“Facts were slanted a bit?” I suggested.
“A dozen people could handle the duties of the station, four being folks with degrees in chemical engineering. The others answered the phone and filed.”
“Eight minimum-wage jobs,” I said.
“It was the usual bullshit: all frosting, no cake.”
Harry leaned forward. “What went down from there, Mardy?”
“Mr. Lawyer showed up with all these fancy-ass flyers in favor of the transfer station, wanted the kids to distribute them in the community.”
“Warm and fuzzy,” I noted. “A good photo op.”
“Mr. Lawyer suggested organizing a parade for the transfer station. All we had to do was show up, moms and dads and kids and aunts and uncles, get the cleanest people we knew to come-”
“The cleanest people?” Harry said.
“Not a second thought about what he was saying.”
“Scumbucket,” Harry whispered.
Ms. Baker said, “All parade permits would be handled, all news media in place. Mr. Lawyer even had scripts. ‘A step ahead for our children,’ ‘Children are the future when parents have jobs,’ ‘Chemitrol Means Community Control.’ Our clean people were to chant this lying shit like fucking parrots-pardon my French. I told the guy he could wrap his flyers with barbwire and stick ’em where the sun don’t shine. A little more politely than that, maybe. Not a lot.”
“The money dried up?” I said.
“The field got padlocked. Within a week it was all over.”
“You never heard from Kincannon?” Harry’s voice was a rasp.
“I thought about making a stink. But then I realized they could point to a bunch of bats and gloves and uniforms and we’d come off like whining ingrates. Of course, the uniforms got dirty and torn, the equipment fell apart. And without a decent place to play, the kids lost interest.”
Mardy Baker closed her eyes, rubbed them with her fingertips.
“I thanked God a thousand times for sending such good-hearted people here. The next year they were at the door with their hands out, our payback time.”
“I understand something,” I said to Harry. “Clair said few of the truly wealthy give with both hands. I thought she meant the Kincannons were exceptions, using both hands to ladle out the lucre. She really meant one hand passes out the goodies, because the other one’s busy grabbing something back.”
Ms. Baker looked at me over her coffee.
“One hand gives, the other hand takes,” she said. “Damn if that don’t sum it right up.”
A deflated Harry retraced our route in, passing by the warehouse, a cheap frame and metal structure squatting on two acres of asphalt, the cyclone-fenced lot now home to industrial equipment-trailers, crane assemblies, scaffolding. He stared as an equipment truck pulled from the building, a small dozer trailered behind, MAGNOLIA INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENTS painted on the truck’s door.
Harry pointed. “There’s where it was, the field. Know who owns Magnolia Industrial Developments?”
“The Kincannons,” I ventured.
“Bastards.”
Harry drove down the street where the meth head had stood, doing ten miles an hour, looking back and forth, stopping to scan down alleys.
“Looking for something in particular?” I asked.
“The meth head, the kid with the mouth like cancer. Haaa-i-eee. I figured out he was trying to say my name. He must have been one of the ballplayers from back then, one of the kids. It’s the only way he could have known me.”
“I’m sorry, bro,” I said.
“I swear if Buck Kincannon was in front of me right now, cop or no cop, I’d nail that son of a bitch to the side of a barn, stand a hundred feet away, and teach myself how to shoot a bow and arrow.”
I’d been trying to figure when and how to tell Harry about Dani. This seemed appropriate.
“Harry?” I said.
“What, brother?”
“Ms. Danbury’s getting screwed by Buck Kincannon.”
I saw Harry’s hands squeeze tight on the wheel, like he was choking it.
“Lotta that going around,” he said.
CHAPTER 18
Harry and I returned to Mobile and silently pored through Rudolnick’s records. Our simmering funk made us a threat to others, set off by an errant word or gesture-one of Pace Logan’s wiseass remarks, for instance-but since we’d both been wounded by Buck Kincannon, we were safe with one another.
After an hour of reading psychoterminology, Harry pitched a stack back in the box. “How about we get Terry Baney to talk to the trucker, get a sketch made to pass out on the streets?” he suggested. Terry Baney was the departmental artist.
“Sketch? The perp doesn’t have a face to draw, Harry. We got one eyewitness, right? According to our wit, the perp looks like a Wookiee. Or maybe a yeti.”
“If you saw a yeti walking down the street, you’d remember it, Carson. Right?”
An hour later we were in the flower-lined hospital room of Arlin Dell. He’d been disconnected from most of the machines. The truck driver scowled, thinking our request strange.
“All I saw was hair, like I told you,” Dell said. “Remember Cousin Itt on The Addams Family? Draw him, just leave off the top hat.”
“Cousin Itt wore a bowler hat,” Terry Baney corrected. He sat in a chair beside Dell’s bed, a drawing pad in one hand, a thick pencil in the other. Harry and I leaned against the wall.
Dell rolled his eyes. “Bowler hat, top hat, whatever.”
Terry Baney was forty-three and looked like a man more at home with actuarial tables than drawing materials-slight, bespectacled, pomaded hair, a pink hue to his scrubbed cheeks. He wore a suit fresh from Kmart’s bargain rack; his only artsy touches were a bolo tie and silver belt buckle dotted with turquoise. But the man had a gift, an ability to coax fragments of recollections from witnesses, transforming them into representations that held not photographic exactitude but something better: emotive content.
Baney drew three shapes on his pad, a flattened circle, a circle, and a vertical oval. He turned the pad to Dell, tapped the drawings with his pencil.
“Which of these was the basic shape of the perpetrator’s head?”
“Come on,” Dell scoffed.
Baney smiled nonchalantly, kept the drawings in front of the trucker.
Dell thought a moment. “The middle one. Maybe more square, like a box.”
Baney ripped the page off, tossed it to the floor. He drew a squarish circle, began adding lines indicating hair shape.
“The hair, did it fall straight down like this?” He scribbled vertical lines from the oval. “Or did it fluff out to the sides, more like this?” Baney radiated lines out at an angle, creating a delta form.
“That one. It was fluffed out.”
“Did it fluff out straight? Or was it curly hair like this?” Baney drew curling lines.
“No, the other way. It was straight.”
Baney ripped the page away and started on a fresh sheet.
“The guy’s eyes, Mr. Dell. You said they were like holes in the middle of all that hair.”
Dell reached for the switch controlling the bed and raised himself higher. “Just holes. And they were kind of deep. Like his eyes were pushed back.”
“Let’s talk shape. Round holes like this?” Baney drew his perceptions. “Or were they more like this?” His hand flashed over the paper. The result suggested prominent cheekbones and deep-set eyes.
Dell jabbed a finger at the pad. “That. I remember a white triangle above his eyes. Skin. Shaped like a tent from the front.”
“That indicates hair parted at the top,” Baney said, tossing aside a page, beginning fresh. His pencil skipped over the paper, a blur. “Right in the middle. That’s what makes the, uh…tent effect. Can I use that in the future, Mr. Dell? Tent effect?”
Dell grinned and nodded, pleased with his invention.
“The hairy man’s deep eyes,” Baney asked. “Small, large?”
Dell closed his eyes, thought. “Small. Or maybe they seemed that way because the guy was…” The trucker’s eyes popped open. “Angry. Scowling.” Dell frowned hard at Baney, indicating the look.