Read Perplexity on P1/2 (Parson's Cove Mysteries) Online
Authors: Sharon Rose
“All right, but y’all better start calling me Kyle or you’ll be in big trouble with the Law.” He turned around and winked again.
“We don’t have any problem with that, do we, girls?” I said.
“And, it doesn’t mean we don’t respect you as much,” Flori had to add.
Kyle took off flying out of the parking lot while Stella, Flori and I hung on for our lives. In three seconds or less, he pulled into a small dumpy diner.
“Oh, oh,” Stella whispered. “Maybe we should’ve chosen. This is a dive.”
“Why would a cop eat here then?” I whispered back.
She shrugged. “All of them come here. I don’t know why.”
The three of us spilled out of the car as soon as Kyle opened our door. We would’ve opened it ourselves except there weren’t any handles in the backseat.
Stella was right; the place was a dive. You could cut the tobacco smoke with a machete. If there were a non-smoking area, it wouldn’t have made any difference because it was so small. I’m not sure what color the walls were; there was an inch or so of soot on them. There were windows along two walls and Kyle headed for a booth that was empty and faced the Gulf. We trailed after him while everyone in the place stopped eating or drinking, including talking, and watched. After we sat down, I looked around. Most of the people appeared to be city workers. One or two looked like homeless men. There wasn’t one man in a suit. The only other woman was a very pregnant one who sat a couple of booths down. She was puffing away on a cigarette. Flori was sitting across from me beside Stella so she couldn’t see. I was glad because if she had, she might’ve gone over and knocked that cigarette right out of her mouth. Not that I would blame her. I’ve never been pregnant but even I know that’s a big no-no.
I also didn’t mention the cockroach creeping up the side of the wall and disappearing somewhere behind the window frame.
There was a breakfast special but before we could say anything, Kyle raised his hand and yelled to the waitress, “Four Specials here.” Then, he turned to us and asked, “You want coffee?” We nodded and he yelled, “Four coffees too, Selma.”
“Sure thing, Kyle,” she yelled back and that was that. No menus, no asking what we would prefer, nothing. No scrambled, sunny-side up or easy-over. Flori looked a bit flustered but then again, she would never argue with a cop.
“So, Kyle,” I said, trying to put us more at ease. “You should come and visit Parson’s Cove sometime. Maybe Maxymowich told you, that’s where Flori and I are from. We have a couple of young deputies not much younger than you are. Of course, our sheriff is older. In fact, he’s ready to retire. You could apply for his position.”
Kyle laughed. “I’m sure it would be a blast. I’m sort of attached to Yellow Rose though. It’s usually a quiet place. Haven’t had any real bad crime, you know like murders, here in a long time.”
“What about that li’l girl who was kidnapped awhile back?” Stella said. “An’ that old man who was beat up and had all his money stole?” She glared at him and then looked at me. “I’d say that was some real bad crime, wouldn’t you, Mabel?”
Before I could try to quell the argument, she continued, “You should live where I live on P ½. I tell you, there’s a crime goin’ on every night on that street.”
Kyle cleared his throat. “Well, all you gotta do is phone the police, Stella. That’s all you gotta do. We’ll take care of it all.”
The waitress, a skinny thing with her hair pulled back in a pony tail and with crooked front teeth, brought four cups of steaming coffee on a tray and plunked one in front of each of us. How she did it without spilling was a miracle. There was barely enough room to add a teaspoon of milk.
Stella didn’t even take the time to thank the server. “You don’ think I bin doin’ that?” she said to Kyle. “I quit countin’ how many times I dialed 911.”
“Where you live on P ½ anyway?”
“On the corner of P ½ and thirty-eighth.”
“You’re right next door to Cecile Tucker? Heck, woman, you didn’t need to worry at all. He’ll be looking out for y’all.” He grinned and winked.
Stella glared again. “Yeah? Well, I don’ think I need his kind lookin’ out for me.”
“What happened last night anyway?” I asked, changing the subject. “Was there really gunshots fired or are you boys trying to tell us in a nice way to stay out of your way?”
He shook his head. “Hey, we don’t go making up stories. ‘Specially when it comes to murder. And, especially that Captain. He’s one serious dude.” He paused for a sip of scalding hot coffee. “Williams called to tell us you were there but by the time we drove down, you were pulling out. That’s when we saw the other car coming so we took off and waited down the street. Saw this guy back into the exact spot you were in, and then after sitting there for a few minutes, he went over to the house. We saw he had his gun drawn so we got out of the car and spread out. I guess he must’ve seen some movement or something because he fired at one of the officers as he was running back to his car. The officer returned fire but neither one got hit. The fellow took off and that’s the last we saw of him.”
“So, that means he came for someone in that house. Was it a man for sure? I mean, is there a chance it could’ve been a woman?”
“Naw. It was a man. You could tell by the way he moved.”
“Could you see what he looked like?”
“Nope. Too dark. Couldn’t get a license plate number either. All we know is that it was a dark late model car. That’s it.”
I looked at Stella. I figured she was thinking the same as I was. That matched the description of Hatcher’s car and the stranger’s car - the man at Cecile’s house. Just down the road on P½ .
Our breakfast arrived: three fried eggs, three fried sausages, three pieces of slightly undercooked bacon, a pile of slightly burned hash browns, and toast saturated with butter. On a separate plate, there were three medium-sized pancakes served with three packets of butter on the side and a pitcher of hot maple syrup. I guess everyone in Yellow Rose must take their eggs over-easy, their bacon dripping with grease, and white bread, toasted, because every plate was the same. There wasn’t an inch of space left on the table. If I would’ve thought about the cholesterol and sodium content, I would have had a heart attack right then and there.
We ate in silence for the next ten minutes. It wasn’t that our eating was silent; it’s just that there was no conversation. It was the tastiest breakfast I’d eaten in days.
After our first coffee refill, Kyle said, “So, I don’t understand why you came down here, Mabel and Flori. I don’t think that Captain of yours… What’s his name again?… Maxymowich? … was too happy about it all.” He looked up at us over his cup. “In case you didn’t know, he doesn’t have any jurisdiction down here. Obviously, he could’ve gotten the info he needed by phone, so it seems he headed down here to make sure you two left town. Maybe he was worried that you’d screw up the case.”
“He doesn’t have any jurisdiction down here?” I asked. “You mean, he can’t come down here and arrest somebody?”
“Nope, that’s up to the folks in Texas now to catch these crooks.”
“That’s interesting.” I drained the last of my coffee. “So, really, then, Flori and I could do more good solving a murder down here than he could?”
Flori’s eyes got big and she looked like she was sipping on a straw, except she didn’t have a straw, but she didn’t speak.
Kyle pulled a toothpick out of his shirt pocket, picked off the lint, and stuck it in his mouth. “Well, I wouldn’t go that far. We don’t like ordinary folk getting involved in crime fighting. It’s a dangerous sport to get mixed up in, that’s for sure. Besides, we got this one pretty much figured out anyway.”
All three of us stared at him.
“You do?” I said. “You know who murdered Grace? Or, Andrea, or whoever she was?”
He shifted in his seat. “Well, that we don’t know yet. But, this whole thing has to do with drugs and gambling. Cecile’s been working undercover for years.”
“Pardon me,” I interrupted. “You said that
Cecile
was working undercover? You mean the person who lives next door to Stella? The creep who looks like a convict? He’s a cop?”
He nodded and let out a hoot. “Cecile’d love to hear you say that cause that’s why he’s so good at it. Nobody suspects. He lives the part. Gets in there, real mean and dirty. Been doing this for years. His cover’s been blown now so I imagine he and Grace will be moving on. Some other city, some other crime scene…”
“Just a minute, Kyle. You know that the Grace Hobbs who was murdered was not his wife? She was somebody named Andrea.”
“Well, sure. That’s right.” He shook his head as if trying to erase something from his brain and then yelled, “Time for some coffee refills here, Selma.”
“Well, sure? That’s all you’re going to say? What’s going on here, Kyle? Flori and I came all this way to find out who killed Grace Hobbs, only to find out she’s not Grace at all. I think the least you can do is fill us in on a few things. Like, are all of you just plain crazy or is there some sense to this?”
We all stopped talking while Selma filled our cups, pulled a handful of creamers from her pocket, placed them on the table, and cleared away our plates. She started with two plates in her hand and she lined all the rest up from there to her shoulder.
“So?” I asked, when I saw Selma disappear behind the swinging doors that led to the kitchen.
“So, I have to say this was a tough one.” He reached for four sugar packets and proceeded to add them, one at a time, to his coffee.
“Thank the Lord, we don’t lose good officers too often,” he continued. He started stirring his coffee. “Still can’t figure it out.” He shook his head. “She was always right on her game. Things can happen when you’re in the line of fire. Go wrong, you know. Gotta be prepared for the worst. All the time. You just never know.” He kept stirring.
Flori was trying not to weep and at the same time, looking a bit confused because she really had no idea for what or whom she should be weeping.
“Could you explain that a little more?” I said. “What do you mean, ‘line of fire’? What do you mean - lose good officers?”
“Well, here’s all I can tell you: Andrea Williams infiltrated that gang because Cecile Tucker recommended her and Hatcher fell for it.”
Flori gasped. “See, Mabel. Her last name was Williams. I thought it would be. That’s why she had to take on a whole new name.”
Kyle laughed. “Yeah, that’s quite a coincidence, isn’t it? Imagine two women with the same name.”
“So, that’s why Andrea changed her name to Grace Hobbs? Because she would’ve had the same name as the other woman on the trip? How come when I went to look for her number in the phone book, I ended up at Cecile Tucker’s house?”
“Because no one ever changed that old number, I guess.”
Stella leaned forward. “There was somethin’ funny going on there when Cecile and Grace moved in. I think they might’ve done something to that nice young woman who used to live there.”
“No,” Kyle said. “That was Ginger Hobbs and she moved on. Got shot in the knee or something, if I remember correct.”
“Wouldn’t Hatcher have known Cecile’s wife?” I asked.
“Hatcher knew Cecile real good but Cecile kept his wife out of the scene as best he could. Don’t know if any of them did business when Grace was around.”
“What about Grace, the wife? Where does she fit in?”
“We never had Cecile and Grace work together. They just do that in the movies. No, when it was time to start closing in, Cecile said he wanted another undercover agent to infiltrate. By this time, everybody trusted him so that’s when we called in Andrea. She’s been doing undercover for years.”
“How long was Cecile working on this anyway, Kyle?” I asked.
He shook his head. “A long time. I remember thinking Cecile was a drug dealer when I got on the Force. Guess it must be almost three years now.”
“Is it okay that you’re telling us this?”
He laughed. “It’ll be plastered all over the news within the next few days, I’m sure. You know, big crime bust. Probably say that they put Cecile Tucker away for the next twenty years. That means Cecile and Grace will be pulling out. Hate to see them go. It was kinda fun, treating him like a crook. Y’know, bashing him up once in awhile.” He grinned.
“You’re being really quiet,” I said to Stella. “What do you think of all this?”
She shook her head. “I don’ know. Some things still don’ add up for me.”
“Well, I’m glad it’s coming to its end. But, just think, Stella, you don’t have to worry about Cecile anymore. Too bad about Grace though.” I stopped. “Somehow, I can’t get used to calling her Andrea.”
“Yeah,” Kyle said. “Seemed like this one should be an easy bust after takn’ so long but instead it ended up in tragedy.” He started stirring his coffee again. “Still can’t figure out what went wrong. Course, nobody tells me too much. Probably that Captain, Maxymowich, knows more than I do. One thing I do know, the drugs went through okay and Andrea collected the gambling money. Cecile made sure of that. He followed them all the way to Las Vegas. Said he always had her back. Then, he lost Andrea in Denver. Suddenly, she just disappeared. Doesn’t know where she went or who she went with. Next thing you know, her body’s found in some little town somewhere.” He cleared his throat, pulled out a tissue and blew his nose. “Yes, sir. Sure is tough when you lose one of yer own.”
I gave him a second or two to get the handle on his emotions and re-establish his macho image. That’s about all the time it took too. Flori, however, was having a harder time but I ignored her. Stella sat, looking like she was still in a state of shock.
“Okay, Kyle,” I said. “For the last time, let’s see if I have this straight. You’re saying Andrea Williams was an undercover cop, and that she took on the name, Grace Hobbs. Cecile, who is married to a different Grace, is also an undercover cop.”