The Midnight Plan of the Repo Man (35 page)

BOOK: The Midnight Plan of the Repo Man
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“Come over here.” Strickland gripped my arm and moved me carefully to where I could see the face. “Know who this is?”

He was a large man, muscular, a tattoo of some kind reaching blue tendrils from inside his shirt to the base of his neck. I shook my head.

“No. I've never seen him before.” My relief was so overwhelming I felt tears collecting in my eyes. I hastily raised a trembling hand and wiped them away. If I lost Jimmy I didn't know what I would do.

Strickland frowned at me in concern. “You okay?”

“Yeah, I just … I thought it might be Jimmy Growe. He's staying with me in the upstairs unit.” I let out a breath.

“I should talk to him, too, then. Know how I can get in touch with him?”

“No, not at the moment.” I was seized with another alarming thought. “What about my dog? Did you see my dog? He was in the house.”

“Hold.” Strickland snapped a radio off his belt and held it to his face. “Strickland here. Anyone have eyes on a dog?”

The silence gave me my answer even before someone came back and told the sheriff no sir, didn't see any dog.

“Jake?” I shouted. Strickland grunted in feeble protest as I stepped off the plastic and went to my bedroom. The door was open and there, lying completely still, was my dog, sprawled motionless on the bed where he was never allowed.

I almost didn't want to look at him. In the dim light from the hall, his eyes were open and he didn't seem to be breathing. Why would Drake kill my dog? What kind of bastard kills a man's
dog
?

“Oh, Jake,” I said softly. Strickland's shadow filled the doorway behind me. “Jake, Jakey” I whispered. I put my hand on him. He was still warm.

His eyes looked at me.

“Jake? Jake!”

He feebly wagged his tail. I put my face to his neck, laughing into his fur. Probably he figured that with Drake breaking in and gunshots going off and the cops overrunning the place, all rules were out the window and he could sleep on the bed as long as he was quiet. “You crazy mutt. What kind of watchdog are you? There must be twenty people here.”

Jake's look indicated I wasn't paying him enough to be a watchdog.

“Come on, Jake,” I ordered. With a world-weary sigh, Jake eased off the bed and followed me into the living room.

Strickland escorted me back outside. “Your back window is broken and the back door was open. From the position of the body, it looks like he was standing there, looking out your front window at something, maybe a car in the street. We pulled a slug out of your paneling; that's where it wound up after exiting.” Strickland was eyeing me carefully, seeing how I processed what he was telling me. I nodded, but my thoughts were on Jimmy. He was probably out doing something with some female.

“Pretty big fellow,” Strickland observed.

“Yeah.”

“The light on behind him, someone standing out here with a deer rifle would probably think it was you.” We looked at each other. “Anybody got reason to want to put a bullet in you, Ruddy?”

I evaded the question, jamming my hands in my pockets and turning back to my house. “I think you'll find out that guy's name is Drake. I don't know his first name. He's from Detroit. You look around, you'll probably come across his car parked nearby.”

Strickland nodded. “I've got someone doing that right now. Who is this Drake person to you?”

I told him only that a business deal had gone south and that a man who claimed I owed him money had said he was going to come up to Kalkaska and talk about it.

“So he broke into your house?”

“He kind of implied it was going to be that sort of talk.”

Strickland didn't like any of it—I had a feeling I would soon be back to “Mr. McCann.” I felt Alan come awake, making a startled noise when he saw to whom I was talking.

“You got anything else to say?” the sheriff asked.

“No, sir. This guy Drake threatened me and obviously came up here to have it out. He broke into my house and someone shot him from the street. But it wasn't me, I was out with Katie Lottner.” There, now Alan knew everything.

“And that's it.”

“Well…” I took a breath. “When you do ballistics on that rifle slug, you might compare it to what you took out of Alan Lottner's body, see if they came from the same gun.”

“Ruddy!”
Alan exclaimed, shocked.

Strickland stared at me. “What in God's name are you implying?”

“It's just a hunch, sir.”

“A hunch.”

“Yessir.”

Strickland leaned over and spat his toothpick out onto the grass. “Like your dream. Same thing.”

“Yessir.”

He mournfully shook his head. “Move along, McCann. My office will let you know when you can get back into your house. Probably tomorrow.”

Jimmy and I spent the next two nights on cots in the back room of the Black Bear, Jake happily sleeping on the floor between us.

When we were kids, Becky and I thought sleeping in the bar was a special treat, and would stay up half the night telling spooky stories to each other. I was never scared, though, because I felt sure that Bob the Bear would protect us. Now, though, I was being hunted by Franklin Wexler—it was up to me to provide protection for everybody else.

Two nights twisting and thrashing on a rickety steel-springed cot with a thin, almost prison-issue mattress should have played havoc with my back, but I felt remarkably pain-free each morning.

“Yoga,”
Alan said simply when I remarked on it.

“Yoga,” I repeated. “Alan, we talked about this.”

“What do you expect me to do when you're asleep?”

“I expect you to lie there.”

“So stretching and exercising so you don't wind up paralyzed from a night on that hideous contraption you call a cot is against the rules?”

“Doing
anything
is against the rules. What if Jimmy saw me doing yoga?”

“What if he did?”

“People like me don't do
yoga,
” I snapped.

I was back to being the most exciting attraction in town. Everyone wanted to ask me who Drake was, why he broke into my house, and why he got shot. “I can't talk about it while there's a police investigation going on,” I said glumly. This was like trying to calm a crowd by setting fire to it: My lack of comment galvanized every gossip in town.

“They're saying Kermit shot him, to protect me,” Becky told me on Friday.

“Maybe he did,” I speculated. Kermit was standing there, trying to figure out if he should look proud over this. Alan was asleep.

“What was the damage today?” I asked. With every mail delivery, more bounces arrived, and we had no new business to replace it.

“Just eight hundred,” Becky responded faintly.

“I'm going to go over and talk to Milt in a little while. I'll borrow what, fifteen thousand?”

Becky's eyes were sorrowful as she nodded.

Kermit cleared his throat. “I looked into new business, but we're not likely to find someone to let us decimate the funds like that.”

My patience broke with an audible snap—I'd had it with Kermit's wonderful vocabulary. “Decimate. To destroy,” I said to him, my voice shaking with anger.

Kermit looked a little surprised at the heat in my response. “No, I mean, to keep a tenth of the business.”

“You said decimate. It means to destroy, like blow up,” I shouted.

Kermit glanced at Becky. “Ruddy…” she began.

“No! No, Becky.” I pointed at her. “I've had it with Mr. Vocabulary. Let's get a dictionary. We're going to settle this whole thing once and for all. Right here. Right now.”

“What whole thing?” she asked timidly.

“No!” I yelled. I marched into the back room and grabbed a dictionary, flipping agitatedly through the D's. “Decimate!” I cried. I stopped, moving my lips a little.

One of the meanings of the word “decimate” is “remove onetenth of.”

I slapped the dictionary shut. “Okay! Fine! You win, Kermit! Happy now?” I stomped out the door.

Alan came awake as I was trudging down the muddy sidewalk.
“What are you so angry about?”
he asked.

“What makes you think I'm angry?” I challenged.

“I can tell by the way you're walking. And your fists are clenched.”

“Let me ask you this, Alan. What does the word ‘decimate' mean to you?”

“Decimate?”

“Just answer the question.”

He thought about it.
“I guess it means to destroy something.”

“Aha!”

“Also to remove every tenth man from a group, or withhold ten percent of something,”
he reasoned.

“Well, why do you keep dropping off to sleep all the time? What kind of person are you? You're never around when I need you!” I stormed.

“Sorry?”

“Alan, this is one of those times when you should just stop talking,” I fumed.

Milt was in his office when I got there.
“That fence you hit, Einstein's place?”
he greeted.

“That I allegedly hit,” I responded. Alan snorted.

Milt waved his hand. “Doesn't matter. Turns out Croft put the thing in without a permit, and get this—it wasn't even on his property, it was too close to the road. You want to, you can sue
him.

Milt handed over a couple of assignments—the death grip of winter was finally relaxing its hold on business a little bit, and we were heading for a far happier time—repo season.

With business picking up it felt like a good time to tell him I needed to borrow some money, at least fifteen thousand dollars, maybe more, and that I had a free-and-clear house he could attach as collateral.

“For the Bear?” he asked when I explained what the money was for. “I guess I don't understand, I was in there last night. A lot more business than I've ever seen on a weeknight. My nephew says they're going to have to hire someone to help cook.”

“It's not that. I just got us into a bad business deal, Milt, and this is the only way out of it.”

Milt said he'd get going on the paperwork, and Alan was silent when I got into the tow truck. “Okay, Alan, what is it?” I demanded testily.

“Why didn't you explain about Kermit's numbers-running business?”
Alan asked.
“Seems like it would have been a perfect opportunity to let him know what's going on with his nephew.”

“I don't like that sly tone in your voice, Alan.”

“You can't help it, you like the guy.”

“Who, Kermit? I loathe the guy. But I love my sister. So…” I shrugged.

“So you decided not to tell Milt because it would have gotten Kermit in trouble with his uncle,”
Alan finished for me.
“Ruddy McCann, repo man with a heart of gold.”

“Yeah, well, don't let it get out,” I grunted.

I spent the afternoon hauling a Chevy Malibu out of the middle of a cow pasture. According to the file, the customer decided he was too inebriated to drive on the roads one night and attempted to make it home from the bar by traveling directly overland. He made it through some barbed-wire fences without a problem, but became bogged down in the mud and concluded he shouldn't have to pay for such a defective automobile. He called the bank and told them where to find it. The bank's collection department was headquartered in Los Angeles and apparently the folks there thought that
cow pasture
was roughly the same as
shark tank,
so instead of calling a tow truck they elected to contract out to a repo man the task of recovering their collateral from amid the dangerous animals.

In truth, the biggest danger from cows is their curiosity. As I shoveled and cursed and squirmed around in the mud trying to hook the car frame solidly enough to winch it out, they stood around and watched, their flat expressions communicating a complete lack of comprehension. When I finally managed to get underneath the car I looked over and three of them had their heads lowered so they could watch what I was doing. They didn't seem particularly awed at this feat by a superior species.

“What if one of them is a bull?”
Alan asked nervously.

“You see any horns, Alan? Only thing we have to worry about is one of them stepping on us while trying to get a better view.”

We had a busy Friday night, busy enough that I could let Becky serve Janelle bourbon without making it appear I was avoiding her. Janelle, though, kept turning her eyes toward me, so finally I steeled myself and went over to her table.

“Hey, Janelle.”

“You've made some amazing changes in here. I love the new floor,” she greeted. “Engineered wood. Nice.”

“Becky did all the work,” I replied.

She looked good—hell, she looked very good, everything pulled together, a black sweater and black skirt clinging tightly but tastefully to her curves. She sat back in her chair and gazed at me for a long moment, while I stood there getting more and more uncomfortable. Alan, of course, was asleep.

“I'm going to visit my sister in Kansas City for a month,” she said softly. “Might look for a job while I'm there. Get out of this place.”

“Wow, really? That's great.”

“I leave tomorrow. I have a bunch of food in the fridge. Rather than me throw it out, why don't you come over after the Bear closes and pick it up? It won't last for as long as I'll be gone.”

Her eyes were watching me steadily.

“Oh, well, that's really nice, Janelle. The thing is…” I cleared my throat. “I'm sort of seeing somebody.”

I couldn't tell if she thought I was lying—it certainly
felt
like I was lying.

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