"I'm sorry."
"Hell, even the commander's kid got into the drugs last year. Been in and out of two substance abuse programs already."
"It's everywhere."
"Kill 'em all, anybody who deals that shit."
"We're trying that with mandatory sentencing, Tom. It doesn't seem to be the solution. Maybe it's time we legalize it."
He sighed. "Who the fuck knows?" He was a big man easily given to depression. We needed to change the subject.
"You run a license number for me?"
"Sure," he said.
I gave him the number. It belonged to the green Ford that I'd seen earlier at the lawyer's and again in the parking lot.
"Be tomorrow before I can get to it."
"No problem. I'll send you twenty-five dollars. I appreciate it."
"Aw, hell. Forget the money. Just buy me a spaghetti dinner at Mario's next time you're in the city. We can swap cop stories."
I smiled. He loved cop stories. Not the violent ones so much. The odd ones. The four-year-old kid wearing his bathrobe like a cape and wanting to jump off a three-story roof. The wife who caught her police captain husband whacking off while wearing a pair of her panties. The nun who packed heat. The powerful mobster who took painting lessons in night school, complete with his bodyguard standing right next to him. They were Chicago stories and if they were slightly exaggerated, so what? Why couldn't cops take a little artistic license, too?
"Well, I'd better get ready."
"Heavy date?" he said.
"Yeah. Bowling."
"Nude bowling?"
"Yeah. Right. Nude bowling."
"Hey, you gotta do something out there to liven things up."
"Yeah, and nude bowling sounds just like it."
"You see this new gal the detectives got for a secretary, you'd want to see her bowl nude, believe me."
"Spectacular, huh?"
"Spectacular? And you should see them. What a rack."
"You sure they're real?"
"Oh, they're real all right. I got an eye for that. They hang a certain way when they're real." Then, "You know, women with the real thing should maybe start carrying papers."
"Papers?"
"Yeah. You know. Like pedigreed dogs. So you could know for sure they were real."
"I think we should let the United Nations work on that one, Brady."
"Yeah, like the UN can ever solve anything."
On that note, we hung up.
I went to get some ice and a Diet Pepsi. On my way back, I made the mistake of passing by the motel door belonging to Laura West.
She was shrieking at Noah Chandler. "Why would I want to marry some washed-up TV actor? Now get out and leave me alone!" Then, "Let me go or I'll start screaming!"
I paused. I might have to go in there.
"You ever grab me like that again, you bastard, and I'll report you to the police!"
"You bitch! I've done everything I could for you and look what I get out of it!"
Something smashed to the floor.
"Oh, great," she said. "Now you start breaking everything?"
"You'll be sorry you treated me like this, Laura. You damned well will."
I wasn't the only one being treated to this soap opera. Half the motel could hear it.
The door started to open.
I scooted down to my room.
He slammed the door so hard behind him, the entire motel wall shook
"Fucking bitch," he said, loud enough for me to hear. Then he stalked off to his own room.
I took a quick shower and shave. Dry and naked, I walked out of the bathroom and over to the accordion-fold closet. I opened the door and looked at the two shirts and two pairs of trousers and sport jacket I'd brought. Then I saw him. Or rather, I smelled him before I saw him.
The closet was deep and dark enough to do a pretty good job of hiding him. He looked even bigger than he had in his car. The funny thing was, he still had his aviator shades on. The killer had stabbed him several times in the chest and then cut his throat. For good luck, maybe. He'd filled his pants, which was what I'd smelled. I went through his pockets carefully and found a small key in his shirt pocket. It looked like it belonged to a locker, and lockers were usually found at bus stations.
I went over to the phone. Male voice. "Yes?"
"Would you connect me with the police station please?"
"Sure. Everything all right?"
"Everything's fine. I just need to contact the chief."
A minute lapsed. A voice identified the police station. "My name's Robert Payne. Susan Charles is expecting to see me in about twenty minutes. I wondered if you could give me her home number."
"I can't give out the number," the dispatcher said. "But I can call her at home and have her call you back."
"That'd be fine."
"She had some trouble last year. Somebody making obscene calls to her. Took six months to find the guy. So she's gone unlisted since then."
"Don't blame her." I gave him the phone number of the motel and my room number.
The phone rang a few minutes later. "Chickened out, huh?"
"There's a dead man in my room."
"God," she said, "I'm sorry. You know who he is?"
"No."
"Or how he got there?"
"No."
"Or who might have killed him?"
"No."
"You're just the kind of witness cops dream of."
"I don't know the drill out here, Susan. But we'll need the whole nine yards."
"The SBI, too?" Meaning the State Bureau of Investigation, which could get here from Cedar Rapids quickly, and which would have a van or two loaded with all the appropriate high tech crime tools.
"Absolutely."
"So much for bowling."
"I guess so."
"You didn't by any chance kill him yourself, did you?"
"No."
"Good," she said. Then, "See you in a few minutes."
I dressed quickly.
Part 2
ONE
They came in groups. First the cops. Then the motel staff. Then the motel guests. Then the teenagers. Then the adults.
I've never resented crime scene crowds the way some law enforcement people do. A natural reaction, to be drawn to the scene of death. As the Irish say, when you go to a funeral you're preparing yourself for your own demise, too. Rehearsal, if you will.
This crowd was well-behaved. Nobody tried to push through the demarcation lines of yellow tape. Nobody bugged the two deputies or the ambulance attendants or the whiskery little man who turned out to be the coroner. They just stood and watched and talked among themselves on the pleasant autumn night, the rumble and roar of semis on the nearby interstate being the loudest sound. I kept looking for Tandy and Laura, or even Noah Chandler, but they were nowhere around.
I was the guest of honor.
Susan Charles, in crisp white blouse and jeans, led me to an empty motel room, sat me down in a chair, had one of the deputies get us both Diet Pepsis, and proceeded to question me. She wrote things down in a small black notebook.
"So you don't know who he is?"
"Right. And you don't either?"
"Whoever killed him took his wallet. No ID whatsoever."
"Damn."
"And you have no idea how he got in your room?"
"Right."
"And you never saw him before?"
"Wrong."
"You saw him before?"
"Once."
A knock. Our Diet Pepsis. It tasted ridiculously good.
I said, "This afternoon." I told her the circumstances. "Tell your people to start looking at the green Ford with Illinois plates in the parking lot. I noticed it when I pulled in earlier."
"You think he was following you?"
"Possibly."
"Why?"
"Why would he follow me, you mean?"