“I could get along with you and B. D. fine, Sid, but I’d have to go along to do it, wouldn’t I?”
Fork made himself look puzzled. “Don’t quite follow that.”
“I mean, you want something from me. Right now. Tonight.”
Fork changed his expression from puzzled to hurt. “I don’t play that way, Henry, and neither does B. D. The job’s yours. You can start Monday, like I said, if you can quit the sheriff that soon. But I’d better be absolutely honest with you. If anybody ever dumps B. D., I expect to be the first one fired and the new mayor’ll probably get rid of all my people and bring in his own. But that’s just the way things work, isn’t it?”
Henry Quirt leaned forward on the couch, managing to look both skeptical and wise. “What d’you want from me that’ll help B. D. stay mayor forever?”
“Nothing. Like I keep saying, the job’s yours.”
“No more bullshit, Sid.”
“Well, now that you brought it up, there are those prints Charlie Coates told me and B. D. about-the ones they lifted off of that pink Ford van. Charlie’s already got a make on ’em, right? Despite what he said.”
“Right.”
“You get a look at the make?”
Quirt nodded.
“And with that memory of yours…”
“I remember it, Sid. All of it.”
“Now I’m not asking you to tell me who belongs to those prints. And I want you to understand that it’s got nothing to do with the job and the take-home car and the thirty-five a year because that’s all set. And anyway, I can’t ask you to do something you can’t do in good conscience.”
Looking more skeptical and wise than ever, Quirt said, “I don’t hear my conscience saying much of anything, Sid.”
“Well, now, that’s fine. So when d’you want to come to work-Monday?”
“Better make it the fifteenth of next month-just in case Sheriff Charlie turns up something else B. D. can use.”
Chapter 35
At 2:04 A.M. on that last Sunday in June, Kelly Vines and Chief Sid Fork once again sat side by side on the couch with the woven-cane back in Virginia Trice’s Victorian parlor.
Mayor B. D. Huckins sat opposite them, her legs tucked beneath a straight-back chair and crossed at the ankles. Jack Adair sat on the low chair with the worn plush seat-hair mussed, shirttails half-out and bare feet in the cordovan oxfords he still hadn’t bothered to tie because it was Adair who had raced down the stairs at 1:52 A.M. to answer the insistent doorbell. Vines, then only half-awake, had dressed while Adair was in the kitchen, making coffee.
Huckins put her cup and saucer down and said, “Virginia not home from work yet?”
“Not yet,” Adair said.
“We need to talk about something.”
“Something that can’t wait, I take it,” Adair said.
She nodded. “But first I want answers to some questions.”
“First thing I wish you’d do, B. D.,” Sid Fork said, “is quit acting so goddamn mysterious.”
The mayor’s gray eyes were still on Adair when she said, “Shut up, Sid.”
The chief of police opened his mouth to reply, thought better of it, slumped back on the couch, stuck his feet out and jammed his hands down into his pants pockets, looking, Kelly Vines thought, extremely pissed off.
Still gazing at Adair and obviously indifferent to how Fork felt, Huckins cleared her throat and said, “You never told us what happened to the boy and girl-Jack and Jill Jimson-after your supreme court overturned their guilty verdicts and ordered a new trial.”
“They were retried in another county.”
“A change of venue then?”
“Combine Wilson argued for it and got it. The Jimson kids were tried a second time a hundred and thirteen miles from home and acquitted.”
“But didn’t that bribe the old justice took, what’s his name, Fuller-”
“Mark Tyson Fuller.”
“Didn’t that taint the supreme court’s decision?”
“The state decided there was no bribe.”
“What did it call that five hundred thousand dollars in shoeboxes on the dining room table?”
“Four hundred and ninety-seven thousand,” Adair corrected her, “not to mention the five hundred thousand in my closet that they didn’t find.”
“Let’s stick to the Fuller case,” she said. “If it wasn’t a bribe, what did they call it?”
“A double murder,” Adair said. “And also a very expensive and elaborate scheme to make it look like a bribe.”
“This is official-and not just your theory?” Huckins said.
“It’s what was decided after an extensive investigation by city and state police. Actually the state police were the attorney general’s investigators who were brought in because, after all, old Mark was a state supreme court justice.”
“Why didn’t you tell us this before?” Huckins said.
Adair’s blue eyes were kitten-innocent as he looked at Kelly Vines and asked, “Didn’t we go over all this during lunch at the roadhouse?”
“No,” Vines said.
“Why not, Mr. Vines?” she said.
Vines shrugged. “It’s a matter of public record.”
“The public record in a distant state.”
“Maybe I should’ve said common knowledge.”
“Sounds to me like some folks for some reason don’t trust other folks,” Fork said.
The silence that followed was growing uncomfortable when Jack Adair, using what he regarded as his voice of sweet reason, broke it with: “We’re about to reach an impasse that maybe I can prevent, Mayor, if you’ll indulge me for a minute or so.”
After considering the request, she nodded.
“According to both state and city police,” Adair said, “the killer who rigged the deaths of old Justice Fuller and his wife to look like suicide and murder, respectively, was either careless, stupid or hadn’t watched enough TV. As every nine-year-old now knows, thanks to television, when you fire a semiautomatic pistol it leaves a residue on your hand. There wasn’t any on Justice Fuller’s hand. Therefore, he couldn’t have shot either his wife or himself.” Adair looked at Vines. “The murder weapon, as I recall, was a thirty-two-caliber Llama, right?”
“The XA model,” Vines said.
“The police traced it to a Tampa gun shop,” Adair continued, “where it’d been bought by a Mr. T. S. Jones, whose name, address and driver’s license proved false.”
“What about that letter Fuller wrote-his confession?” Huckins asked.
“The police decided it was dictated to him. They’re convinced the shooter threatened to kill old Mrs. Fuller unless her husband wrote exactly what he was told. After he wrote the dictated confession and signed it, the cops think he was forced to remove his lower plate and use it as a paperweight-a bizarre touch-and shove his chair back from the table. The killer then shot Fuller, went into the living room and shot Mrs. Fuller, who was so far gone she probably didn’t even realize what was happening. The killer then returned to the dining room, wrapped Fuller’s hand around the pistol to leave some prints and let the gun fall to the floor. It was, the cops said, a very amateurish piece of work-except for the false teeth on the suicide note, which they thought was kind of cute, and the three thousand dollars missing from the five hundred thousand that made it look as if Fuller had already spent it. The cops also liked that a lot.”
“What if the cops had found that half million in your closet?” Huckins said.
“If that’d happened, I suspect they wouldn’t have been nearly so diligent in their investigation of the Fullers’ deaths and might well have accepted the written confession at face value. And as for me, well, I’d’ve still been doing time.”
“So you’re saying that no one was bribed,” Huckins said.
“I’m still living off that half million Kelly found in my closet and shipped down to the Bahamas.”