"Seemed like a good spot for a break. We was headed to a hardware store for some roof paper, nails, wood stuff like that."
"Lumber," Neria Torres said archly. "In the construction business, it's called 'lumber.' Not wood."
"Sure." He was scratching at his Old Testament tattoos.
She said, "So go already."
"Yeah, well, we need some money. For the lumber."
"Matthew, there's something I've got to tell you."
"Sure."
"My husband's been murdered. A police detective is coming out here soon."
Matthew took a step back and said, "Sweet Jesus, I'm so sorry." He began to improvise a prayer, but Neria cut him off.
"You and your crew," she said, "you are licensed in Dade County, aren't you? I mean, there won't be any problem if the detective wants to ask some questions ... ?"
The Tennesseeans were packed and gone within fifteen minutes. Neria found the solitude relaxing: a light whisper of rain, the occasional whine of a mosquito. She thought of Tony, wondered whom he'd pissed off to get himself killed-maybe tough young Edith! Neria thought of the professor, too, wondered how he and his Earth Mother blow-job artist were getting along with no wheels.
She also thought of the many things she didn't want to do, such as move back into the gutted husk at 15600 Calusa. Or be interviewed by a homicide detective. Or go to the morgue to view her estranged husband's body.
Money was the immediate problem. Neria wondered if careless Tony had left her name on any of the bank accounts, and what (if anything) remained in them. The most valuable item at the house was his car, untouched by the hurricane. Neria located the spare key in the garage, but the engine wouldn't turn over.
"Need some help?"
It was a clean-shaven young man in a Federal Express uniform. He had an envelope for Neria Torres. She signed for it, laid it on the front seat of Tony's Chevy.
The kid said, "I got jumpers in the truck."
"Would you mind?"
They had the car started in no time. Neria idled the engine and waited for the battery to recharge. The FedEx kid said it sounded good. Halfway to the truck, he stopped and turned.
"Hey, somebody swiped your license plate."
"Shit." Neria got out to see for herself. The FedEx driver said it was probably a looter.
"Everybody around here's getting ripped off," he explained.
"I didn't even notice. Thanks."
As soon as he left, Neria opened the FedEx envelope. Her delirious shriek drew nosy Mr. Varga to his front porch. He was shirtless, a toothbrush in one cheek. In fascination he watched his neighbor practically bound up the sidewalk into her house.
The envelope contained two checks made out to Antonio and Neria Torres. The checks were issued by the Midwest Life and Casualty Company of Omaha, Nebraska. They totaled $201,000. The stubs said: "Hurricane losses."
Shortly after noon, when Detective Brickhouse arrived at 15600 Calusa, he found the house empty again. The Chevrolet was gone, as was the widow of Antonio Torres. A torn Federal Express envelope lay on the driveway, near the rusty Oldsmobile. Mr. Varga, the neighbor, informed the detective that Neria Torres sped off without even waving good-bye.
Brickhouse was backing out of the driveway when a rental car pulled up. A thin blond man wearing round eyeglasses got out. Brickhouse noticed the man had tan Hush Puppies and was carrying a box of Whitman chocolates. High-pitched barking could be heard from the back seat of the visitor's car.
The detective called the man over. "Are you looking for Mrs. Torres?"
The man hesitated. Brickhouse identified himself. The man blinked repeatedly, as if his glasses were smudged.
He said, "I don't know anybody named Torres. Guess I've got the wrong address." Speedily he returned to his car.
Brickhouse leaned out the window. "Hey, who's the candy for?"
"My mother!" Fred Dove replied, over the barking.
The detective watched the confused young man drive away, and wondered why he'd lied. Even crackheads know how to find their own mother's house. Brickhouse briefly considered tailing the guy, but decided it would be a waste of time. Whoever crucified Tony Torres wasn't wearing Hush Puppies. Brickhouse would have bet his pension on it.
Augustine parked at a phone booth behind a gas station. The governor had them wait while he made a call. He came back humming a Beatles tune.
"Jim's alive," he said.
Edie Marsh leaned forward. "Your friend! How do you know?"
"There's a number where we leave messages for each other."
Bonnie asked if he was hurt badly.
"Nope. He took it in the vest."
Augustine shook a fist in elation. Everybody's mood perked up, even Edie's. Skink told Bonnie she could call her mother, but make it fast. It went like this:
"Mom, something's happened."
"I guessed as much."
"Between Max and me."
"Oh no." Bonnie's mother, laboring to sound properly dismayed, when Bonnie knew how she truly felt.
"What'd he do, sweetie?"
"Nothing, Mom. It's all me."
"Did you have a fight?" her mother asked.
"Listen, I've met two unusual men. I believe I've fallen in love with one of them."
"On your honeymoon, Bonnie?"
"I'm afraid so."
"What does he do?"
"He's not certain," Bonnie said.
"These men, are they dangerous?"
"Not to me. Mom, they're totally different from anyone I've ever known. It's a very ... primitive charisma."
"Let's not mention that last part to your father."
Next Bonnie phoned the apartment in New York. When she got back to the Seville, she told Skink to go on without her.
"Max left a message on the machine." She didn't look at Augustine when she said it. Couldn't look at him.
Bonnie repeated her husband's message. "He says it's over if I don't meet with him."
"It's over regardless," Skink said.
"Please."
"Call back and leave your own message." The governor gave her the details-the place, the time, who would be there.
After Bonnie finished with the phone, Skink made another call himself. When they got back in the car, Augustine punched the accelerator and peeled rubber. Bonnie put her hand on his arm. He gave a tight, rueful smile.
They made the 905 turnoff in the nick of time. Already the northbound traffic was stacked past Lake Surprise; Skink surmised that the police had raised the Jewfish Creek drawbridge for their roadblock. He predicted they'd set up another one at Card Sound, as soon as more patrol cars arrived from the mainland.
Edie Marsh said, "So where are we going?"
"Patience."
The two of them sat together in the back seat. On the governor's lap was a Bill Blass suitcase, removed from the Cadillac's trunk to make space for the blacked out Snapper.
Skink said, "Driver, dome light! Por favor." Augustine began pushing dashboard buttons until the ceiling lights came on. Skink broke the locks off the suitcase and opened it.
"What have we here!" he said.
The troopers waited all night at Jewfish Creek. As Jim Tile predicted the black Jeep Cherokee never appeared, nor did the silver Cadillac stolen from a customer at a Key Largo convenience store. The French victim had dryly described the armed carjacker as "a poster boy for TMJ."
At daybreak the cops gave up the roadblock and fanned through the Upper Keys. It would take three days to locate the Seville, abandoned on a disused smugglers' trail off County Road 905, only a few miles from the exclusive Ocean Reef Club. The police would wait another forty-eight hours before announcing the discovery of the vehicle. They omitted mention of the bullet hole in its dashboard, as they didn't wish to unduly alarm Ocean Reef's residents and guests, which included some of the most socially prominent, politically influential and chronically impatient taxpayers in the eastern United States. Many were already in a cranky mood, due to the inconvenient damaging of their vacation homes by the hurricane. News that a murderous criminal might be lurking in the mangroves would touch off heated high-level communiques with Tallahassee and Washington, D.C. The Ocean Reef crowd didn't mess around.