Jack Davis Mystery - 01 - Shakedown (33 page)

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Authors: Joel Goldman

Tags: #Suspense Fiction, #Legal Stories, #Murder - Investigation, #Kansas City (Mo.), #Mass Murder, #FICTION / Thrillers

BOOK: Jack Davis Mystery - 01 - Shakedown
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“How’s Kate?” she asked.
“Still in surgery. Is anyone working late tonight?”
“Everyone is working. There is no late.”
“Have someone check the records of phone calls made to the office in the last six weeks for any calls originating from a land line or cell phone belonging to Jill Rice.”
“Not that it matters since you’re doing such a good job staying out of this case while you’re on medical leave and all, but why?”
“Colby says that he took a call from Jill Rice and that she was looking for someone to buy her ex-husband’s car. Jill Rice says she never made that call. We need to pick a winner in that liar’s match.”
“You have a favorite?”
“I wish I did.”
“I’ll call you when I know something.”
“Who did you find buried in Latrell’s basement?”
“Black female in the fresh grave. We’re checking her prints, but it’s probably Oleta Phillips. There were two skeletons in the second grave, one on top of the other.”
“One of them is probably Latrell’s mother. Anything else interesting turn up?”
“It looks like he was preparing for the end of the world.”
“How’s that?”
“He had enough candles and ?ashlights to last a lifetime,” she said.
“What about bottled water, canned goods and dried fruit, stuff like that?”
“Now that you mention it, we didn’t find any. Maybe he was just afraid of the dark.”
“Marty Grisnik stopped by the hospital. Says he saw you at Latrell’s.”
“Yeah. He wasn’t too happy that he was late to the party, but that’s the way Troy is playing it.”
“You bring him up to date on what’s been going on?”
“Sure. Figured that was the best way to get him on our side, but don’t tell Troy.”
“Not a chance. By the way, you say anything to him about Wendy?”
“Yeah. Grisnik asked for her name and a description. Said he wanted his people to help find her. Why? Is that a problem?”
“No. We need all the help we can get.”
“I’ll get back to you on the phone records,” she said and hung up.
The waiting room felt like it was getting smaller. The walls weren’t moving and neither was I. Waiting for Kate to come out of surgery while hoping that my cell phone would ring with good news was a suffocating prospect.
I left my cell phone number with the nurse, who promised to call when I could see Kate. I didn’t know where to look for Wendy, but I was certain that if I could find Colby, I would find her.
If they were being held against their will, I could spend the rest of my life combing the city inch by inch and never find them. If they were hiding, at least one of them would have to come out for food, money, or air. That was likely to be Colby. He wouldn’t go to his house or to Wendy’s apartment because he’d know that the FBI was watching both of those locations, as was anyone else they might be hiding from. Colby would reach out to a friend and I could only think of one person who might qualify.
Chapter Fifty-six

 

Pete’s Place was not the place to be at midnight on a Friday night. There were only three cars parked anywhere near the door, one of them across the street. It may have been crowded earlier, but it was down to the stragglers. The restaurant next door, Pete’s Other Place, was buttoned down and black. The nearest streetlight was fifty yards to the north, a ball of yellow that splashed on the pavement and quit, leaving the bar buried in the dark, the faint neon glow in the window a pale beacon for anyone looking for a last stop.
The lights inside the bar were milky, the air quilted with smoke. A heavyset man who looked to be in his sixties, his chin on his chest, was passed out in a chair, his head angled against the wall, an empty beer pitcher on the table in front of him. Tanja Andrija was bent over him, patting his face to bring him around.
“C’mon George. Wake up and go home. I’m not running a bed and breakfast.”
George stirred and smiled, trying to grope Tanja. She batted his meaty hand away like he was a child.
“Not tonight, George. You’re too drunk to do me any good and your wife would kill us both, anyway.”
Two other men were seated at the bar. Both had the broad shoulders and over-the-belt-guts of men who’d spent their lives working hard and drinking harder. They lumbered off their stools.
“We’ll get him home, Tanja,” one of them said.
They each slipped an arm around George, hefting him to his feet like he was a sack filled with feathers and air. I sat down at the bar as Tanja opened the door and the trio stumbled into the night.
She closed the door behind them and snapped the dead-bolt, came around to the business side of the bar, and leaned against the far wall framed by bottles of booze, the mirrored wall behind her letting me watch me watch her. She was wearing low-riding jeans that hugged her like they meant it and a deep red T-shirt stretched tight across her breasts. Standing with her elbows on the counter, her ankles crossed, her eyes alive, and her mouth pitched at an inviting angle, she promised trouble. If she were on my calendar, I’d never make it to next month.
Marty Grisnik and Colby Hudson had fallen for her. I could see why. Grisnik was probably not over her all these years later. Colby might not get the chance to forget her.
“You came back,” Tanja said.
“Is that why you locked the door?”
“We’re closed.”
“I don’t mind.”
“I do. Like I said, we’re closed.”
“I don’t want to buy a drink.”
“What do you want?”
“I’m looking for Colby Hudson.”
She looked around the bar. “I don’t see him.”
“Doesn’t mean you don’t know where he is.”
“What did he do? Break curfew?”
“I didn’t say he did anything. I’m just looking for him.”
“He was in here the other day,” she said, turning her back to me. The cash register was next to her. She opened it, removed the cash, and stuffed the money into a bank bag. She zipped it closed, tucked it under her arm, and looked at me in the mirror behind the bar. “Same day you were here. He introduced us. You should remember that.”
“I remember. You told Marty Grisnik not to bring me back.”
“I guess I should have been more specific. I should have told you not to come back. Consider it said.”
“You and I aren’t going to be friends, are we?”
She held the money bag in front of her with both hands like it was a shield. “I don’t think we have enough in common.”
“We have more in common than you think.”
“Name one thing,” she said.
“Colby Hudson. You said he makes you laugh. If you want him to keep doing that, I need to find him.”
“What are you, his mother?”
“Colby tell you what he does for a living?”
She hesitated, put the money bag on the counter, and stuck her hands in her pockets. She rolled her shoulders back, her blond hair swirling around her neck and her posture lifting her breasts. I couldn’t tell whether she was preparing to attack or surrender. “He’s an FBI agent, same as you. Marty told me all about you.”
“And Marty told me all about you. He said the two of you used to go out. He’s a cop and he’s your friend. Colby’s an FBI agent and, from what I saw the other day, he’s your friend, too. So why are you giving me such a hard time when I’m only trying to help Colby?”
“You’re not like Marty and Colby. You’re full of self-righteous bullshit, the way you judged Colby and me. What’s between us is nobody’s business but ours.”
I’d never seen Colby look at Wendy the way I’d seen him look at Tanja. I thought again of Joy and Kate. Each time I was ready to condemn someone else, I painted myself with the same brush.
“You’re right. It’s none of my business, but I still need to find him.”
“If Colby wants you to find him, you will.”
“Why wouldn’t he want me to find him?”
She looked at me straight on, her blank face set in stone. “I don’t know. I run a bar. That’s all.”
I stood. “You hear from Colby, tell him to find me.”
“Sure. Next time I see him,” she said.
“You do that. Is there another way out of here besides the front door?”
“Why?”
Her eyes widened and her brow arched upward in a ?ash. In the next instant her face was smooth. If I had blinked, I would have missed her micro expression. Kate would have labeled it a classic expression of fear. It was the kind of fear that could come from hiding Colby in the back of the bar.
“Because you’re closed and the front door is locked. I’ll just go out the back.”
“You don’t have to do that,” she said, recovering quickly as she smoothed her T-shirt, tugging on the bottom edge. “I’ll let you out the front.”
I followed her to the door. The breeze stirred her hair. She brushed it away from her eyes. We were inches apart. She was a magnet.
“Remember what I said,” I told her.
“You do the same. Don’t come back.”
Chapter Fifty-seven

 

I sat in Kate’s car on the northbound side of Fifth Street and started the engine. The night had turned cool, the drop in temperature coating the windows with a layer of dew. Tanja was standing inside the bar, peering out over the neon sign promising free beer tomorrow and waiting for me to drive away.
I pulled away from the curb, wondering whether Colby Hudson was standing in the shadows behind her, watching me over her shoulder. Petar and Maja Andrija’s house was a few blocks to the north, dark and silent as the rest of Strawberry Hill as I glided past. Glancing in my rearview mirror, I saw a burst of light suddenly ?are from their open front door, the porch light blinking on and framing Colby as he ?ew down the stairs and bolted into the protective darkness surrounding the house next door.
He’d been at Tanja’s parents’ house, not at the bar. She could have called him by now but, if she had, she would have told him to sit tight until she was certain I was gone. His departure looked more like a jailbreak than a careful getaway. Either he wasn’t supposed to be there or he wasn’t supposed to have left.
I stayed off the brakes, not wanting him to think that I’d seen him, knowing that he wouldn’t recognize Kate’s car and that he’d wait until I was out of sight before he started moving. Advantage mine.
I crested the hill at the intersection of Fifth and Ann in front of St. Ann’s Church, which sat on the southwest corner of the intersection, the church and the street named after the same saint. A playground stretched from the east side of the church to the curb. This was where Marty Grisnik and Tanja had gone to school, Marty probably stealing a kiss, getting whacked on the back of his head by a nun for his trouble.
I turned left onto Ann, then right into an alley, where I parked the car. I popped open the dome light and unscrewed the bulb, not wanting to give the edge back to Colby when I got out of the car.
He could have gone in any direction. I was counting on him choosing the only one that gave me a chance. I found a doorway recessed a couple of feet into the damp, limestone wall of the church facing the playground. Standing in the doorway was like nesting in a cave. It was so dark that Colby could have spit on my shoe and not known it. I held my gun at my side, and waited, steady as the rock that surrounded me.
My eyes adjusted to the dark, the shapes of the playground equipment coming into focus. Thinking of the playground as a clock, I was at twelve o’clock, Fifth Street was at six, a swing set in the center. Ann Street was at three o’clock and the jungle gym was at nine. The playground covered half a block and was surrounded by a chain-link fence meant to keep kids and balls in, not meant to keep rogue FBI agents out. If Colby were headed this way, he’d stay close to the church and away from any passing headlights.
Sound travels farther late at night, undiluted by kids playing ball or cars grinding their gears. The jingle jangle sound that chain-link fence makes when someone climbs over it would have been lost in the mix of daytime background noise. In the still of the night, it sounded like an out-of-tune wind chime.
Colby slipped by my doorway, his head down, less than two feet from where I stood. I waited until he’d gone ten feet past me and then stepped onto the playground, my gun aimed at him, calling his name.
He stopped, his back to me. He was wearing jeans and a light jacket. He raised his head, his right shoulder turning in as he reached in to his jacket. I knew he preferred a shoulder harness to a holster stuck in his pants or clipped to his belt.
“You won’t need that,” I told him.
“Why, Jack? Because you’re unarmed or because you’re not going to shoot me?”
“Because I won’t shoot you if I can help it but I will shoot you if I have to. You pull your gun and there’s a lot better chance that will happen. Turn around real slow, keep your hands where I can see them, and talk to me.”
He turned around and said, “You don’t have to do this.”
“Then I apologize in advance. Unzip your jacket, use two fingers to lift your gun out, and put it on the ground. Use three fingers and I’ll shoot one of them off. Then kick it over to me.”
“Listen, Jack.”
“Don’t say a word until I tell you. Just get rid of your gun.”
Colby did as he was told and I kicked his gun toward the jungle gym, steel skidding hard on the asphalt. I pointed my gun at him.
“You can lay down on your stomach, I can cuff you, and search you for your backup gun, or you can save me the trouble and put it on the ground along with any other toys you’re carrying.”
“Give me a break, Jack. You don’t even have your fucking badge. I’ll keep my hands where you can see them, but that’s all. You don’t like it, you can shoot me, or you can come over here and search me.”
I had made a stupid bluff, the kind that always made the other guy bold when he called it and I had to fold. Backing down wasn’t an option. That would turn our power struggle on its head.

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