Read The Collection, Vol. 1 Page 15


  Chapter One

  The rental car sat idling in the desert heat. The sunlight glinted of its metallic silver surface and waves of mirage water seemed to dance around it from a distance away. It was a shinning beacon in a mostly empty parking lot along the main drag of the small Nevada town. As Sheriff Benson pulled up next to it, he thought of going into Mark’s diner for a bottle of real water. Mirages wouldn’t do. He would have considered a beer but he was on duty. Even in a no account hamlet like this one the little stuff mattered.

  No one had been in the vehicle for at least over four hours now and the manager of the diner had started to get nervous. Benson thought about how people got spooked too easy. He’d received the call from Mark twenty minutes ago and knew what the tone of voice meant: something unusual had happened. In a place like this the unusual could just pack its bags and wait for the next bus out. It wasn’t welcome. But what was so strange? It was more than an abandoned car, but Mark wouldn’t say what had gotten under his skin. All the lawman knew was that no one was really sure how the car had gotten there.

  Benson decided to give the car the old once-over before going into the restaurant and asking official kinds of questions. It was a newer model, he knew that much. One of those hybrids everybody was so crazy over these days. From the rear he could see the doors were locked. Something, maybe a light windbreaker jacket, was slung over the front passenger seat. He stepped closer to have a better look at the front.

  He stood next to the passenger side door. It was a windbreaker over the seat, a light blue one. But that wasn’t what drew his attention the most. He finally saw what had probably thrown Mark off kilter. Sitting on the seat was an urn, like the kind in which people kept the remains of relatives. Benson leaned a little closer.

  The urn was white with pale blue flowers and flourishes lacing around its middle. Resting atop the thing was what appeared to be a small handwritten note. He couldn’t quite make it out. He lifted his sunglasses off his face and moved toward the front of the idling car. He was already becoming used to its steady rumble. He almost didn’t notice it anymore. In the back of his mind he barely formed a thought. It was gone before he realized it was there. The thought he wouldn’t remember was, People get too used to things in their surroundings too fast and then forget about them far too quickly. He leaned closer to the note from his new position in front of the side mirror. He could read the note.

  “I’m so sorry,” he spoke the message as he read it. “Sorry about what, I wonder? Your friend in the jar, there? Leaving an idling rental car in the middle of the Nevada blaze? All of the above?” He took a few backward steps so he could see the whole front end. Nevada plates. He pulled out the note pad from his front pocket and scribbled the number. He circled the car slowly.

  Not a scratch. No missing hubcaps. No bumper damage. Nothing strange but the Deceased Stranger in the urn. Sometimes people got nervous if they damaged a rental without buying the insurance and abandoned it or tried to destroy it. That wasn’t what this was. And besides, who forgot Uncle Frank or Aunt Sue’s ashes in the front seat if they were trying to get rid of the evidence of a rental fender bender?

  He went back to his own car, retrieved a long, slender strip of metal and returned to the idling rental and began to jimmy the door lock. After about five minutes he finally heard the victorious click. He pulled the metal strip out, opened the door and looked in. Nothing out of the ordinary except the urn and the jacket. He sat in the driver’s seat and reached for the key to turn the car off. He froze when he looked at the dashboard display. The fuel gauge registered as full.

  A car that had been idling for at least four hours and probably had been running for more would have used up something. Even if it was a hybrid. A few other details flooded the sheriff’s mind. The nearest town, and therefore the nearest gas station, was at least fifty miles away. That would have used up some gas. The gas station in this town had been closed down for the last two days for repairs and this car could only have been in town since this morning or early this afternoon. If it had been around longer he was sure people would have noticed it. He would have noticed it himself.

  Maybe there’s a gas canister in the trunk, he thought. He found the trunk release lever, pulled it, heard it release, turned off the car, stepped out and closed the door. He arrived at the back and peered in. He half expected to find a body wrapped in a garbage bag, like on TV. Nothing. He closed the trunk.

  Benson would have said things didn’t add up, but he didn’t even have anything resembling numbers to add up. This was weird. He turned his head to look at Mark’s diner and decided to see what the people inside knew. He doubted he’d gain much but sometimes the smallest detail was enough to open the door for a decent investigation.

  The walk across the parking lot was short but hot. It was one of those days that were above average temperatures, even for Nevada. Heat seemed to come at you from all directions. It radiated up at you from the asphalt. The breezeless air held the burn like an older brother held a younger one in a headlock. And now everyone was being punished for it.

  The little bell over the door jingled as he opened it. Stepping inside was like walking into a wall. Air conditioning was a beautiful thing on a day like today. A quick check to the right as he walked in told him that it was only eighty-five degrees in the diner. Heaven on earth. Outside was the other place.

  “Hey, Stu!” called Mark from behind the counter. “Glad you could make it on short notice.”

  Benson turned in the direction of the voice. Forties, overweight from indulging in his own business a bit too much over the years, sweat stains on the plain white t-shirt, Mark bounded from behind the counter waving one hand as if the sheriff would have a hard time picking him out of the three customers and the waitress in the joint. The man stopped about an inch from his face. All the smells of a truck stop kitchen came with him. Benson didn’t mind. He’d known the man for years, since grade school, probably. They weren’t exactly close fiends, but they knew each other’s phone numbers and got together with a few other guys once a month to play poker in someone’s basement. He looked more nervous than he sounded on the phone.

  “What do you think of her, Stu?” By ‘her’ Mark meant the car. For some reason cars were always girls with Mark. It might have been because the man never married and for that Stuart Benson never blamed him. There weren’t many options in the sleepy town of Forgetful, Nevada. The sheriff himself had gotten a bad one and it lasted only two years. That was twelve years ago. Only at rare moments like this did he think about it anymore.

  “Well, she’s an abandoned rental car, Mark. Nothing to get bent out of shape over.” It was a lie, but Mark would never be able to tell. It might be something to get bent out of shape over. He just wasn’t sure why yet. But, for Mark’s ease of mind, it was better to play it off as nothing. It wasn’t likely to bring the man any harm. The consequences would be reserved for the person who abandoned the car in the first place.

  “Why do you think she was left running?” the large man asked.

  “Don’t know. Maybe the renter was in a hurry.”

  “If he was in a hurry don’t you think he would have taken the car to get where he was going?” Mark replied.

  It made sense, of course, but there were others questions that needed answering before they could be certain about anything.

  “Well that all depends on who the driver was, if that person was alone, where they came from and where they were going…among other things.” Several different scenarios were rolling through the sheriff’s mind at present. Maybe there were two or more people. Maybe they had gone out into the desert together for some reason. There were documented cases of one person taking another into the desert to make an illegal deal only for one of the parties to find out it was a set-up. Sometimes one of them was left buried under a few feet of sand while the other drove off with a case of money or drugs or whatever. And that was just one of the options. At this point it could be a lot of different
things. But Benson would never mention any of this to Mark.

  “So, what next?” Mark asked.

  “Next I have to ask some questions. If you’re not too busy I’ll just start with you.”

  “Sure,” Mark said. “Lunch crowd’s gone. Things will be slow for the next two or three hours.”

  “It shouldn’t take very long. Is there someplace we can go where we can talk in private?” Benson didn’t want other people hearing the questions he would be asking some of them. It might give them the opportunity to over-think and come up with answers that weren’t theirs. A person’s memory was also sometimes a fragile thing and influence from someone else could fabricate a memory that never really happened. These false memories always seemed real because they were often things that made sense, whether they were factually remembered or not. And some people just wanted to be heroes and freely made up details they thought might be useful.

  Mark had a small office at the back of the kitchen. Benson walked in and Mark came in behind him and closed the door after himself. The sheriff retrieved the small notebook and pen and started in on his questions.

  “Who was the first to notice the car?”

  Mark had to think for a moment. “That would have been Lou. I can’t remember seeing it when I came in this morning, but that doesn’t mean it wasn’t there. Lou came in and asked whose new car was out there in parking lot.” He paused to think again, his eyes squinting a bit. Benson wrote the name ‘Louis Dahl’ in his note book. Lou was Mark’s second string short order cook. He didn’t come in until ten o’clock in the morning most days, including today. It was about two-thirty now.

  Benson moved onto his next question. “Did anyone see the driver?”

  “I don’t think so, but I didn’t ask.”

  It went on like this for another fifteen or twenty minutes. As Benson suspected Mark didn’t have much to tell. There was a lot of basic information the sheriff had already deduced on his own. And after the brief examination he had performed in the parking lot when he first arrived there were many things Benson knew which Mark didn’t.

  Next, Benson interviewed Lou, the cook. “No, I didn’t see nobody,” Lou said. Then with a hushed and nervous curiosity he asked, “Did you look inside?” The question was asked in such a way that revealed Lou already knew what was in the front seat. Mark had let Benson know that the short order cook had ventured out to the car to inspect it before Stu had arrived. There was no harm done in that, the sheriff knew, because the vehicle had been locked.

  “Yes,” he replied, then asked, “You?”

  “That thing in the front seat…is it what I think it is?” There was a kind of fascinated trepidation in the man as he asked this.

  Benson weighed his response options, not wanting to feed small town the paranoia and rumor mill. In the end, however, he decided a simple and straightforward answer would be best. “The urn? I think so.”

  The waitress, Stacie, was even less helpful than Lou. She was college age but not college educated. Her training for life was of the brand one received from growing up in a second rate trailer park and her professors were sitcoms and soap operas. This, Benson knew, wasn’t something to be held against her as not all of what was needed for life could be found in libraries, study halls, and dorm parties. In the sheriff’s view the Stacies of the world made up a better part of the population and mattered as much as the elite upper crust of society.

  “Have you seen the car up close?” Benson asked.

  “No way,” she said while rubbing her arms as if chilled in the manufactured mid-eighties temperature. “It gives me the creeps.” She fell silent as the sheriff scribbled his notes. Before he could ask his next question she leaned forward and in a tone that communicated the sharing of a confidence she said, “Lou told me what was in it.”

  He didn’t allow the inconsequential revelation to interrupt his duty. He merely looked up at her, nodded his head in acknowledgment and gave an audible affirmation of the statement. “Mm-hm. Is there anything else you noticed?”

  “Just that it’s one of them city cars,” she said matter-of-factly. ‘City car’ was local code for any car that was less than a decade old and therefore only affordable to someone who lived in one of the larger cities. Benson wrote the phrase down on his little pad and underlined it.

  The last interview was with one of the regular patrons, Ed, and he came up with about the same story as with Mark, Lou and Stacie, although he had a few colorful thoughts on what had happened. Ed, in his late fifties and showing by his weight that he spent a lot more time in Mark’s greasy spoon diner, was saying, “I don’t think so. Nothing much to notice about her other than she ain’t from around here.” He hesitated for a moment and looked like he wanted to say something but was afraid to. Courage triumphed over trepidation and Ed said, “Hey Sheriff?”

  Attentive , Benson responded, “Yeah, Ed?”

  “You don’t think it’s them aliens, do you?”

  Unable to stifle his chuckling, the sheriff said, “What?”

  Keeping a completely straight face, Ed continued, “You know, little green men come here from beyond to probe your…”

  Benson, still trying to suppress his laughter, interrupted saying, “Boy, I hope not Ed. That would sure ruin my day.”

  And soon after that the interviews were over and the obvious parts of the story were laid out for the sheriff. There was an abandoned, idling car which seemed to come from nowhere and generally a creepy feeling about it. He had all he was going to get for the moment.

  He stepped out of the air conditioning into the sweltering heat and inwardly prayed for a cold front. The asphalt of the lot beneath him seemed to pull at his feet as he walked back to his patrol car. He got in, turned the car on and pulled away from the diner and headed back to the station. On the ride back his mind was plagued with the question of how the car might have come to its place at the diner. Who had the driver been? What possible motive could he have had for leaving it? What was the bigger story here?

  He radioed the station to set up a time for the car to be toed and impounded. That would all happen sometime after dinner and he planned to be there when it did. Something else was tugging his mind for attention but it had no form, nothing Benson could identify at least. If he gave it space it would eventually come to him. It always did.

 
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