Divine Fury (18 page)

Read Divine Fury Online

Authors: Robert B. Lowe

Tags: #Mystery

BOOK: Divine Fury
8.14Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
 

“What I don’t get,” he continued, “is what happened with the Wainwright endorsement?
 
You guys kept that pretty close to the vest but someone got to him.
 
What happened there?”

 

The waiter brought fresh, hot bread.
 
Blount slathered some butter on a piece, took a bite, and washed it down with a little wine.
    

 

“Well,” said Blount.
 
“You’re right.
 
This is off the record and I don’t know that it’s necessarily a story for you.
 
But it’s a huge problem for me.
 
We’ve got a leak.
 
A bad one.
 
It’s like they know what we’re doing before we do.
 
I don’t know if someone is talking out of school or what.
 
I’ve got to find out and plug it…fast.”
    

 

                      

 

Chapter 21

 

THE SECURITY GUARD at the Salinas Municipal Airport had directed Enzo Lee to Pedro’s Cantina in town as the place where crop-dusting pilot Michael “Buzz” Shelton was likely serving most of his month-long grounding courtesy of the FAA.
  

 

Pedro’s was almost completely walled off from the busy four-lane street
 
outside by peeling wood paneling painted rust-brown and white, frosted glass.
 
The only clear panes of glass that would have provided a look into the interior were blocked by a red and white Budweiser sign and flickering orange neon that read “Tecate.”
 

 

At 4 pm on a Thursday, there were only four patrons in the establishment.
 
Lee had Shelton pegged immediately.
 
Thin and late-40s, his elbows were on the sticky bar.
 
His black short-cut hair was sprinkled with gray. He had aviator sunglasses despite the darkened interior and wore a white windbreaker over a black T-shirt and jeans.
 
He was communing with the bottle of Budweiser sitting in front of him next to a clump of keys.

 

The other customers were scattered among the beat-up café tables.

 

Lee took the stool two away from him.
 
He nodded as he sat down, got no response and ordered a Budweiser himself when the bartender walked over to him.
 
After he’d taken his first sip, he turned to Shelton.

 

“Hey,” he said.
 
“I’m a reporter…from the San Francisco News.”

 

Shelton stirred from his reverie and focused on Lee.

 

“Oh, great,” he said, sarcasm heavy in his voice.

 

“Yeah,” said Lee.
 
“I was out there.
 
When was it?
 
Early last week?
 
When you dumped that stuff on us.”

 

Shelton grimaced.

 

“Sorry about that,” he said.
 
“It actually was just smoke though, if that makes it any better.
 
I put the skywriting rig on. It was just vaporized paraffin.
 
Didn’t smell great but it’s not like it was a pesticide or something.”

 

 
Lee said a silent prayer of thanks.
 
It was great to know he hadn’t been doused with DDT.
 
But he was particularly relieved at Shelton’s reaction upon realizing he was a reporter.
 
Among the possible options Lee had considered were Shelton walking out, maintaining stony silence, becoming belligerent and even throwing a punch – particularly under the influence of a few beers.
 
Instead, Shelton was apologetic and, now that Lee had his attention, he even seemed politely conversational.

 

Over the next hour, Lee asked about the differences between crop-dusting and skywriting, got a lesson on pre-World War II era planes and found out more than he really wanted to know about running a one-man crop-dusting operation.
 
He also treated Shelton and himself to two more beers and two double shots of Jack Daniels apiece.
 
When he got around to what he really wanted to know from Shelton, the pilot was slurring his words and Lee was feeling the effects, too.

 

“So, Buzz,” said Lee.
 
“What was that all about anyway?
 
I mean, excuse, the pun, but why did Buzz buzz us out there?”

 

Shelton was quiet and took two deep breaths while Lee waited.

 

“Okay.
 
Jus’ ‘tween me an’ you, okay?”
 
he said.
 
“If I’m asked ‘bout it, I’m denyin’ it!”
 
He banged his fist on the bar.

 

“It was Bud Walters.
 
Sonofabitch!
 
Was gonna take my bizness if I didn’ do it,” Shelton continued.
 
“I said ‘No.’
 
I said, ‘No goddamn way!
 
I’m not dumpin’ tha shit on people!’
 
But the guy has clout ‘round here.
 
He says the word an’ my bizness dries up.
 
Overnight!
 
So, I jus’ took his money and did it.
 
I’m sorry, man.”

 

“Well…okay, Buzz,” said Lee.
 
“Sounds like he didn’t give you a choice.
 
Unbelievable.
 
Just unbelievable.
 
So, uh…how much did he pay you anyway?”

 

Shelton drained the last beer before answering.

 

“It was a lot,” he said.
 
“Twenty thou, man.
 
Twenty fuckin’ thou.”
    

 
 

* * *

 

Even after a plate of chicken enchiladas, black beans and rice, Lee figured he should stay the night in Salinas.
 
It wasn’t just the beer and Jack Daniels he’d consumed at Pedro’s Bar
 
working through his system.
 
Shelton had given him the next link in the chain – Bud Walters – the man who had paid the pilot to ruin Harper’s immigration policy announcement.
 
He called Lorraine Carr, got her voice mail, and updated her on his talk with Shelton.

 

Fortunately, one of the librarians at the News was working late so Lee got him to run a quick web search on Bud Walters.
 
The results showed Walters owned Earth’s Own Produce, one of the largest independent growers in the Salinas Valley and was the past chairman of the 200-member Central California Growers Association.
 
 
They also figured out that the headquarters of Walters’ farm operation was 12 miles north of Salinas, and just a few miles off the route Lee would be taking back to San Francisco.

 

It was a long shot, but Lee figured he’d just stop in at Bud Walters’ headquarters unannounced the next morning in the hope he’d find the farmer there.
 
If he had to wait awhile to see him, that was fine.
 
With any luck, he wouldn’t have to explain beforehand the nature of his inquiry and could surprise him with questions about the crop-dusting debacle.

 

Lee got a room at the Salinas Courtyard Marriott and grabbed a Diet Coke from the vending machine.
 
He took a hot shower, climbed into bed and leaned against the headboard while clicking through the remote until he found the Giants game.
 
They were playing the Dodgers, their archrivals, although sometimes it seemed as if it were Barry Bonds playing the opposing teams by himself.
 
Lee kept the sound off and followed the pitcher’s deliberate rhythm.
 
Pitch – get the slow return throw – kick the mound a little – get the catcher’s sign – work through the personal tics – get set – pitch again.
 
He’d always found baseball pleasantly hypnotic.

 

It gave him a chance to slow down and think about what he was doing.
 
Lee realized he was violating his self-imposed rule about staying with the fluffier side of news.
 
But he had to admit that he was intrigued by what Shelton had told him.
 
If the pilot had been paid to disrupt that campaign event, it probably wasn’t an isolated episode.
 
Blount might be right that the run-in with the freighter on the sea otter expedition was more than an accident.
 
Perhaps there really was an ongoing, concerted effort to undermine Harper’s campaign.
   

 

Lee had been a target of Shelton’s dive bombing and he had seen the journalists tossed into the water by the near miss with the freighter.
 
He might not be bosom buddies with every television reporter or cameraman, but they were his tribe.
 
Whoever was responsible for this had no qualms about endangering them.

 

He had a picture in his head of someone in the shadows pulling the strings.
 
A manipulator.
 
A Wizard of Oz type.
 
Then he had another image.
 
It was of his hand reaching through the curtain, grabbing whomever it was and throwing them onto the front page of the News.
 
That would feel good.

 

Lee was distracted from his thoughts by one quick swing of the bat.
 
Bonds again.
 
A splash hit over the right field arcade and into the bay.
 
Three-run homer.
 
Game over.
  

 

Chapter 22

 
 

IT WAS THREE hours after Andrew Harper had finished his speech, shaken his last hand and rolled out of the dusty lot next to the Jefferson River when the river suddenly surged. In just a couple of minutes, the five-foot wide stream doubled in size and still was growing steadily.
 
Within 15 minutes, the previously dry parking lot at the bend in the old riverbed where Harper had addressed the television cameras was under three feet of cold, swirling water.
 

 

Harper and his staff were oblivious to the wet mishap.
 
When the flow peaked and then quickly receded, they were 40 miles away doing their best to turn a thousand cheering students at Humbolt State University into an army of campaign workers.

 

Both the university rally and the Jefferson River stop were part of a three-day swing through the far northwestern part of California.
 
There had been some scheduling confusion over the first day of the trip.

 

The Jefferson River event was planned for that day.
 
But when Harry Blount sent out a daily memo to the campaign staff he confused the events and listed the river press conference at 4 pm instead of noon.
 
He was on a chartered Lear flying to Eureka when he caught the error. He called an assistant in San Francisco to email out the correction.
 

 

Seventy years earlier, the Jefferson flowed unimpeded from the tall Trinity Alps in the center of the state and through the redwood forests on the damp coast before emptying into the Pacific.
 
During spawning season, the river had been filled with leaping salmon heading upstream.
 
After the construction of three dams built to restrain its floods and divert water to farms in the Central Valley, the flow in the lower Jefferson was reduced to a fraction of its historical volume.
 
In a good year, the returning salmon now numbered in the low hundreds.
   

 

Blount had picked the sandy parking lot in the old riverbed used mainly by day hikers for Harper to voice his support for the removal of the deteriorating dams on the Jefferson.
 
The setting was beautiful.
 
The steep slopes above the river held tall redwoods that pierced through layers of purple, orange and yellow wildflowers.
  

 

Ironically, it was an unplanned 20-minute release of water from the last of the three old dams – it would never be clear exactly who ordered it – that inundated the site of the earlier Harper event.
 
When it was over, the Jefferson once again became a modest stream flowing down a much larger riverbed that had been turned into a muddy mess.

Other books

Charlotte Street by Danny Wallace
Night Monsters by Lee Allen Howard
Love Me Tonight by Gwynne Forster
Compromised Hearts by Hannah Howell
Stages of Grace by Carey Heywood
Hart To Hart by Vella Day
Life in the Land by Rebecca Cohen