“Okay,” Larry said.
“You do a lot of this work?” Stone asked.
“You bet. Make a nice living at it, too.”
“How’d you get into it?”
“Fellow offered me five grand once, when I was broke, so I got myself a mail-order book that tells you how to do it and get away with it.”
“The work doesn’t bother you?”
“Naw, it’s just business. I mean, I don’t have anything against the people I hit.”
“You know, in my line of work, I have clients who sometimes have need of somebody with your skills. Maybe you should give me your number?”
Larry grinned broadly. “Well, first, let’s see how this goes, okay?”
“Why don’t you try the number again?” Stone said.
“Sure thing.” Larry punched redial, then held the phone away from his ear, so Stone could hear the recorded message again. “Hey, Ernest,” Larry said. “It’s your next left, right?”
“Right,” Ernest said, and a moment later, he turned left onto a dirt road. A moment later, they were winding down a track that ran through scrub pines. To their right, mangrove grew in swamp water. Shortly, they came to a small clearing, and Ernest made a U-turn and stopped.
“Okay, out of the car,” Larry said, opening the door and helping Stone out of the rear seat.
“Let’s try the number again,” Stone said.
Larry punched redial, and again, the dreaded message repeated.
“Well, I guess you’re just shit out of luck,” Larry said, pocketing the phone. He pushed Stone toward the mangrove. ”My instructions were, if I couldn’t reach him, to do the deed and meet him tonight.“
“You’re doing this on credit, then?” Stone asked, trying not to panic.
“Don’t worry,” Larry said, “me and Mr. Barnacle go way back. We did a little stretch together.”
Suddenly the name rang a bell. “Barnacle? Douglas Barnacle?”
“That’s his name.”
Stone realized that he was about to be murdered by a dead man. “Hang on,” he said.
“Listen, Mr. Barrington, there’s no use stretching this out. You don’t want to think about this any more than you have to.”
“Don’t you read the papers? Watch television? Listen to the radio?”
“What are you talking about?”
“Didn’t you hear about the shoot-out in a Palm Beach restaurant last night?”
Ernest, who had gotten out of the car, walked up. “Yeah, I heard something about that,” he said.
“What shoot-out?”
“The guy you call Doug Barnacle was living in Palm Beach under the name of Paul Bartlett. The police killed him last night.”
That brought Larry up short. “Ernest, that was the name, wasn’t it? Paul Bartlett?”
“That’s what he was using yesterday,” Ernest said.
“Turn on the car radio,” Stone said. “Find an all-news station.”
“Do it, Ernest,” Larry said.
Larry went to the car, turned on the radio and found a station. Farm report, bank robbery in West Palm, weather.
Larry looked at his watch. “Ernest, we got a plane to catch.”
“I know it,” Ernest said.
Larry turned and marched Stone back to the mangrove. He put a foot against his backside and shoved him into the swamp. Stone kept his balance and ended up thigh-deep in the black water. A large snake slithered past no more than a yard away. “Mr. Barrington, that was a real nice try. I admire it, but it’s time for you to say bye-bye.” He raised the pistol and pointed it at Stone’s forehead, no more than five feet away.
“Hey, Larry!” Ernest called.
“What?”
“Listen!” He turned up the radio.
“… chaotic scene at La Reserve, a Palm Beach restaurant last night, ended up with one dead, and a Minneapolis police officer seriously wounded.”
“Don’t Doug live in Minneapolis?” Ernest asked.
“Shhhh.”
“… have identified the police officer as Lieutenant Ebbe Lundquist, of the Minneapolis PD, and the dead suspect as Paul Bartlett, also of Minneapolis. Bartlett had been wanted in Minnesota for the murder of his wife, Frances Simms Bartlett, nearly a year ago, and Lieutenant Lundquist was trying to effect an arrest in the restaurant, backed up by the Palm Beach Police Department.”
“Well, shit,” Larry said. “You’re not lying, Mr. Barrington.”
“No,” Stone said, “I’m not.”
“I mean, you got no idea what some folks will tell you in circumstances like this, you know?”
“I’m sure. But the fact remains, Larry, that you’re not going to get paid for this one, so why do it? You’ve already got the twenty-five thousand, so you haven’t wasted your time, but Bartlett isn’t going to pay off, now.” Stone did not like standing in this swamp, with things slithering around in it.
“He’s got a point, Larry,” Ernest said.
“Maybe,” Larry said, thoughtfully.
Ernest looked at his watch. “And we haven’t got all that much time before our plane.”
Larry looked at Stone. “I don’t guess you’d really pay me the fifty grand, would you?”
“Give me your address, and I’ll send you a check,” Stone replied.
Larry burst out laughing. “Come on, Ernest, let’s get outta here!” He got into the car, and Ernest drove off, spinning the wheels and throwing mud everywhere.
Stone stood in the swamp for a minute, trying to get his heart rate down, then the snake appeared again, and he started struggling for the shore.
Once on dry land, he lay down and, with the greatest possible effort, got his handcuffed hands under his ass and finally over his feet. Now, with his hands in front of him, he was able to get to the cell phone under his sweater on his belt. He punched in the number.
“The Shames yacht,” Dino said.
“Dino,” Stone said, “I need you to come and get me, and bring your handcuffs key.”
39
Dino found the whole story hilarious. “I don’t believe it,” he cackled. “Bartlett bites you on the ass from the grave! I wish I had been there!”
“Dino, it wasn’t funny, even if you were there.”
“And you thought it was Manning who bought the hit!” He cackled again.
“And it still isn’t funny.”
Stone went to his cabin, showered and changed, retrieved his laptop computer and brought it into the saloon.
“What are you doing with that?” Dino asked.
“The only address we have for Frederick James is an e-mail address, so I’m going to e-mail him.”
“Will he be able to tell you’re in Palm Beach?”
“No. The return address will be the same as if I’d sent it from New York.”
“Okay, why not?”
Stone made some adjustments in his telephone dialing program, logged on to his Internet provider and went to e-mail.
TO: FREDERICK JAMES FROM: STONE BARRINGTON
DEAR MR. JAMES:
I UNDERSTAND YOU HAVE BEEN TRYING TO GET IN TOUCH WITH ME. IF SO, YOU MAY REACH ME AT THE ABOVE E-MAIL ADDRESS, OR TELEPHONE ME AT (917) 555-1455.I THINK YOU AND I MAY HAVE SOMETHING TO DISCUSS THAT WOULD REACT TO YOUR BENEFIT.
Stone sent the e-mail. “Let’s see if that raises him.”
“And what if it does?”
“All I want to do is buy the guy off. Maybe he’ll listen to reason."
“You think he’s interested in money?”
“I don’t think he’s interested in anything else. He’s doing this because he’s pissed off at his wife for taking all his money. I’m going to propose that she give some of it back.”
“I think the guy’s a fruitcake, Stone, and…”
A chime from Stone’s computer interrupted him. “You have mail,” a notice on the screen said.
“That was quick. The guy must have been working on his computer.” Stone opened the e-mail.
TO: STONE BARRINGTON
FROM: FREDERICK JAMES