Authors: James Hayman
Maggie managed not to visibly react. Just said, âOh, really? Did she say where she got it? If maybe it was the name of somebody she knew?'
Sam shrugged. âNo idea. I assume she just dreamed it up.'
âDid she make other suggestions for the book?'
âYes. Quite a few, actually. As I told you, Tiff was both talented and imaginative.'
âWould you print out a copy for me? I'd like to read it.'
âNo. Not till it's finished.'
âSam, this is not about literature, it's about murder. I promise I won't criticize its literary merit.'
âI don't think so.'
âThink again. I can always get a warrant if I need one. Also, since you were one of Tiff Stoddard's sex partners, I need you to come to the Sheriff's Department first thing tomorrow morning and provide us with a set of fingerprints and a DNA sample.'
Sam sighed. âVery well. Is that all?'
âNo. I thought you might be interested in knowing Emily was injured last night by the same guy who killed Stoddard. But don't worry. She'll be fine.'
11:37
P.M
., Saturday, August 22, 2009
Machias, Maine
I
t was Saturday night and even late on a Saturday night in August the Musty Moose was jammed. Maggie waited for a twenty-year-old Ford Bronco to pull out of a close-in parking spot and hustled to beat an equally ancient Corolla to the space. The driver scowled but didn't make an issue. Maggie smiled sweetly and offered a little wave of thanks.
Maggie had wasted more than a few good hours hanging out at the Moose back in the day. Though it had been a while since she'd been there, when she walked through the door it looked as if nothing had changed. The big horseshoe bar in front of her was jammed with drinkers. Three full-sized pool tables in a separate room to the right appeared to be as busy as ever. The booths and tables to the left where dinner could be had before the serious drinking began were pretty much full.
Perhaps the most defining feature of The Moose was the dozens of stuffed heads that stared down from the walls through beady glass eyes. More heads, in Maggie's opinion, than you'd be likely to find in most museums of natural history. She always thought it would be a nice touch if they included among the deer and moose and bears, a few of the heads of local drunks who'd dropped dead in the place over the years. Among them would be Charlie Harbison and Duane Cuyler, both of whom were grossly overweight and both of whom suffered fatal heart attacks, three years apart, falling off the same stool at the bar. Perhaps the most famous Moose incident of them all was the killing of Clarence âSquidgy' Kelly, who choked to death on a cue ball stuffed down his throat by a 300 pound logger who was irate he'd come in second to Squidgy in a high-stakes game of straight pool. It had taken a much younger Sheriff John Savage and three of his deputies to wrestle the logger to the ground and get the cuffs on him. He ended up doing twenty to life at the old prison in Thomaston for murder.
Maggie scanned the main room but didn't spot any familiar faces. A bluegrass group, Bobbie Rae and the Sunrise Pickers according to the sign propped in front of them, were making some nice sounds in the far corner. Since The Moose was the only real bar in town it drew a wildly eclectic collection of both casual and serious drinkers. Pretty much everybody within a ten-mile radius who had an inclination for booze and the money to pay for it hit the Moose at one time or another. Tonight, as on most Saturdays, especially in summer, the bar was packed three deep with a noisy, laughing mass of ex-hippies, aging rednecks, gray-haired bikers, some with ponytails and one with dreadlocks, a few local business types and a bunch of college kids, most of whom may or may not have been legal but sure as hell didn't look it.
She took a deep breath and plunged into the maelstrom, finally managing to squeeze in close enough so that one of the two bartenders might actually notice her. For a couple of minutes neither did. The one Maggie didn't recognize was a sour-faced young woman in her twenties who couldn't seem to handle the stream of orders being thrown her way. Tiffany Stoddard's replacement, Maggie supposed. C'mon, honey, she silently urged, if you don't get that scowl off your face and prove you can handle the hustle better than this, Tommy'll toss you out on your ear.
The other bartender was, of course, the maestro himself, Tommy Flynn. Tommy could do it all simultaneously. Take orders, mix drinks, throw out a cheerful Irish insult and never miss a beat. Tommy had been a fixture at the Moose as long as Maggie had been old enough to go there. Matter of fact, it was Tommy who mixed and served her her first legal drink. A frozen margarita. Salt on the rim. Tab on the house. A twenty-first birthday present. Seemed exotic as hell at the time.
It only took him a minute to notice her.
âWell, my God, if it isn't the love of my life.' He leaned across the bar and gave her a peck on the cheek. âUp visiting the old man?'
âYou got it, Tommy. Can't believe you're still working here.'
âDarlin', I'm just like your father. Never give up a gig that works. Anyway, I don't just work here any more. I own the place. Half of it anyway. Josh Bender sold me fifty percent for a whole bunch less than it was worth and took off for the sunshine three years ago.'
While he was talking Tommy flipped the caps off three bottles of Pabst Blue Ribbon and handed them to three of the college kids and mixed and poured two icy martinis, which he set down in front of a pair of aging preppies propped up at the other end of the bar. âAnyway, what can I get you?' asked Tommy. âSaturday nights, I give away the PBR for two bucks a pop.'
PBR had its fans, but Maggie wasn't one of them. âNo thanks. Have any Geary's Summer?'
âJust in the bottle.'
âThat'll do.' Maggie looked around at the crowd. âAnybody I might know in tonight?'
âYour baby brother got here just a while ago. Last time I looked he was working a couple of suckers in the other room at table three.' Maggie glanced over. You couldn't see the third table from where she was standing. Tommy got the beer and set it down in front of her then grabbed a bottle of Canadian Club and started pouring whiskey over ice. âHow long you in town for?'
âI don't know. Maybe a while. Heard you lost one of your bartenders last night.'
Tommy looked up, instantly getting it that Maggie might be here for more than a beer and a chat.
âFormer bartenders. Tiff hadn't worked here in a while. Hell of a way to go, though. Got her head damn near cut off is what I heard.'
âThat's close enough.'
âYou working this case?'
âJust helping the staties out,' she said. âCan I pull you into a quiet corner for a couple of minutes?'
Tommy thought about that. âSure. I guess I owe Tiff that much. Must be due for a break anyway.' He looked around and called over a young man who'd been waiting tables and told him to take over at the bar.
âLet's go out back,' he said. âIt's quieter there. Less public.'
âWhy don't you get yourself a drink?' she asked. âMy treat.'
Tommy smiled. âNever touch the stuff while I'm working.'
Tommy led her through the kitchen, where the cooks were frying up a storm. Haute cuisine it wasn't. Practically everything on the Moose's menu that wasn't a lobster, a burger or a side-salad was either deep-fried or barbequed. Only place she knew that actually served chicken-fried artichoke hearts. The two of them went out through a back door on to a small deck. The noise behind them, while still audible, was no longer deafening.
âTell me about Tiffany Stoddard.'
âWhat do you want to know?'
âYou've got a good eye. Let's start with your general impression.'
Tommy shrugged. âI've got nothing but good to say about her. Pretty girl. More than pretty, actually. Good bartender too. Unlike that sourpuss I've got now, Tiff could bullshit with the customers and handle the drinks at the same time. Smart, too. Like you in that regard. Nothing much got by her. I always figured Tiff Stoddard could go as far as she wanted in this world. Do anything that took her fancy. Never dreamed anything like this would happen to her.'
âAny idea what it was she wanted to do?'
âTalked about being a writer sometimes.'
âReally? You mean like fiction?'
âNah. More like working for a newspaper. Or maybe a TV station. Y'know, a reporter.'
Same thing both Sam and Donelda had said. Maggie took a swig from the Geary's bottle. âHow long was she working here?'
âA couple of years. Ever since she started at UMM. Washington County kid. Folks live up in Eastport.'
âWas she an addict?'
âOxycontin?'
âYeah.'
âNo way. Tiff was too smart for that.'
âThink she might have been dealing?'
âJesus, I wouldn't have thought so. Tiff was a girl who knew where she wanted to go.'
âWhy'd she quit?'
âSaid she had enough saved up and wanted to concentrate on her studies. But I don't know. Even if she had the savings, I would have thought she would still want to make some money. Sure as hell enjoyed spending it.'
âYou know anything about any boyfriends she might have had?'
Tommy shrugged. âJust about all the unattached guys who came in this place hit on Tiff from time to time. Some of the attached ones too. She was happy chatting them up but far as I know none of them ever scored. None she ever talked about anyway.'
âWas there anybody she saw regularly?'
âI wouldn't know. But, come to think of it, you might want to ask your brother about that.'
âHarlan?'
âYeah. I saw the two of them leave together more than once. But do me a favor. Don't tell Harlan you got that from me. Sonofabitch has an unpredictable temper and I don't want to get on the wrong side of him.'
11:45
P.M
., Saturday, August 22, 2009
Eastport, Maine
T
hat night, Tabitha Stoddard dreamed she saw the December Man again.
In her dream it wasn't summer any more but every bit as dark and icy as it had been just before Christmas, when Tiff brought him to the house to give Pike the money for the boat.
Tabitha dreamed she was outside by the breakwater. Snow was falling. Millions of small, hard flakes swirling in circles all around her. She was walking down a long wooden dock that seemed to stretch forever out into the cold, black sea. She was carrying Harold in both arms. He still had Tiff's package inside him, still wrapped in layers of newspaper and packing tape exactly as it was when she'd gone to meet Tiff in the playground. Having the package scared her and she wanted to give it back to Tiff.
She walked past fishing boats that were tied up, one after the other in parallel lines on either side of the dock. The
Katie Louise
was at the end, the very last boat in a very long line. In spite of the darkness Tabitha could see her father's boat clear as day, its silhouette outlined in tiny white Christmas lights, its diesel engine idling, churning up the water behind. In the dream, the
Katie Louise
wasn't dirty and beat up any more, but freshly painted bright red and white. She was brand new all over again.
She saw Tiff standing in the stern dressed, in spite of the cold, in a gauzy white summer dress. Her high school graduation dress. Her hair was down and she was smiling and waving. Tabitha had never seen her look more beautiful.
âC'mon, slowpoke,' Tiff called to her. âWe'll never get out of here if you don't hurry.'
âWhere are we going?'
âIt doesn't matter. You just have to hurry.'
But Tabitha didn't want to hurry because the December Man was standing behind Tiff, staring at her with icy eyes and holding a big knife.
The December Man wasn't smiling.
Tiff called out to her again. âCome on, goose. A promise is a promise.'
She wanted desperately to warn Tiff the December Man was there. Warn Tiff the December Man was going to kill her.
But, try as she might, she couldn't get the words out, and so she just watched as the December Man reached around Tiff's head with the knife and drew the blade across her neck. Tiff screamed. Blood poured from the wound. Waves of blood. Oceans of blood that just kept coming and coming until it turned Tiff's white dress and the deck of the
Katie Louise
and even the black ocean itself a bright, blood-soaked red.
âSee, just like I told your father,' said the lady cop who for some reason was standing beside Tabitha, one hand on her shoulder. âCut her open like a hog in a slaughterhouse.'
Tabitha turned and ran. The December Man jumped down from the deck and ran after her, still holding the knife, wanting to cut Tabitha's neck open as well.
Tabbie ran as fast as she could but she was just a fat little kid and her fastest wasn't even close to fast enough. Before she was halfway up the dock, she felt a hand grab her by the wrist. The December Man turned her around and grabbed Harold from her arms. Then he pulled her toward him. Lifted the knife. Tabitha closed her eyes and screamed and screamed waiting for the knife to cut her throat. But instead, all she felt was a pair of strong hands lifting her and holding her, a familiar voice telling her it was all right. It was just a bad dream. Nothing but a bad dream. She opened her eyes. The December Man was gone and her mother was there.
Donelda pulled Tabitha toward her, held Tabbie's rigid body tight against her bony chest, rocked her back and forth and told the last of her three daughters that it had only been a bad dream. A nightmare. Told her that everything was all right and she mustn't be frightened. But Tabitha couldn't stop sobbing because she knew very well her mother was wrong. Everything was not all right. Nothing would ever be all right again.