Dead Air

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Dead Air Page 20

by Mary Kennedy


  Then she pushed the button down to lock all four doors.

  My mom. Always thinking ahead.

  I approached the trailer. Dead silence. I tensed, waiting for Ray Hicks to come tearing out of his trailer or for the hounds from hell to come bounding over the dusty yard. No curtains fluttering at the grimy windows, no sound inside. It was as if a neutron bomb had struck, killing every living thing but leaving all the double-wides intact.

  I swallowed hard and walked up the two concrete steps. I held my breath, tapped on the wooden frame around the screen door, and silently counted. When twenty seconds had passed and nothing had happened, I glanced back at Mom and gave her a cheery thumbs-up.

  The battered screen door was closed, but it was warped and there was a good three-inch gap showing at the bottom. All I had to do was nudge it open quietly and then tackle the main door.

  This was the tricky part. I gingerly tried the handle on the metal front door, and the skin on the back of my neck prickled. The door didn’t budge.

  Surprise, surprise. The trailer door was locked, but a quick swipe of my Visa card and it creaked open. I was amazed. I’ve seen that trick on a million cop shows but never really believed it worked until now.

  My heart was hammering as I stepped inside the darkened interior. It smelled even worse than earlier in the day, and I realized that all the windows were closed. No sign of Ray Hicks, but I noticed an open can of beans on the counter and an old-fashioned black frying pan on the burner.

  Now that I was inside the trailer, I had no idea where to start looking. I flipped on the tiny flashlight, feeling like Nancy Drew in The Mystery at the Moss-Covered Mansion.

  The place was a mess, and I wondered where Hicks kept his papers and bills. I spotted a shoe box filled to overflowing with documents on the top shelf of a built-in fiberboard bookcase over the stove. I pulled it down and riffled quickly through the contents: coupons and past-due electric bills, a notice from the Brentwood Bay Village Association reminding him to keep lids on his trash cans. Nothing interesting.

  A quick look through the cabinets under the four-burner stove. Nothing again. Dirty glassware and cheap crockery piled on the shelves above the stove. A pan lid clattered down to the floor, and I nearly jumped out of my skin.

  Where to look next? I hated to tackle the bedroom, but it was my only option. The door was wide-open, and I could see piles of clothes scattered on the unmade bed, like a suitcase had exploded. The louvered closet door was tilting half off its hinges, and I spotted a couple of windbreakers hanging inside.

  I quickly went through the pockets. A couple of match-books and loose change. I stood on my tiptoes to run my hand over the closet shelf and came up empty. I looked around with a sense of despair. There had to be something tying Ray Hicks to Guru Sanjay, but what?

  And then I spotted it.

  A well-thumbed copy of Heal the Cosmos on the bedside table.

  I remembered Sanjay saying it was his latest release. Why would Ray Hicks be reading it? More important, where had he gotten it? It had one of those little gold foil “Signed by Author” stickers on the cover, and I opened the book gingerly. There, on the very first page, was a florid inscription to Ray Hicks from Sanjay Gingii.

  It was dated the day Sanjay died.

  Bingo. I felt a happy little surge of triumph. This placed Ray Hicks at the conference after all, on the very day that Sanjay went to that big ashram in the sky. Motive, means, and opportunity. I’d nailed him!

  I picked up the book, turned off the flashlight, and prepared to make my way out of the trailer. I could hardly wait to see what Rafe Martino and the entire Cypress Grove PD would make of this new evidence.

  Guru Sanjay always said that good karma is instantly followed by bad karma. It is the “way of the universe.” Here is the CliffsNotes version of his philosophy: For every good thing that happens to you, you are immediately zapped with a disaster. Every smile is followed by tears. A burst of sunlight will inevitably give way to a torrential downpour. I’ve never really understood that philosophy.

  Until now. Suddenly it all made sense.

  I think having a gun jammed in my back really cleared my head.

  Chapter 24

  “Drop it, girlie.” I felt something cold and hard nudging my spine, and my breath caught in my throat.

  Ray Hicks. I’d recognize that hayseed accent and fishy breath anywhere.

  “Turn around real slow, and don’t try to pull a fast one.”

  “I won’t,” I warbled. “I promise. No fast ones. Not even a slow one.” So much for my sleuthing technique. I hadn’t even heard him slip into the trailer. How had I missed this one? I never saw it coming. I slowly raised my hands in a surrender pose.

  My thoughts flew to Mom. What had he done to her? Had he knocked her unconscious, or something much worse? My mind was scrambling with dark thoughts, and fear began to explode like fireworks in my chest.

  Ray Hicks had killed her, and I was responsible. I felt an overwhelming wave of sadness sweep over me, and my eyes blurred with tears. It didn’t matter what happened to me now. Mom was gone forever.

  And then I heard a familiar voice calling to me from the living room.

  “You better do what he says, Maggie,” Mom piped up. Out of the corner of my eye, I spotted Mom standing in the living room shadows. She must have gotten out of the car and followed Ray inside. “He’s armed with a bottle of Rolling Rock.”

  Rolling Rock? I spun around to see a sheepish grin on Ray Hicks’s face and a beer bottle in his hand.

  “I’ve always wanted to do that,” he said, lowering the bottle. “Saw it on a crime show once. The killer poked someone in the back with a beer bottle, and they figured he had a snub-nosed revolver.” He chortled with glee, which set off a phlegmy coughing fit. “Guess I had you goin’ there for a minute or two,” he said. He looked inordinately pleased with himself.

  “Yes, you did,” I said, nearly choking on the words. I swallowed hard. A lump the size of a walnut had appeared in my esophagus, and my knees had turned to Jell-O.

  Ray Hicks reached over and flipped on a light switch. The trailer was filled with a yellowish glow.

  “What’s going on here?” I took a step toward Ray Hicks, tilting my chin. “You have no business intimidating me like that. I nearly had a heart attack. You could be charged with making a terroristic threat.”

  Ray laughed and motioned for me to follow him into the living room. “Girlie, listen to yourself. You broke into my trailer, I caught you going through my stuff, and now you’re accusing me of terroristic whatever? You got some gall; that’s all I can say.”

  “I’m afraid he’s right, Maggie,” Mom said. “We should have waited for Mr. Hicks to return and invite us inside.” I stared at her. “You were terribly rude, I’m afraid, just barging in like this.” A touch of a Boston accent had crept into her voice, and she was sounding oh-so-upper-class, chomp ing down on her vowels as if they were raw oysters.

  I moaned softly and sank down next to her on the sofa. I was terribly rude? What was Mom doing now—channeling Emily Post? I felt the beginnings of a killer headache flare up behind my eyes, and I pinched the bridge of my nose, willing it away.

  I turned to Mom. “What happened outside?” I hissed. “You were supposed to be the lookout for me.”

  “It didn’t quite work out that way.”

  I’ll say.

  Mom’s lips twitched, and I realized she was enjoying my predicament. “Ray pulled in next to me and asked me what we were doing here.” She gave a helpless little shrug as if that explained everything.

  “I didn’t figure you were the Welcome Wagon lady,” he said, snickering. “She’s already come and gone and left me some jelly donuts. They were from the day-old store, but I ate them anyway.”

  Ray Hicks, master of the bon mot. I ignored him and focused on Mom. “And you told him . . . ,” I prompted.

  “And I told him that your roommate was accused of killing Sanjay and we re
ally had to do everything possible to prove her innocence. That we’d launched our own investigation since we didn’t trust the Cypress Grove PD to do it properly. We knew it was very naughty to come back to the trailer uninvited”—she giggled girlishly—“but we just couldn’t help ourselves. We would do anything to help Lark.”

  Leave it to Mom to show our hand. I shook my head in dismay. If Ray was the killer, now he would certainly cover his tracks and send us off in the wrong direction. Time for some expert damage control, Dr. Maggie style.

  “I thought you were gone for the evening,” I said briskly to Ray. “I apologize for letting myself into your trailer.” I figured it was better to say nothing about the Visa card and just let him think that the door had magically opened by itself, or that he’d left it unlocked.

  I made a conscious effort to keep my body language open, my tone pleasant. I even arranged my features into a smile. I found it very hard to smile at Ray Hicks, but desperate times call for desperate measures. He nodded, as if he accepted this explanation.

  “No harm, no foul,” he said gruffly. “I’d probably do the same for a friend.” He opened the miniature fridge, popped open another beer, and offered me one. I waved it away with my hand, my mind still mulling over the new turn of events. One question was nibbling at the edge of my thoughts. “What happened to the dogs? Where are they?”

  “The dogs? Oh, they belong to my brother. I was just keepin’ ’em for a few days while he went down to Orlando with his family. He came back this afternoon and picked them up.”

  “You told us you always spent Friday nights at a tavern,” Mom said.

  “So I did. But when I got down to the Crab Shack, I saw that my favorite bartender wasn’t workin’ tonight, so I came home after a couple of beers. Figured I’d watch a little television and relax.” He grinned. “Never thought I’d see Thelma and Louise campin’ out here, though.” He laughed and slapped his thigh. “Man, you two are one for the books.”

  “Look,” I said firmly, determined to end this silly charade. “You’ve got to explain how you got this book. You told us earlier you’d never been to Cypress Grove and you never attended the conference.” I tapped the cover decisively. “Yet I find an autographed book and it’s signed and dated on the day Sanjay died.”

  “Well, here’s the thing, missy,” Ray said, sitting down on a stained armchair. “I wasn’t completely honest with you.” I started to interrupt, but he held up his hand. “Yes, I was in Cypress Grove. I lied about that. I figured it would be my last chance to see Sanjay and figure out if I was going to get any of my money back. I was so fed up, I would have taken twenty cents on the dollar at that point. It was better than nothing.”

  “You were there,” I said softly. I was surprised he admitted it.

  “Yep. So I did lie to you, but I didn’t lie about the important part of the story. I didn’t kill him. What would be the point? The money was gone and the money was all I ever cared about. Knocking him off wouldn’t get me back a penny of my investment. Why bother?”

  “I believe you,” Mom said feelingly, and I shot her a look. Why were we having a lovefest with this guy? He was still a suspect—maybe our best suspect.

  “Not so fast, Mom.” I looked at Ray. “So you’re telling me you did talk to Sanjay and he signed this book for you.”

  “Not exactly.” Ray wiped his hands on his grubby jeans. “I never stuck around to see Sanjay. He was doing those crazy workshops, and he had goons surrounding him every minute. You couldn’t get past them, you know?” I nodded. I remembered the guy in the black T-shirt who stopped me at the back of the conference room. And the two gorillas who’d accompanied Sanjay to the WYME interview. “So I figured I’d have a drink at the bar and hit the road. It wasn’t worth my time to spend the whole day listening to him spouting off, and I knew he probably would brush me off. I decided to have a quick beer at the bar, and that’s when I met Travis.”

  “Travis?” The name sounded vaguely familiar, and I remembered seeing it on an organizational chart of Team Sanjay in a seminar brochure.

  “Travis Carter. He’s a nice guy, but he got screwed over by Sanjay, too.” He snorted. “Looks like we both got taken in by him. His situation was different from mine, but Sanjay stole from him just the same. It wasn’t a real estate deal, though. It had to do with work.”

  “Travis was an assistant to Sanjay, or an associate or something, wasn’t he?” I suddenly remembered that Travis Carter was the one who had sent me a press kit about Sanjay’s latest book so I’d be prepared for the interview.

  Ray leaned back in the armchair. “Well, that’s what Sanjay wanted everyone to think. But the truth is, Travis was the brains behind Sanjay’s next book.”

  I raised my eyebrows. “His next book? You don’t mean Heal the Cosmos?”

  “Nah. The next book was the one that was gonna make a fortune for Sanjay. It was going to be bigger than all his other books put together. Travis told me there was a lot of—what’s the word . . . noise? I think that’s what he called it. He said there was a lot of noise about the book already.”

  “Noise? Do you mean buzz?”

  Ray nodded. “Yeah, that’s it. He used the word ‘buzz.’ He said there was gonna be a lot of buzz about this particular book. And that didn’t sit well with Travis, let me tell you. He could see that Sanjay was going to make a ton of money and he was gonna be left looking like a schmuck.”

  “Why’s that?” Mom said, leaning forward. “Why would he be concerned about Sanjay making a lot of money on the book?”

  “Because Travis is the feller who wrote it.”

  “Travis Carter wrote it?” I was stunned.

  “He sure did. He did all the research and spent about five years of his life puttin’ it all together. But he made a big mistake. Yessiree.” Ray wagged his index finger for emphasis and put his beer down on the scratched coffee table.

  “And what was that?” I was so caught up in the story, I almost forgot that Ray could be fabricating the whole tale, making it up as he went along.

  “Well, here’s the thing. He gave Sanjay all his research notes. Every lick of paper connected to the book.” Ray raised his eyebrows. “And ole Sanjay just ran with it. He decided to peddle it as his own book. Not a word about Travis or the work he’d done.”

  “Wow,” Mom said softly. “I can’t believe Sanjay would do that.”

  Ray took another swig of beer. “It makes sense if you think on it a little. Sanjay was the one with the big connections and a New York agent. He just added a few lines here and there, and he was gonna pass it off as his own. Pretty smart, huh?”

  “This is amazing.” I shook my head. “When Sanjay was a guest on my show, he didn’t say a word about another book coming out. All he wanted to do was promote Heal the Cosmos. He never let on there was anything else in the pipeline.”

  “Sanjay was a pretty shrewd guy, you know. He knew how to play his cards close to his vest. He figured no one would be the wiser, and he was right. I don’t even know if his agent was in on it. Travis was going to be left holding the bag once the new book came out.”

  “But what evidence did Sanjay have that he actually wrote it?” I wondered what Nick, my investigative reporter pal, would make of all this. I tried to remember other plagiarism cases I’d heard of. Hadn’t there been lawsuits? “What was he going to do if anyone challenged him on it?”

  “Oh, Sanjay doctored up some e-mails to prove it was his idea all along and that Travis was just a jealous employee. You know, a wannabe. Some nobody who was tryin’ to ride the coattails of a big star. He said it happens all the time and the public would believe him, not some nobody even if he did have a bunch of fancy degrees.”

  I suddenly thought of Lenore Cooper. She had a “bunch of fancy degrees” and had been left out in the cold by Sanjay, too. His career had soared, while her star had fallen. Was this a case of history repeating itself? He’d stolen from Lenore in a way, too. Sanjay had learned the ropes from her, g
lommed on to her career, and figured out how to write books and give seminars. The minute he had what he needed from her, he’d dumped her.

  For a moment, there was dead silence in the trailer as we pondered this new information. Mom shot me a questioning look, but I tried to keep my face completely neutral.

  This put a completely different spin on things, but was Ray telling the truth? Or was he simply trying to divert suspicion away from himself and onto Travis Carter? A good offense is the best defense, and even a backwoods guy like Ray Hicks probably had a strong survival instinct.

  “What happened then?”

  “Well, Travis was hopping mad; that much I know. He was drinking and talking up a storm. He said he wasn’t going to roll over and take it. I knew he was up to something, but I didn’t know what.”

  “But why didn’t Travis consider going to the police or a lawyer?” Mom asked. “How could he let Sanjay get away with this?”

  “I guess he figured he had no choice. Sanjay had a whole legal team on retainer. He said he’d hammer Travis into the ground and drain his bank account dry if he ever tried to sue him. I guess Travis was scared of him.”

  “It certainly sounds that way,” I offered.

  “Sanjay isn’t the kind of guy you want to mess with.” Ray gave me a meaningful look. “If you dig into his background a little, you’ll see what I mean.”

  Chapter 25

  “What did you think about all that?” I was driving a little too fast, speeding south on A1A. “I still can’t figure out Ray Hicks. The whole story about Travis Carter was puzzling, wasn’t it?”

  “I’ll say. Puzzling isn’t the word for it.” Mom leaned forward and braced her hand on the dashboard, her signal to me that she didn’t like my driving.

  I eased up on the gas a little, my thoughts swirling. I was rattled by this sudden turn of events and decided I needed a good night’s sleep to deal with it. Mom had suggested we spend the night in her condo and visit South Beach again the next day.

 

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