http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00M6J47KW
By
Al Lamanda
Copyright by Al Lamanda
Prologue
What went
through his mind during the three seconds it took from the time he heard the
sound of the bullet to the time it entered his left hip was, not like this. Not after all the war zones,
the hundreds of interrogations, the close calls during in-fighting, the car
bombs, suicide bombers and the like.
Home
from the Middle East for two weeks, he went for a morning jog along the back
roads in Frederick
County . The surrounding
woods were deep and thick and even on a bright, sunny day if you walked just a
few hundred feet in, sunlight barely penetrated the treetops.
It
was hunting season and rifle fire was not an uncommon sound to hear on a jog or
walk, so there was no reason to think that a stray bullet would strike him
down.
Yet,
at the sound of the crack he knew he was about to be shot.
He’d
interviewed many a combat veteran and many said the same thing, that at the
sound of a bullet they knew they were about to get hit.
Maybe
it was the direction of the report of the round, or some kind of sixth sense,
he didn’t really know or understand.
Until
it happened to him.
A
shot fired in the woods and even though it could have been fired in any
direction, he knew it would strike him somewhere on his body.
Later,
as he reflected on the moment, he thought about how many wounded soldiers he’d
interviewed who said they didn’t even know they had been shot until later on
when things quieted down and the adrenaline wore off.
That
wasn’t the case with him. The moment the bullet struck the bone of his left
hip, he fell to the ground in encrusting pain. It occurred to him much later
that most of the soldiers he’d interviewed who claimed they didn’t know they
had been shot were wounded in flesh, either muscle or fat.
He
had the misfortune to be struck by the 7MM hunting round on the left hip where
there wasn’t any meat at all. Just bone and nerves.
He
was just shy of forty-four years old at the time.
What
followed was six months at Bethesda ,
a total hip replacement and months of rehab before he was discharged.
And
retired from the FBI on a disability pension.
He
walked with the aid of a cane the first few weeks after he returned home. After
a while he felt stronger and stopped using the cane. He hated sitting around
the house, but wasn’t much for hobbies or television and there were just so
many books a man could read in a given week. He was used to seventy hour work
weeks and the toll of nothing to do all but drive him crazy.
He
had earned a black belt in Kung Fu, but hadn’t practiced in many years. He
found a school in Baltimore
and enrolled, figuring the exercise would return flexibility to the replaced
left hip.
It
did. After several months of three-times per week workouts, he was as strong
and flexible as he was at the age of twenty-five.
On
the one-year anniversary of being shot, he returned to the very road where the
incident happened and went jogging again.
The
hip didn’t bother him in the least.
And
nobody shot at him.
He
ran six miles along a loop in the road and when he returned to his car that
he’d parked along the soft shoulder, two unmarked SUV vehicles had wedged him
in. He recognized the vehicles immediately as FBI.
Four
agents wearing the standard dark-colored suits emerged from the vehicles.
“Agent
Wyatt?” a man he didn’t recognize said.
“Retired,”
he said.
The
man flashed his ATF identification. “Not anymore,” he said.
One
Jack Wolfe Jr.
steered the deep-sea fishing boat southwest off the coast of Key West at a moderate speed of twelve knots.
He stood six-foot-four inches tall and was built like a linebacker the way his
daddy was before he grew the beer gut. His dark hair was long and shaggy.
Behind the dark sunglasses, his eyes were gray, a trait he got from his mother.
At twenty-four, he was the oldest of the three Wolfe brothers.
Jack
Jr. turned and looked at the deck where his brothers were horsing around, as
usual and said, “Cut the bullshit you assholes. Lonnie, go get my smokes.”
Lonnie,
fourteen-years-old, in a choke hold being administered by his older brother JD,
said, “Where are they?”
“Below
deck, and JD, let him go or I’ll come down there and kick your ass good for
you,” Jack Jr. said.
JD,
twenty-three and nearly as tall and heavy as Jack Jr. released his hold on
Lonnie. “Lighten up, big bro,” he said. “All work and no play makes Jack a dull
asshole.”
“I’ll
lighten the boat and toss your useless ass overboard,” Jack Jr. said. “Lonnie,
my cigarettes.”
Lonnie
snapped to attention, saluted and then dashed below deck.
JD
took the steps and stood next to Jack Jr. at the wheel.
“How
far?” JD asked.
“Hour,”
Jack Jr. said as he glanced at the GPS unit mounted below the wheel.
Lonnie
appeared with a package of unfiltered cigarettes and a Zippo lighter and gave
them to Jack Jr.
“I
want one,” Lonnie said.
“Go
ahead, but if you tell Kate, I’ll put my foot up your scrawny ass,” Jack Jr.
said.
“Why
would I tell Kate?” Lonnie said as he removed three cigarettes. He lit them
with the Zippo and passed one each to his brothers.
JD
tapped Jack Jr. on the shoulder and said, “Company.”
Jack
Jr. looked at the Coast Guard Cutter quickly approaching from the east.
“Fuck
do they want now?” he said.
“Looks
like a sixty-five footer,” JD said.
“Good
thing it’s Saturday,” Lonnie said. “They’d be saying, why ain’t I in school?”
The
cutter’s horn blew several times and Jack Jr. shut down the engine.
“Son
of a bitch,” he said.
“Doing
twenty-five knots,” JD said.
“Think
they’ll come aboard?” Lonnie asked.
“Why
you think they’re flagging us, they out of sugar and want to borrow a cup?”
Jack Jr. said. “Well, let’s go greet our uninvited guests.”
They
filed down to the deck and waited for the cutter to arrive. It pulled alongside
and two seaman tossed ropes to the brothers.
The
captain of the cutter said, “Prepare to board.”
Three
petty officers armed with sidearms stood by the rails.
“Coming
aboard,” the captain said.
He
and the three petty officers boarded the charter boat.
“Captain,”
Jack Jr. said.
“This
is a routine inspection,” the captain said.
“Sure,”
Jack Jr. said. “No problem.”
“Go
ahead, men,” the captain said.
The
three petty officers split up to search the boat.
“What’s
your business on the water today?” the captain asked Jack Jr.
“Scouting
locations for a fishing party for tomorrow,” Jack Jr. said.
“Who
is the Katherine One registered to?” the captain asked.
“My
mother owns the boat,” Jack Jr. said. “Her name is Katherine.”
The
captain nodded. “What kind of fishing is your party interested in?”
“Swordfish,”
Jack Jr. said. “They’re deep in calm water this time of year. Maybe forty miles
out to the southwest.”
“They
all want to find the mythical ten
footer, huh?” the captain.
“Yes
sir, they do,” Jack Jr. said. “I’ve never seen one past eight feet and seven
hundred pounds, but you never know.”
“World
record is nine feet, eight inches,” Lonnie said. “And something like eleven
hundred pounds.”
The
three petty officers returned to the captain.
“Clean,
sir,” one of them said.
“Enjoy
your hunt,” the captain said.
“We
will,” Jack Jr. said.
The
brothers watched the captain and three petty officers return to the cutter and
cast off.
“Assholes,”
JD said.
“Don’t
just stand there, go start the engine,” Jack Jr. said.
“What
are you gonna do?” JD said.
“I’m
going below to take a shit,” Jack Jr. said.
Two
Katherine Wolfe
used her key to enter the rear door of the bar that her late husband named the
Wolfe’s Lair. She flicked on the wall switch to turn on a light, and then
punched in the six digit code to turn off the alarm.
She
went to her office beside the storeroom, turned on the lights and tossed her
handbag on the desk. She took her cigarettes out, lit one and went into the bar
and put on a pot of coffee.
A
month ago, she celebrated birthday number forty-four. She didn’t mind the
number so much as she didn’t feel any different than a decade ago. What she
minded was seeing the tiny lines and wrinkles forming under and around her
eyes. She wasn’t much for heavy makeup or Botox, so she would just have to
learn to live with them, or to just ignore them as they were here to stay.
By
the time she finished the cigarette, the coffee was ready and she took a mug
back to her office.
Just
short of ten in the morning and already she could feel the heat. She turned the
air conditioner to low and took a seat behind her cluttered desk.
She
did the books last night, but always reviewed them in the morning for mistakes.
She also needed to order liquor, something she did once a month.
Business
had been good lately and she toyed with the idea of ordering twice a month for
a while.
She
sipped her coffee and lit another cigarette.
As
she rifled through purchase orders and bills, a pick-up truck arrived outside
the rear door of the bar. She glanced at her watch. It was exactly eleven AM.
The door opened and a moment later, Walter appeared in her office doorway.
“Morning,
Kate,” he said.
“Hey,
Walter,” she said. “Bar’s low. I checked when I made coffee.”
“I’ll
stock it,” Walter said. “The boys back yet?”
“Not
yet, thankfully,” Kate said. “I need the peace and quiet to get this paperwork
done.”
“I’ll
go stock the bar,” Walter said.
Alone,
Kate dug into the paperwork and by eleven forty-five it was nearly complete.
Just
in time for her Neanderthals to come bouncing in the back door as if the circus
had arrived in town.
They
stopped at her office door.
“Hey,
Kate,” Jack Jr. said with his big, goofy grin.
He
was just like his father, except maybe a little dumber.
“Any
problems?” Kate asked.
“A
sixty-five footer came aboard for a look see,” JD said.
“And?”
Kate said.
“And
nothing,” Jack Jr. said. “They snooped around, came up empty and left.”
“You’re
sure?” Kate said.
“Yes,
goddammit, Kate, we’re sure,” Jack Jr. said.
Kate
looked at Lonnie. “Is that how it was?”
“I
don’t lie to my own mother,” Jack Jr. said.
“That’s
how it was,” Lonnie said. “They snooped around a bit and then left.”
“Alright
then,” Kate said. “Go help Walter with stocking. He’s getting too old for heavy
lifting.”
“That
old man’s a bull,” Jack Jr. said.
“I’ll
help him,” Lonnie said.
“Come
on, JD, play you a game,” Jack Jr. said.
“Turn
the air on in the bar so it’s cool by one,” Kate said.
Jack
Jr. whacked Lonnie on the head. “You heard Kate, go turn on the air,” he said.
“The
three of you leave me in peace,” Kate said. “JD, bring me another cup of
coffee.”
Kate
worked on her list of restock and finished up around twelve forty-five.
She
could hear her two oldest Neanderthals engaged in a game of pool. Calling each
other names, mock fighting and picking on the squirt.
The
noise suddenly stopped.
Jack
Jr. said, “Bar opens at one.”
And
a voice from her past said, “Hello, Walter. I see you’ve prospered in my
absence.”
Three
Wyatt sat with
two ATF agents in a hotel room just across the border in Virginia . They offered him coffee, tea or
anything he wanted. He took a coffee. Otherwise they didn’t say a word except
to thank room service.
They
just sat around in a nice hotel room for forty-five minutes drinking coffee
little to no conversation exchanged.
Until
a knock on the door brought Morgan from CID, the Criminal Investigative
Division into the room and Wyatt knew, to coin a phrase, that some serious shit
was about to go down.
Wyatt
stood and shook Morgan’s hand.
“You’re
looking good, Wyatt,” Morgan said. “Real good. How is the hip?”
“I
was about to end a six mile run when your boys picked me up,” Wyatt said.
“They
didn’t pick you up, Wyatt,” Morgan said. “You could have refused.”
“If
it’s about my department issued Glock, I believe I turned it in when I was
shit-canned,” Wyatt said.
“It’s
not … you weren’t, as you put it, shit-canned,” Morgan said. “You were retired
due to a disability.”
“I
ran six miles this morning,” Wyatt said. “Can you?”
“That’s
not the point,” Morgan said. “At the time you were shot, the Bureau …”
“What
is the point then, that I can run six miles and you can’t, or that I was shot
and you weren’t?” Wyatt asked.
“I
see you’re the same old pain in the ass that you always were,” Morgan said.
“It’s
been working for me so far, I figure why change,” Wyatt said. “So why don’t you
tell me why I’ve been kidnapped.”
“That’s
classified,” Morgan said.
“Am
I under arrest?”
“No,
of course not.”
“In
that case, I’m leaving.”
“Wyatt,
sit the hell down.” Morgan said.
“Can
I get more coffee first?”
“Sure.”
Wyatt
went to the serving trolley brought in by room service and filled his cup.
“So
who are we waiting on?” Wyatt said. “Someone from ATF?”
“We’ll
talk about it when …”
“It’s
not exactly a secret, Morgan. The guy practically yelled ATF in my face,” Wyatt
said. “And these two mummy’s here on the sofa, they’re ATF.”
Morgan
sighed. “We’re waiting on …”
And
there was a knock on the door.
One
of the ATF agents got up to let in three men.
One
of them was a decade older than Wyatt.
He
carried a briefcase.
“Wyatt,
this is Michael Jonas,” Morgan said. “He supervises the IOI for ATF. That’s
Industry Operations Investigator.”
“I
know what it is,” Wyatt said.
Wyatt
looked at the man. Jonas made no effort to shake hands.
“IOI
for ATF,” Wyatt said. “Wants what with me?”
There
was a circular conference table in the room and Jonas placed his case on it and
looked at Wyatt. “Let’s talk,” he said.
Wyatt
and Morgan went to the table.
“I’ll
have a coffee,” Jonas said.
Wyatt
pulled out a chair, sat and sipped his. “Oh, I’m sorry,” he said. “Were you
giving me an order?”
“No,
I’m giving you a badge if you’ll take it,” Jonas said.
An
ATF agent brought Jonas a cup of coffee and then vanished into the background.
“I’m
on disability, didn’t you know?” Wyatt said.
“Yes,
I do know,” Jonas said. “Do you know Katherine Wolfe, maiden name Vieira? Since
you went to high school with her and she married your best high school bud, I
believe you do.”
Wyatt
was stunned for a moment. Katherine Vieira Wolfe was a name from the past he
wasn’t prepared to hear.
“What
about her?” Wyatt asked.
“Got
your attention now, huh?” Jonas said.
“What
about her?” Wyatt asked again.
“Tell
you what,” Jonas said. “Read the file and then we’ll talk.”
Jonas
slid the case to Wyatt, and then he and Morgan left the table.
Wyatt
stared at the case for a moment. Then he reached for it, opened the snaps and
removed a thick file.
The
filed was headed ATF Special
Investigation Katherine Wolfe/Xavier Estes.
She
married Jack Wolfe when she was seventeen and he a year older. She gave birth
to her first son, Jack Jr. one year later. Jason Donald, called JD, was born one
year after that. Youngest son, Lonnie came later and he is now fourteen. Just
months after Lonnie was born, Jack Wolfe was gunned down in Miami one night and his killers were never
apprehended.
Jack
Wolf, owner of a charter fishing boat and a small bar on Big Pine Key, was long
suspected of running guns out of Key
West , but evidence was never gathered to make an
arrest. Suspicions first came to the attention of ATF when he was seen in the
company of Xavier Estes, a Miami Beach
businessman suspected of smuggling weapons to Mexico . When questioned by agents,
Jack Wolfe claimed he met with Estes about expanding his charter fishing
business into Miami Beach ,
but Jack was later murdered and the deal never materialized.
It
was strongly suspected that Katherine Wolfe had taken over the gun running
business from her late husband. After years of surveillance on the Wolfe family
the investigation had stalled.
Wyatt
looked at a recent photograph of Kate, as he always called her when they dated
the one year in high school before she dumped him for Jack. She was as stunning
as ever. Her dirty blonde hair was shoulder length, her features fine and
chiseled, but what got him now was what got him then, one green eye and one
gray.
Wyatt
looked at the photos of her three sons. Jack Jr. and JD were linebackers like
their father and appeared just as dumb. Lonnie, on the other hand, was much
shorter and wiry like a welterweight boxer, and had intelligence in his blue
eyes.
There
were dates and times listed for a hundred or more surveillances on the family
owned bar, the Wolfe’s Lair and their home and charter fishing boat.
Wyatt
closed the file and Jonas and Morgan returned to the table.
“So
Jack Wolfe and now his widow Kate has been the target of surveillance by ATF
for a decade without fruition and now you want what from me?” Wyatt asked.
“We
and by we I mean ATF and the FBI would like to reinstate you as an ATF agent
and have you work undercover in the Keys to gather enough evidence against
Katherine Wolfe and her family to arrest and convict for gun smuggling,” Jonas
said. “That said, the bigger target is Xavier Estes and we believe Katherine
Wolfe would roll over on him to spare her sons twenty-five hard ones in a
federal pen.”
Wyatt
looked at Jonas. “You’re out of your fucking mind,” he said.
“Wyatt,
this is that go out with a bang case every agent dreams of before retirement,”
Morgan said.
“Except
I’m already retired, remember,” Wyatt said.
“And
you’re gonna do what for the next three decades, go jogging?” Jonas said.
“Katherine
knows I joined the FBI,” Wyatt said. “She’ll suspect I’m there to keep an eye
on her. It won’t work. She’s too smart for that.”
“What
makes you think she’s so smart?” Jonas said.
“You’re
here asking me to do your dirty work,” Wyatt said.
“Wyatt,
you were born and raised in the Keys,” Morgan said. “You know them and you know
Katherine Wolfe. That’s why you’re being asked to run surveillance on this. And
there’s a bonus. Her bartender is Walter.”
Wyatt
looked at Morgan. “Walter, as in my father Walter?” he said.
“None
other.”
“Ain’t
this fun,” Wyatt said. “You do understand that Walter hates my guts and would
just as soon shoot me on sight as take a piss.”
“Like
I said, it’s a bonus,” Morgan said. “Estes is the target, Katherine Wolfe and
company are the means.”
“Any
idea why Jack Wolfe was murdered?” Wyatt asked.
“It’s
suspected a shipment of AK-47 rifles destined for Afghanistan
rebels was in dispute with the buyers,” Jonas said.
“But
you have no evidence or proof of that,” Wyatt said.
“Would
I be here talking to you if I could prove any of what we just talked about?”
Jonas said. “All we have and ever have had on Estes is his political
affiliation to an organization known for being sympathetic to Cuban rebels who
want to oust the Castro family from power, and even that is a paper tiger.”
“So
what’s my deal?” Wyatt asked.
“Deal?”
Jonas said.
“You
swear me in as ATF for how long, for what pay grade, with what authority and
what if I decide to stay on afterward?” Wyatt said.
“Stay
on?” Morgan said.
“You
said I was too young to spend my life jogging?” Wyatt said.
“The
deal is this,” Jonas said. “You’re sworn in until the case is terminated. You
act undercover on your own and report only to me. You’ll be paid the going rate
for a high-ranking field agent and continue to collect your pension. The
assignment is classified and will never be spoken about by you after its
conclusion. Expense money will be fronted prior to your arrival in the Keys.”
“Weapon?”
Wyatt asked.
“Non-issue
from ATF or FBI, otherwise anything you want to carry,” Jonas said.
“I
haven’t been to the Keys since I left for colleges,” Wyatt said.
“It’s
about time you went back for a visit then,” Jonas said.
Four
And a voice from
her past said, “Hello, Walter. I see you’ve prospered in my absence.”
Kate’s
neck stiffened at the sound of Wyatt’s voice. It was a voice she would never
forget no matter how many years passed since she’d last heard it.
She
took her coffee mug to the edge of the hallway where she could see the bar.
Jack Jr. held a pool stick in his hands and pointed it at Wyatt.
“You
fucking deaf?” he said.
JD
stood beside Jack Jr. and held a cue ball in his right hand.
Wyatt
stood about six feet from the bar and maybe twelve feet from the pool table.
Walter
aimed the shotgun he kept under the bar at Wyatt.
Lonnie
sat at the bar and the little shit was smoking a cigarette.
“I
aught to shoot you where you stand,” Walter said to Wyatt.
“Take
your shot then,” Wyatt said.
Jack
Jr. took a step forward and Wyatt pointed at him without looking at him.
“Move
again and you’ll have that stick up your ass,” Wyatt said.
Kate
felt her heart rate quicken as she looked at Wyatt. He stood around
six-foot-one or two and went around two hundred pounds of hard lean muscle. His
dark hair was worn short and his black eyes were as dark as she remembered
them.
“I’m
warning you, Duncan ,”
Walter said. “Turn around and leave or I’ll pull the trigger on you.”
Wyatt
strolled to the bar and stood next to Lonnie. “Do it,” he said.
Walter
glared at Wyatt.
Wyatt
looked at Lonnie. “I’d move if I was you, son, just in case he’s stupid enough
to pull the trigger.”
Lonnie
stood up and backed away.
Wyatt
looked at Walter.
Then,
with cat-like reflexes, Wyatt snatched the shotgun from Walter with his left
hand. “You aught to know better than to play with loaded weapons, Walter,” he
said.
“Fuck
you, boy,” Walter said.
Jack
Jr. moved again and as cool as you please and without looking at him, Wyatt
turned the shotgun so that it was aimed at Jack Jr. and JD.
“I
thought I told you not to move,” Wyatt said.
“Well,
what is it you want?” Jack Jr. asked.
“I
went to high school with the owner of this establishment Katherine Wolfe,”
Wyatt said. “I’m passing through and I thought I’d say hello.”
Kate
strolled out from the hallway and walked to the bar and stood next to Lonnie.
“Hello, Wyatt,” she said. “It’s been a long time.”
“Hello,
Kat,” Wyatt said. “You need to hire a better class of bartender.”
Kate
smiled. “Those two apes at the pool table are Jack Jr. and JD, my oldest boys.
This squirt is my youngest, Lonnie, and if I catch him smoking again I’ll show
him he’s not too old to feel a belt.”
“Aw,
Kate,” Lonnie said.
Wyatt
set the shotgun against a bar stool.
“Boys,
this is Duncan Wyatt,” Kate said. “I went to high school with him. He played football
with your daddy. He left us to become an agent for the FBI, ain’t that right,
Wyatt?”
“Everybody
has got to do something,” Wyatt said. “Besides, I retired last year.”
“Come
on over and talk to me,” Kate said.
She
went to the end of the bar and took a seat. “Boys, go about your business.”
Wyatt
went to Kate and took the stool next to her.
“Want
a beer?” Kate said.
“Too
early for me,” Wyatt said.
“Walter,
bring us each a fresh coffee,” Kate said.
Walter
glared at Wyatt as he set out two mugs and poured.
“I
hate you like mortal sin, boy,” Walter said as he turned away.
“That’s
enough, Walter,” Kate said.
Wyatt
took a sip from his mug. “So you took over for Jack, huh?”
“I
did, and you already knew that or you wouldn’t have asked for me instead of
him,” Kate said.
“They
ever find who killed him?” Wyatt asked.
“No.”
“Too
bad.”
“So
why did you retire? You’re no older than Jack.”
“Got
shot about a year ago,” Wyatt said. “I figured twenty-three years was enough,
so I took a disability pension.”
“Disability?”
Kate said. “You don’t look none too disabled to me.”
“I
live a clean life,” Wyatt said.
“Where
did you get shot?”
“Left
hip. Fractured it beyond repair, so they replaced it.”
“And
you it seems.”
“Seems
so.”
“And
you’re in the Keys because?”
“I
haven’t been back in a long time,” Wyatt said. “I sold my house in Virginia for a fair
profit. I thought I might check things out, do some fishing, and maybe stay
over the winter. I noticed last winter the cold bothered my hip.”
Kate
sipped her coffee.
“That’s
it? That’s all you got?”
“Afraid
so. Thought I’d drive down to Key West
and watch the sun go down over a steak.”
“Want
some company?”
“Meaning
you?”
“Meaning
me.”
“Why
not?”
“Can
you pick me up at four?”
“Here?”
“Right
here.”
“Sure.”
“And
Wyatt, this is just dinner. No ideas, okay.”
“Wouldn’t
dream of it.”
“I
got a mountain of paperwork to do,” Kate said. “See you at four.”
Wyatt
nodded to Walter on the other end of the bar.
“Thanks
for the coffee, Walter,” he said.
“Go
fuck yourself you rat bastard,” Walter said.
“You
have a nice day, Walter,” Wyatt said as he slid off the stool and walked past
the vacant pool table and out of the bar.
The
three amigos were standing out front, each of them smoking a cigarette.
“Some
time I’d like to see you do that stick up my ass trick you spoke about,” Jack
Jr. said.
Wyatt
kicked Jack Jr. in the balls, and then spun in a circle and kicked JD in the
face with his right foot.
Both
men went down to the ground.
Wyatt
looked at Lonnie and winked.
“Best
get some ice,” Wyatt said. “For both of them.”
Five
Walter walked
into Kate’s office with a mad on fit to kill a bear. He folded his arms and
glared at her and demanded to know if she was really going to dinner with his
asshole rat bastard of a son.
“Yes,
Walter, I am,” Kate said.
“Why?”
Walter demanded.
“Because
I don’t trust him,” Kate said. “That’s why. I think he’s up to something and
I’d like to get a feel for it.”
“No
good son of a bitch is a family traitor,” Walter said.
“Well,
whatever he is I’m not going to find out what he’s up to by alienating him,”
Kate said.
“How
come I never heard him being shot?” Walter said.
“When
was the last time you spoke to him?” Kate said.
“The
day after he graduated college and told me on the phone he was joining the
FBI,” Walter said.
“Twenty-four
years.”
“About.”
“And
you’re wondering why you don’t know?” Kate said.
From
the bar, JD said, “Help me get him on the pool table and then get some ice,
Lonnie. For both of us.”
“Now
what?” Kate said.
“Goddammit,
Lonnie, get the fucking ice,” Jack Jr. yelled.
Kate
and Walter walked out to the bar.
Jack
Jr. was sprawled out on the pool table with both hands holding his crotch. JD
was sitting on the edge of the table holding his nose as blood streamed down
onto his hands and shirt.
“Jesus
Christ,” Kate said.
“What
happened?” Walter said.
“He
kicked me in the Goddamm balls is what happened,” Jack Jr. said.
“And
my nose,” JD said.
“Why?”
Kate asked.
“How
the hell do I know why?” Jack Jr. said.
“We
didn’t do nothing, Kate. Honest,” JD said.
Lonnie
returned with a plastic bag of ice and a towel wrapped around ice cubes. He
gave the bag to Jack Jr. and the towel to JD.
“He
broke my fucking nose,” JD said.
Lonnie,
go to the office,” Kate said.
“I
didn’t do nothing,” Lonnie said.
“Did
I say that you did?” Kate said. “Office. Now.”
Lonnie
turned and walked away.
“Let
me see that nose,” Kate said to JD.
JD
removed his hands.
“It’s
broken,” Kate said. “Walter, take JD to the hospital. I’ll watch the bar.”
“What
about me?” Jack Jr. said.
“You
want to show me your balls?” Kate said.
“Goddammit,
Kate,” Jack Jr. said.
“Walter,
take Jack Jr. with you,” Kate said.
“Come
on you heroes, I’ll drive you to the hospital,” Walter said.
Kate
returned to the office where Lonnie was standing with his face in the small air
conditioning, window unit.
“It’s
hot,” he said.
“Lonnie,
sit down,” Kate said as she took her chair behind the desk.
Lonnie
turned away from the AC unit and took the chair facing the desk.
“What
happened out there?” Kate asked. “No bullshit.”
“He
kicked Jack in the …” Lonnie said.
“I
know what he did,” Kate said. “Why did he do it?”
Lonnie
looked at the floor.
“Look
at me when I address you,” Kate said. “Boys look at the floor. Men look you in
the eye.”
Slowly,
Lonnie looked up and at Kate.
“Now
tell me why Wyatt did what he did,” Kate said.
“We
were out front and he came out,” Lonnie said. “Jack said something like he’d
like to see him do that pool stick up his ass thing, something like that.”
“Jack
Jr. said that to Wyatt?” Kate said.
Lonnie
nodded.
“And
then?” Kate said.
“Then
he kicked Jack in the balls and kicked JD in the face,” Lonnie said. “Then he
winked at me and said I better get them some ice.”
“Lonnie,
remember that time was you were seven and I told you to leave the baby gator
alone and you stuck your finger in his mouth, what happened?” Kate said.
Lonnie
held up his left thumb where a slight scar was visible. “He bit me.”
“That’s
right, he bit you,” Kate said. “You think on that for a while as you wipe
glasses at the bar.”
Lonnie
nodded, stood up and left the office.
Kate
lit a cigarette, sat back in her chair and despite herself felt a smile cross
her lips. “Fucking Wyatt,” she said aloud.
Six
Wyatt drove east
on Route One to Islamorada where they rented a bungalow at a motel that had a
water view. Of course, it was close to impossible not have a water view just
about anywhere in the Keys, but he understood marketing.
The
car they leased for him in his name was a one-year-old dark blue Taurus
equipped with every option available. New, the car cost over forty thousand and
was a comfortable, powerful ride.
Traffic
was heavy in both directions. He ran the AC on high. A few blocks past the
Theatre of the Sea, he turned right down a side street to the motel and parked
in the gravel-topped parking lot. There were twenty-four bungalows in a
horseshoe shape and separated by about eight feet.
His
was number seven.
The
pool was enclosed inside a chain-link fence and a woman in a yellow bikini was
sunbathing as he walked past to number seven. She looked at him and waved. He
waved back.
Number
seven was a twelve by sixteen room, with a double bed, sofa, television,
bathroom and tiny area for cooking. The four burner oven, mini-fridge and sink
was enough to get by on, although there was no real place to sit and eat except
the picnic table around back.
Except
for the pool, there was no water view to be had.
The
closet and dresser barely held the two suitcases of clothes he brought, but he
wasn’t here to work on expanding his wardrobe.
Earlier
he stopped at a Winn Dixie supermarket for a six-pack of beer and soda and some
basics, coffee, milk and a few other things.
The
window AC unit was good enough to chill the room and he left it running before
he went out and the room was a comfortable sixty-eight degrees.
“Hey
number seven, why don’t you come out and have a beer with me?” the woman at the
pool shouted.
Wyatt
looked out the window. The woman was holding up a six-pack of beer, minus two
cans.
He
looked at his watch. There was time to kill.
He
went out to the pool and said, “One’s my limit.”
“I
doubt that, cowboy,” the woman said.
She
was a curvy redhead with piercing blue eyes, around forty or so and had been
working on her tan for quite some time.
“I
saw you check in this morning,” she said. “Im in twenty-three.”
“Well,
twenty-three, one is all I have time for,” Wyatt said.
He
sat in the lounge chair next to her.
“Got
a name, cowboy?” she said.
“Wyatt.
Duncan Wyatt.”
“Nice
name.”
“What
do I call you besides twenty-three?”
She
sipped her open beer.
“Lo-Lo
Del Ray,” she said, and held out a beer to Wyatt.
He
popped the tab and took a small sip.
“So
what do you do Wyatt Duncan Wyatt?” Lo-Lo said.
“Retired.”
“From
what? You can’t be more than forty-two.”
“Forty-five
and the FBI.”
“Kind
of young, ain’t you? For retirement.”
“Twenty-three
years on the job is enough,” Wyatt said. “What do you do, Lo-Lo?”
“Exotic
dancer at the Aces and Eights. I specialize in acrobatic pole dancing.”
“Acrobatic
pole dancing,” Wyatt said. “Don’t believe I know what that is.”
“Do
you know what acrobatics is?”
“I
do.”
“Same
thing, only I do it on a pole and I’m naked except for a G-string.”
“Sounds
like quite an extravaganza.”
Lo-Lo
chuckled. “That’s one way of putting it. Can you reach my cigarettes there on
the table?”
Wyatt
picked up the pack of cigarettes, removed on and gave it to Lo-Lo. There was a
book of matches and he struck one to lite her cigarette.
“I
won pole dancer of the year in Miami
in 2006,” she said.
“They
have contests for that?” Wyatt said.
“For
a while there I was pretty hot,” Lo-Lo said. “A listed all the major clubs in Miami , Jacksonville and
even Atlanta .”
“So
why are you here?” Wyatt said.
“I
turned thirty-five and suddenly was a B lister,” Lo-Lo said. “Now I’m lucky to
work the biker clubs and occasionally a bachelor party.”
Wyatt
sipped his beer.
“Give
any thought to what you’re going to do when you can’t … acrobatic pole dance
anymore?” he said.
“I
save my money, or most of it, plus I get five hundred a month from my ex,”
Lo-Lo said. “In two years I’ll have enough saved to open my own agency.”
“Agency?”
“For
exotic dancers. Like an agent. I take a small commission for placing girls into
clubs,” Lo-Lo said.
“I’m
learning all kinds of new things,” Wyatt said.
“Okay,
cowboy, you’re turn. Why are you here?”
“I
was born here,” Wyatt said. “I’m just visiting old friends and family.”
“Gonna
stay?”
“Don’t
know.”
“Where
do you live?”
“I
did live right outside DC in a Maryland
suburb, but I sold my house, so I’m undecided.”
“Traveling
man,” Lo-Lo said. “No wife?”
“I
was never in one place long enough to meet the right woman,” Wyatt said.
“But
plenty of one night stands, though,” Lo-Lo said. “Huh?”
“I’ve
enjoyed our conversation, but I have to meet an old friend for dinner,” Wyatt
said.
“My
last set in at one,” Lo-Lo said. “I’m back at the pool with a glass of wine at
one-thirty if you want to join me. Right now I’m drinking beer because I sweat
out every last ounce of carbs in my body last night and this is the quickest
way to replace them. Otherwise I’ll get cramps in my legs.”
“I’ll
be sound asleep at one-thirty in the morning,” Wyatt said.
“Well,
if you are awake, I could use the company,” Lo-Lo said.
“If
I’m awake,” Wyatt said.
Wyatt
returned to his bungalow to take a shower and change. When he reemerged
forty-five minutes later, Lo-Lo had vacated the pool.
Seven
“Lonnie, bring
me some fresh coffee,” Kate said.
A
minute or so passed and Lonnie appeared with the pot. He filled her mug and
said, “Almost twelve-thirty, Kate.”
“I
know,” Kate said. “I’ll be out to open and then you scoot back here. They
shouldn’t be much longer.”
“I
was thinking on what you said about the baby gator,” Lonnie said.
“And?”
“I
think what you were saying is that Jack Jr. stuck his hand in the gator’s mouth
and got bit even though he knew he shouldn’t.”
“Remember
that the next time you think about picking a fight with a stranger,” Kate said.
“A garden snake could turn out to be a Diamondback.”
“I
will.”
After
Lonnie left her office, Kate lit a cigarette, sipped her coffee and thought for
a few minutes. Then she turned to her computer and did a search on Duncan
Wyatt, FBI agent news stories.
The
search brought up dozens of stories. One in the Washington Post detailed how
Wyatt was jogging on a path around the woodlands in a Maryland suburb when a stray bullet from a
deer hunter struck him in the left hip.
Several
paragraphs detailed Wyatt’s career with the FBI. He traveled the world to
interrogate and investigate terrorist activity and was one of the bureau’s most
successful counterterrorism agents, responsible for thwarting dozens of plots
and saving countless lives, home and abroad.
A
follow up story stated how Wyatt called 911 on his cell phone after he’d been
shot, but it took nearly forty-five minutes for an ambulance to arrive and the
lack of response time caused the hip bone to die. He received a hip transplant
and was retired from active duty from the FBI. After a year he was officially
retired from the bureau active or otherwise.
The
hunter responsible for the stray bullet was never located or identified.
Kate
heard the back door open and a moment later, Jack Jr., Walter and JD walked
into her office.
JD
had a large bandage on his nose.
“It’s
broken,” Walter said. “They set it at the hospital and gave him some pain
killers. About now he’s feeling no pain.”
Kate
looked at JD and he was definitely looped.
“And
you?”
Walter
shook his head and chuckled softly.
“What?”
Kate asked.
“Swollen,
purple and tender is what the doctor wrote on the report,” Walter said.
“Swollen,
purple and tender,” Kate said. “You have a run tomorrow, are you going to make
it?”
“I’ll
make it,” Jack Jr. said.
“Walter,
can you go in place of JD?” Kate said.
“Guess
I’ll have to,” Walter said.
“I’ll
drive JD and Lonnie home,” Kate said. “Then I’ll come back and stay until four
when the second shift arrives.”
“Why
can’t I stay?” Lonnie said.
“Because
you’re underage, that’s why,” Kate said. “Let’s go.”
*****
Kate was back in
the bar by ten past two. Already the regulars were in place at the bar and the
jukebox was playing country tunes. A few were playing pool. If they noticed
JD’s blood on the felt they ignored it or didn’t care.
She
took a seat at the bar near Walter. He filled a mug with coffee and set it in
front of her.
“The
run is for ten to two, isn’t it?” Walter said.
Kate
sipped and nodded.
“Best
get the on-call people in early then,” Walter said. “JD will be out of
commission for several days.”
“Apparently
Wyatt hasn’t slowed down any,” Kate said.
“I
hate the son of a bitch like poison, but I have to admit he always was a fine
athlete,” Walter said.
“I’ll
make those calls and then help you out at the bar,” Kate said.
*****
By four o’clock
the Saturday afternoon crowd was in full gear. Two-fisted drinkers lined the
bar while others played pool and darts. The jukebox played one country tune
after another without a break. A few couples were dancing on the floor reserved
for a band.
And
despite herself, Kate felt a bit flustered when the clock behind the bar showed
three minutes past four and Wyatt hadn’t showed yet.
She
hoped Walter didn’t notice her slight anxiety. She glanced his way and he was
busy with customers.
Then
Wyatt walked in and she walked down the bar to Walter.
“Be
back around nine I suppose,” she said.
Walter
glared at Wyatt.
“If
he gets out of line, shoot the bastard’s nuts off,” Walter said.
Eight
Kate met Wyatt
at the door and when they walked to his Taurus, he opened the passenger door
for her they way he used to when they were in high school and he would borrow
Walter’s Oldsmobile on Saturday nights.
When
he got behind the wheel, Kate said, “Still a polite, gentleman I see, Wyatt.”
“I
do my best,” Wyatt said. “Go ahead and smoke you want to. It won’t bother me
none.”
Wyatt
pulled out of the lot and turned west on Route One.
Kate
obliged him by lighting up a cigarette.
“Any
place in particular you want to eat?” Kate asked.
“Not
really,” Wyatt said. “I thought we’d park and wander until a place struck your
fancy.”
Kate
looked at Wyatt. Struck your fancy.
Good God, he was still a dork.
“Speaking
of finding a place, did you?” Kate asked.
“To
stay? Yes I did. A little bungalow motel by the water, or so it says. I haven’t
seen any water so far except for the pool.”
“Marathon ?”
“Islamorada.”
“A
lot of changes in twenty years.”
“Route
One is wider, the old bridge is falling apart, more tourist spots to get ripped
off in, but it’s not as bad as I thought,” Wyatt said.
Kate
smoked her cigarette and felt the cool air-conditioning on her face and it was
almost like entering a time warp to her past.
Their
past, really.
She
fifteen, he a year older, riding along One in Walter’s Olds on a Saturday
afternoon with the air on high and the glaring sun on their faces. Going
nowhere, really, just being young with nothing else to do and no where to do
it.
She
was, as the cliché goes, head over heels for him back then.
There
was little doubt in her mind he would be her husband.
And
then she turned sixteen.
And
Jack Wolfe entered her life.
And
turned it upside down.
In
their junior year at high school, Wyatt was the star quarterback and Jack was
the starting running back. Wyatt was a good six-foot-one, but Jack towered over
him. Jack reeked with arrogance while Wyatt possessed a quiet confidence. On
the field they were an unbeatable combination and won the state championship
two years in their junior and senior years. The school hadn’t won a
championship since.
It
was off the field where their differences were most apparent. Wyatt was a
straight A student. Jack was more the C minus type. Wyatt was quiet and
reserved, but had a dry sense of humor that was lost on most people. Jack was a
runaway freight train, unafraid to say or do anything at any given time.
Soon
after her sixteenth birthday, Kate found herself less attracted to Wyatt and
more and more drawn to bad-boy Jack Wolfe.
Wyatt
never took her past the kissing stage, even at the drive-in.
Jack,
on their first date just plowed right into her and in the back seat of his
father’s Chevy he made her no longer a virgin.
After
that she broke it off with Wyatt and became Jack Wolfe’s girl. And dropped out
of school at seventeen to give birth to Jack Jr.
A
year later, Wyatt moved away to college and she married Jack.
“Awful
quiet,” Wyatt said.
Kate
lowered the window and flicked out the spent cigarette. “Sorry. I have a lot on
my mind.”
“We’re
here. Let me find a place to park and we’ll walk around a bit,” Wyatt said.
“The
lot near the movie theatre is the best bet,” Kate said.
Wyatt
found the lot and parked and they walked to the main drag of Key West . On Mallory Square , the masses were already
gathering for the evening event, the sunset, even though it was a good three
hours away.
The
Square was filled with street performers, shirtless men on skates, women in
bikinis on skates and tourists enjoying the outdoor bars where it was legal to
stroll in public while consuming alcohol.
“Do
you want to eat in the place with the wild cats or the place with the wild
chickens?” Kate asked.
“The
cats is Mexican if I remember right,” Wyatt said. “Cats all right?”
“Good
by me,” Kate said.
They
walked several blocks to the restaurant where, even at five in the afternoon,
the wait time was thirty minutes.
“Cold
drink?” Wyatt said.
They
waited at the bar.
Wyatt
had a dark, Mexican beer. Kate went with a cold glass of white wine.
“How
did Jack come by the bar?” Wyatt asked.
“Luck,
mostly,” Kate said. “The DEA busted the place for drugs I think it was
seventeen years ago. The place went up for auction and Jack had a great year
charter fishing. He put in a high bid and won at auction.”
“I
can’t see Jack trapped behind a bar every night,” Wyatt said. “But I can’t see
him charter fishing, either.”
“He
settled down some, but I can’t disagree with you, Jack was a restless one to
the bone,” Kate said.
“They
never arrested anybody for his murder,” Wyatt said.
“No.”
“Suspects?”
“You
know all this, Wyatt. Don’t bullshit me. What’s on your mind?”
“I
may be retired, but I still have all my contacts at the Bureau,” Wyatt said. “I
can have them do some poking around for you if you’d like?”
“It’s
fourteen years plus years ago, Wyatt,” Kate said. “Leave it alone.”
“Okay.”
“That’s
it, okay? No arguments?”
“Why
would I argue?” Wyatt said. “It was just a thought is all.”
“Well,
leave it alone,” Kate said. “We got over not having Jack around a long time
ago.”
“Sure.”
The
hostess came to the bar and told them a table was ready.
Jack
ordered the chef’s steak. Kate went with chicken.
“Would
you mind a question about Walter?” Wyatt said.
“That’s
a trick question,” Kate said. “How do I know if I mind the question if I don’t
know what you’re going to ask me.”
“Is
this a Pulp Fiction moment?” Wyatt said.
Kate
grinned. “I guess it is. What’s your question?”
“You
and Walter, how did that come about?”
“Don’t
you know?” Kate said, somewhat surprised.
“No.
I’ve been away a long time.”
Kate
paused for a moment to gather her words.
“You
broke Walter’s heart, Wyatt,” she said. “He was devastated for a long time. He
took Jack under his wing and after a few years, Jack became like a son to him.”
“The
son he wished he had,” Wyatt said.
“Well,
yes.”
“Walter
was angry because I chose a path in law enforcement rather than stay here and
become a small time criminal like him,” Wyatt said. “Growing up, he was always
into some small-time scheme of some sort. Stolen TV’s, VCR’s, even women’s
dresses. I was not about to follow him to prison, Kate.”
“I
understand all that,” Kate said. “Walter doesn’t.”
“So
after Jack died, you became what, the daughter Walter always wanted?”
“More
or less.”
“And
all he does is tend bar for you, nothing else?”
“Like
what?” Kate said. “Walter’s an old man now, Wyatt. He’s tired. Every once in a
while he’ll go out on a charter, but that’s about all.”
“He
still hates me, though,” Wyatt said.
Kate
grinned. “He does that.”
“So
how’s the dessert in this place?” Wyatt said.
*****
Wyatt and Kate
took their place among a crowd of a thousand or more to watch the sunset.
Everything and everybody seemed to just freeze in place fifteen minutes prior
to the sun going down. Even conversations stopped.
The
sky was a deep orange color, glowing. A few sailboats caught in the glory
appeared as dark silhouettes on the water. Then the sun touched the horizon and
there was an explosion of orange and gold across the sky that lasted a full
five minutes or more.
Then,
as the sun slowly sank below the horizon the colors dimmed and faded until the
sky was caught in twilight and finally darkness.
The
crowd became animated and quickly dispersed along Mallory Square .
“I
haven’t seen that in a long time,” Wyatt said.
“Feel
like walking a bit?” Kate said.
“Sure.”
They
walked away from the crowd and wandered aimlessly for a while and somehow wound
up on Whitehead and South Street ,
the southernmost point in the continental United States .
They
stood in front of the giant buoy that served as a marker.
“I
almost forgot about this,” Wyatt said as he read the plaque.
“Just
ninety miles to Cuba ,”
Kate said.
“I’ve
been there,” Wyatt said. “Dozens of times.”
“For
the FBI?”
Wyatt
nodded. “Interrogate prisoners at Gitmo.”
“That
sounds like fun.”
“Not
so much,” Wyatt said. “Want to walk back?”
“I
told Walter I’d be back by nine.”
They
returned to the parking lot and again, Wyatt opened Kate’s door before opening
his.
Traffic
was much lighter on the return trip.
“So,
what do you think?” Kate said as she lit a cigarette.
“About?”
“Sticking
around?”
“Debating,”
Wyatt said. “It’s not a bad place to sit out winter while I figure things out.
How often do you charter fish?”
“Four
or five runs a week,” Kate said. “Party of four or more only. One hundred and
fifty per person for a four hour block. You want more time it’s extra. You
thinking of doing some fishing?”
“I’m
thinking why not?” Wyatt said. “Last time I fished was … hell, I don’t remember
it’s been so long. High school, maybe.”
“I
don’t think it’d be a good idea to use my boat,” Kate said. “Walter would have
a fit and you didn’t exactly endear yourself to my boys, Neanderthals as they
may be.”
“No
problem,” Wyatt said. “There must be a dozen charter boats in Key West alone.”
“At
least that many,” Kate agreed.
“What
do you think it would cost to rent or lease a boat for the season?” Wyatt said.
“A
lot more than it’s worth.”
“You’re
probably right, but I would like to try my hand at a swordfish.”
“Enough
with the fish,” Kate said. “Mind a personal question?”
“How
do I know if I mind if I don’t know what the question is?” Wyatt said.
Kate
grinned. “Touché.”
“What’s
your question?”
“How
come, back when we were dating you never tried to put the moves on me?” Kate
said.
“I
wasn’t ready and neither were you,” Wyatt said.
Kate
nodded. “True.”
“That
didn’t stop Jack though, did it?”
Kate
laughed. “No it did not. Bing, bang, boom, de-flowered.”
Wyatt
turned into the parking lot of the Wolfe’s Lair. It was nearly full.
“Business
is good,” he said.
“Want
to come in for a drink?” Kate asked.
“I
don’t think Walter would appreciate my company,” Wyatt said.
“Probably
not. Goodnight then,” Kate said and opened her door.
She
didn’t look back as Wyatt drove off the lot onto One, and entered the Lair and
went straight to the bar where Walter was on duty. She grabbed a vacant stool.
Walter
came over and stood in front of her.
“I
don’t trust him,” she said.
Nine
Driving back to
Islamorada, Wyatt stopped at the big liquor store and purchased a bottle of
Black Maple Hill, sixteen-year-old bourbon. Back in Maryland , a bottle, when he could find one
went for around ninety dollars. For some reason the store charged one hundred
and five.
The
night was still fairly young and he wasn’t tired and he drove to Big Pine to
Walter’s house, the house he grew up in.
The
place hadn’t changed much at all. It was a one-story home made to appear larger
by the hurricane stilts it rested upon. In dire need of paint and repair to the
storm shutters, it was obvious even in the dark that Walter let the place go to
hell.
What
little patch of lawn there was needed mowing and weeding.
An
old rusting F-150 truck was parked or abandoned under the overhang between the
stilts.
It
must be twenty-five years old or older. He wondered why Walter kept such an old
vehicle that obviously belonged in a junkyard.
When
he was a kid there was a Jamaican hammock and some patio furniture.
But
that was when his mother was still around. She left when he was ten and not he,
Walter or anybody else as far as he knew ever heard a word from her again.
He
never asked Walter why she left and Walter never volunteered the information.
By the time he was in high school it was if he’d never even had a mother at all
she was so far removed from his memory.
Away
from the house, on the sand he had set up a tire suspended between two poles.
He used to practice throwing a football through the hole in the tire the way he
saw Joe Namath do in old training camp videos. His final year in high school he
could make nine out of ten throws from twenty yards.
He
left the Taurus and walked to the sand where he remembered the tire had hung.
He wondered if he could still make a toss through the hole.
It
was a long time ago. He hadn’t held a football since that final championship
game in his senior year.
He
returned to the Taurus and found himself driving to Cudjoe and didn’t know why
until he found himself on a dark, side road in front of Jack’s old home, the
home where Kate and her sons now lived.
He
parked in the shadows on the opposite side of the street and watched the
two-story home. Every light was lit on both floors. Loud rock music blared some
heavy metal song from the eighties.
He
remembered the first time he drove into the driveway on a Saturday night in
Walter’s Olds to take Kate to the drive-in. It was hot and she wore shorts and
a tank-top. Her blonde hair was pinned up off her neck. She smiled at him as
she got into the Olds. He looked at her one green eye and one gray eye and went
speechless the entire drive to the theatre.
She
mistook his silence for shyness.
But
he wasn’t shy. He was having a silent debate with his conscience on if it was
the right thing to do to have sex with her in the back seat of Walter’s Olds.
Good God he wanted to more than anything, and he could tell that she did, too.
His
conscience talked him down, told him what the right thing to do was, and then
he’d steal a glance at Kate’s tan, muscular legs and the argument would start
right up again.
In
the end his conscience won out and he was a prefect gentleman. They ate burgers
and fries, popcorn and drank soda and hugged as they watched the double
feature.
God,
what were the movies, Wyatt thought?
All
he could remember was the first one was something terrible, almost painful to
watch it was so bad.
Afterward
he drove her home.
From
inside the house, he could hear someone yelling. It sounded like Jack Jr., but
he wasn’t sure.
Wyatt
started the engine and drove straight to the motel. The pool was dark and
deserted. He took a cool shower to wash the stinking heat off his skin and then
opened the bottle of Black Maple Hill. He poured about an ounce into a water
glass and sat naked in front of the window AC unit and let the cold air
basically air dry his body.
He
took small sips of the smooth bourbon and thought about Jack.
Even
after Jack stole Kate from him they remained best friends right up until
graduation. It was impossible to stay mad at Jack for any length of time. He’d
grin and rub your head, say something stupid and you’d cave in to his boyish
charms.
Just
like Kate did.
The
son of a bitch could play ball, too.
In
the senior championship game, Jack ran for two hundred yards, scored two
touchdowns, and caught eight passes for another two.
Wyatt
had the game of his life, throwing thirty completions out of forty passes for
three hundred yards and four touchdowns, but all anybody wanted to talk about
was Jack Wolfe.
The
thing was he didn’t mind one bit. He knew he was leaving the Keys to pursue
something outside of himself and that Jack was destined to stay and be a
good-ole-boy the rest of his days.
Except
that Jack’s days were cut way short. Murdered in Miami in an unsolved case that was now
fifteen years old.
Wyatt
made a few mental notes, finished off the ounce of bourbon and tucked in
between the sheets with the AC on high.
Jack
wasn’t the victim of a random killing, of that he was sure.
Wyatt
made some mental notes as he tossed and turned in bed.
In
the morning he hoped to get some answers to some old questions.
Answers
that may shed some light on Kate’s activities.
The
lights of a car briefly came through the window and turned off. He glanced at
the digital clock on the tiny nightstand. One thirty in the morning.
He
heard footsteps on the cement path. A door opened and closed.
A
few minutes later a door opened and closed again and softer footsteps followed
and the gate to the pool opened.
There
was a splash.
Wyatt,
still wide awake got out of bed and went to the window. Lo-Lo was swimming a
lap, touched the side of the pool, reversed and swam back to the other side.
The
moon was nearly full and high and he could see well enough so that when she
climbed out of the pool using the shallow end steps, he could see that she was
completely nude.
She
didn’t bother with a towel and picked up her bikini and put it on. Then she
lifted a bottle of wine, poured a glass, toasted the moon and sat in a
recliner.
“Well
how about that,” Wyatt said aloud and then returned to bed.
Ten
Wyatt was up
early and started the morning by brewing coffee in the four-cup pot on the
small, kitchen counter.
While
the coffee brewed, he got down on the rug and did one hundred push-ups without
stopping, then switched over to sit-ups and did one hundred of those, switched
back and did another fifty of each.
He
took a five minute rest.
Then
he placed his feet on the bed and did fifty inclined push-ups and on the last
rep, he went into a plank position and held it motionless for a silent count of
one hundred and eighty seconds.
He
changed into sweat pants and tee-shirt, filled a cup with coffee and went out
to the pool to drink it in the cool morning air. His watch read seven-fifteen.
The cup was empty by seven-twenty and he got up to start his run.
Wyatt
didn’t clock distance, but the time. He ran for one hour. Depending upon where
he was the distance always varied. If he was in a place that was all hills the
distance in an hour would be shorter than the very flat, Florida
Keys .
He
ran to the main drag of Route One and then turned down a side street and ran
loops around neighborhoods and back. As he ran he could feel the heat begin to
set in and by the thirty-minute-mark, his tee-shirt was soaked through.
Wyatt
used the daily run, as he used to call it, as his office time. As he ran he
entered a zone and his thoughts ran free and oftentimes he thought more clearly
about a case or suspect.
With
ten minutes left in the run, Wyatt returned to Route One and headed down the
back roads to the motel. He coffee cup sat undisturbed where he set it and he
grabbed it on the way in.
He
was absolutely drenched in sweat by the time he put the key into his bungalow
door. The room was chilled from the AC unit that he left running.
He
took a cool shower and dressed casually in jeans and teal Polo shirt and took a
second cup of coffee out to the pool and sat in the shade.
Wyatt
turned and looked at Bungalow twenty-three when the door opened and Lo-Lo
emerged with a large mug of coffee in her hand. She was covered up in a beach
wrap. She smiled at him as she opened the gate to the pool area.
“Morning,”
she said as she took the chair next to Wyatt’s.
“Morning,”
Wyatt said.
“Do
you know anything about car brakes?” Lo-Lo asked.
“I
know when I press on them the car is supposed to stop,” Wyatt said. “You having
a problem?”
“I
noticed last night when I step on the brake it makes a grinding noise.”
“There’s
a place about a mile from here that will fix them,” Wyatt said. “Sounds like
you need pads and maybe rotors.”
Lo-Lo
sipped her coffee, and then said, “Have you had breakfast?”
“No.”
“I
hate sitting around a repair shop. Want to have breakfast with me?”
“I
have some errands to run, how about I pick you up at the shop in about an
hour?” Wyatt said.
Lo-Lo
smiled. “That would be great.”
*****
Wyatt drove to
the cookie-cutter office supply store on One. At the copy center he wrote down
their fax machine number. Then he purchased a disposable cell phone and
returned to the Taurus, activated the phone and called Jonas at his ATF office
in Washington .
After
three transfers and twice being put of hold, Jonas came on the line.
“Jonas,
it’s Wyatt,” Wyatt said.
“How’s
it going?” Jonas said.
“I
need you to do something for me,” Wyatt said. “Get copies of the Miami PD
reports on the murder of Jack Wolfe. Every scrap of paper on record.”
“Why?”
“We
both believe that Jack’s murder wasn’t random, but have no evidence that says
otherwise,” Wyatt said. “I think his death had something to do with gun
smuggling and may tell me a little something more about Katherine’s activities
in the Keys.”
“That
could take a day or more,” Jonas said.
“I’m
in no hurry,” Wyatt said. “No secondary reports like I’ve already read. The
actual reports to the last crossed T and dotted I.”
“And
send them where?”
“Write
down this fax number,” Wyatt said and read off the number. “Call me one hour
before you fax them so I’ll be at the machine.”
“Anything
else?”
“How
am I on expense money?”
“Whatever
you need to get the job done is available.”
“Glad
to hear that.”
“Why?”
“This
could take a while.”
*****
Wyatt found
Lo-Lo in the waiting room at the repair shop. She was dressed in jeans, a white
blouse and wore black jogging shoes. Her hair was pulled back away from her
neck. She was reading a copy of People magazine.
She
smiled when she spotted Wyatt, tossed the People and stood up.
“I’m
thinking strawberry pancakes,” she said.
