Harmless as Doves (16 page)

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Authors: P. L. Gaus

BOOK: Harmless as Doves
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“Did he go home?”

“No. He’s taking Vesta out to Jeremiah and Sara Miller’s house tonight. They’ll get married and live English.”

“But now he has a record,” Caroline said.

“No, he was never charged,” Cal said. “No record.”

Caroline gave a weak laugh. “First Amish man suspected of murder, and Michael missed it all.”

Cal smiled. “Now we need to figure out who really murdered Glenn Spiegle.”

Caroline got up and started through the family room, toward the kitchen. “I can’t get Michael out of the Duke library, Cal.”

Cal followed her back into the house. “How long is this sabbatical going to last?”

“Two semesters,” Caroline answered over her shoulder. “We’ve been down at Duke since August first.”

“Why are you home?”

“I came back to manage some of the trust fund issues for his museum at the college. I should be headed back tomorrow, but I’m not done, so maybe Monday or Tuesday. Then I’m going to haul him out to the Outer Banks. Get him out of that library.”

As Caroline pulled a pizza out of the freezer, Cal’s cell phone rang. He answered, listened, and said, “I’ll get Caroline to call him,” and switched off.

Caroline turned her oven on, set the temperature, and asked, “Who was that?”

Cal shook his head. “Bruce Robertson. Jacob Miller has been killed. Down in Bradenton Beach.”

Caroline stepped back from the oven. “Bruce wants me to call Michael?”

Cal nodded. “He asked if you’d call Mike, to see if he’d be willing to meet Ricky Niell down in Sarasota.”

* * *

“It’s all happening down in Florida, Dad,” Rachel said at her computer. “Billy Winters missing, Jacob Miller shot dead, and now my truck has been seized by the DEA.”

“Why?” Cal asked. “Just because they found blood in the cab?”

“No. They also found drugs hidden in the door panels. They think Billy was hauling cocaine up here, from Florida.”

Sitting down beside Rachel, Cal asked, “Do you think that’s possible?”

Rachel shook her head. “Not Billy, Dad. But that’s his blood type, in my truck.”

“How would they know his blood type?”

“I know his type,” Rachel said. “All my drivers take regular blood screens, and I know all their blood types. So, it’s a real big problem, Dad, that the DEA found drugs in one of my trucks.”

“Is Billy still missing?”

“Yes. And Evie Carson stopped by here, about an hour ago. Darba is going nuts, worried about Billy.”

“I got a call from Evie,” Cal said. “While I was still over at Caroline’s.”

“You going out to Darba’s?”

“Not until tomorrow morning,” Cal said. “Evie has her sedated, tonight.”

“Is Darba anything like Billy?”

Cal nodded. “She tends to nurse her little worries into bigger ones. And they’re both conspiracy theory nuts, about government surveillance.”

“Well,” Rachel said, “if she’s using her head for something besides a hat rack, she’s got to be worried that somebody killed Billy over those drugs.”

Cal sat and thought. Rachel stared at her monitor. Then she tapped the screen where Google Earth showed the parking lot at Bradenton Beach. “Billy’s my best driver, Dad. Reliable. Honest. Always hits his waypoints. And if he’s been hauling drugs, what about the rest of my drivers?”

“Billy’s a good man,” Cal said. “Maybe he isn’t involved in any of this.”

“Didn’t he used to be a drunk?” Rachel asked. “It doesn’t seem like him, now, but didn’t he used to be?”

“A long time ago. He was drying out at a rehab clinic where Darba was a volunteer—back when she was still teaching—and she helped him get sober.”

“They got married after that?”

“Many years ago. Darba didn’t have any mental struggles, then. She was the best teacher, too. Loved her kids.”

“They say she went a little nuts in her classroom,” Rachel led.

“She did,” Cal said, remembering. “She had to quit teaching, but Billy stood by her.”

Rachel smiled. “They stuck together through the rough years.”

Cal nodded. “Darba isn’t always ‘troubled.’ She has her spells. But most of the time, she is fine. And the Amish kids out there all love her.”

“Because of her Rum Room?”

“That, yes, but she takes the time to talk with them. Billy does, too. They help the kids figure out what they should do with their lives. You know—Amish or English—how they’re going to live.”

“That’s just the thing, Dad. Billy can’t be hauling drugs. It’s just not in his nature to be doing that.”

Cal nodded and looked up to study the monitor. “Will the DEA keep that truck of yours?”

“They will, if they can prove Billy was running drugs in it.”

Cal shook his head.

Rachel said, “Tomorrow, when I get to work, I expect there’ll be DEA agents crawling all over the place. We won’t be able to ship any product until this is all cleared up.”

“Is this all connected?” Cal asked. “Spiegle was from the Sarasota area.”

“I don’t know,” Rachel sighed. “You’ve got Spiegle and Miller, both dead. And Billy Winters missing, with drugs hidden in his truck. My guess is that there’s something that connects it all together. It just can’t be Billy, is all I’m saying.”

Cal got up and walked back into the kitchen, and Rachel followed him, asking, “You want some dinner?”

Sitting at the table, Cal said, “I was going to have pizza at Caroline’s, but then Bruce Robertson called. Wanted me to call Mike Branden.”

“Did you?”

“Yeah. He’s getting on an airplane tomorrow morning, to meet Ricky Niell in the Tampa airport.”

“Why isn’t Robertson going himself?”

“Won’t fly,” Cal said, smiling.

“You’re kidding.”

“No. Bruce Robertson won’t get on an airplane.”

“Why?”

“Don’t know. He’s just not an airplane kind of guy. Not these days, anyway.”

Rachel rolled her yellow platform over to the refrigerator, climbed up and pulled a pizza out of the freezer, and stepped down. “Could you make yourself scarce, Dad? After dinner?”

“Sure, but why?”

“I’ve got my first session with the sheriff tonight. He sounded pretty nervous on the phone, so I thought I’d play some of my Jimmy Buffett songs in the background, to calm him down.”

“And you don’t want me here to spoil the mood?”

“Under the circumstances, Dad, I don’t think you’d be able to leave us alone.”

25

Friday, October 9

8:35
A.M.

RICKY NIELL met Michael Branden at Tampa International Airport with a rental car. They crossed Old Tampa Bay to Saint Petersburg and then drove over Tampa Bay on the Sunshine Skyway Bridge, the long, arching span’s yellow cables cresting high into a deep blue sky. Ricky wore his sheriff’s department uniform, neat and trim as usual, all of the creases pressed and straight. Branden was in jeans, a yellow golf shirt, and a brown blazer, his graying beard set off by a deep tan.

As they came down off the high point of the Skyway, Ricky remarked from behind the wheel, “Cal said you’ve been in a library for a month, but you don’t look so pale to me.”

“There’s lots of sun in North Carolina,” Branden laughed. “Even if you’re out for just an hour a day.”

“You writing a book, or something?”

“Something like that. It’s a new biography of Sherman.”

Ricky rolled his eyes. “Don’t get Robertson started on that. We’ll never hear the end of it.”

On U.S. 41, they turned south into Bradenton, crossing through the busy city on State Route 684, and turning west to the point at the little trailer park in Cortez. Once they had passed over the northernmost reaches of Sarasota Bay on the low Cortez drawbridge, they turned left at the light on Gulf Coast Drive and then, after three short blocks, left again, to circle back into the sleepy little community of Bradenton Beach. The police station sat next to the bridge, with a marina
on the water behind it, and a white-planked fishing pier jutting out into the crystal green water of the bay. The color of light butterscotch, the two-story stucco police building hunkered in the sun on a blazing white patch of sand and crushed shells. Parked next to it was a thirty-foot aluminum police skiff on a trailer, two large outboard motors hanging off the stern. Two cruisers were parked out front, and a beach patrol officer’s bicycle was chained to a steel rack beside steps and a wheelchair ramp leading up to the entrance on the second level.

They climbed the steps and entered a vestibule with a glass partition in front of a dispatcher’s console. When they had rung in, a middle-aged man in khaki slacks and a tan golf shirt came into the dispatcher’s room, keyed the intercom, and asked, “Business?” pointing to Niell’s uniform.

Ricky said, “Holmes County Sheriff, Ohio,” and displayed his badge.

The dispatcher wrote down Niell’s badge number and pushed a button to release the lock on the door into the department’s offices. Once they were inside, in a narrow air-conditioned hallway with offices to either side, the dispatcher introduced himself, offering his hand and saying, “Ed Vickers. The chief’s not in right now.”

Ricky said, “Rachel Ramsayer from Holmes County has been talking with Sergeant Raleigh Orton. So has our Sheriff Robertson.”

Vickers nodded. “We call him Ray Lee. Ray Lee Orton. This about the Stevens Clark shooting?”

“Well, yes,” Ricky said. “But we’re interested in the man who was killed in the attack. Jacob Miller, an Amish man from Holmes County, Ohio.”

Seeming to take his first note of the professor, Vickers stuck out his hand and asked, “You with the sheriff’s department, too?”

Branden nodded. “Reserve deputy. Mike Branden. I help out from time to time, but mostly I teach Civil War history at Millersburg College.”

“Seems like a curious mix,” Vickers offered. “Professor and reserve deputy.”

“I suppose it does,” Branden said. “You handled the shooting? Dispatching?”

Vickers nodded. “What a mess. It happened right over there, on the bridge road. You can see it from here, if you stand outside. Anyways, a family out for a walk on the beach saw it all, and when the dad called 911, the kids were all screaming in the background of the call.”

As he spoke, a policeman in a uniform shirt and bicycle shorts came up the end staircase into the hallway, and Vickers said, “Here’s Ray Lee now.” Vickers called Orton over and introduced the men, saying first, “Sergeant Raleigh ‘Ray Lee’ Orton,” and then as they shook hands, “Sergeant Ricky Niell and Professor Mike Branden.”

Orton noted Niell’s uniform and asked, “Where are you from?”

“Holmes County, Ohio,” Ricky said.

“Then I’ll bet you’re here because of that Amish man who was killed.”

“Right,” Ricky said. “And we have another murder up home. Another Amish man, Glenn Spiegle.”

“You’re kidding!” Orton barked out.

“No,” Ricky said, surprised. “You knew him?”

“He skipped out on his parole a couple of years ago,” Orton said. “We all thought he had been murdered down here, and his body disposed of.”

“Why?” Branden asked.

Orton turned to Vickers. “Ed, this Ohio case is gonna connect up with Old Connie.” Then to Niell and Branden, Orton said, “Let me show you something,” and he led them through the outside door.

They followed Sergeant Orton out onto the parking lot in front of the police building. Orton was muscular, but also lean, thick in the chest and arms, narrow at the hips. As he led them along the Cortez Road at the base of the long bridge, Branden asked, “Does riding bicycle patrol keep you so fit, Sergeant Orton?”

Orton laughed back over his shoulder and led on, saying, “It’s probably the kite surfing.”

Trailing, Ricky asked, “Where are we going?”

“Two short blocks,” Orton said. “I want to show you three things, and we can stand in one spot to do it.”

Ricky glanced sideways at the professor, but he followed Orton down the sidewalk shaded by old cypress trees, with tall palm trees lining the other side of the road. After one short block, they had reached the sand-blown intersection at busy Gulf Coast Drive, where a continuous parade of tourist beach traffic motored up and down beside the sand of Bradenton beach itself, the waters of the Gulf of Mexico easily visible over the barrier sand, with slender grasses waving in the cool Gulf breeze.

Standing at the corner, Orton pointed out the signal lights at the intersection of State Route 684 and Gulf Coast Drive. Then, as impatient drivers made their turns from the bridge road onto Gulf Coast Drive, some heading north onto Anna Maria Island and some south along the water toward Longboat Key, Orton pointed out the left-turn lane onto Gulf Coast Drive and said, “Right here is where your Jacob Miller was killed.”

Ricky produced a small digital camera and took several pictures of the intersection, saying, “We understand that he died instantly.”

“Twelve-gauge shotgun, at very close range. Took the whole side of his head off.”

“How’d you ID him?” Branden asked.

“Airplane ticket in his pants pocket. He didn’t have a wallet. Just a roll of bills.”

“You would have responded,” Ricky said. “You’re just around the corner.”

“We got here in less than a minute, Sergeant Niell.”

“Please, it’s just Ricky.”

“OK. Well, your Miller was in the passenger seat of an old pickup truck. They were waiting at the light, to turn left onto Gulf Coast, and he was shot by the driver who pulled up right beside them, in the right-turn lane.”

“Point blank range?” Branden asked.

“Right,” Orton said. “His driver—an old guy named Stevens Clark—was lucky, if you can call it that. Got clipped in the side of his face by six or seven pellets that blew past Miller’s head.”

“But did Clark make it?” Ricky asked.

“Yes. He’s in Manatee Memorial, over in Bradenton. Came out of his second plastic surgery early this morning. He was sedated before that, so we haven’t been able to talk to him much.”

“But did he see who shot them?” Branden asked.

“Oh, we know who did it,” Orton said, with satisfaction. “Clark recognized him when he first pulled up beside them. He told the paramedics, before they sedated him.”

“Has the shooter been arrested?” Ricky asked.

Orton shook his head. “There’s two more things I want you to see.”

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