Read The Good Guy Page 15


  seemed to orchestrate its energies to thwart him.

  In order to engage in some constructive reflection, he needed a place where he could relax, feel at ease. Taverns, coffeehouses, and cafés had never appealed to him.

  He was a home-loving man, and pretty much any home would do, as long as it met his standards of cleanliness.

  Twenty-Nine

  After speaking with Tim on the phone at half past midnight, to inform him about the call from Hitch Lombard, Pete Santo took a two-hour nap before continuing his on-line search for a clue to the hit man’s true identity.

  Shy Zoey refused to jump on the bed and sleep at his feet. She curled up on her dog bed in the corner.

  Her refusal to join him was a reliable predictor that he would have some heavy-duty dreams. Perhaps the capacity to enter a dream state might be preceded by a subtle change in body chemistry that a dog, with a sense of smell thousands of times more powerful than that of a human being, could detect. Or maybe she was psychic.

  Half reclining against a pile of feather pillows, Pete said, “Come on. Come up.”

  She raised her head. Her soulful brown eyes regarded him with what might have been disbelief. Or pity.

  “No nightmares. I promise. Has your dad ever lied to you? I’m just taking a nap here.”

  Zoey lowered her head, resting her chin between her fore-legs, and her pendulous upper lips—flews, they were called—bloomed over her paws, and she closed her eyes.

  “My feet smell especially fine tonight,” he said. “You’d enjoy sleeping with your snout near my feet.”

  She raised one eyebrow without opening her eyes. She licked her chops. She lowered the eyebrow. She yawned. She sighed. Invitation declined.

  Familiar with rejection, Pete matched her sigh and then switched off the lamp.

  He went instantly to sleep. He always did. Falling asleep was never a problem. Staying asleep was a bitch.

  Of course, he dreamed. Dogs know.

  Birds died in flight and fell, and the severed heads of babies sang a sweet and melancholy tune, while the woman pulled out her hair by the roots and made an offering of it because she had nothing else to give.

  He woke at 2:48, gasping for light, and turned on the nightstand lamp.

  From her bed, Zoey watched him with a sad expression.

  He took a quick shower, dressed, and made a pot of coffee almost corrosive enough to test the brewer to destruction.

  By 3:22, he had settled at his desk in the study, surfing the Web, drinking the ink-black blend, and eating his mother’s walnut brownies.

  His mom was a bad cook. She was a worse baker. The brownies tasted all right, but they were hard enough to break teeth.

  He ate them anyway. Proud of her imagined kitchen wizardry, she had given him a large plate heaped with the brownies. He couldn’t throw them away. She was his mother.

  The danger of dreams having passed, Zoey squirmed into the knee space under the desk and slept on his feet. She didn’t beg for any of the brownies. A wise dog.

  The call from Hitch Lombard had clearly been triggered by Pete’s attempt to match Kravet’s many aliases to the names of officers in various local, state, and national law-enforcement databases. This time he would stay away from such authorized-access-only resources, where evidently those names triggered embedded security alerts that tagged the inquirer as a potential troublemaker.

  Googling each of the names and combing through the hits promised to be an arduous task. A lot of people had the name Robert Krane, for instance.

  He needed to string each name to some search words. Considering that the Krane identity and most of the others were supported by a California driver’s license and address, even though bogus, Pete added California.

  Tim had been miserly with information, as though paying out any facts about the woman would only buy her greater trouble than she already had. Parrot, mug, egg, custard, pie: They were not words that made a useful search string.

  Whoever the many-named man might be, logic suggested that he had been involved with some police agency, on one side of the law or the other. Consequently, Pete added police to the list, and began the search.

  A few names later, at 4:07 A.M., he made the connection to the brutal Cream Sugar killings. For forty-eight hours, the police had listed one Roy Kutter, of San Francisco, as a person of interest, which had become the politically correct, tone-deaf way of saying “suspect.”

  The smiling man’s portfolio of identities included Roy Lee Kutter.

  As Pete pored through all the news stories that he could find on the Cream Sugar investigation, his gumshoe intuition raised alarms. He didn’t need a dog’s superior sense of smell to know this case was rotten.

  His bloodhound blood called him to the hunt, and happily he set to work, considering each news story as a series of snapshots, slowly developing a broader picture of the case.

  At 4:38, the cable service failed, and he lost his Internet connection.

  His cable company was reliable. Often a service interruption proved to be brief.

  While he waited to get back on-line, he went to the bathroom and took a whiz.

  In the kitchen, he refreshed his coffee.

  Turning away from the brewing machine with a full mug, he discovered that Zoey had followed him.

  Her intense gaze, raised head, and anxious expression suggested that she might need to visit the backyard. Her tail wasn’t wagging, however, and a certain easy wag had always been a component of her I-need-to-pee code.

  He put down his mug and got a beach towel from the laundry room. When the dog came in from the rain, Pete would need to rub her dry.

  Opening the back door, he said, “Okay. Want to kill some grass, girl?”

  She approached the door and stood at the threshold, staring across the porch, into the yard.

  “Zoey?”

  Her ears lifted. Her black nostrils flared and quivered, testing the air.

  The thunder and lightning had stopped. Anyway, storms had never frightened her. Like most retrievers, she loved rain—though not on this occasion.

  “Coyote out there?” he asked.

  She backed away from the open door.

  “Raccoon?” he suggested.

  Zoey padded out of the kitchen.

  He switched on the outside light and stepped onto the porch. He saw nothing unusual and heard only the rain.

  When he went looking for Zoey, he found her in the living room. She stood at the front door.

  He opened the door, and again she stared out at the night. She would not cross the threshold.

  She made a low sound in her throat. It almost might be mistaken for a growl. Zoey never growled.

  The telephone rang. At 4:46 in the morning.

  Ears up, head up, tail tucked, Zoey scampered into the study, and he followed her.

  The telephone rang again.

  He stood looking at it. The caller’s ID was blocked.

  On the fourth ring, he went into the bedroom. His Galco Jackass rig and service pistol lay on a shelf in the closet. It included an ammo pouch with two spare magazines.

  As he rigged up, the phone stopped ringing.

  In his study once more, he sat at the desk.

  Zoey did not want to return to the knee space, where previously she had been so cozy. She stood by the desk, alert, staring at him. She appeared to be anticipating a nightmare.

  The cable service had not been restored.

  Pete switched off the computer. He sat for a moment, thinking about the Cream Sugar case.

  The telephone rang.

  His wallet and badge case lay on the desk. He put them in his back pockets.

  From the study closet, he got a lined and hooded wind-breaker, slipped into it.

  Zoey followed him into the kitchen, where he snared keys from a pegboard.

  The phone stopped ringing.

  In the garage, he said, “Dress,” and at once the dog came to him to receive her collar. He attached a leash
.

  When he opened the tailgate of the Mercury Mountaineer, she sprang into the cargo space.

  He locked the door between the garage and the house, as he had locked the front and back doors. He intentionally had not turned out the lights.

  Action by action, he moved faster, with more economy. He was in gear now. Maybe he would be quick enough.

  Thirty

  Lumbering south on the coast highway, the aging Transportation Authority bus perfumed the rainy night with an agri-fuel flatulence. This month it might be running on an ethanol blend, on peanut oil, on reprocessed grease from fast-food restaurants, or on some extract of biologically engineered giant mutant soybeans.

  Tim drove around the behemoth, raced five blocks, parked at a restaurant, and abandoned the Explorer, this time perhaps forever.

  He had driven past three bus stops. He and Linda ran two long blocks north, returning to the nearest stop, where they waited for their fragrant new transport.

  The wind blew rain under the roof of the shelter, dashed it in their faces.

  Traffic had increased in the hour before dawn. The siss of tires on the storm-sluiced pavement was an icy sound, reminiscent of sled runners slicing across crusted snow.

  They boarded the bus, ascertained that it went at least as far as Dana Point, and dripped along the aisle as the driver pulled onto the highway.

  This was one of the first buses of the day, and it carried few passengers. Most were women on their way to hard jobs that started early.

  Everyone aboard was dry. They had umbrellas. Some regarded Tim and Linda with sympathy. Others couldn’t repress smug little smiles.

  She led him to seats in the back, at a distance from the nearest other passenger, where they could not be overheard.

  “So what was that?”

  “What was what?”

  “We couldn’t park closer to a bus stop?”

  “No.”

  “Because you don’t want him to know we got on a bus?”

  “I don’t want him leaping to the idea right away. He’ll get there soon enough.”

  Her friend Teresa, currently spending a week in New York with a couple of girlfriends, lived in Dana Point. They were going to use her house briefly.

  “You actually think they would track down the bus, interview the driver?”

  “I actually do.”

  “He wouldn’t remember us,” she said.

  “Look at us. Two drowned cats.”

  “Well, it’s raining.”

  “He’d remember.”

  “When he leaves us off, we’ll be walking several blocks to her house. They won’t have any idea where we went, just somewhere in Dana Point.”

  “Maybe the nerdy nephews have instant access to phone-company computers. When did you last call Teresa?”

  She frowned. “Oh. They could get any numbers I regularly call in Dana Point.”

  “Yeah.”

  “And from the numbers they could trace addresses.”

  “Right. And the next time he gets close to us, we won’t be able to hoodwink him so easy.”

  “None of that seemed easy to me.”

  “It wasn’t. So we better not let him get close to us till we’re ready.”

  “We’re going to be ready?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “I don’t see how you get ready for someone like him.”

  Tim did not reply.

  For a while they rode in silence.

  She said, “I keep thinking and thinking—what did I do? I didn’t do anything.”

  “This isn’t about something you did.”

  “It can’t be.”

  “It’s about something you know,” he said.

  Those green eyes started working again, trying to open him like a vacuum-packed can.

  He said, “You know something that could do serious damage to someone important.”

  “I’ve been doing nothing for years but writing navel-gazing novels. I don’t know anything about anyone.”

  “It’s something—you don’t know that you know it.”

  “That’s for sure.”

  “Something you heard, something you saw. It didn’t seem to be anything at the time.”

  “When?”

  He shrugged. “Last month. A year ago. Anytime.”

  “That’s a lot of territory to walk back through.”

  “Wouldn’t do you any good to walk it. It didn’t seem like anything big to you then, it won’t seem like anything big now.”

  “They want to kill me for something so insignificant I can’t remember it?”

  “Not insignificant. It’s something big. Important to them, unremarkable to you. I’m pretty sure that’s the way it’s got to be. I’ve been thinking hard about it since he showed up at the hotel.”

  “You’ve been thinking hard since I opened the door and first saw you,” she replied.

  “You said a head as big as mine has to have some brains in it. Are you cold?”

  “I’ve got the chills. But not because I’m wet. The knot’s getting tighter, isn’t it?”

  “Well,” he said, “no matter how tight a knot gets, you can always cut the rope.”

  “If it’s something big enough, there might be no way out.”

  “There’s always a way out,” he said. “There’s just a bunch of ways you don’t want to think about.”

  A small quiet laugh escaped her.

  Again, they chose silence for a while.

  Tim sat with his fists on his thighs, and after a mile or two, she put her left hand on his right fist.

  He opened his hand and turned it palm-up, enfolding her hand.

  The bus stopped from time to time, and more people got on than got off. None of the new passengers appeared to be intent on murder.

  Thirty-One

  Pete Santo slumped behind the wheel of the Mercury Mountaineer, a block from his house.

  When he killed the headlights and the engine, Zoey used the console as a bridge to pass from the cargo space to the passenger’s seat.

  Together, they watched the street and waited. Now and then he rubbed the crest of her neck or behind her ears.

  The nearest streetlamp was not close enough to shed any light into the SUV. The spreading boughs of a stone pine, under which he had parked, would cloak them in shadows even for a while after the sun rose.

  Only an hour ago, he could not have imagined that he might one day conduct a surveillance of his own home. This was a fine time to be alive if your meat was paranoia and your bread was violence.

  Pete expected company to come calling well before sunrise. In fact, they arrived ten minutes after he took up watch from under the pine tree.

  The Suburban stopped in front of his house, beside a streetlamp, facing the opposite direction from other parked vehicles on this side of the street. Evidently the visitors saw no need for discretion.

  Three men got out of the Suburban. Even seen from a distance and in rain gear, they looked the type.

  Pete lost sight of them as they approached his house. From this distance and angle, he could not see his place, only the street in front of it.

  He assumed that one of the three would detour to the backyard.

  Whatever law-enforcement ID they were carrying, it would trump his PD badge. Maybe FBI or National Security Agency. Maybe the Secret Service or Homeland Security.

  In his mind’s ear, he could hear his doorbell ring.

  Most likely their badges and photo IDs would prove to be no more legitimate than Kravet’s many driver’s licenses.

  If Pete had not fled with Zoey, he would have had to engage these men as though they were who they claimed to be. Because maybe they were.

  Whether they were the real deal or not, they came with a message: Lay off the smiley guy with all the identities; lay off the Cream Sugar murders.

  They would claim he was interfering in a major ongoing federal criminal investigation of great delicacy. Or that this was a matter of national secu
rity. In either case, the investigation would not be in the jurisdiction of a local cop.

  Had Pete remained at home, this delegation would have seriously compromised his ability to assist Tim and Linda.

  Now they must be ringing the bell again and discussing their next move.

  Zoey began a mild anxiety panting.

  “Good girl,” he said. “Sweet baby girl.”

  He doubted that they would ring the bell a third time.

  A minute passed. Two. Three.

  These were not the kind of guys who would sit in rocking chairs on the porch to jaw about baseball and the weather while they waited for Pete to return.

  They had gone into the house. Whoever they claimed to be, that wasn’t who they were. They were renegades.

  Maybe they would confiscate the hard drive of his computer to see what else he’d been doing before they had tagged him for chasing the Kravet identities.

  They might plant drugs where he wouldn’t find them. Then if they needed to