“Could be.”
“Who?”
“We find baldy.”
“How? You said you had an idea.”
“Let me put it another way. We find Dickie Strauss.”
“You think he’s the guy Dougett saw running from the house?”
“Fits the physical description. Burns on the arm? Try a tat sleeve. And if it wasn’t Dickie, it might have been one of his tat sleeve crew.”
“There aren’t any gangs in Drake, Puller.”
“None that you’re aware of,” he corrected.
“Why would Dickie Strauss have been in that house? And if he was, then that means he killed Larry Wellman. Why would he do that?”
“That’s not necessarily so.”
“What do you mean? They were both in the house and Larry ended up dead. Somebody had to kill him. He didn’t hang himself.”
“Agreed.”
“So what’s your point?”
“Let’s just find Dickie instead of arguing. Any idea where he might be?”
She slid the cruiser into drive. “Yeah.”
“Where?”
“You’ll find out when we get there. I can play things close to the vest too.”
CHAPTER
62
The concrete dome. Puller studied it as they passed by.
“Maybe Drake should make that into a tourist attraction,” he said.
“Yeah, that would be a great draw. Stare at cement for a dollar,” replied Cole.
She turned down a street and steered the cruiser into the neighborhood that had once housed people that had worked in the nearby facility. They passed abandoned houses that were starting to cave in, and other homes where people had worked to make them livable. Puller stared at small kids with dirty faces, and skinny mothers who ran after them. He didn’t see many men, but figured they were probably out earning a living or at least trying to find work.
He sniffed the air. “Nice aroma.”
“We try to get them to take their trash to the dump, but it’s an ongoing struggle. And the bathrooms in these places stopped working a long time ago. Most have put in outhouses of some kind.”
“Nice life for the citizens of the richest nation on earth.”
“Well, those riches must be concentrated in the hands of a few, because we don’t have any of it.”
“They are,” said Puller. “Like your brother-in-law.” He looked around. “Those are electrical poles, but those transformers don’t seem to be hot.”
“People here were trying to tie into them and getting fried. We had the electric company turn this part of the grid off and do a workaround.” She pointed to a telephone pole that had some cable running from it down to the ground where it snaked inside some of the homes.
“Telephone service is being tapped into, as you can see. We let that pass. Folks here can’t necessarily afford cell phones. But they can still talk to people. Phone company is okay with it. Hell, more and more people don’t even have landlines these days. They make their money off cell phones and data usage and stuff like that.”
Cole pointed up ahead. “There’s our destination.”
The place was at the end of the street and far larger than the other homes. Puller stared at the massive overhead doors painted red, though the paint had mostly faded away.
It struck Puller what he was looking at. “A firehouse?”
“Used to be. Hasn’t been used for that since they domed over the Bunker. At least that’s what I was told as a kid.”
“So what do they use it for now?”
The next instant Puller heard the motorcycle start up. Actually, it was more than one motorcycle.
“Harley club,” said Cole. “Of which Dickie Strauss is a member. They call it Xanadu. Some of them might not even know what it means. But it helps keep most of these boys out of trouble.”
“And Treadwell too? He had a Harley. Is that where the tat sleeve came from?”
“I don’t know about the tat sleeve. And no, not everyone in the club has one.”
“But it would have been nice to know that Dickie and Treadwell belonged to the same club.”
“We just found out that it might have been Dickie that ran out of the Halversons’ place. Until then, I had no reason to suspect he was involved.”
“But maybe the motorcycle gang was connected to Treadwell’s death.”
“It’s a club, Puller, not a gang. Most of the members are older guys. They have families and bills to pay.”
She pulled the car to a stop in front of the old firehouse and they got out. Through the open doorways Puller could see an old fire truck with rotted wheels in one bay, and the ubiquitous fire pole just beyond it. Wooden lockers lined both sides of the wall, and there was old firefighting equipment stacked in piles.
In the other bay were a half dozen vintage Harleys. Puller counted five men inside, two on their Harleys and revving the motors and the others tinkering with their machines.
“How come those guys aren’t out working?”
“Probably because they can’t find jobs.”
“So they just sit around playing with their expensive rides?”
“Most of these bikes are twenty years old, Puller. Nobody’s playing with anything. I know most of those men. They work hard. But when there’s no work, what do you do? County unemployment rate is nearly twenty percent, and that’s folks who are still looking. Lots of people have just given up.”
“Do they keep their bikes here?”
“Sometimes, why?”
“You said the people who live here are scavengers.”
“Yeah, but they don’t touch the motorcycle club stuff.”
“Why not?”
“Because the club members help them.”
“How?”
“They collect food, blankets, and hire some of the guys to work for them when they have jobs lined up. Most of the club members have special skills: mechanics, plumbers, electricians, carpenters. Like I said, hard workers. They’ll go by the houses and fix stuff for the families free of charge.”
“Bunch of Good Samaritans.”
“We do have them here in Drake.”
They walked up the cracked concrete drive to the front of the firehouse. Several of the men looked up. Puller saw Dickie Strauss walk out of a back room, stop, and stare at them. He was wiping his greasy hands on a work rag.
Cole said, “Hey, Dickie, we’d like to talk to you.”
Dickie turned and ran toward the back of the building.
“Hey,” shouted Cole. “Stop! We just want to talk.”
Puller had already moved forward, into the building.
Two guys who’d been working on their Harleys blocked Puller’s way. They were both built like fireplugs, older than Puller, with tie-dyed bandanas and overly confident expressions. Their hands were huge and the pronounced cords of muscles in their forearms showed they performed physically hard labor for their daily bread.
Puller held up his badge. “Out of the way. Now.”
One of the men said, “This is private property. Let me see your warrant.”
Cole said, “Let him by.”
Puller had one eye on the fleeing Dickie and the other on the lead bandana.
“I need to talk to him,” said Puller. “Just talk.”
“And I just need to see your warrant.”
“This place is abandoned.”
“Does it look abandoned to you, slick?” asked the other man.
Cole was about to pull her gun when the lead bandana put a hand on Puller’s shoulder. A second later he was facedown on the concrete floor. His stunned expression revealed that he had no idea how he got there. The other man yelled and swung at Puller. Puller grabbed the man’s arm, cranked it down, whipsawed it around, and the man joined his buddy on the cement. When they tried to move, Puller said, “If you get up I will put you both in the hospital. And I don’t want to do that. This is not your fight.”
Both men collapsed back down and stayed there.
Puller had just straightened up when Dickie’s huge friend, Frank, rushed at him from a darkened corner of the building. His nose was bandaged and he had two black eyes from the previous collision with Puller’s head. He was holding a long board.