength. Hot blood gushed over my fist and down my
forearm. Rus Poultrez shuddered and fell limp. In an old cattle trough next to the barn,
I washed off Poultrez's blood in a shallow pool of rainwater. The feeling
started to return to my right hand, and with the feeling came searing pain. I
could use my thumb and two of my fingers, but my index and middle fingers hung
like dead tubes of meat. I went back to check Poultrez. He was
extremely dead. It took a minute or so to find Joey's
handgun. I picked it up in my left hand and mounted the porch. No one was
moving inside the house. I circled the house, found the front door
unlocked, and stepped inside. The only sounds were the ticktock of Susan's
antique grandfather clock and the periodic hum of the refrigerator's ice maker
cycling on. I knew the house, so I left the lights out as I conducted a search
of every room on the ground floor. Upstairs, only one person was in residence.
And it was my client, Carli Poultrez. Carli jerked and made a yelping sound when
I opened the bedroom door. She said something like, "No." Her wrists
and ankles were bound with shaggy twine and lashed to a four-poster bed. Her
slit-up-the-outside shorts were unsnapped and unzipped, but they were still on.
Carli's shirt and bra had been torn or cut open at the front, and the white
mounds of her breasts looked soft and vulnerable against the tanned muscles of
her stomach and shoulders. I said, "It's okay, Carli. It's me,
Tom." She lifted head off the bed and stared
wildly in my direction. "Get out of here. Run. Run now. Get out of here,
Tom. Get out of here." "Carli, it's okay." She screamed. "Don't you understand?
He's here! He'll kill everybody." I glanced down the hallway and closed the
door before walking over to the bed. I reached down and pulled a spread over
Carli's exposed breasts. "Who's here, Carli? Is it just your father?" She started to cry and spoke between deep,
wrenching sobs. "Yes. My father. He's here." I dropped the Walther in my hip pocket and
started picking at the knots on her left wrist. I could have cut them—if only my knife hadn't still been buried in her father's neck.
"Is anyone else here? Anyone else who wants to hurt you?" "No. Just him." She looked at
what I was doing and seemed to find herself a little. "Hurry. He'll be
back. You need to hurry. We gotta find Susan." I had one wrist free now, and Carli
reached across to claw at the twine binding her other arm while I moved down to
untie her ankles. "It's okay, Carli. Your father's dead. He tried to bash
my head in with a shovel, and I had to kill him. I'm sorry." Her wrists were free now. Carli sat up and
looked at me. "He's dead? You sure? He's really dead?" "Yes, Carli. He's really dead." She squeezed shut her eyes and began to
cry again. The spread had fallen away when she sat up, and each sob made her
young breasts tremble. All she said was, "Good." I was untying the last piece of twine. She
looked down and pulled the covers up to her neck. I said, "Do you have any
other clothes here?" She seemed to be coming into the present. "Yeah.
In my bag. It's over in the closet there." I walked over and opened the
closet. As I bent over to pick up her backpack, she said, "I put it in
there yesterday when I first got here. You know, before I knew Susan and my ...
before I knew he was here." I dropped the backpack on the bed.
"Susan's here?" Carli came a little unfocused, then said,
"She was here. He couldn't handle her and me at the same time. He
said ... he said he was gonna shut her up and save her for later. He said she
was gonna be dessert." She started to cry again. "Is she okay?" "I don't know. I guess." "Carli. Was Susan hurt? We found a
lot of blood in the room where they kidnapped her." The girl's eyes focused. "No. Susan
wasn't hurt when I got here. Unless, since then..." "Did he leave the farm with
her?" Carli stopped to think. "No. I don't
think so. He wasn't gone long enough. At least, I don't think he was." She
gazed off at the wall. "He tied me up before they left. He was gone
awhile, and I heard him downstairs. Banging around the kitchen, fooling with
the TV and stuff. Some time went by. I heard him come up the steps and open the
door. That's when he tore up my clothes and got his hands in my pants." "Carli, don't." She shrugged and reached for her bag, but
it was feigned callousness. "He's done worse." "I know he has, Carli. But he won't
anymore. I promise, nobody's ever going to hurt you like that again." I
patted her calf. "Get dressed. Take a shower if you need to. I've got to
find Susan." As I turned to leave, Carli said my name.
"Tom? The first time we met you told me it'd be easier to just walk away
and forget about the murder on St. George. You know, not go to the
police." She looked down at the bedspread. "When it came to it,
though, you didn't walk away." I didn't know what to say. I was opening the door when she said,
"I knew you'd come help me." And I left my young client sitting on the
bed, staring at the little collection of possessions in her backpack. I trotted downstairs and walked quickly
through each room, flipping on lights and checking closets as I went. Susan was
not in the house. Like most Americans, Susan had a
flashlight in a drawer in the kitchen. I found it rolling around among
batteries and matches and scissors and tape. I clicked it on and left through
the back door. No one had disturbed the barn that had been Bird Fitzsimmons'
studio, and the carport was empty. I could think of only one other place to
lock someone up. At the rear of the house, I found four fifty-pound bags of
fertilizer stacked on top of the door to Susan's bomb shelter. Susan had shown
it to me six months before when I needed a place to store my dead brother's
stolen money. Some prior owner had built it during the 1950s atomic-bomb scare.
Susan had used it as a root cellar. I tossed the bags aside and yanked open
the door. "Susan!" "Tom?" She walked forward into
the flashlight's beam. "Are you okay?" Susan squinted into the light.
"Poultrez is here." "Not anymore." Susan is tough, and she seemed unhurt. I
told her Carli was inside the house, getting cleaned up and changing clothes. "What did he do to her, Tom?" "Maybe she should tell you about
that." Susan looked scared, so I added, "He didn't rape her. Just,
you know, ripped her clothes and touched her, I think." We were up on the porch now. Susan reached
over and rubbed her hand over my back and said, "Thanks." I cringed.
She had managed to rub over the imprint of the business end of Poultrez's
shovel on my lower back. She stopped and faced me. "What'd he do to
you?" I smiled. "Hit me with a
shovel." "God. Is that why you're holding your
hand funny?" "Yeah." "Is it broken?" "Well... yeah." Susan pushed open the door. "Go in
the kitchen and put some ice on that. I've got to go check on Carli. I'll come
tend to you when I'm done." She looked at me. "Go!" So I went. And, as I went, I was all but
certain I heard mumbled words, containing, among other things, the words
"ridiculous" and "macho," coming from Susan's direction. In the kitchen, I found a family-size bag
of Green Giant LeSeur Early Peas in the freezer, bopped it on the counter to
break up the frozen peas a little, and draped the bag over my broken hand. Then
I walked over to the little built-in, kitchen desk, picked up the phone, and
punched in 911. I relayed my predicament to a bored municipal employee and hung
up. Not five minutes later, I heard a loud
knock on the front door. Susan was still upstairs with Carli. I
wandered through the house to the entry hall, pulled open the door, and found
myself face-to-face with Deputy Mickey Burns of the Apalachicola Sheriff's
Department. chapter thirty-seven "You get a transfer?" Deputy Mickey smiled. But then, he pretty
much always did. "I heard the call go out about the murders on the way in.
I was already headed up here to get you." He stepped forward with the
obvious expectation that I would react normally and step aside. I didn't. He
stopped and said, "May I come in?" "I'm still thinking about it." Deputy Mickey actually stopped smiling.
"I'm here to take you back to Apalachicola for questioning in the murder
of Willie Teeter." This was not good. Either Captain Billy
had changed his mind or the two boys who Billy and Peety Boy had plugged in
their respective legs had started talking. I decided to do innocent. "What
are you talking about?" I should have been paying closer attention
to his hands. I knew he had stepped back. I just hadn't noticed the service
revolver in his meaty, freckled paw. "Turn around and put your hands
against the door." I hesitated, and he raised his revolver level with my
chest and brought up his left hand to steady the gun in firing position.
"Do it!" So I did. At least, I leaned with my left
hand and kind of propped against the door with my right elbow. "Get your feet back." I managed to put one foot back a little
and say, "My hand's broken." I listened for Susan and Carli, hoping they
were locked in a bathroom upstairs taking care of each other. Just stay
upstairs. The sheriff's coming. An ambulance is coming. The deputy patted me down, lifted Joey's
Walther PPK out of my pocket, and said, "Oh. Okay, turn around. I'll cuff
you in front." I pushed away from the door and turned to
face him. "Cuff me? What the hell for? Am I a suspect or something?" His only answer was to slap cuffs on my
wrists in that quick, clip-on way cops have of doing it. It hurt, and I
wondered how much time he'd spent practicing that cute move on his bedpost or
maybe a girlfriend. I let the bag of frozen peas drop and
said, "Can you hand me that? It's the only thing that's helping the
pain." My plan was, first, for him to bend over
to pick up the peas and, second, for me to kick him as hard as I could in his
friendly freckled face. But apparently he'd heard of that plan because, before
he bent over to get the frozen veggies, Deputy Mickey jammed the barrel of his
revolver into my stomach and kept it there until he had placed the bag back
over my wrist and stepped away. He said, "Move," and I thought I
could see panic creeping into his eyes. I had a new plan: kill time. "Look,
you and I both know you don't even have jurisdiction here, and the local cops
are on the way. Let's just sort this out when they get here. I grew up in this
town. You probably don't know that but..." He was panicked, and the veneer of
polite professionalism disappeared. Deputy Mickey Burns reached out and clamped
his gun-free hand over my broken hand and gave it a sharp squeeze and a yank. I
yelped a little, which wasn't particularly dignified, and he said, "I told
you to move. Now." Another change of plans: I decided that
getting the deputy away from Susan and Carli wasn't the worst thing I could do.
And since I didn't have a hell of a lot of choice, I might as well find
something good about being hauled off into the night by a Florida deputy with
no jurisdiction, authority, or good reason. Deputy Burns maintained a death grip on my
arm as we hurried across the porch and down the front steps. When we reached
the cruiser, he pulled open the back door, put his hand on the back of my head,
and shoved me inside. Peering out through the steel screen
separating the back seat from the front, I could see the flash of moonlight on
the deputy's equipment belt as he sprinted around the front of the vehicle. He
literally jumped inside. The motor roared, and I fell sideways as the grinding
noise of tires spinning through loose gravel filled the air. I righted myself
in time to see Susan's twin ponds streaming by the side windows. The trees
across the way were coming too fast, and the cruiser fishtailed through a small
curve as it left the ponds behind. We spun and swerved over another quarter
mile of dirt road. But the deputy never lost control, and he had made it out to
the highway and covered another three miles toward town before the sweeping red
lights of the ambulance met us. The deputy slowed, and a quarter mile later
representatives of the Coopers Bend Sheriff's Department appeared over a hill
in a wash of swirling blue light. Unfortunately, they weren't interested in us.
They were speeding toward the charming country farmhouse where I had just
discovered one corpse and deposited another. We had been riding for a little more than
an hour. I had been trying to think. I guessed my captor had been doing the
same. I decided to try a little conversation. "Where are we going?" "Where do you think?" "I mean, are we going straight to the
Apalachicola Sheriff's Office? Or are we going to the hospital, or what?" He didn't answer. I was beginning to feel
ignored. A minute or two passed. Deputy Mickey
plucked his mike off the dash, looked at it like it was something he'd never
seen before, and put it back. Then he reached over and punched the button on
the glove box. The door fell open and a little bulb lighted a haphazard
collection of maps and what looked like paperback field manuals. Burns shoved a
freckled hand under the maps and stuff and came out with a thick mobile phone
that had a coiled wire hanging from it like an oversized tail. I said, "Who are we going to
call?" The deputy glanced back and forth from the
road to the phone as he pulled the cigarette lighter from the dash and replaced
it with the phone's adapter. I decided to try again. "You think I
could use that thing to call a lawyer? It'll make things go faster when we get
there." Again, he didn't answer, and it was
becoming clear that we were not going to be friends. Instead of engaging me in dialogue, the
good deputy punched a long series of numbers into his phone and then pressed it
against his ear. "This is Burns. I got him." Silence. "No. No
problem. We oughta be there in three hours or less." Silence. "Yeah,
okay." He punched a button and put the phone on
the seat beside him. I leaned up close to the metal screen
separating me from the front seat. "What's wrong with your radio?" "Shut up, McInnes." "I was just wondering..." "You want a drink of water, you can
get one when we get there. You need to take a leak, you can piss your pants.
You want to use the phone, well, you're shit out of luck. Now. That's all the
conversation we're gonna have. Any more questions and I'm gonna pull over on
the side of the road and cuff your hands and feet together and stick a rag in
your mouth. You got that?" I said, "Got it," and lay back
against the seat. Might as well get comfortable. Three hours later, when we cruised
straight through the municipality of Apalachicola, Florida, without stopping, I
got a lot less comfortable. After Deputy Mickey Burns turned north on 65 and
hung a right into Tate's Hell Swamp, I felt downright miserable. Burns followed the same route Joey had
taken the night before. We were going to Carpintero's compound. I thought about
the dead nephew of a Panamanian dictator—the corpse we
had left in a smoldering wrecked car—and I thought
about the pretty young wife who I hoped had gotten far away with her fat little
kid. I wondered how Deputy Mickey planned to
get his patrol car across the submerged road that led through the swamp without
either drowning out the engine or sliding off into the ooze the way Willie's
truck had. But, as we rounded a curve and approached the saw grass field, that
question was answered with the headlights of half a dozen pickups and 4x4s. We had a welcoming committee. And I didn't
feel a damned bit welcome. Bumping across miles of field and marsh
and swamp while lying in the bed of a truck tied to a metal cleat, nursing a
broken wrist, and trying to avoid any contact with the black-and-blue
imprint of a shovel on your back ... Well, it sucks is what is does. Deputy Mickey Burns had departed, leaving
me in the care of eight guys with long hair, multiple tattoos, and expensive
jewelry. And it quickly became obvious that the caravan of 4x4s was indeed
headed for Carpintero's compound. With each new jolt of hot pain in my
wrist, my breathing grew more erratic and another ounce of hope floated away
and drowned itself in the slimy black water that surrounded us. I tried to think. I couldn't. I was too
damn scared. Even with jarring pain, even lashed to the
cleat of some redneck criminal's truck, being alive was better than what waited
at the compound. So I felt no relief when the six-car caravan entered the
compound and parked in perfect order beside two more off-road vehicles. For some reason, I glanced at my watch. It
was close to midnight, and the swamp was full of the sounds of crickets and
frogs and night birds. I could hear the metallic clicks and thuds of truck
doors being opened and closed. Someone opened the gate on the truck I was tied
to and stepped into the bed. The back end sank under his weight, and the truck
made creaking, complaining noises of metal against metal. A knife clicked open. The ropes pulled
against my wrists sending an electric jolt of pain shooting up to my shoulder,
and I looked at the man standing over me. He wore cowboy boots like the ones
Sonny Teeter's corpse was wearing that night. The ropes popped loose under the
pressure of his knife blade, and he jerked me to my feet. He wore a white,
western-style shirt with pink stripes and starched blue jeans with sharp
creases down the front. His bald head shone in the night above a curtain of
shoulder-length hair that hung from his temples and the back of his head. He
looked like a malnourished Benjamin Franklin. I asked, "What do you want?" Ben spun me by one shoulder and shoved me
over the side of the truck. I managed to spin and get my feet under me but then
misjudged the ground and landed on my shovel-imprinted back. Bald Ben hand-sprinted over the side and
landed next to me. Another man joined him. They snatched me up, and each man
picked an elbow and clamped down. We headed into the large warehouse structure
that I had searched earlier that same day—although it
seemed days now, maybe weeks, since I had watched Peety Boy shoot Willie Teeter
and since I had disarmed Seсora Carpintero and helped Captain Billy take his
dead and dishonored grandson to the morgue. Inside, overhead fixtures flooded the
warehouse with yellow light. Shipping crates lined the walls. Ten feet up on a
storage area that looked like a barn loft, brown cardboard boxes were stacked
head high. My escorts walked me to the middle of the
wooden floor and left me. My shattered hand shot hot jolts of
electricity up my arm. My back throbbed, and the bright light stung my eyes. I
looked around the warehouse. I was surrounded by cowboy boots and Air Jordans,
printed T-shirts and tank tops, blue jeans and cutoffs, and, everywhere,
tattooed arms and hands. A man I recognized stepped forward. He was
the on-duty deputy who had pointed his gun at Susan and me the night Purcell's
killers had broken into Susan's beach house. "This is the man who killed Leroy
Purcell." He spoke like a senator addressing Congress, like a man giving a
speech, except that his voice came out in a high-pitched, bluegrass twang. I decided to speak up. "That's not
true." The orator was quicker than he looked, or
maybe I was deeper in shock than I thought. He spun on his heels and popped me
across the mouth with a backhand before I saw it coming. The blow scattered my
thoughts for a few seconds and the deputy resumed his speech. "This man's name is Tom McInnes.
Yesterday afternoon, he killed Tim and Elroy, Johnny and even little Skeeter out
on Dog Island. He rented a boat at The Moorings, floated out there with this
big white-haired asshole, and they killed all four of 'em. Then he come back in
and drove up to Seaside and killed Leroy." The deputy swept his open hand
around the room, motioning at the rogues' gallery. "You heard about it. It
ain't no secret. This rich asshole lawyer from up at Mobile killed Leroy and
then used a hammer to nail his ball sack to a table." The deputy was doing a good job, and, with
the mention of Purcell, murmuring began to fill the warehouse. When he reminded
them of the nails, the threats became audible and graphic. "Mickey promised you he'd bring in
Purcell's killer. He done it. Mickey said he'd let all of us get a chance to
question the bastard that done it. He done that too. And—as much as Mickey Burns wanted to take this piece-of-shit bastard
and nail his balls to a table—he promised to bring him here and give us
the pleasure of fuckin' him up any way we want before we bury him in the swamp.
And Mickey done that too." It was pretty obvious that Deputy Mickey
Burns was the ambitious young man Carlos Sanchez had mentioned who wanted to
replace Leroy Purcell as the head Jethro. It was also obvious that Deputy
Mickey had a hell of a campaign manager in his fellow deputy. Now or never. "I did not kill Leroy Purcell. He was
killed by a man named Carpintero. A man called 'the Hammer.'" My voice
sounded hollow. The speaker spun and slung another
backhand at my mouth, and I tasted blood. The deputy said, "Who's got theirself
a question?" The skinny Ben Franklin who had pushed me
out of his truck bed spoke up. "Fuck that. Only question I got is who gets
to kill him." My voice came again, almost without my
knowing it would. "Listen! Listen to me, damnit!" The skinny speaker stepped toward me and
threw a fist this time. But I saw this one coming and slipped the punch. When
his hand had swung around and he was off balance, I stepped forward and kicked
him in the balls with every ounce of strength left in my body. A thick groan
came from deep in his chest as his legs lifted off the ground and he fell
facedown on the floor, squirming and puffing and making the same guttural sound
over and over. I heard running, and a strong hand grasped
my arm. Half a second later, a fist slammed into my left kidney, and I fell to
one knee. Legs and fists swirled around me as more
men rushed forward. I caught a flash of cowboy boot, jerked my head back, and
felt the wind from a hard kick aimed at my mouth. A knee hit and pain exploded
in my chest, and I went down in a hailstorm of pounding boots. Automatic gunfire shattered the air inside
the metal building. "Stop!" An accented male voice
boomed above the celebration. There was a pause as murmuring filled the
space above my head. Again automatic gunfire crackled
throughout the warehouse, and pieces of the boxes lining the walls spun and
danced under the floodlights. "Step away from Mr. McInnes."
The Bodines looked for the disembodied voice, but they didn't move. The unseen
man shouted, "Now!" Jean-clad legs had just begun to back away
when a pair of creased and starched jeans walked past and swung a cowboy boot
into my stomach. A single, penetrating explosion echoed inside the warehouse,
and skinny Ben Franklin fell backward and landed perpendicular to my prostrate
body. A ragged, bloody hole poured blood from the place where his left eye had
been. I pushed my chest up off the floor just as
another shot echoed inside the metal walls, and I glanced over to see a man in
a tank top fall to his knees with a hole in his chest. He looked surprised;
then he fell dead. The voice came again, and I was sure I
could hear echoes of an equatorial accent. "Mr. McInnes, you may
leave." A quiet mumbling started again. "Mr. McInnes! Get up and get out of
here!" I was on my feet and moving fast through
the outside door. I ran out past the trucks and looked for whatever help was
there. A soft, familiar voice came out of the darkness. "Over here, Seсor McInnes." And Carlos Sanchez stepped out of the night. At
his side was Deputy Mickey Burns. I said, "What's going on?" It
was a stupid question, but I wasn't really in a smart mood. Sanchez said, "You are safe." I nodded at Burns. "I was safe before
he brought me here." Sanchez puffed on his ever-present cigar. "Actually,
no. You weren't. There was a price on your head. Those men inside wanted you
dead." "And now they don't?" Sanchez shrugged. In the distance, I could hear helicopter
blades beating the night air. I pointed at the sky with my good hand. "Is
that yours?" He nodded. "Was Deputy Mickey here in on this
all along?" The deputy spoke up. "That's Deputy Burns.
And what I've been doing is none of your business." The freckle-faced deputy was puffing
himself up to fill Leroy Purcell's shoes; he was ready to don the Caterpillar-cap
crown of the next King Jethro. And he seemed a lot surer than I was that there
would still be a few Bodines around to follow him after tonight. As I stood there thinking about all that,
I heard running and turned to see a dozen men in black clothing round the
corner of the warehouse and disappear inside. Each man had an angular automatic
weapon suspended from a shoulder strap and secured by one hand. I asked, "What's going to happen in
there?" Sanchez drew again on his thin cigar,
making the red tip glow like a hot coal in the night. "Do you really want
to know?" "Yeah. I do." "There will be a boating accident. A
chartered fishing vessel has already left the marina in Carrabelle. The names
on the charter will match those of the men inside." "Am I safe?" He nodded. "What about my clients?" "You and they have nothing else to
fear from Leroy Purcell's branch of the organization." Sanchez turned to
Deputy Burns. "Go see what's happening." The deputy squared his shoulders and said,
"I don't want no part of this." Sanchez turned to face Burns and simply
said, "Now." Two seconds passed while the deputy tried
to think of a way to salvage some dignity, and he turned toward the warehouse. I looked up to search the stars for the
helicopter, and a pistol fired next to my ear. I fell to one knee and froze.
Deputy Mickey Burns of the Apalachicola Sheriff's Department lay dead on the
ground. I turned to see if Sanchez was still alive. He was. And he was sliding
what looked like Joey's Walther PPK into a hiding place inside his coat. Suffering a broken wrist, a shoveled back,
and multiple kicks and stomps had taken a lot out of me. It took some effort to
get back on my feet. I asked, "Am I next?" Sanchez just said, "No," and
then paused to look at the blanket of stars spread overhead. "The
helicopter will be here soon. It will take you to only one place. Dog
Island. I am sorry about your hand. You hold it as though it is broken." I nodded. "Too bad. There is no medical help on
the island. In any event, you will check into the inn and stay there until
morning. At that time, you may take the ferry to Carrabelle. After that, you
are free to go wherever you please." "Except the police." "Yes. Except the police." "Why Dog Island?" "Arrangements have been made. It is
the island or, well, nothing. Perhaps, so you will understand, nothingness would
be a better word." "Why are you doing this?" Sanchez paused to look at one of his men
who had exited the warehouse. The night-clad soldier nodded at Sanchez, who
shook his head in response. The soldier went back inside the building. The
two-named patriot turned back to me. "Your young client deserved none of
this. You are in trouble only because you tried to help." He paused.
"We are not criminals. We are soldiers. This mess was, in some ways, our
doing. I have decided to set it right, to the extent that that's
possible." I studied his aristocratic features in the
moonlight. I said, "And Purcell got out of line." He didn't answer,
so I repeated the same words and added, "And it's as good a reason
as any to take the Bodines out of the picture once and for all." Sanchez smiled. "As I said, we heard
you were smart." Suddenly the helicopter appeared over the
treetops and dropped its tail as it began its descent into the compound. I yelled over the blades. "One more
thing." Sanchez looked at me. "Whose idea was it to bring a dethroned
Panamanian dictator's nephew into the country?" Carlos Sanchez rolled his cigar between
manicured fingers. A few seconds passed before he said, "We did. And we knew
the dangers associated with his family's presence. But he was well connected in
Castro's government, and we thought his contacts would be worth the risk." I shouted. "And was it? Was it worth
all this?" His only answer was to point at the
helicopter and say, "Go." I ran to the chopper and climbed inside.
The helmeted pilot lifted off as I watched Sanchez walk to the warehouse door, speak
with one of his soldiers, and then hurry to a waiting Hummer. As the helicopter
climbed into the night sky and leveled out over the black mass of oak and
cypress treetops, I could have sworn I heard the jarring staccato pops of
automatic gunfire echoing inside the warehouse and splintering the night air. epilogue Bright sunshine filled the bedroom. A cool
spring breeze floated through
open French doors, softly ruffled the sheets, and lifted me out of a deep,
satisfying sleep. I smiled and reached over for Susan. She was gone, and my
heart missed a beat before I realized Carpintero, Leroy Purcell, and—thanks to New Cuba—the rest of the renegade Bodines had gone
on to their rewards, if the kind of afterlife that was likely to greet them
could be called a reward. I plumped my pillow and leaned my back against it. I
didn't look at my watch or the clock on the bedside table. Judging from the
sun, it was somewhere around midmorning, and that was close enough. Sounds of Susan piddling in the kitchen
drifted up the staircase. I rolled out of bed, and, after brushing
my teeth and splashing a little water on my face, I lifted the terry cloth robe
off the hook on the bathroom door and wandered out onto my second-floor deck.
And that's where I was, leaning against the railing and watching a tanker
headed for the Port of Mobile, when Susan appeared in the doorway with a large glass
of orange juice in each hand. And, only two days after being rescued from
root-cellar imprisonment, she looked pretty damned good. Lying in bed last night, Susan and I had
talked long past midnight, and now I understood most of what had happened. It looked as though Purcell had dispatched
Rus Poultrez and Sonny Teeter to grab Susan from Seaside while Joey and I were
busy on Dog Island looking for Carli. Purcell had wanted Susan as a hostage.
Poultrez, on the other hand, wanted Susan to help him find Carli. What neither
of them counted on was Susan plugging Sonny with her little snub-nosed .38 when
he broke into the Seaside cottage where she was manning our listening
equipment. That's where the hole in Sonny's side and the blood at the Seaside
cottage had come from. Unfortunately, Susan only got off one shot before
Poultrez grabbed her from behind after coming in the back. Apparently, Poultrez and Sonny had spoken
freely in front of Susan—probably because they planned to kill her
later. Susan heard Poultrez say that he knew Carli had headed for Meridian,
and, after finding Susan's address in her purse, Poultrez and Sonny just sat
Susan in the backseat and headed for the farm. She had waited for a chance to
get away, but none came. When they arrived, the house was empty.
So, Sonny—just having been gut shot and all—decided that killing Susan right then was a hell of an idea.
Poultrez disagreed and finally snapped Sonny's neck to drive home his point. What I didn't know and couldn't figure out
was the sequence of events at the farm. When did Carli get to Coopers Bend and
why was Susan in the root cellar unhurt...? "Hello?" I came back into the present. "Oh,
hi." Susan smiled. "I'm here bearing
gifts." I took a glass in my good hand; my right
fist was locked in plaster and suspended from a sling. "Orange juice is a
gift?" "Yes. From Minute Maid. What were you
thinking about?" "Poultrez and Sonny and the rest of
it." Susan set her glass on the railing and
plopped down in a redwood deck chair. "You're not still worried, are
you?" "Oh. Hell, no. I'm just trying to
piece it all together. You mind if we talk about it a little?" "I told you last night. I'm
fine." I thought maybe she was a little testy
about the subject for someone who was fine, but I let it go. I said, "I
just didn't know if you wanted to mess up a great morning like this by talking
about it." Susan looked at me, then picked up her glass and sipped some
juice. So much for my stab at sensitivity. "Okay. Here's what I don't
understand. I know Carli didn't get to the farm until after you and Poultrez
and Sonny were already there. But I don't know how long Carli was there with
her father before I showed up." Susan rose out of her chair and came to
stand beside me. "I guess a couple of hours. Poultrez locked me in the
bomb shelter just after Carli got there. I didn't have a watch, but about two
hours or so is my best guess. And Poultrez killed Sonny before I went in. So..."
Susan put her elbows on the railing and leaned out to look down the beach.
"In case you're wondering, you probably saved Carli from being raped by
showing up when you did. She told Sheriff Nixon in Coopers Bend that, when her
father heard you outside, he had just 'started on her.'" Susan made a
face. "God, what a way to put it." "Better than most of the
alternatives." "I guess. Anyway, he's gone and she's
going to make it." I shrugged, and Susan said, "Really. I believe
that. Loutie's going to take care of her for a while. Get her some counseling,
whatever she needs. Like I told you from the first, there's more to Carli than
meets the eye." "What about her mother?" "It's pitiful. Carli says not to
worry. Apparently, the mother's kind of... well, she's just about what you'd
expect to be married to her father." I drank some orange juice and said, "Oh." I was thinking about Carli and watching
three slack-jawed pelicans drift over the bay when the phone started ringing. I
set my juice back on its round wet spot on the railing. Susan said, "Let the machine get
it." "Turned it off." "Well, then just let it ring." As I turned to walk inside, I said,
"I stabbed a guy in the throat two days ago. They know it was
self-defense, but it wouldn't be a great idea for the cops to think I had
sneaked off somewhere. I'll be right back." I walked around and sat on the bed before
picking up the receiver. "Hello?" "Tom?" It was Carlos Sanchez—known in political circles as Charlie Estevez—and he apparently had decided that we were on a first-name basis. Unfortunately, I wasn't sure which name to
use. So, all I said was, "Yes?" "Carlos Sanchez." That answered that. "Good morning,
Carlos." Two could play at that game. "How's your friend? The giant with
white hair." "The giant with white hair is fine.
He's back in Mobile, and he's got a beautiful woman to nurse him back to health.
The doctors say a few weeks and he'll be back to normal." "That is good to hear."
Sanchez hesitated just as Susan walked into the room. She whispered, "Who is it?" I put my hand over the mouthpiece.
"Carlos Sanchez." Susan whispered again. "Did you tell
him you know his real name?" I kept my hand over the phone. "Hell,
no." Susan laughed, and I realized that Sanchez had been saying something.
"I'm sorry Carlos, someone just came in. What were you saying?" "I was asking about your young
client." "Carli's doing about as well as I
guess anyone could under the circumstances." "Yes. It is very sad." As far as I was concerned, Carlos Sanchez
was a pretty good guy. I formed this opinion after he rescued me from being
kicked to death in the swamp by a bunch of tattooed, redneck smugglers. But I
did not believe he had called my home to check on my friends' health and
well-being. He wanted something. "Why'd you call?" "Ah, we have a problem, and it could
turn out to be your problem too." He had my attention. "Someone is
missing." "Who?" "The Carpenter. With what happened to
Leroy Purcell, well, I don't need to tell you what kind of attention such a
psychopath could focus on my organization." "Then I take it Carpintero's done
this before." Sanchez hesitated before answering.
"Yes. I am afraid 'the Hammer,' 'the Carpenter,' whatever name you want to
use, is quite famous among former political interrogators in Central
America." "I didn't think that kind of thing
went on down there anymore." "Well, with the spread of democracy,
it is certainly not accepted practice anymore, which is one reason El
Carpintero was looking for a new, ah, venue." "And you were going to supply
one?" "What? No. No, seсor." I decided I had jerked him around enough.
"Carpintero is dead." "You have seen the body?" "Sure. He crashed into a building out
there in the compound. He was trying to make a run for it in an old Mercedes
and one of the young Bodines, a guy named Willie Teeter, either shot him or
just shot at him and made him crash. Whichever, he was dead." Sanchez was silent long enough for me to
wonder if we had lost the connection. Finally, he said, "You said Seсor Carpintero died in a crash?" "That's right." "And his wife. What happened to the seсora?" I could feel hair prickling on the back of
my neck. "We found her in a cabin. She tried to shoot me. I managed to
disarm her and ask a few questions. Then an old man and I left on an airboat.
We left Seсora Carpintero and her son—who she had
hidden somewhere in the bedroom—we left them in the cabin. There was a
four-wheel-drive parked outside with the keys in it." Sanchez laughed, but there was no humor in
it. "And you North Americans say Latinos are chauvinists. The man you call
Seсor Carpintero was an overweight,
undisciplined political hack with a rich uncle and family connections. His
wife, the mother of that chubby little boy, was a prison physician who was
brought in years ago to revive political prisoners after torture. She developed
a taste for it. And a specialty. In addition to her scalpel, she liked to use
nails." I opened my mouth to speak and nothing
came out. Susan sat on the bed beside me and put her hand on my leg.
"What's wrong? What is it, Tom?" I shook my head at Susan and spoke into
the phone. "Why did she kill Purcell?" "We don't know the details, but it
appears Leroy Purcell treated Carpintero and her husband like employees. I
expect it doesn't take much to set her off. Anyway, they were setting up some
kind of lab out there in the swamp. And the word is that a disagreement
arose." "A disagreement." It wasn't
really a question or a statement, and Sanchez let it lie there. I said,
"What was it, a meth lab?" "I'm afraid not. As far as we can
tell, it was some kind of biological hazard setup. That's something
this woman has tried her hand at before. I can only guess that Purcell planned
to enter the weapons trade." I cussed, and Sanchez added, "We burned
her laboratory to the ground." "If you didn't, I'll make sure
someone else does." "We set fire to the whole complex.
Feel free to ride out there and check, but it shouldn't be necessary. The fire
rangers were all over it an hour after we pulled out. I'm sure there's a
report." Pictures of Leroy Purcell's corpse flashed
through my mind, and one stuck. I couldn't shake the image of his thick
jock-neck spread out and nailed to the desk, the skin glistening like melted
wax where it was stretched tight across his throat from neat rows of nail holes
on each side. And, I thought, I had let the person who
did that loose on America. I could almost see the seсora, riding down a highway
somewhere in the heartland in that harmless-looking, soccer-mom
four-wheel-drive—a raven-haired beauty with a chubby little
boy and a taste for evisceration. Sanchez was waiting for me to say
something about the fire. I managed to say, "Okay. Fine." "Tom, are you all right?" "No." Some time went by, and he said, "So.
If nothing remains to be handled, we will put this behind us." I looked at Susan. All the color had
drained from her face. She was suddenly frightened, and she didn't even know
why—except that she had seen the terror in my
eyes. I said, "One more thing. Who was the
poor bastard who started all this? Who did Leroy Purcell shoot in the
mouth in See Shore Cottage while Carli was peeking in the window?" "Tom," Sanchez said, "I
have absolutely no idea." |
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