Mike Reuther - Return to Dead City (22 page)

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Authors: Mike Reuther

Tags: #Mystery:Thriller - P.I. - Baseball - Pennsylvania

BOOK: Mike Reuther - Return to Dead City
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I shook my head.

“Tie on a good drunk. Best little fixer-upper for a batting slump. Can you imagine me tellin’ kids that these days?”

I turned down Reuther’s invitation to watch the first few innings of the game
against a team from Binghamton, N.Y.
in the dugout along the first base line. Wallace assured me it would be okay to sit in one of the five buck seats behind the Mets dugout for a while. At the end of the third inning, he’d meet me once again over at the clubhouse entrance to take me down for a talk with Emerson. The stadium was all but empty. Maybe two hundred fans at the most.
They
were scattered in various parts of the grandstands. That’s why it was easy to spot Ron Miller. He was in a box seat right behind home plate and staring at me. When I gave him a big wave, he quickly turned his attention to the field where the opposing team’s lead-off hitter was settling himself into the batter’s box.

Jack Walter was sharp. I had to give him that. In that first inning, he fanned two of the Binghamton hitters and got the other batter to pop up harmlessly to the shortstop. From what I could see, the kid looked to be a prospect. His fastball hopped
,
and he had a wicked slider that ran in on the hands of left-handed hitters. The cheers he got from the sparse crowd as he strutted off the field at the end of the inning didn’t exactly break any decibel levels though.

Hans
o
n was the lead-off hitter for the Mets. He took a couple of pitches to work the count in his favor then got a fastball from the Binghamton pitcher he drilled up the alley in right-center. It was a sure double, but
Hanson
smelled a triple and took off for third. He was churning around second when suddenly he stumbled and went down. I thought he had just tripped. He made no move to get to his feet though, and then the relay from the outfield came in, and he was tagged out. He was just lying there in the infield dirt when the entire Mets team piled out onto the field to come to his aid. Everything was real quiet in the ball
park as the players formed a circle around
Hanson
. After a few minutes,
Hanson
got to a sitting position, and Emerson and a couple of teammates helped him to his feet and led him to the dugout to the scattering cheers of the sparse crowd. I looked over at Miller. He was talking with Wallace and shaking his head. A few minutes later Wallace was over at my seat and telling me that my rendezvous with Emerson was off.

“He’s too busy now attending to
Hanson
.”

“I’ll stay out of his way.”

“Mr. Miller said absolutely not.”

“Listen. An ambulance will be here soon. He’ll be out of Emerson’s way then.”

Wallace gave me a blank look.

“They’re taking the kid to the hospital … “

Wallace began to stammer and look at his watch. “Look Crager. I got to tear. You can talk with Emerson another time.”

He began backpedaling past the box seats. “I’ll call you.”

I looked toward Miller’s seat. He was watching me.

 

I left the ball park and got a rental car. It took me five hours to reach the Maryland town Billy Vaughn called home. Finding him was a cinch. It was one of those small burgs with a main drag, a few side streets and a single red light plunked down in the middle of what passed for a downtown. Some old man sitting on a bench in front of an American Legion hall told me I could probably find Billy over at the ball field at the edge of town.

“Just drive a half mile and take a right at the Dairy Queen. Ya can’t miss it,” I was
assured.

Billy was there all right. Crouched in a fielding position out near second base, he was picking off ground balls being hit to him from home plate by some teenaged kid. They were the only two people here. This was a true country field. No dugouts, not even bleachers to sit in. Just a backstop pieced together from chicken wire and a snow fence for an outfield wall.

It was almost dusk, and I just stood there next to the backstop for a while watching Billy scoot across the dirt infield to snare balls with his glove. He was a pleasure to watch. I got to say that. The kid was quick but smooth. He must have grabbed about fifty ground balls in this time without fumbling even one. Finally, Billy had had enough. He trotted over to the first base area and pulled from a bag a towel and wiped his head with it.

The kid who’d been hitting the grounders turned around now to face me.

“He’s really something ain’t he?”

I nodded.

“The best damn player we ever had come out of this town.”

“Or who will
ever
come out of here,” I said.

Then Billy came over. He had a bat on one shoulder and was carrying his bag. He only seemed a little surprised to see me. “You’re that detective aren’t you sir?” He looked at the ground. “How’s the team doing?”

“Can’t buy a win.”

“Yeah. I heard.” He pawed at the dirt with his cleats.

“So,” I said.

“Yeah. Say Jimmy. I don’t want to be rude, but I guess there’s some things I have to discuss with this man.”

Jimmy said fine. He asked Vaughn about getting in some more practice tomorrow.

“Yeah,” Billy said. “Meet me here at five. We’ll do some hitting. Get in some running.” He turned to me. “I guess you’re still looking into that murder. Huh?”

I said I was.

“The ball club sent me home here ya know. Said it was to get my head on straight.”

“So I heard.”

“I don’t believe it. They wanted me away from there.”

“Why’s that?”

He pawed at the dirt again with his cleat. “I wasn’t honest with you sir.” He bowed his head. “I was no better than the rest of them, I guess.”

“How do ya mean?”

“I was sleeping with Reba Miller.”

He slowly raised his head. “Kinda puts a different slant on things doesn’t it.”

I agreed that it did.

“But I didn’t kill Lance Miller. I could never murder anyone.”

“How could a nice kid like you get mixed up with someone like her?”

But I already knew the answer to that. Women like Reba Miller had been getting their hooks into fresh-faced young kids like Billy since God created man.

“I feel just awful about it. I had a girlfriend here in town I was going to marry. As soon as I got my career established that is.”

“You got more to tell me don’t you kid?”

“I guess I do.”

“You were over at the Spinelli Hotel the night Lance got murdered weren’t you?”

“Yes sir.”

“Tell me about it.”

“I wasn’t at the banquet. Mrs. Miller asked me to meet her in a room she had reserved there.”

“A room?”

“That’s kinda how we had it arranged. We’d meet there and

well

you know.”

“So she snuck away from the banquet to meet you up in that room?”

“Yeah. But we never really got together that night.”

“Oh.”

“Lance caught her coming into my room.”

“That must have been some scene.”

“Not really. She stopped there in the hallway. I heard them behind the door. He said he had just been called up to the show and was leaving later that night.”

“The Show?”

“The
M
ajor
L
eagues. Anyways, I heard them walk off together then down the hall.”

“And that’s the last you saw of either of them?”

“That was it. I knew she was in love with Lance. She talked about him every time we got together.”

“So she was using you to get at him,” I said.

Billy shrugged. “I’m afraid that’s what was going on. Thing is

I think I was in love with her.”

“Yeah

well

those things happen kid.”

It was Billy who broke the uncomfortable silence that followed.

“So the team is doing pretty crumby?”

“I think they won three games all of August.”

He smiled. “I guess it’s wrong. But I’m kinda glad.”

“Oh?”

“Yeah. They gave me my release you know.”

“No. I didn’t.”

“It was right after I talked with Chief Gallagher from the police department.”

“Gallagher?”

“He called me here at home. He wanted to know about steroid use on the ball club.”

“Gallagher’s dead kid.”

“Oh my gosh. Really.”

“Suicide.”

He bowed his head. Then he raised it and gazed out toward center field.

“He sounded funny that day he called,” he continued. “Something about wanting to make things right. I guess he tried to talk with some of the players too.”

“What did you tell him kid?”

“Only what I knew sir. That Lance was taking them. From what I heard, he owed
that gym owner, Mick Slaughter, a few thousand dollars for steroids.”

“Oh. What else?”

“Just that
Hanson
and maybe a few others on the team were taking them too.”

“Well that explains that,” I said.

“What sir?”


Hanson
collapsed today running the bases.”

I drove straight from that little Maryland burg to the ball
park back in Centre Town. It was past 2 a.m. when I arrived. I parked the car about a half a block away from the field along a street of tidy, well-kept homes. Getting into the ball
park would be gravy. I’d seen a couple of kids earlier that season slipping through a hole in the corner of the fence near the left field foul pole.

Sure enough, I was just small enough to squeeze through it myself. A three quarters moon bathed the inside of the empty ball
park in a weird glow. Early morning dew shimmered on the outfield grass. I walked slowly along the foul line, crossed the infield and entered the first base dugout. It was dark as hell, and I nearly killed myself going down the clubhouse steps leading from the dugout. The lousy aroma of body sweat hit me as I entered that dark clubhouse. The only sound was the dripping of water from the shower room.

“Who’s there?”

The room suddenly lit up. There, standing just ten feet away was Emerson. He was in a crouch and holding a knife as long as my arm.

 

 

 

Chapter 13

 

 

 

“Crager,” he said. “What the hell are you doing here?”

“I was about to ask you the same. What’s with the blade? Preparing to disembowel some jockstraps.”

He looked at the knife in his hand as if cognizant of it for the first time, smiled and scratched his head.

“Hey. I’ve had break-ins here before. Just protecting myself, I guess.”

“Yeah. With that thing you could do some heavy damage. Let me see that.”

He stepped toward with the knife but kept a hold of it. It was a hunting knife, a very large hunting knife with a blade that glistened like it was well polished.

“Nice.” I said.

He nodded. Cuts pretty good too. I do some hunting now and then. Mostly deer.”

“Got any others?”

“Yeah.”

“Hobby of yours?”

He nodded and rubbed his eyes. It was obvious I had just woke him up, though he was dressed in work clothes.

“What. You sleep here?”

“I got a room on the other side of the shower room,” he said, pointing behind him with the blade.

“How’s the kid?”


Hanson
? In the hospital. You know what the doc thinks it was? Steroids.”

“Oh yeah.”

“Yeah. Said the kid’s heart was running like an old man’s. He liked to have died out there on the ball field.” Emerson slashed the air with the blade. “It’s that fuckin’ Mick Slaughter. These kids are getting there steroids at his lousy gym. Someone’s gonna die one of these days. I’m tellin’ ya. That’s what it’s gonna take to get this out in the open.”

“Steroids didn’t kill Lance Miller.”

“How’s that Crager?” His hand gripped the blade.

“Do I have to spell it out?”

Emerson’s eyes hardened. “What? I killed him? Look that could have been anyone’s knife.”

“Hobby of yours huh? How about I get a look at your collection.”

“You’re out of line Crager.”

His big beefy face had gotten red.

“Yeah. Tell that to the police.”

He took a step toward me with the knife. “Out.”

“What are you gonna do big guy. Stab me too. C’mon. I’ve taken blades away from bigger kids than you.”

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