Playing Dead Part 28
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"Yep."
Mitch didn't reveal that he already had that information and held up a recent picture of Oliver Maddox. "Do you recognize this man?"
Barney took a good look. Shook his head. "Not familiar. He the one who went under?" Barney glared at them. "It wasn't a drunk driving thing, was it? I don't let anyone leave here with his keys if he's drunk."
"That's right," one of the two early morning regulars at the bar piped up. "That's why I walk here."
"You only live two blocks away. You need the exercise," Barney responded.
"We have no evidence that it was a drunk driving accident," Steve said. "We believe Mr. Maddox was on his way to meet someone here on Sunday, January 20."
"January? That was awhile back," Barney said.
Mitch had been watching the bartender closely while Steve asked the questions. When Steve mentioned Maddox's name, Barney tensed. It was a minor physical reaction, unconscious for the most part. His face didn't change, but his neck muscles tightened, and he straightened just a fraction.
"Mr. Maddox has been in the river since," Mitch said.
"I have no objection if you want to flash the picture around, or leave it with me."
"We know that Mr. Maddox was here that Sunday night near closing. He was likely meeting with someone."
"I'm really sorry. I wish I could help, but I just don't remember. Except for a gal who comes in to help me on the weekends, I'm the only one here. Most everyone are locals, but we get a good tourist crowd on the weekends and summertime. People coming in for a beer after a long day on the river."
"In January? When it's raining?"
"The fish bite in the rain," one of the drunks said.
Mitch was on the verge of losing his temper. Something was odd here, but he couldn't put his finger on it. He pulled out his ace and hoped he wasn't playing his hand too soon.
"Mr. Maddox was looking into the death of one of your former employees," he said to Barney. "Frank Lowe."
Barney glanced at Steve, then at the bar. He crossed his arms. "I told the police everything fifteen years ago, and the arson investigator, and the insurance company. They said I had nothing to do with the fire. h.e.l.l, it may not have even been arson! The owner of the building put in substandard wiring, that could have done it. Probably was the cause."
"I didn't say we were looking into the cause of the fire," Mitch said. Barney was talking too fast. Something was definitely odd. "Did Maddox talk to you about Lowe?"
"No. If he did, I don't remember. That was months ago. I don't even remember the kid coming in here."
This was going nowhere. Mitch left a copy of Maddox's picture. "I'd like a list of your regulars."
Barney laughed. "Just about everyone in town. I'm the only bar."
The small drunk piped up. "Lora. She's here every night, till closing." He winked at Barney. "I think she has a thing for you, Tip."
Tip turned red. Mitch had never seen a man blush before.
"Don't go bothering Lora," he said.
Steve approached the men at the end of the bar, notepad in hand. "Lora?"
"Lora Lane. Nice name, eh? Lora Lane. Yep. She's the daughter of the chief of police. A bit slow, but sweet as all get-out. Sits at the bar every night nursing her rum and Diet c.o.ke after getting off work from the tackle shop. Her daddy owns that, too."
"Does she live around here?"
"Course. With her mom and dad. In that big yellow Victorian on the corner of C and 4th. Can't miss it."
Claire spotted the Fed before she left the house with the dogs for her morning walk. She'd suspected that Agent Donovan would have someone sit on her after last night. Her dad was lucky that the Feds were slow to react. He might have been caught last night, and then there'd be no reason for the prison authority to give him the surgery he needed.
He was a walking dead man either way.
She confirmed the Fed-a female-when she went out with Chewy and Yoda. While sipping her coffee coming back from Starbucks, she knew that no matter what she did, the FBI would follow.
Screw that. She wasn't going to lead them to her father. She considered driving up to Lake Tahoe just for the h.e.l.l of it, make the Fed wonder what was going on. Might be fun . . . but she had too much work to do. She had to track down Greg Abrahamson and find out about Frank Lowe's arrest. And then there was Tip Barney down in Isleton. It wouldn't hurt to have the Fed follow her around town, but it was the principle of the thing: She didn't like being followed. Or manipulated. Or treated like a fragile little girl.
Her dad was turning himself in because he was dying. She needed to prove he was innocent before . . . no. He wasn't going to die. Nelia Kincaid, his attorney-or whatever she was-wasn't going to let him surrender without an a.s.surance that he'd be given the medical attention he needed.
With that belief firmly in place, Claire showered, dressed in jeans and a T-s.h.i.+rt, and threw on a loose-fitting blazer. She holstered her 9mm as well as her Taser, then strapped on her ankle gun, a Kahr P40, and picked up her house phone. Were they listening in? She put down her phone, pulled out her cell phone. The cell phone was owned by Rogan-Caruso. If it was tapped, they'd know. And if they knew and condoned it, then she was already up the creek. She hoped her employer would talk to her before cooperating with the FBI.
She called a local taxi service and sent a car to the corner of 40th and H Streets.
Claire went out the back door, hopped over two fences, and ended up on the street parallel to hers. She took the long way to the meeting place, making sure the Fed wasn't driving up and down the streets looking for her. She had the car pegged-not what she thought of as a typical FBI sedan. A small, sporty black Honda. Must be the agent's personal car, or the Feds had gotten more discreet in surveillance.
She called Bill as she neared her destination. "Hi, Bill. Can I borrow your truck? My Jeep isn't starting. No, don't pick me up, I'm already in a taxi. I'll be there in twenty minutes."
TWENTY-SEVEN.
Mitch and Steve didn't find Lora at the Victorian house on the corner, but she was at the tackle shop on the main dock in Isleton.
She was a stick of a thing, with dyed blond hair and huge fake diamond earrings that made her lobes sag with their weight. She smiled when she saw them, but it wasn't until she spoke that Mitch realized the man at the bar was right: Lora Lane was on the slow side.
She was making lures behind the counter. There were no customers in the shop, but Mitch saw several boats on the river through the windows behind the counter.
"Ms. Lane?"
She looked up, smiled, and said brightly, "Hi. Welcome to Isleton Bait and Tackle."
They identified themselves and showed their badges. Mitch said, "I think you can help us in an ongoing investigation."
"Sure!"
"We're trying to trace the last steps of a law student who was found dead in the river near here. You might have heard about it. His body was found on Wednesday."
She bobbed her head several times. "Everyone who comes in is talking about it."
"We know that he was at the Rabbit Hole the night he disappeared. We were told that you're a regular." Mitch held up Maddox's photograph. "Do you recognize this man?"
She stared at the picture and bit her lip. "I haven't seen him recently. I'd remember, because he has nice gla.s.ses."
"In January. It was a Sunday night and it was raining pretty badly."
She brightened and nodded. "Oh, yes! I remember. I think." She bit her lip again. "I think so. But it was a long time ago. But I have a good memory."
"You think you might have seen this man in the bar?"
"Yes," she said cautiously. "I think he came in late, after dark."
That didn't help-in January it was dark before six in the evening.
"Do you know if he met with anyone? Maybe had an argument?"
She shook her head, her eyes wide. "I just remember what he looks like. I'm good with faces. And he was sitting in his car a long time after he left."
"His car? Do you remember what kind of car?"
She shrugged. "Not really. Tip was walking me home. It was raining pretty hard and we were walking really fast. I thought maybe he didn't want to drive in the rain."
Steve asked, "Did Tip see the man in the car?"
"I don't know. Maybe. Maybe not."
Mitch retraced the conversation. "This man came in after dark, and how long do you think he stayed in the bar?"
"I don't know. Long enough to have a drink."
"Did he seem nervous? Agitated? Angry?"
Lora Lane frowned, her eyes worried and confused. Mitch backtracked. "Did this man act strange?"
"I don't remember."
"But you remember him having a drink?"
She blinked in confusion. "I got to bring him his beer. Tip lets me do that sometimes, especially when it's slow, and I like to help."
"Were there any other strangers in the bar that night?"
She looked worried. "I don't know. Should I know that?"
"No, not necessarily."
"If you have a picture I might be able to remember. I'm very good with faces," she repeated.
"You've been a big help already, Ms. Lane."
"I have?"
"Yes. Thank you for your time."
They left.
"Who did Maddox call at the Rabbit Hole?" Mitch asked. "Directions? And why the second call?"
"Maybe it was a mistake, a misdial," Steve suggested.
"A rainy Sunday night. No other strangers. Barney has the only connection to Maddox through Frank Lowe. But why?"
"Maybe he followed Maddox out of town. Ran him off the road."
"Maybe. But why was Maddox sitting in his car?"
"Waiting for Barney to leave, maybe. Want to go back and push him?"
"We need something else. Lora Lane is not a reliable witness. Something definitive, otherwise we're just fis.h.i.+ng and if he is guilty, then we've tipped our hand."
"No pun intended," Steve said as he unlocked the car.
Mitch rolled his eyes and slid into the pa.s.senger seat. "Let's get the background check on Mr. Barney and see what we can find. We can always come back."
"Great," Steve said sarcastically as he turned onto River Road. "I hate driving this road."
"Could be worse."
"How?"
"It could be dark and raining."
Lora Lane liked pretty things.
Ribbons for her hair. s.h.i.+ny jewelry for her fingers and ears. Manicures and pedicures and keeping her boring brown hair blond.
She didn't like working in the dirty tackle shop, but she liked the money she earned every Friday. Her mama always said she was a pretty little girl without an ounce of common sense. Daddy let her live at home because she wasn't very good with her money and he said people would take advantage of her.
She knew she wasn't a smart girl, but she was smart enough to know that people thought she was a r.e.t.a.r.d. She'd heard them talking. Her daddy shut them up right quick, but she heard them sometimes. She ran the tackle shop almost all by herself, knew the difference between a night crawler and a b.u.t.terworm, and made the world's finest lures. Her daddy said so himself, and everyone came into the shop to buy them because they worked.
She wasn't stupid. She knew how to mind her mouth. She didn't tell those nice men about her agreement, did she? No, she didn't. She kept it to herself like she'd sworn on the grave of her grandmama that she would.
For two years, Lora had watched Tip Barney like she was told. Every night she went to the Rabbit Hole and watched him. She kind of liked him, he was nice to her and didn't treat her like she was dumb. He talked to her like she had something important to say, even when she didn't say anything. He was nice-looking, too. Had nice blue eyes and a pretty smile.
When the men came to her house, Daddy wasn't home. He was working. He had an important job, just like she did. He was a policeman. The chief policeman in Isleton. At first she was scared, but then the pretty man smiled at her and she felt all fluttery inside.
She had a job. And it was as important as her daddy's job. She was undercover for the Department of Homeland Security. She reported back to Agents Smith and Jones everything that happened at the Rabbit Hole. Everything. She took very good notes.
She liked Tip, but he was a terrorist. As Agent Smith said, not all terrorists look like terrorists.
Playing Dead Part 28
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Playing Dead Part 28 summary
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