He waited for me to sit down in front of him. When I did, he looked at me for a good minute without saying anything. I was amazed once again by how much hair the man had. Say what you want about this town, the chief had good hair.
“You’re not making me coffee this time,” I finally said.
“Why are you here?” he said.
“I came to see Maria.”
“Why were you threatening Stu?”
“I wasn’t threatening Stu,” I said. “And you can stop lying to me about Maria. I know she’s here. I saw her.”
He gave me a little smile. “If you say so, Mc-Knight.”
“Where did it happen?”
“The shooting?” he said.
“Yes, the shooting.”
“Why do you want to know that?”
“Why didn’t you turn this over to the county?” I said. “Or the state? This is a major crime.”
“I don’t need to turn it over to anybody,” he said. “This is my jurisdiction.”
“You’re the only full-time officer,” I said. “You told me that yourself. How many part-timers did you say you have?”
“Four,” he said. “You just met two of them.”
That stopped me. “Who?”
“Rocky and Harry,” he said.
“The men who were going to cut me in half with a shotgun.”
“Everybody’s a little jumpy around here today,” he said. “Don’t forget, we had a shooting yesterday.”
“Yeah? And where was Rocky at the time?”
“He didn’t shoot the man, McKnight. He was in his bar. Like every other night. Until he got the call . . .”
“What call?”
“Rocky was the one who answered the ‘shots fired’ call. He found Wilkins.”
“This keeps getting better and better,” I said.
“Let me ask you something,” he said. “You said you were a Detroit cop.”
“Yes.”
“How long?”
“Eight years.”
“Then what? You quit?”
“I got shot.”
“I’ve been shot,” he said. “I didn’t quit.”
“Some people never learn,” I said. “What’s your point?”
“My point is, I’ve been a cop my whole life,” he said. “I started out as a deputy down in Oakland County. Then I was a state trooper for over twenty years. And then I retired and came back home to Orcus Beach. They asked me to take over as chief of police. Even when the furniture plant closed and we lost half our population, the town council kept the police force. And me.”
“Don’t tell me,” I said. “Rocky and Harry are the town council, too.”
He let that one go. “My grandfather practically built this town himself,” he said. “I grew up here. I’ve lived all around the state, but I keep coming back. I know every single person who lives here right now. I’m sure they’ll bury me here someday.”
“Why are you telling me all this?” I said.
“Because I want you to understand, Mr. McKnight. I’m a lifetime cop, not somebody who wrote tickets for eight years and then became a private eye. This shooting happened in my town. It’s my case. I don’t want the county guys here. I don’t want the state guys here. And most of all, I don’t want you here. Am I making myself clear?”
“What if I have information you need?”
“Like what?”
“Like a white Cadillac,” I said. “The license plate is on the pad your . . . your officer took from me. I’m not sure if one of the letters is a V or a Y. You’ll have to run it both ways.”
“And what will this tell me?”
“The name of the guy who’s following her,” I said. “The same guy who was casing out her family’s house in Farmington. You did talk to her family, right?”
“We’ve been in contact,” he said. “I told you that at the hospital.”
“So you know about this man named Harwood?”
He tapped his fingers on his desk. “You say Rocky has this number?”
“Yes,” I said. “I’m not even going to ask you if I can have my pad back.”
“You’ve had a long day, Mr. McKnight. We should let you go home now.”
“I can’t go anywhere,” I said. “My tires are flat and the gas station is out of air.”
“We’ll see if we can find you some,” he said. “Then you can be on your way.”
“It’s a long drive home,” I said. “And I’ve been up since four this morning. I think I’ll grab a room for the night.”
“Won’t find one here,” he said. “Closest motel is in Whitehall. They’re probably full, though. Your best bet would be Grand Rapids.”
“So you’re all out of rooms, too,” I said. “April is your peak tourist season.”
He just looked at me. He almost smiled. “You’re a funny man,” he said. “Let’s go pump up your tires.”
He let me sit in the front seat this time on the ride back to the gas station. We passed a small motel called the Orcus Arms. It was a little six-room affair facing Lake Michigan. The chief caught me looking at it, and the empty parking lot in front. “It’s closed,” he said. “Doesn’t open until June.”
The sign in front of the motel was decorated with a big cannon in a mound of sand, just like on the chief’s hat. “What’s with this cannon, anyway?” I said.
“Goes back to the turn of the century,” he said. “When a ship got caught in a storm, it would try to get as close to the shore as it could. There’d be a crew of men here who would use the cannon to fire a rope out to the ship. They could fire that thing a good half mile if they aimed it right.”
I tried to picture it. It would take a hell of a shot to hit a boat that far away.
“Just goes to show you,” he said. “A gun doesn’t always kill you. Sometimes it saves you.”
With that thought ringing in my head, we pulled into the gas station. Stu managed to find some air to put in my tires. He pumped up my tires himself and then he stood next to the chief while I climbed into the cab. When I closed the door, the chief stepped closer and rapped a knuckle on my window. I rolled it down.
“Sleep well tonight, Mr. McKnight,” the chief said, “and then have a safe trip back home tomorrow morning. I hope you enjoyed your visit to Orcus Beach.”
There were a couple things I could have said to him, but I decided to keep my mouth shut. I turned the key and gunned the engine.
“Seriously, Mr. McKnight,” he said. “I know we’ve got some pretty extreme characters around here. You gotta understand—people in this town, they just have a habit of acting very protectively. You know what I mean? As a matter of fact, I’d say overall, you caught us on a good day. The next time, we might not be so friendly.”
I pulled away and left him standing there in the light of the gas station. He got smaller and smaller in my rearview mirror as I headed south, away from Orcus Beach and everyone who lived there.
“Good night, Chief,” I said as he faded out of sight. “I’ll be seeing you.” In my mind’s eye, I pictured the pad of paper and the license numbers I had written down. I recited the numbers to myself, just to make sure I remembered them. One for Maria. And the other for whoever was driving that white Cadillac.
CHAPTER 15
I woke up the next morning in a strange bed, in a motel room in Whitehall, Michigan, twenty miles south of Orcus Beach. I had pulled in around eleven o’clock, my eyes burning from driving all day, my stomach empty. The motel was called the Whitehall Courtyard, and each room had a bright green light above the door that made you think you were in an aquarium. I asked the man at the front desk if there was a restaurant open at that hour. He just looked at me and laughed. “In Whitehall?” he said. “That’s the best one I’ve heard all day.”
So I settled for cheese and crackers and Oreo cookies from the vending machine, and then I closed the blinds against the green light and went to sleep. I had disjointed dreams about shotguns and woke up suddenly in the
middle of the night, dead certain that I was about to feel the hot blast of buckshot in my chest. It took a few seconds to remember where I was, and what I was doing there. I went back to sleep for a few hours. When the morning came, I sat up in the bed and reached for the telephone. Leon picked up on the second ring.
“Alex!” he said. “Where are you?”
“I’m in a motel in a town called Whitehall,” I said. “I need you to run a couple plates for me.”
“Whitehall? Where’s that? What’s going on, Alex?”
I gave him the five-minute version. Seeing Randy in the hospital, going back to Leopold’s house, then my adventures in Orcus Beach.
“How can you be sure it’s Maria?” he said. “You didn’t even talk to her.”
“I know it’s her,” I said. “It has to be. Let me give you those plate numbers.”
“All you gotta do is call the secretary of state,” he said, “and give them your PI number.”
“That’s right,” I said. “I remember you telling me that now.”
“I’ll do it,” he said. “You’ve got another call to make.”
“What’s that?”
“A Dr. Havlin called here looking for you,” he said. “Early this morning. He had one of our cards, so he tried both numbers.”
“What did he say?”
“They’re going to operate.”
“Is it . . . I mean . . .”
“He didn’t say, Alex. He just said you should call him.”
“Okay,” I said. “Thanks. I’ll do that.”
“So give me those plate numbers.”
“Here’s Maria’s plate,” I said. I closed my eyes and called up the three letters and three numbers.
“This could get us her current address,” he said.
“It might,” I said. “And whatever name she’s using now.”
“Okay, give me the other one.”
I gave him the three letters and three numbers from the white Cadillac, then told him he’d have to run it two ways, with a Y and a V.
“This white Cadillac,” he said. “You really think it’s the same guy who was staking out her family’s house? There are lots of white Cadillacs in the world.”
“Maybe it’s the same guy,” I said. “Maybe it isn’t. If it is, then somehow he found Maria.”
“Maybe Randy went to Leopold’s house,” he said, “and then to Orcus Beach, and this guy followed him.”
“If that’s true,” I said, “then I helped make it happen.”
Leon didn’t say anything for a while. “I’ll run these plates,” he finally said. “And I’ll call you right back.”
“No, let me call you,” I said. “As soon as I call the doctor, I’m gonna get something to eat. Or I’ll need a doctor myself.”
I said good-bye, then punched in the doctor’s number. A woman at the hospital in Grand Rapids answered. She told me that Dr. Havlin was in surgery.
“Do you know the name of the person he’s operating on?” I said. “It may be the man I’m calling about.”
“You’re going to have to speak to the doctor directly,” she said. “I can’t discuss it over the phone.”
I told her I’d try later. Then I got dressed and went out to see if the town of Whitehall had a place where you could get a decent breakfast. I ended up finding a restaurant with a seven-dollar all-you-can-eat buffet, and I ate enough scrambled eggs and bacon and hash browns to make it the best seven dollars I ever spent. The man who showed me to my table, the woman who took my money, the boy who kept taking my empty plates away—they all looked genuinely happy that I had chosen to visit their little town. It restored my faith in the people who live in Michigan, and it made me wonder why Orcus Beach was so different. I had a few minutes to think about it as I drove back up that lonely two-lane road.
I pulled out my cell phone on the way and tried to call Leon. The call didn’t go through. I barely overcame the temptation to open my window and throw the phone into the lake.
I got to see Orcus Beach in the daylight this time. It was a sleepy little shoreline town that had seen better days. You wouldn’t have thought it was much different from a thousand other towns, until you happened to stop in and sample the local hospitality.
I drove past Rocky’s place. The parking lot was full again. Either they did a good breakfast or they did the only breakfast in town. I kept going north, through the traffic light and past the gas station. I could see Stu sitting at his counter, but I didn’t think he noticed me driving by.
I went past the town hall and the fire station. I didn’t drive around back to see if Chief Rudiger was there. I didn’t figure he’d be too happy to see me.
I kept going, past the old furniture plant. The road opened up again into a long stretch of nothing but pine trees and glimpses of the lake to the west. I drove another ten miles, just to confirm to myself that Orcus Beach really was in the middle of nowhere. I pulled over and tried the phone again. The signal teased me for a few seconds and then disappeared.
I went back to town. This time when I got to the traffic light, I took a left and went east, away from the lake. I crossed over some railroad tracks and drove through a neighborhood of small houses set closely together. Everything looked heavy and wet, like the snow had just melted. There was an empty ball field at the next corner, with wooden bleachers down the first-base line. I watched for white Cadillacs as I drove. I saw one parked in front of a little bait shop at the edge of town, but the license plate didn’t match the one I had seen the day before.
As I drove, I couldn’t help wondering exactly where Randy had been shot. It had been only two days since the shooting, and it was such a small town. I kept expecting to see yellow crime-scene tape, but I didn’t.
The road leading east went over a small bridge, then turned north. After another few houses, the pavement gave way to gravel. I stopped and turned around. When I got back to the middle of town, I kept going west, right through the traffic light, toward the shoreline. I figured I might as well see the whole town.
The road led directly to a public boat launch. The place was empty. I pulled in and looked out at the water for a minute. I could hear the sand ticking against the truck, driven by the wind off the lake. I tried the phone again. The planets must have been aligned just right this time, because I got a signal and it stayed strong enough for me to make two calls. The first was to Leon. It was busy. He’s probably calling about the license plates right now, I thought. The second call was to the hospital. I got through to Dr. Havlin this time. The signal wavered for a few seconds and his voice started to break up, but then the line cleared and I heard him telling me what he had just done to Randy.
“Mr. Wilkins had what we call a pellet embolism,” he said. “A piece of buckshot entered the bloodstream and then migrated away from the wound, all the way to the brain. Which is why we didn’t see it when we were working on his neck.”
“How serious is that?” I said. “It goes right into the brain?”
“Well, actually, it stopped where the cerebral artery enters the brain. The end result was a stroke, which explains why he didn’t regain consciousness. It must have knocked out both hemispheres.”
“So now what?” I said. “Is he conscious now? Is there going to be permanent damage?”
“He’s not conscious, no,” he said. “As far as permanent damage goes, we just don’t know right now. We’re doing a neuro check every hour. Meanwhile, we’ve still got a county deputy outside his door every minute, day and night. I don’t know what they think Mr. Wilkins is going to do. Anyway, I’ve got your number, Mr. McKnight. I’ll call you if anything changes.”
“I appreciate it,” I said.
I hung up and pulled back out onto the secondary road, taking it south until it came to a dead end, then headed north. The homes on the lake side of the road had mailboxes next to long driveways. Some of the houses were bigger than others, but they all looked a little beaten up by the long winters and the storms on the lake. I
saw a lot of NO TRESPASSING signs. Like most of the lower Great Lakes, the shoreline here was strictly private property.
I didn’t see any white Cadillacs. I didn’t see Maria’s red Mustang. The road ended abruptly where a little inlet cut in from the shoreline. There was a guardrail there to keep you from driving right into it, and behind that a chain-link fence with four seasons’ worth of litter pasted to it. I turned the truck around and headed back to the center of town.
So now what, Alex? Either you go to the hospital and wait to see what happens to Randy. Or you stay here in town and do something stupid.
When I got back to Rocky’s place, I saw Maria’s car in the parking lot. I tried the phone and somehow it worked again. A day filled with miracles already. Leon picked up on the first ring.
“Alex, I’ve got some names for you,” he said. I could hear the enthusiasm in his voice. This kind of stuff was what he lived for. “Are you ready?”
I didn’t have my little pad of paper anymore, so I grabbed a deposit envelope out of the glove compart ment. “Go ahead,” I said.
“I’ll give you the white Caddy first,” he said. “If that was a V you saw on the plate, then it was a woman named Ethel Birmingham from Center Line, Michigan. And it wasn’t really a white Cadillac; it was a brown Buick.”
“I’m guessing it wasn’t really a V,” I said.
“Good man,” he said. “If it was a Y, then you’ve got a Mr. Miles Whitley, who just so happens to own a white 1983 Cadillac, and just so happens to be a private investigator out of Detroit.”
“A private investigator?”
“Are you surprised?”
“I don’t know,” I said. “I guess not. Not if he’s been following her. Maybe this Harwood guy hired him.”
“My thought exactly,” he said. “I’ve got his number here if you want it. I don’t know if we should just call the guy or not. What do you think?”
“Good question,” I said. “Let’s think about that one.”
The Hunting Wind: An Alex McKnight Mystery Page 17