dog island

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dog island Page 14

by Mike Stewart


  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 me
n 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 birdhouses 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.

&nb
sp; 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.”

 

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