Read The Lakeside Conspiracy Online
Authors: Gregg Stutts
CHAPTER 49
“Bill, what are you talking about?” Max said.
“Max, listen to me,” Bill said. “Jack’s body was found in a wooded area a few miles from the school. From what I understand, his car had a flat tire, he stopped to change it and the police think someone else stopped too. It looks like there was an altercation. And now Jack is dead.”
“Bill, I’m sorry Jack is dead,” Max said. It was only a little lie.
“Max, the police asked me for your number. Haven’t they called you?”
“Why would the police want to talk to me?” Max asked.
“Max, they’ve already looked at the footage from the security camera at the field house. You were there this morning with Jack.”
“So what?” Max said.
“You were most likely the last one to be seen with him and then you followed him out of the parking lot,” Bill said. “Not long after that he was found dead.”
“They think I had something to do with it?” Max said. “That’s crazy! I mean, I didn’t like the guy, but I would never kill him.”
Max was getting a strange look from the guy who’d made his sandwich.
Max lowered his voice and said, “Bill, this is crazy. You don’t think I would hurt Jack, do you?”
“Max, did you threaten Jack after the Rogers game?”
“Did I what?”
“Did you threaten Jack after the game Friday night in Rogers?”
Max tried to think. Had he? He couldn’t even remember what had happened after the game. “Bill, I don’t know. You know what it’s like after a game. If I said anything, it was just a heat of the moment thing.”
“You probably need to come home, Max. Let’s get this cleared up and then talk about when to get you back on the field.”
“What’s that mean, Bill? Are you suspending me?
“Just come home, Max.”
CHAPTER 50
Max ended the call and put his phone in his pocket. He wasn’t ready to listen to whatever voice mail the police may have left for him. He noticed the guy who’d made his sandwich was still looking at him funny. What had he heard? And misunderstood?
It probably wasn’t a good idea to stick around and find out. He wrapped his sandwich and walked outside into the cool, late-September evening in Seaside Park. What was he doing here? Who was looking for him? Why was he a possible murder suspect? How in the world had he gotten himself into this?
He walked two blocks east to the boardwalk and turned north toward Seaside Heights. Six weeks ago, there would have been thousands of people here. Tonight, just a handful. He looked around and was confident no one was following him. But what did he really know? He was a high school football coach from Arkansas, not an intelligence operative. Maybe his every step was being watched.
He walked a half-mile or so up the boardwalk, sat down on a bench and pulled his sandwich out. He was still hungry. And confused. He needed time to think. Time to plan. He couldn’t go back to his motel though. Not until he knew who was there waiting for him. And why.
He needed a place to sleep. To regroup.
He pulled his phone out and made the call.
And hoped Michelle would answer.
CHAPTER 51
She didn’t answer, so it went to voice mail. He didn’t leave a message though. Anything he’d say at this point would sound pretty crazy. He took a bite of his sandwich and wondered what to do next. By the time he’d finished eating, he’d decided on his next step.
He got up and started walking toward Island Avenue where Michelle’s parents lived. It was a little after 9:00 p.m. He thought about how eleven hours ago, he was eating biscuits and gravy with Willy overlooking Beaver Lake. Now he was by himself, two blocks from the Atlantic Ocean and afraid to go back to his motel because of the two men staking out his room.
This kind of stuff just doesn’t happen. Not in real life, he thought. Not to high school football coaches. He was supposed to be at his kitchen table watching game film from the Rogers game, as much as he’d like to forget that game.
Just a block from their house, he still had no idea what he was going to say. He didn’t even know if Michelle would be home. If he didn’t see her car, should he leave or knock on the door and wait for her parents to answer? The whole situation was going to be awkward for everyone.
He turned the corner onto Island Avenue. Their house was on the south side of the street about half way down the block. It was dark, but the streetlight in front of their house was illuminating Michelle’s car. At least she was home, he thought.
And then he realized how nervous he was, not because of the men who were looking for him, but because he was about to see Michelle. Showing up unannounced was a gamble. He knew that. It was unlike him to do something so spur of the moment, but he’d listened to Willy. When it came right down to it though, he really didn’t even know Willy. And yet, here he was in New Jersey, because an old man he hardly knew had cashed in his frequent flyer miles.
Max tried to look on the positive side. Michelle might be happy to see him. Maybe she’d appreciate the fact that he’d come all this way, especially during football season. He knew that wasn’t likely though. It was much more likely she’d be shocked and then angry. As he neared the house, a car turned onto the street behind him. The headlights lit up the street and cast his shadow ten feet in front of him. Max could feel his heart start to pound as he realized it could be the men looking for him. Maybe they’d found him somehow.
The car approached him very slowly. He kept walking and looked straight ahead. He didn’t want to turn and allow them to see his face. He glanced to his right and thought about running between two houses and onto the next street. He could be a couple streets away before they were able to get around the block. Unless one or both of them got out of the car and ran after him. He decided to keep walking.
The car pulled alongside him, but then passed him by. He slowed his pace in case they stopped and waited for him to catch up. And then the car stopped about thirty yards in front of him and parked right behind Michelle’s car.
Max stopped and watched. He could see two people in the car. Slowly, he took several steps backward. If they were watching him in the mirror, he didn’t want them to see him start running yet.
After several steps, he stopped and waited. The streetlight above him was out, so they might not even see him in the shadows. The moon had been out earlier, but the wind was starting to blow the clouds ashore. He wondered if this was the beginning of hurricane Paul.
He kept his eyes on the car. And watched. The car was still running, the lights were on and the occupants were waiting inside. Maybe now would be his best chance to run. He thought about running the half mile back to the motel and getting his car, but there would be no way to get there before them.
He was about to turn and head back the other way, when the driver’s door opened. He saw one of the men get out and look up and down the street. And then he walked around to the passenger’s door and opened it.
And Michelle got out.
CHAPTER 52
Max watched as the man who’d been driving the car helped Michelle out and the shut her door. They stood on the sidewalk and talked for a moment and then hugged. It was a long embrace. And then he kissed her. And she didn’t resist. She kissed him back. And even from thirty yards away, Max could see it was an intense, passionate kiss.
Max’s first reaction was the same feeling he’d had when Michelle told him she wasn’t coming back. It was like being hit in the stomach and having the wind knocked out of him. His legs felt weak. His heart was pounding again. He felt lightheaded.
He’d suspected there might be someone she was seeing, but he didn’t want to believe it. He thought about sprinting the thirty yards and launching into the guy with a forearm to the head—the kind of hit that was illegal in football for good reason. He wanted to do the same thing to Jack Murphy. Of course, Jack was dead now so that wouldn’t be necessary. Before he was dead though.
He watched as they hugged again. Then the guy got back in the car and slowly drove away. Michelle stood on the street and watched until the car turned north onto Ocean Avenue and was out of sight. Max stayed where he was in the shadows as he watched Michelle sit down on the front steps of her parent’s house.
Max slowly walked down the street toward Michelle. If this wasn’t the definition of awkward, he didn’t know what was. He didn’t know if he wanted to cuss her out or beg for her forgiveness.
There weren’t any guidelines for situations like this. What exactly were the rules of etiquette when surprising your wife after you’ve seen her kissing another man…which you pushed her into…then having to tell her you’re a murder suspect…and being followed by two strangers?
And so Max did the only thing he could think of. He walked up the sidewalk, stopped in front of the house and sat down next to her. “Hi, Shelle,” he said.
“Hi, Max,” she said. She didn’t seem the least bit surprised he was there. And she didn’t seem to care that he’d just seen her with another man. They sat together on the front steps in silence. The only sound was the ever-increasing wind blowing in off the ocean.
After a few minutes, Max said, “We need to talk.”
CHAPTER 53
“Let’s walk,” Max said.
They walked east toward the boardwalk, which was just a couple blocks away. The closer they got to the ocean, the stronger the wind became. “The hurricane may be turning toward the coast,” Michelle said.
Max didn’t respond. They walked another hundred yards and came to the boardwalk. They turned north and began walking in the direction the wind was blowing, which made it easier to not only walk, but also hear each other.
“I guess you saw,” she said.
Max wanted to be angry. But he wasn’t. He was more grieved than angry. More sorry than upset. “Yeah,” was all he said.
They walked for a minute or so before Michelle spoke again. “I’m sorry,” she said.
“Shelle, you have no reason to apologize,” he said. “I’m the one that needs to apologize to you.”
They walked a little further then Michelle said, “He didn’t want to hear it, but that was goodbye,” she said.
Max waited for her to continue.
“I tried to tell him it was over. That it was wrong to keep seeing him. He wouldn’t accept it though. He said we’d talk again in the morning.”
“Was that Chris?” Max said. He knew she’d been in love with Chris before she met him.
“Yeah, it was Chris.”
They walked some distance in silence. The wind was getting stronger by the minute. The waves were crashing harder and closer to the boardwalk now.
They walked a little further, then Michelle said, “Now what?”
Max started to answer, but couldn’t shake the feeling he was being followed. And now standing under a light on the boardwalk, he was feeling a little too exposed. He looked up and down the boardwalk and then behind him on the street. He didn’t see anyone, but still didn’t feel safe standing under the light.
He led Michelle a little further up the boardwalk in between light poles where they sat down on a bench looking out onto the dark Atlantic Ocean.
“I’m not sure where to even start,” he began. “So much has happened. So much I don’t even understand. Shelle, I know I failed. Badly. I let you down.” Max was quiet for a moment. “I have no excuse.”
Michelle was quiet. The wind and waves were getting louder though.
“I was angry,” he said. “At God. At life. At myself for not being able to do anything to help Sarah. It’s not an excuse though.”
Michelle listened and looked out into the darkness. And as Max continued, she reached over and took his hand in hers. “And I pushed you away,” he said. “I wasn’t there for you. I was consumed by me, by my anger.”
She squeezed his hand as they sat there together facing into the coming storm.
“I love you,” he said.
“I love you, too,” she said.
“Shelle, I know we have a lot to work on and I promise we’re going to do that. I’m going to do my best to be the husband you need and want and deserve. But right now, there’s a lot I have to tell you,” Max said.
“Max, there are things I need to tell you, too.”
Max quickly swung his head around when he saw headlights reflect off the metal railing in front of them. A car had turned onto Ocean Blvd. and was slowly coming toward them. He couldn’t tell if it was the car he’d seen the two men get into at the motel, but he was suspicious of every car now.
“Max, what is it?” she said as she looked in the same direction he was.
Max watched as the car got closer. When it passed by, he saw only one person in the car and he breathed a sigh of relief. It didn’t mean the other guy wasn’t nearby on foot though. He didn’t feel safe where they were.
“Shelle, it’s hard to know where to even start,” he said. “I think I could be in trouble though. We need to get moving.”
“Max, tell me. What’s going on?”
As they walked in the shadows, Max told her the whole story. He started with driving to work and coming across Dante’s accident. And then taking the picture. And why he’d sent it to her.
He told her about Dante’s mother not showing up for their meeting, but Jack Murphy being there instead. He explained the bad feelings he’d had about Jack. And then how Jack was dead. He told her about the phone call with Bill Jackson and how he said the police suspected him in Jack’s death.
Max told her about meeting Willy and Rose. And how Willy had suggested he fly to New Jersey and how Willy had booked the flight with his frequent flyer miles. Lastly, he told her about getting back to the Windjammer after his walk on the beach and seeing the two men hanging around his room and his car.
Ten minutes later, Max was finished. Michelle had listened to the whole story and hadn’t freaked out. She simply said, “So what do we do now?”
“If the police think I killed Jack, then they’ll probably arrest me or at least take me in for questioning the minute I show up in Lakeside,” he said. “I think someone set it up to look like I did it.”
“Who would do that?” she said. “Why would anyone want it to look like you killed Jack?”
“I don’t know, Shelle. I know how crazy all this sounds.”
Michelle looked into his eyes and said, “I’m not going to tell you this doesn’t sound like something straight out of a John Grisham novel, but I believe everything you’ve said.”
Max was relieved to hear her say that. If she’d thought he was crazy, he might have thought the same thing. He’d been living this for the past month and still couldn’t believe what was happening.
“So what are we going to do?” she said.
“This all started with Dante’s accident,” he said. “Somehow we need to find his mother. If she’s even still alive.”
“Can you try calling her?” Michelle said.
“I guess I can try again,” Max said. “I haven’t talked to her since the night I was supposed to meet her and she hasn’t answered my calls.”
Max took his phone out. His battery was down to 4%. Unfortunately, the wall charger was in his room and the car charger was in the rental car. He suspected he’d never see those again. He scrolled through his contacts, found Ms. Jones and placed the call. It rang and rang and rang.
And then Max heard, “Hello?”