First Drop tcfs-4

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First Drop tcfs-4 Page 12

by Zoe Sharp

I smiled at Harriet to cover the awkward silence. “You have a lovely house,” I said. “Have you been here long?”

  “Oh, since we got married,” she said, fetching a plate of thin crispy bacon strips and indicating that we should dig in and help ourselves. “Walt and his daddy started building this place in the fall and we moved in in the spring, right after the wedding. Forty-five years ago next month.”

  “My family’s been in construction going back three generations,” Walt put in.

  “It’s been a good family home,” his wife said, contented.

  “It still is, by the looks of it,” I said, finding that bacon went amazingly well with maple syrup. Even if it hadn’t I still would have eaten it. I hadn’t realised just how hungry I really was and it took some effort not to let my table manners slip to Trey’s level. “Do you have a lot of grandchildren?”

  Harriet frowned. “No,” she said, “we’ve never been blessed.”

  Surprised, I nodded to the toys in the garden and Walt smiled.

  “We foster. Y’know – kids from problem homes,” he explained. “Try and set ‘em back on the right path.”

  I thought about Sean’s sister and his younger brother, who’d taken his parents’ broken marriage much harder than Sean had done. His kid brother, in particular, had gone off the rails in fairly spectacular fashion the winter before. We’d since managed to retrieve him, more or less, but how either of them were going to react when they found out that the big brother they idolised was dead, I couldn’t begin to guess.

  “So,” Walt said now, mopping his mouth with a paper napkin and sitting back in his chair, “Charlie here’s from Manchester, that much I know, but that doesn’t sound like an English accent you got there, Trey. Where you from, buddy?”

  It was casually slipped in. If it hadn’t been for the shrewd look in the old man’s eyes, I wouldn’t have read anything more into the question.

  “Oh, well, we’ve lived in a bunch of different places,” Trey said airily. “My dad kept us, like, moving around a lot.”

  I glared at him. If he was trying to make it sound like Keith was a petty criminal, he was going about it the right way. “Trey’s from down near Miami,” I put in quickly. “I’m just looking after him.”

  Now it was Trey’s turn to scowl. He didn’t like the idea that I was his nursemaid any better than he liked the idea that I was his bodyguard.

  “Uh-huh,” Walt said slowly. He poured himself a glass of water, offering the jug to the rest of us before setting it down again on the table top. His movements had a slow precision to them, as though he weighed the merits of each one before he did it. “So how come you were sleeping on the beach last night?” he asked.

  It was a reasonable question, I couldn’t argue about that. What to tell him was the problem.

  “We got robbed yesterday,” Trey said. And just when I thought that maybe he was starting to think on his feet at last he had to go and embroider it unnecessarily. “Four guys jumped us – with guns. Took all our money.”

  Harriet immediately made sympathetic noises, but I was watching Walt. His only reaction was to let his eyes flick up briefly from under those disordered eyebrows. He let his wife run on a little, then said, “Gee, that’s bad luck, Charlie. So what did the cops say?”

  I took another sip of coffee while I thought furiously about my answer. Damn Trey’s smart comment. I hadn’t a clue what the American police would be likely to have told us in such a situation. I put my cup down again. “We didn’t go to them,” I said at last. “The guys who mugged us threatened to come back for us if we did and anyway—” I shrugged, “—we didn’t have much money to give them.”

  “Musta had your credit cards, though – if you couldn’t get yourselves a motel room last night,” Walt said, apparently busying himself forking a slice of watermelon from the central platter onto his plate. “I know it’s Spring Break an’ all, but there’s still plenty of places further out with vacancies.”

  For a moment I didn’t answer. This was getting sticky. I glanced at Trey’s worried face. “We’ll sort something better out for tonight,” I said. That, at least, was true.

  Walt nodded at that, his eyes hooded and his face serious. “So,” he went on, his voice still slow and pleasant, “was that before or after you crashed your car?”

  I went utterly still, eyes fixed on Walt’s face. How could I have ever thought he was just a nice friendly old man? He was ruthless. Relentless.

  “Oh Walt,” Harriet protested with a shaky laugh, “I’m sure you’re mistaken about that.”

  “You were driving, young lady,” he went on mildly, ignoring her. The sheer certainty in his tone sent the blood thumping in my ears.

  “Whatever gives you that idea?” I asked, hearing the slightly steely note that had crept into my voice, however hard I tried to maintain my neutrality.

  He had been trimming the skin off his watermelon with one of the table knives, and now he used the rounded blade as a pointer, waving it towards my bare forearms where they rested on the table top.

  “When the airbag went off it burned along the inside of your arms as it deployed,” he said conversationally. “I’ve seen it happen plenty before. It’s one of the sure signs if the driver and passenger have tried to swap places after the event.”

  “I see,” I said, unable to stop myself shifting my hands into my lap. If I’d remembered my upbringing and kept my elbows off the table to start with, I reflected, I might not have been rumbled. “You seem very well-informed about the mechanics of road traffic accidents for a third-generation construction worker.”

  “Walt never followed his daddy into the construction business,” Harriet said. She was sitting very straight and very still, I saw. Her voice was unnaturally calm and clear. “After the navy he spent twenty-five years with the Bureau.”

  The Bureau. Even a non-American like me knew that meant the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Shit. We’d escaped from the cops and walked straight into the arms of the silver FBI.

  I pushed my chair back and stood up. Trey followed suit, almost scrambling to his feet. Walt and his wife didn’t move to rise with us and they both kept their hands still. Harriet’s jaw was tight. I hated being the cause of her sudden fear.

  “We’re really very grateful to you for feeding us,” I said, giving her a small smile, “but unfortunately we really must be leaving now.”

  I backed towards the door we’d come in by, pushing the kid ahead of me. Trey shuffled, as though he could hardly move under his own steam.

  As I reached it, Walt asked sadly, “What do you think you’re gonna achieve by running, Charlie?”

  “Right now? Staying alive,” I said, flat.

  “Maybe I can help.”

  I shook my head. “The people we’re dealing with have no compunction about killing bystanders,” I said. “This is not your fight, Walt. You’d be better off staying out of it.”

  “If you change your mind, call me. I mean it. Any time – day or night,” he said and reeled off a ten-digit number. “You want me to write that down?”

  “I can remember it,” Trey said. I glanced at him and he shrugged. “I got a head for figures.”

  I pushed open the screen door and thrust him out into the garden. As I stepped through it myself Walt threw me a final question.

  “This trouble you’re in – it’s that bad, huh?”

  I gave him a grim smile. “Keep watching the news,” I said.

  ***

  We spent most of the rest of the morning lurking on the beach around the busy Boardwalk area, which was like an old-fashioned seaside promenade, complete with a pier. We tried to stay out of the way of anyone who looked vaguely official and I gave all the wrinklies a wide berth, too. However harmless they might first appear.

  Closer to the centre of Daytona, where South Atlantic crossed over and became North Atlantic Avenue, there was a funfair with one of these contraptions that turns people into human bungee balls. They winch a circular ca
ge down to ground level, strap you in, then release it. The cage goes catapulting up into the sky, suspended by elastic from two support towers. Trey was desperate to give it a try.

  I had no desire to become reacquainted with my breakfast so soon after eating it, but I talked him out of having a go on the grounds of poor security.

  “If the police spot us when we’re up there, we’re sitting ducks,” I told him. Thankfully, he seemed to believe me.

  By ten-thirty, in any case, he was itching to get to the sound-off at the Ocean Center to meet his friends. We crossed back to the west side of the main drag, braving five lanes of traffic that didn’t seem to pay any attention to the walk/don’t walk pedestrian signals at the crossings.

  The police were everywhere. I kept my head down and hoped that some quirk of fate didn’t make the SIG slip out of its place behind my belt and clatter to the floor in front of one of them.

  The banners strung across the front of the Ocean Center announced, ‘Spring Break Nationals – the world’s most famous Sound-Off.’ If I’d never heard of it before, I couldn’t help but hear it now.

  There were half a dozen wild-looking cars spread across the expanse of concrete in front of the building. They had amazing paint and graphics, the kind of thing I’d only seen at custom bike shows in the UK. We walked past a Cadillac Escalade with chrome wheels that, according to the tyre size, were a mind-boggling twenty-four inches in diameter. The truck was riding so low that I couldn’t have got four fingers between the side rail and the ground. How on earth did they drive them?

  I’d never been particularly interested in cars. To me they were a means to an end. A preferable way to travel, but only if it was snowing, or the rain was being driven down horizontally. If it wasn’t, I would far rather have used my bike.

  But nobody seemed to be looking at the vehicles themselves. They were too interested in the outlandish stereos inside them. Each competed for the crowd’s attention with the system wound up louder than the last. They made the whole of my chest cavity vibrate just walking past.

  The kids weren’t content with that, though. They wanted to actually cram their heads into the interior, which struck me as an occupation only slightly less risky than trying to train a bunch of sharks to take morsels of food out of your mouth.

  Either way you were likely to lose your head.

  In spite of my misgivings, we paid our entrance fee on the door and moved into the building itself. I stuck my nose in one of the programmes they were handing out so I had a viable excuse not to be looking at any of the security guards in the lobby area.

  Back when I was in the army I spent plenty of time out on the ranges during live-firing exercises. Since then, I’d worked nightclub doors, found myself in the thick of an urban riot and involved in a full-blown fire-fight, but nothing prepared me for the sheer barrage of noise inside the Ocean Center.

  It had started out life as music but when a hundred different sound systems are all playing a hundred different tunes, it gets hard to tell. All you could feel was the pound of the bass.

  There were customised vehicles of every type, from monster civilian versions of US military Hummers to new-shape Mini Coopers, even a Ferrari and a couple of full-dress Harleys, though I couldn’t quite see the reason for the bikes at a car stereo show.

  Inside, the main conference hall was a huge open space, now filled with stands from equipment and accessory manufacturers. They varied from little more than a cloth-covered table laid out with boxes of product, to elaborate modular structures with space for two or three vehicles. One stand even seemed to be strung with inflatable small green aliens. I didn’t quite get the significance but no-one else was acting like it was out of the ordinary.

  The place was heaving with people, mainly teenagers perhaps a few years older than Trey. They didn’t seem at all bothered by the din, although when I looked closer I saw that quite a few of them were wearing little yellow ear defenders like the ones I’d used for shooting in the past. I still had a load of them at home but it wasn’t something I’d ever thought to pack for this trip.

  I reached forwards and tapped Trey on the shoulder as we wended our way through the crowd, putting my mouth close to his ear. “Where are we supposed to meet your friends?” I bellowed.

  He pointed over into a corner of the huge conference centre hall. “By the main stage,” he yelled back. “Yeah – there they are!”

  There seemed to be any number of people clustered round the raised stage area, sitting on the floor and sipping cola or eating junk food from the nearby concession stand, so I didn’t immediately spot Trey’s mates. It was only when one of them noticed him and waved that I got the idea.

  There were three of them, two boys and a girl. The girl jumped to her feet and came bouncing over to greet Trey, wrapping herself onto his arm like bindweed and eyeing me up suspiciously.

  “So, who’s this?” she asked, arching her eyebrows. She had a mass of ringleted dark hair and smooth caramel-coloured skin and, purely in my subjective opinion, way too much make-up for someone her age.

  She was wearing shorts and a microscopic little crop top. The latter showed off a flat tanned midriff at the front and a painful-looking tattoo of a rising sun at the bottom of her spine. I could hear her chewing her gum even over the background noise.

  “Oh, this is Charlie,” Trey said, trying to be cool and casual, like he was introducing me to his posse. “Charlie, meet the guys – Scott, Xander, and this is Aimee.”

  Scott was taller than Trey but just as gawky, with short spiky hair dyed an aggressive white blond and studs through the left-hand side of his nose, his eyebrow, and the middle of his chin. His shorts came down to below his knees, showing only a small section of tanned calf between the hem of the legs and the tops of his absurdly large basketball boots.

  Xander was a little shorter, his skin a deep Caribbean black and badly pockmarked by teenage acne. His hair was shorn to within five mil of his scalp and had intricate designs and swirls razor-cut down to his skin.

  He was wearing a No Fear T-shirt that advised anyone who read it to ‘drive it like you stole it’. When he grinned in welcome he revealed a gold tooth in his upper set. None of them looked older than about seventeen.

  I kept only part of my attention on the group as Xander and Scott went through some mystic teenage ritual of slapping palms with Trey rather than shaking hands. I was painfully aware that the two cops on the beach had come within a hair’s breadth of catching us this morning and I didn’t want to get caught napping like that again.

  “What’s happening, man?” Xander asked. “Your message was kinda cryptic.”

  “We’re in big trouble,” Trey said impressively. He was going for nonchalant but his pride took the edge off it. “Got the cops on our tail and we need a place to hide out for a coupla days, ‘til the heat’s off, y’know?”

  The boys were nodding sagely, pretending that this kind of situation arose for them all the time. I didn’t like to break the mood by telling them that with four people dead it was likely to take longer than a few days for the manhunt to subside.

  I hadn’t seen any news reports to know if they’d connected the couple at the motel with the dead cop. When they did, things were going to get thoroughly nasty. Always supposing that Walt and his wife hadn’t already brought in the cops. Or his former colleagues in the FBI.

  “Cool,” Scott said. “My mom and dad are in the Carolinas. You can crash at my place.”

  “So, what did you do, Trey?” Aimee asked with a giggle.

  Trey glanced at me for guidance but I kept my face expressionless. They were his friends and I was interested to see what story he’d come up with.

  “Dad’s gone AWOL,” he said at last, “and there’s these guys after us. They shot a cop down in Lauderdale but we, like, got away.” He saw the shock register on their faces and swallowed. “It’s kinda hard to explain here.”

  I let my eyes slide away from him and roam over the sea of faces aro
und us, looking for anyone who was staring too hard. Anyone who seemed to be trying to remember if that Identikit picture they’d seen on the TV this morning might really be one of us.

  And then, over near one of the exits, I saw the pair of cops, led by a security guard in a uniform blue blazer. They were pointing their arms like they were designating a search area and talking into hand-held radios.

  I moved forwards and nudged Trey’s arm. “Time to go,” I said, loud enough to be heard.

  This time he didn’t question my reasons, just looked round for the cops.

  “You got your truck, man?” he asked Scott.

  Scott shrugged and jerked his thumb. “In the back lot,” he said. “We leaving already?”

  “Unless you want to watch us being arrested,” I told him, “I think that would be a very good idea.”

  But as we started to move towards the closest exit the doors opened and another couple of cops walked in. If it hadn’t been for the press of people, Trey’s sudden about-turn would have been more than enough to flag our whereabouts.

  They could have been responding to some other emergency in the hall, but I very much doubted it. Someone – most likely some sharp-eyed security guard – had spotted us on the way in. Getting out might prove somewhat more problematic.

  We pushed and hurried our way through to where the crowd was thickest. A whole swathe of it seemed to be gravitating towards one of the big industrial doors that led out of the main hall and into a corralled outdoor arena.

  We allowed them to sweep us along and carry us out into the blazing sunlight, hoping it would be enough to cover our escape. Then, just when I was beginning to get my hopes up, the advance of people slowed and stopped.

  They seemed to be gathering round a big electronic scoreboard and PA system that was set up in a corner of one of the parking areas. I glanced behind us and spotted a couple of peaked caps in among the baseball hats, heading in our direction, but without the urgency to suggest they’d actually spotted us. I kept pushing Trey towards the forward edge of the crowd, trying to put as many bodies between us and authority as I could.

 

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