by Jack Lynch
“Sure.”
She stood aside. It was her bedroom, with a large bed along the far wall. The room was lighted by some candles. The wall alongside the bed had been paneled with squares of mirrored glass.
“Over here, on the wall opposite the bed,” she told me.
I stepped into the room, turned and very nearly blushed. It was a poster-sized depiction of a girl’s torso. At first I thought it was a blown-up photograph, but closer inspection showed that only the head was a photo, and that was of Allison herself. She had a length of straw in her mouth and was winking. The rest of the piece was a very life-like painting of a girl’s body from the hips up. The figure wore an unbuttoned shirt. One hand held back a flap of the shirt revealing a round, golden breast. I tried to whistle but my lips went dry on me.
“Pretty tantalizing,” I told her.
“Thanks.”
I followed her back out to the kitchen.
“I sell a lot of that sort of thing at art fairs.” She refreshed her drink and handed me mine.
“Do they all look like that one?”
“No. I use different poses and scraps of clothing. Maybe show a bare bottom instead of a breast. And I never use my own face, as on that one.”
“I’d like to meet your model sometime.”
“You already have. I never found anybody’s body that was any better for that sort of hush puppy than my own. I do it with mirrors and things.” She put down her drink and began moving with the music. “Let’s dance, mister.”
I put down my own glass and she moved in close, locking her hands behind my neck. I held her lightly. After a while I held her a little closer. I didn’t know if she was just particularly susceptible to the drinks, or I reminded her of her father or what. Whatever it was, we both were enjoying it.
“Any special reason for this?” I murmured.
“Nope. Just wanted to, captain. It was my idea and not yours. That’s the big difference between now and when Jerry was here. After all, I’m not exactly neuter, you know.”
I smiled and just let our bodies go with it. I had put in a couple of long days. I could afford to shut down the business without any guilty feelings. I hadn’t expected anything like this to happen, but there it was, and that sometimes was best.
“You’re my sort of dame,” I told her softly.
“Why’s that?”
“You wash your face. You brush your hair. You smell nice.”
“Glad you like it. You’re my sort of guy too.”
“Why’s that?”
“You hold onto me nicely.”
“I was brought up that way.”
“And you’re bold and tenacious.”
“Now how can you know a thing like that?”
“I just do. From the way you do things. I’m going to make me a baby boy, someday. When I do, I’ll want him to be bold and tenacious too.”
We drifted for a few miles, and when I kissed her she responded as if she’d been waiting a while for me to do it.
“I think we should go to bed,” she said finally.
I followed her back to her bedroom. She hung up her tan jacket, then turned with a little frown. “Hmmm. There is something, after all, and I’d better tell you now before we do something to make me forget.”
“To do with what?”
“You asked if Jerry’s job could have had anything to do with his being up here. I do remember now,” she said, lifting the Lodi Buckeyes over her head, “that he said something about being on the trail of a cop.”
“A cop?”
“Uh-huh, a detective, he said.” She unbuckled the belt of her Levi’s, unzipped them and stepped quickly out of them. As I had suspected they would, her legs looked grand.
“A local cop?”
“Well now I hardly think so, Mr. Bragg. If it were one of the locals, he would have just gone down to the police station and asked for him, wouldn’t he? No, it was somebody from out of town.”
“But he didn’t say where?”
“Nope.”
She was staring me straight in the eye as she reached back to unsnap her bra and shrugged out of it. She threw it to one side and stepped up to me and began sliding the end of my belt through its buckle.
“And don’t think for a minute that you’re going to do anything more about it tonight, Peter Bragg. What does a girl have to do, flog you?”
TEN
At a little past eight o’clock on the following misty, gray morning, I drove back to the Square in downtown Barracks Cove and turned into the parking area behind the town hall and police headquarters building. I hadn’t been sure I would find anybody up and around that early, but the parking lot was crowded with cars, trucks, vans and trail vehicles. Knots of men stood talking, and people were entering and leaving the building. The town hall parking lot appeared to be the place to go on a Sunday morning in Barracks Cove.
I parked my car and went inside. The police offices were at the far end of the building. A small outer office was divided by a counter. Voices came from the room behind the counter off to the right. An elderly woman clerk in khaki uniform sat at a desk doing battle with an old typewriter. She got up and came over. I showed her my photostat and gave her a card.
“The name is Bragg. I’m from San Francisco, on a missing person case. I’ve traced the individual to this area. I’d like to chat for a minute with the person in charge.”
“The chief himself is here this morning, Mr. Bragg, but he’s terribly busy right now.”
“It won’t take long.”
She glanced at the doorway. “Well, I’ll see.”
She went into the inner office. One of the voices from in there said something about telling the men outside. It half sounded as if they were forming a posse. A minute later a rangy, middle-aged man wearing outdoor clothing came out and passed through a gate at the end of the counter. He frowned at me, as if something weren’t quite right.
“You here to help?” he wanted to know.
“Not that I know of.”
The man grunted and continued on out of the office. The woman clerk came back out, opened the gate and motioned me in. “The chief’s in there, over in the corner,” she told me.
The inner office was more spacious. It had a long wooden table with chairs around it, lockers along one wall and a rack of rifles and shotguns along another. The chief sat at a dull metal desk that looked as if it had come from a surplus store. Another woman clerk sat at a radio set across from him. The sign on the chief’s desk said his name was William Morgan. He was a large man in his fifties. He looked fit despite a bulge at the belt line. He got out of his chair and came around to shake my hand.
“Bragg? I’m Morgan. Always happy to meet a fellow law officer, even if he’s in business for himself. Especially today.”
“Why today, especially?”
The chief sat on the corner of his desk and folded his arms. “Because I need help, that’s why.”
He said it in a voice that indicated I should be falling all over myself to lend a hand. Being a fellow law officer and all.
“We believe that there’s a plane down somewhere in the coast range between here and Willits. Apparently it’s been there since the storm of Thursday night. An old fellow who lives back up there came into town early this morning to tell us he’d heard it circling around, as if it was trying to make up its mind which way to go. He said it sounded pretty low for back in there. Then he lost track of it. Friday, off and on, he heard what he thought were shouts, but they drifted down from all different directions. Sounds carry weird back in those canyon areas. The important thing is that he heard them, and decided he’d better tell somebody about it. He doesn’t have a phone and it took him another day to get his old truck started. Then we had a call early this morning from the sheriff’s office, saying an airline pilot headed for San Francisco reported seeing a dropping flare. He circled around some but didn’t see anything more. The only problem is he figured it to be quite a distance from where the fello
w who heard the plane lives. Come on over here a minute.”
The chief had a way of sweeping you up in things. I followed him over to a large wall map.
“Here’s where the old man heard the plane, sounding as if it finally went off up a gorge here. Over here is the general vicinity of where the flare was seen. As near as we could make out, the shouts the old man heard could have carried down from here, or over here, or even up there.”
Morgan’s hand covered quite a portion of the map. “Now Bragg, I try to give my men a break on weekends. I short myself, to tell you the truth, and a lot of the auxiliaries are out of town on one thing or another. The sheriff isn’t in much better shape. So all we’ve got right now is about seventeen volunteers to search an area of several square miles. The Air Force is sending up a couple of helicopters, and I think we’ll get some National Guard help, but not until later in the day.”
He drew himself up and laid a hand on my shoulder. “Bragg, I need help right now, not this afternoon.”
“You’re asking a lot, Chief. I’m looking for a missing man. He didn’t have any reason to drop out of sight voluntarily. I think he’s in trouble.”
“That’s one man,” Morgan replied. “We don’t know how many might be back in those mountains, or how badly they might be hurt, or even if there are women and kids up there. After we find them, I’ll help you as much as I can on this other matter.”
There wasn’t any sense arguing about it, if I wanted his cooperation. “Okay. I’ll help out for one day. By then you should have enough of your own men back here.”
“That’s fair enough, and I thank you.” He went back around to sit at his desk and reached for the phone. “The fellow who just left here is Bill Fairbanks. He’ll be in charge. Go report to him. Maybe he can scout up something for you to wear.”
“It won’t be necessary.”
The chief hesitated. “You’re apt to get messed up wearing those duds.”
“I’ve got some casual gear in my car. You never know what you’re apt to get into when you leave the big city.”
“Smart,” grinned the chief. “Damn smart.”
I went out and found Fairbanks.
“It turns out I’m coming along,” I told him. “I have a change of clothes in my car. When are you leaving?”
“In about fifteen minutes. Do you have any friends you could bring along?”
“I’m afraid not.” I went to the car and got out some scruffy pants and a shirt and jacket, along with my hiking boots and some wool socks. I went inside and changed in a men’s room. Then I found a phone booth and called Allison. I explained how the chief had drafted me.
“I like that,” she said. “It means you’ll be around a little while longer.”
“It looks that way. I thought while I was gone you might be able to do me a favor, so the day isn’t a total waste. How late will you work in your studio?”
“Until this afternoon sometime. What do you need?”
“I’d like you to try to find the motel Jerry might have stayed at after he left you that Monday night.”
“That sounds easy enough, we don’t have too many here.”
“It might be tougher than you think. There isn’t any reason I can think of for him to have registered under a phony name, but with his screwy approach to his work, he just might have. I have a photo of him I’ll leave here with the woman clerk at the police station. Pick it up when you’re ready to start looking. Try to speak with the person at each place who was manning the check-in desk that night.”
“Okay. When do you think you’ll be back?”
“Tonight, sometime. I told the chief I’d give him one day of my time. I’ll take you out to dinner if somebody’s still open.”
I went back and left the photo of Jerry Lind, then took my street clothes out to the car. Mike Parsons and another older man I’d seen at his party the night before were leaning against the side of a trail vehicle. I went over to them.
“Howdy, Mr. Bragg. Lending a hand, I see.”
“I guess so. How are you, Mr. Parsons?”
“Just fine, thanks. This here’s Abe Whelan.”
Whelan nodded, and we shook hands. He was a tall, hard-looking gent, long-boned and lean with quick-moving eyes, as if he might miss something.
“Was Allison able to help you out any?” Parsons asked.
“Not really. She was the person I was looking for, but she couldn’t tell me much.”
We were interrupted by a startled cry to one side. I turned. It was Homer from the alley the night before, purple welts on his face and all. He jabbed an accusing finger at me and grabbed the arm of a large, uniformed police officer he was with.
“That’s him! The punk who waylaid me.”
The cop moved toward me with a mean expression. I got out my wallet, opened it and held it up.
“Before you make a bad move, officer, you’d better hear what I have to say about that gentleman. I work out of San Francisco. I was conducting an investigation into a very important matter last evening over at the Ten O’Clock, questioning a witness. Simply because the witness happened to be an attractive woman, Romeo there behind you, drunk, came over and tried to move in on us. I asked him to leave a couple of times and he didn’t. Instead he started annoying the witness. So I took him outside and put him to sleep.”
“What did you use on him, knucks?”
“Just my hands.”
“What’s he saying?” Homer demanded.
I guess his ears were still ringing from the banging I gave them the night before. The cop made a motion for him to stay back, then turned to me again.
“He says you used judo or something on him. He can’t hear so well. He thinks you popped an eardrum.”
“I just wanted to take the fight out of him.”
“Why didn’t you have the bartender call us? That’s what you’re supposed to do in a case like that.”
“Bullshit, and you know it, officer. It happens too quickly in a bar. What’s the big concern on your part? Homer file a complaint?”
“He doesn’t have to. He’s my brother, down visiting from Eugene. That makes it my complaint.”
“Sorry to hear that,” I told him, putting my wallet away. “But the stuff I handle isn’t penny ante. There’s a man missing. He might be dead. It’s that serious. Your brother was impeding my search for him by making a jackass of himself and I can dig up a dozen local witnesses to back me up. Now if you or Homer want to pursue this any further, let’s go in and have a talk with Chief Morgan. I’ve been in to see him once this morning. If I go in again I might have a complaint of my own to make.”
The officer was stopped cold and his face reflected that. It was unfortunate it had to happen in front of the people he worked and lived with. That showed on his face as well.
“All right, buddy,” the cop said softly. “But it seems to me you could have done it a little differently.” He turned and took his brother’s arm to lead him away.
“What is it, Stan?” Homer asked. “Why didn’t you lock him up?”
The men gathered around didn’t have much to say. They briefly studied me with a variety of expressions. I didn’t much care for the way the day had started.
“All right, men,” called Fairbanks from the bed of a pickup truck. “We’ll move out now and assemble at the River Run Campground. For any of you unfamiliar with the area, that’s about thirty-five miles east of here on the road to Willits. That’ll be our operations base. Let’s go.”
I got in toward the rear of the string of cars and trucks that rolled out of the lot and streamed out of town. I had to break the speed limit some to keep up. These were a serious bunch of men. I just hoped that Jerry Lind, wherever he was, or if he was, could appreciate that and hang tough a while longer. Thirty miles out of town I was passed by Homer’s cop brother, Stan. Stan gave me a lingering look as he went past. I kind of wished they’d kept him behind to guard the town.
The road played tag with the Stannis Ri
ver on its winding track up a canyon on the west face of Piler’s Peak, the highest point for several miles in the coastal ridge formation. It wasn’t a tall mountain by the standards of a boy out of the Pacific Northwest, but it was a rugged-looking, timbered area that hadn’t been completely worked over by loggers. Even the areas that had were by now covered with a tough second growth. The River Run Campground was north of the highway. It was at a place where the river flattened some, making it a good fishing site. Also, it was the jump off point for several trails leading up the mountain. The highway cut back away from the river just above and meandered over to a draw between Piler’s Peak and the next high point down south.
The men left their vehicles and crossed to a picnic area. Fairbanks was spreading out a large map on one of the tables. I opened the trunk of my car to get out my day pack. It was a bag I kept filled with first aid stuff: a flashlight, matches, rope, Spam and chocolate, small axe and a signaling mirror, a whistle, compass and anything else I figured might save my tail some day. I decided also to take along one of the handguns I’d put in my suitcase. It would make a good communication device back in those canyons. I took the lighter weapon, a Smith & Wesson .38-caliber revolver. It was a nice little weapon called a Combat Masterpiece that I’d picked up one time after I’d been thrown in with a group of Marines during some very disorganized days in Korea. I looped my binocular case over a shoulder and carried the gear to a picnic table near where Fairbanks was going over the map and organizing things.
By now there were about thirty of us in all. Fairbanks said we’d all hike up to where a foot bridge crossed the Stannis River, about a half mile above the campground. There we’d split into two groups. One bunch would cross the bridge so we could work up both sides of the river toward the top of the peak. The assumption was that since it was the highest formation in the area, it would have been most apt to have been hit by a low-flying aircraft. I have a pal who has his own plane, and from things he’d told me about weather and this sort of country, I knew that Fairbanks’ assumption wasn’t necessarily valid. But then I wasn’t in charge of things and wouldn’t have a better idea anyhow. I did ask him if somebody had thought to notify the Civil Air Patrol and see if they could get an air search underway. He said they were working on it.