by Lowe, Tom
“Draw a pretty picture for a pretty lady,” came a voice from behind her.
Courtney turned around and saw a street artist bend in a slight bow from the waist, tipping his medieval Robin Hood-type hat. It was fern green with a red feather wedged into one side of the hatband. He stood straight and grinned, a dark black goatee on his round face, eyes the color of his hat. Courtney thought the man probably weighed close to three-hundred pounds.
He said, “Hello, me lady. You can be my first portrait of the morning. I assure you that all other portraits after you today, and tomorrow for that matter, will pale by comparison. I am Little John, and I’m at your service.”
Courtney swallowed a bite of beignet and looked up at the man, the morning sunlight in his plump face, left eye squinting, the rumble of a tugboat diesel pushing a barge up the Mississippi. “Thanks, but I really don’t need my picture drawn.”
“Why so serious?”
“Just tired, that’s all.”
“It’s more than that. I can tell because I look at faces all day.”
“No offense, but you don’t need to be staring at mine.”
“Since I draw caricatures of people, I look at how faces have certain, let’s say unique qualities, and then I just use pen and ink to embellish them. And because I study faces all day here in front of Jackson square, I’m a pretty good reader.”
“I have to go.”
“Some people read cards, some read palms, and I try to grasp the energy of the person in the time it takes me to sketch out the crux of the face. I always begin with the eyes. Would you mind taking off your sunglasses?”
“I told you I wasn’t interested in having my picture drawn. Please, just go away.”
“I can’t. This is my office, or studio.”
“Then I’ll leave.”
He smiled and angled his head. “Tell you what, I’ll do it for free. Your only cost is the twenty minutes of your life it takes me to capture you on canvas.”
“I don’t want to be captured on canvas.”
“Before I started doing caricatures, I was a police sketch artist. Did thousands of sketches of bad guys and gals just from descriptions people remembered. I find now that it’s hard for me to forget a face I’ve drawn or wanted real bad to draw.” He pulled a phone out of his jean’s pocket and raised it to snap a picture of Courtney.
She lifted her hand in front of her face. “No!”
“Aw, c’mon. Such a pretty face. Even with the hat and glasses, I can tell.”
Courtney turned her back to the man, grabbed her bag of beignets and her coffee, and walked quickly away from him. After she’d gone farther away, she looked back for a second and saw him talking on the phone. How’d he make such a quick call? Maybe he dialed 9-1-1. I’ve been spotted! Her heart raced. How could she escape or hide in a city she didn’t even know?
Think! She ran, trying to ensure that there were trees, cars, people, and objects blocking the view of the street artist to her movements towards the Toyota truck. She ran across the parking lot, jumped in the truck and started it. She remembered the directions the cashier had given her, and Courtney drove down Decatur Street, hoping that the woman named Mariah Danford was home.
52
I bought two disposable phones and used one to make a call to Dave Collins. I told him what happened and he said, “So right now there isn’t a posse on the tail of an older model red Toyota pickup truck, but it’s just a matter of a short time before that changes. Courtney may still be in Florida. It’s unfortunate that in her wake three more people are dead. Two probably because they were, no doubt, hired guns who stepped in the wrong trailer at the wrong time. So their SUV was wiped clean and no one has a clue who leased it, right?”
“Someone does.”
“Of course. I’d love to follow the bread trail back to wherever the hit order originated. Maybe it was Bandini.”
“I don’t think so. Why would they shoot the dwarf? These guys took orders from bigger fish—sharks, and they smell blood. Maybe they were the two guys who followed me into the Denny’s parking lot, or could be from the same litter. Somehow Courtney survived the first attack. I’ve got to find her before they do. If I can prove that she’s not Andrea Logan’s biological daughter, Courtney will no longer be a liability in the eyes of corporations and PACs funding Logan’s presidential bid.”
“But if you prove the opposite it will be deadly for her.”
“It’s already deadly. I don’t have a choice.”
“Yes you do. This kid’s stepped into the middle of some serious defecation. And by default, she’s taken you with her. We need to think this through, Sean. Every possibility, angle and probability. The irony is the more visible you are, the less likely that someone will put a bullet in your head. With your old connection to Andrea Logan, if something should happen to you, her hubby or at least those orchestrating his campaign would be more than suspect. They can’t afford for that to happen. It’s similar to when Giuliani was fighting the mafia in New York. The mob hated him, but he was too visible, too public to be the recipient of an organized hit. You’re that way now. Courtney is not. And because she’s wanted in murders, it’s worse.”
“I have to find her.”
“You have no idea where to look. She’s not going to show up at another carnival. Do you think the murdered dwarf is related to Solminski, the one working for Bandini?”
“Yes. Looked close in age. Maybe brothers. Possibly twins.”
“She might try to get in touch with him, especially since they’re friends and she’s driving the dead man’s truck. Could you convince Solminski to tell you if she does?”
“Maybe. If he is related to the dead man with the bloody snake, he might have a motive to help me find who’s threatening Courtney. Maybe he’ll point me toward her if he knows where she is or where she’s trying to go.”
“But there’s still a remote chance that the guys in the fire were sent by Bandini. Since you were detained by the local constables in Hillsborough County, the media flew the coop here, most following your trail, the trail of destruction down there in Gibsonton. Courtney might be hiding out with some family member somewhere. FBI will probably find her, and let’s hope it’s before she becomes unfindable—no body—no proof of a murder, and certainly no result of a crime. Logan skates into the White House, and Courtney gets tucked away in the scrapbook of legacies and mysteries next to Jimmy Hoffa’s grainy picture.”
“I can’t let that happen.”
Dave lowered his voice. “I know you can’t, but I have to be the voice of reason in a situation where reason can’t float your lifeboat. You’re my friend, and that’s the least I can do.”
“How’s Nick?”
“Better. Moving about. He walked Max, and spent some quality time with her at the Tiki Bar. Good thing Kim is there to send them both home.”
“I’ll see you in less than an hour—”
“Speaking of Kim, she told me to tell you something if I heard from you. She said a woman called the marina and left a message for you. Kim said the woman had been watching all of the news coverage, saw the allegations about Courtney being the daughter of you and Andrea Logan, and then she said she knows Courtney. Apparently she gave her a ride after she found her walking in the Ocala National Forest.”
I accelerated the Jeep, felt my chest tighten. Who was this woman? Was it some kind of ploy or trap? If I didn’t get pulled over for speeding, I’d know very soon.
53
Courtney drove slowly down Dumaine Street searching for an address on the old buildings. Many were decked with shutters painted lime green or salmon pink, propped up with timeworn red brick, balconies laced in wrought-iron, hanging baskets dripping with color. One balcony was almost covered with ferns growing from clay pots. She had her window down, the breeze warm and tinged with the smell of horse droppings, stale beer, and azaleas.
A white Lincoln eased away from the curb, opening the only parking spot on the street that Cou
rtney could see. She parked and looked for change in her bag, finding four quarters. When she started to drop a quarter in the meter, she saw that it had a full hour of time remaining. Maybe this is a good sign. Maybe Mariah Danford would be here.
Across the narrow one-way street was a bar with doors yawning wide, paddle fans turning in slow-motion, a woman’s rippling laugh coming from the cool recesses inside where two men sat at the bar, their profiles silhouetted in a blue neon wash from an old Jaxs Beer sign.
An elderly black man sat on a swayback bench in the shade of a balcony and to the right of the bar door, his eyes closed, gnarled fingers picking the strings on a guitar, his raspy voice singing a blues song, Rock Me by Muddy Waters.
Courtney looked for addresses, crossed the street and stopped when she walked by the old black man, watching him sing and play the guitar for a few seconds. The four quarters she didn’t have to put into the parking meter, she dropped into a rusted French Market coffee can at the man’s feet.
“Much obliged, darlin’ girl,” he said, pausing from singing. He opened his eyes and looked somewhere above Courtney, his irises clouded with cataracts, his smile wide. A lower front tooth was missing, and the hint of gold flashed near a front incisor.
“How did you know I was a girl? Your eyes were closed when you thanked me.”
“I could feel you standin’ there. Been sightless long as me … o’ter senses commence to gettin’ sharp as a razorblade.”
Courtney studied him a moment, glad he couldn’t see her. White whiskers sprouted from the old man’s gaunt face. A harmonica was perched on his lap, threadbare khaki pants stained from coffee and tobacco. He held a guitar pick made from a broken plastic clothespin. “Where you be headin,’ darlin’ girl?”
“Just passing through.”
“Passin’ through what … life?”
“Sometimes.”
“No times. It’s too short pass through.”
“I have to go.”
“Go where? Maybe I can hep you get there. Been here all my life, me. I used to see with my eyes. I know the Big ol’ Easy. Where you tryin’ to get to?”
“The address is forty-one Dumaine.”
The old man inhaled deeply, lung tissue making a wet sucking sound. “You are close to it. Don’t know if’n it’d be best to get much closer than where you is right here.”
“What do you mean?”
“I means to tell you that ain’t no place for a girl to go.”
“Why?”
“On account that folks who go there are dem peoples who don’t believe in Heaven.”
“What is this place?”
“Used to be what they called a hot pillow joint.”
“You mean a brothel?”
“Yes ma’am. I’d heard the upstairs might still be. The downstairs is a place where they sells Voodoo stuff. I ain’t never seen no need for it, me. No way. No how.” He shook his head and cleared his throat. “They’s lots better spots in Naw’lens to see.”
“Where’s this place? I’ve found forty, forty-two, and other addresses, but no forty-one.”
“It’s ain’t properly marked. Don’t need to be. Evil don’t need directions, just an invite. It’s a block down Dumaine, right past Moe’s Place, a bar. There’s an old arched brick entranceway, ivy growing all over it, kinda like somethin’ you walk through entering a graveyard. They got a wrought iron door on it. Probably ain’t locked no how. Once you go in there … just follow a brick pathway down the alley ‘till you come to the front door.”
“Thank you. I really like your singing.”
“This one’s for you, darlin’ girl.” He cupped his hands around the worn harmonica, brought it to his mouth, and started blowing. Robert Johnson’s song, Cross Road Blues, poured out of the harmonica. Then he picked up his guitar and started singing, eyes closing, his voice carrying the keys of emotion and compassion. Courtney walked away, towards a brick doorway that the old blues man said looked like the entrance to a cemetery. Before his words faded in the breeze, the last thing she heard him sing sounded like a prayer, “I went to the crossroad, fell down on my knees … asked the Lord above, have mercy on me if you please …”
54
When I arrived at the marina, I parked my Jeep away from the main lot and even farther away from the Tiki Bar lot. I walked quickly down the central dock that was adjacent to the seawall, the dock straddling most of the marina waterfront. The captain of the Sea Witch, a forty-four-foot, half-day fishing boat loaded with tourists, slowly accelerated the big Cummins diesels and headed out towards Ponce Inlet and the Atlantic. A half-dozen seagulls followed in the boat’s wake, the birds squawking over the drum roll of the engines.
Approaching the Tiki Bar, I turned left between the marina office and a yacht broker’s small building and walked to get a clear view of the parking lot. No news satellite trucks. No microwave trucks. No hordes of reporters grazing the perimeter. Maybe a few sat at the bar. At this point, I didn’t care. A woman had said she knew Courtney. And I wanted this person to speak to me before she spoke to the news media. My immediate plan was to walk into the bar, ignore any reporters who may be stalking the area, and then I’d find Kim Davis. I hoped she was there.
I entered the Tiki Bar through the rear delivery entrance. The cook, Big John, an Army veteran I knew, mid-thirties, pushing 280 pounds, sweatband over his thick eyebrows, poured fresh shrimp into a deep-fryer. He nodded and used his index finger to flick a piece of shrimp tail from the back of his hand to the floor. Then he grinned and said, “Dude, don’t blame you for comin’ in the back door. You doin’ all right?”
“Yeah, is Kim working today?”
“Her shift ended about ten minutes ago. She might still be out there. Angie’s here along with two servers.” He wiped his hands on a frayed white towel and folded his arms across his big chest. “I’ve worked here three years and never seen biz like it’s been recently. It’s slacked off today, but all this political crap on TV brought out the news crews and the gawkers. Man, I hope all this shit comes out clean for you.” He used a spatula to flip a burger on the grill.
“Thank you, John.” I walked around him in the small kitchen and entered the Tiki Bar. Two charter deck hands and a charter boat captain tended sweating cans of beer at the bar. A half-dozen tourists sat at wooden tables eating and drinking.
Kim was headed for the door, her back to me, purse hanging from her shoulder. I caught up with her and said, “I heard you got a strange phone call.”
She turned around. “Sean, how do you walk so quietly?”
“Boat shoes.”
She glanced down at my shoes and smiled, her brown eyes lifting up to meet mine. She looked around and adjusted her purse strap. “Let’s get out of here. Can we talk on your boat?”
“We can. Come on.” We stepped out the side door leading to the docks, unlocked the gate, and walked down L-dock. A forty-foot Beneteau sailboat was motoring into its slip, the captain using bow-thrusters to maneuver the boat, two women in bikinis sitting in the cockpit with him.
Kim said, “I can see Nick’s doing better. Looks like he’s grilling something in that smoker on his cockpit.”
Max sat in a canvas chair near the grill, Nick turning over sizzling fish, using a brush to apply olive oil and his special sauces. I said, “Max are you helping or just observing?” She jumped from her chair and ran around the cockpit, between Nick’s bare feet, barking, tail flapping, watching Kim and I approach.
Nick turned to us and grinned, his bruises no longer purple, the swelling was going down. “Hot Dog knows how she likes her fish. She watches me to make sure I get it right. Ya’ll hungry? Dave’s comin’ over to eat. I can toss another couple of pieces on the fire. Red snapper. Grilled with olive oil, lemon, salt, pepper, some paprika and a touch of garlic. Greek style, baby!”
Kim smiled and said, “No thanks, Nicky. Big John made me a lunch.”
Nick looked her, one eye squinting in the sunlight. “Big John is good, bu
t he ain’t Greek.”
I said, “I’ll take a rain check, Nick. I can’t stay long.”
He shook his head. “That’s ‘cause shit happens, and you got some big shit happening. Did you find the girl?”
“No, not yet.”
“The news said three more bodies were found, but no sign of the girl, huh?”
“Some signs. Not many.”
Dave walked across the dock, a bottle of water in one hand. He said, “Kimberly, so good to see you on this side of the docks, so to speak. I’m assuming you’re providing Sean with the details of the woman’s call.”
“I’m about to. We just didn’t want to talk in the bar.”
“Can’t say I’d fault you two there. Media will be back when they get wind of your whereabouts, Sean. I was just following this on-going political saga on some of our esteemed cable news channels. If the pundits and pollsters are to be believed, it seems Senator Logan’s popularity has slipped in the polls by fifteen points in the last couple of days. Right now Courtney Burke has the fate of the Republican Party’s national agenda literally riding on her DNA. Law enforcement is speculating she may have left Florida. FBI has mounted a larger scale manhunt. So how long can a nineteen-year-old kid evade that kind of dragnet?”
I said nothing. Nick raised his shoulders in a shrug and tossed Max a small piece of bread. He said, “You think Bandini’s backing off since all this publicity is goin’ down with the girl?”
Dave said, “Perhaps, but it gives him a great cover, too. Assuming he even knew where to find her and take her out to avenge the death of his brother, people might suspect it had Logan’s fingerprints on it. But if a body isn’t found, suspicion can stay inside the public’s collective consciousness, but evidence is out the proverbial window.”