Hawk Channel Chase | |
Alex Rutledge [6] | |
Tom Corcoran | |
Ketch Yawl Pr (2009) | |
Rating: | **** |
Tags: | General, Mystery Detective, Fiction |
Fans of Tom Corcoran's Alex Rutledge mysteries will enjoy this compelling sixth addition to the series. It is mid-October in tropical Key West, a break between the summer and winter tourist seasons. Alex Rutledge, home two days from an advertising job in the Bahamas, is asked to investigate the disappearance of a young woman. With few skills as a private eye and no desire to learn the trade, his decision to decline is easy. Until a close friend asks that he reconsider. A freelance photographer who loves beach scenery and easy schedules and who dreads his occasional law enforcement evidence work, Rutledge must confront the private investigator job with little but instinct to guide himself. Alex digs in only to regret every step, every fact that comes his way on the ocean and in the streets of Key West. To confuse matters, on his first day of the P. I. grind, a man is found dead in a neighboring home. At first considered a suspect, Alex later is asked to take crime scene photos with no body in place. Meanwhile a Lower Keys crime scene is closed to media and local police, open only to secretive federal agents. The questions and perils multiply. And there is still that young woman who never came home... Michael Connelly, author of The Lincoln Lawyer, The Brass Verdict and The Scarecrow, said of Corcoran's previous novel, Air Dance Iguana was the reading highlight of the year for me. With characters as strong and intriguing as the story they move through, I went cover to cover without coming up for air. Randy Wayne White, author of Black Widow and Deep Shadow, said, I finished Air Dance Iguana as the last of a Category Four hurricane pounded away at my house. This book has been storm-tested and proved impossible to put down in winds under seventy knots. Tom Corcoran and Alex Rutledge are Florida treasures. Jimmy Buffett, author of A Pirate Looks at Fifty and Swine Not? stated, Tom Corcoran has put his time on the water to great use. He reconnects my heart and brain to the Key West I knew. Steve Hamilton, author of The Hunting Wind, says, Tom Corcoran knows the human heart, sure as hell knows how to write a good book, and knows Key West-a setting so real you'll get a sunburn.
Tom Corcoran first moved to Florida in 1970. He has been a disc jockey, bartender, AAA travel counselor, U. S. Navy officer, screenwriter, freelance photographer, automotive magazine editor, computer graphic artist, and journalist. His photographs have appeared on seven Jimmy Buffett album covers. He co-wrote the Buffett hits, Cuban Crime of Passion, and Fins. His photos also have appeared on numerous book jackets, including those of Thomas McGuane (An Outside Chance), Winston Groom (Forrest Gump), and Florida novelists Les Standiford (Black Mountain and Last Train to Paradise) and James W. Hall (Hot Damn).
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AWK
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ORCORAN
Dredgers Lane, LLC
Lakeland, Florida
HAWK CHANNEL CHASE. Copyright 2010 by Tom Corcoran. All Rights Reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any manner including electronic information storage and retrieval systems without permission in writing from the publisher except for pertinent, brief quotations embodied in a critical article or review. Originally published in hardcover by The Ketch &
Yawl Press in 2009. Published in trade Paperback by Dredgers Lane, LLC, in 2010.
Kindle Edition ISBN-13: 978-0-9844566-7-3
Dredgers Lane, LLC
PO
Box 5828
Lakeland FL
33807
Cover photograph © 2009 Tom Corcoran
For my son, Sebastian H. Corcoran
For assistance, support, wisdom and time,
I offer my heartfelt thanks to:
Richard Badolato, Les and Dona Bernier, Pat Boyer, John and Laurel Boisonault, Franette Vaughn, Bill Bramblett, Eric Christensen, Marty Corcoran, Nathan Eden, Carolyn Ferguson, Dinah George, Jim Harrison, Nancy Harris, Lorian Hemingway, Sandie Herron, Matt Lockwood, Chris Robinson, Carolyn and Jim Inglis, Jerry and Elsie Metcalf, Doyle Smith, Marshall Smith, David Standish, June Vail, and Katie Wagner.
1
The man at my screen door looked like a former pro halfback. He was about forty, had iron-hard eyes, a deep tan, dark hair, a square jaw and huge arms. On an island where bright tropical-print shirts are as common as sunglasses, his stood out as garish. There wasn’t a drop of sweat on his face, and I suspected that his haircut had cost more than his shoes.
I had begun the day drinking coffee, listening to a Townes Van Zandt album and cleaning dust from the high sides of my ceiling fan blades. A pure South Florida kill time task that promised to be the most thrill-packed half-hour of my week. The man didn’t look like a vinyl siding salesman or religion peddler. I decided to give him a minute of ear time.
He launched his spiel without revealing his identity or confirming mine.
“Mr. Rutledge, straight to the point. I’m here to offer you one-point-one for your house. You’ll have six weeks to vacate.”
He wanted to make me a homeless millionaire.
Dumb ass me, I said, “Let me think about it.”
His eyes filled with pity. “You heard the part about the money?”
I nodded and understood that puzzlement, not pity, had formed his expression. He had expected a fatter reaction to his big bucks offer. I was too stunned to give up a reaction, much less a celebration.
“Do you want to step inside?” I said.
“I’m fine out here.”
“How am I so blessed that my place is a target?”
He shrugged a whatever. “You’re the lucky dog for location.”
“Like every other house in Key West?”
He turned and feigned a judgment scan of the lane. “That about gets it. It’s your palm trees and flora, your fishing shorts and rum drink lifestyle. It’s the Caribbean and you can drive to it.” He smirked and jammed his right knuckles into his flat left hand. “That’s a great slogan. I just made it up.”
“Some people on this island see all that as negative.”
He slid his eyes back to mine. “How would that be?”
“We feel like victims of geography.”
He exhaled a half-laugh through his teeth. “Every one of you came here for geography. You and your neighbors were tourists to start with, right? And, take my word, that post-sale trip to the bank is a great high. If you could let me know inside of seventy-two hours, my cell number’s at the upper right…” He pulled a card from his shirt pocket, poked it through a slit in the door’s screening. “We need to fix this slim little hole before the skeeters find it and carry you off.”
“Great advice,” I said, but he’d started to walk. Except for the card he hadn’t offered his name, and where would etiquette fit in? It was all about the money.
I watched him scope his surroundings, alert for business prospects or immediate threats. I amended my first impression. He probably wasn’t an ex-football player. With his quirky yardbird mannerisms, he moved more like a former prison handball champion. He turned right on Fleming. A moment later I heard two vehicle doors slam. I watched a dark green Yukon accelerate toward White Street. Tinted windows, of course, so I couldn’t see the rest of the team.
It didn’t matter what they looked like. He and his colleagues were errand boys for someone with cash flow as strong as the Gulf Stream. The business card for Worthwhile Investments, LLC, showed a string of capital-letter designations after Bob Catherman’s name. They told of seminars and continuing education with no guarantee that anyone but Bob might benefit. They offered no promise that the man might be less mercenary in future visits. I knew that he would be around again, like the dust on my slowly turning fan blades.
I had returned to Key West the previous night after three days on Bimini. I needed to write a job summary and invoice for my photography, product shots of a hot sauce sold out of Pineland, Florida. The gig could’ve been done on Pine Island, so I assumed the whole exercise was an excuse for the company owner, a retired light tackle guide, to write off a Bahamas trip. I didn’t complain. Who could bitch about fresh fish at every meal, including breakfast, boating the Yellow Bank, or a couple evenings spent bouncing between Big John’s, the End of the World Saloon, and the Big Game Club? All while collecting a pay check.
I knew I’d return to Key West at a late hour, so I left messages for Bobbi Lewis, my confidant and lover, on her cell voice mail and at her home on Big Coppitt. She had called back before I was home to bemoan overwork, to beg off meeting my arrival, to promise quality time, soon. It was my turn again. I tried her direct line at the sheriff’s office.
She picked up. “I’ve had less than eight hours’ sleep in three days, so tonight might not be…”
“Sleep here, Detective,” I said.
“We’d want a week’s worth of something else, darling. I catch myself making small mistakes. I have to rest before they get big and I hurt someone.”
“I will sit here awaiting your call,” I said.
“Thank you, Alex. Try to keep your hand out of your shorts. Or does that sound greedy on my part?”
I spent the afternoon running lightweight errands, catching a sundown beer at Schooner Wharf, running into some friends from St. Augustine and joining them for a light supper at Blue Heaven. I let a backlog of Bahamas fatigue guide me to my pillow well before midnight.
The next morning around nine the handball halfback knocked again on my door. A glance through the screening told me it wasn’t a pressurized follow-up on his offer to buy my cottage. Bob Catherman had aged ten years, had lost his tropical flair and much of his bulk. This was a lost soul, new to the territory, and he was about to share baggage. He didn’t speak, barely made eye contact, but entered when I opened the screen door.
“Coffee’s gone,” I said. “I can make a new pot.”
He sat on a cushioned chair, focused downward as if inspecting the porch floor for splinters. “That might help,” he said. “Maybe the caffeine will work backward and put me to sleep.”
I opened the small window between the side porch and kitchen and went to brew a pot of Bustelo. “If you want to talk,” I said, “I can hear you in here.”
“It’ll wait,” he said. “I’ve been talking to walls for eighteen hours. Right now I need eyes and ears.”
I kept quiet while I poured water and scooped dry grounds. A strong flash of “Why me?” blitzed my thoughts.
“You wouldn’t have a cold one?” he said. “Like an appetizer for the coffee?”
I had two bottles left from a six-pack bought before Bimini. I popped them and returned to the porch. In contrast to Catherman’s dismal appearance, the morning sun, muted by screen mesh, lighted the bougainvillea and reminded me why I hadn’t jumped at the man’s cash offer a day earlier. Still, I wasn’t sure why I had opened the second beer, or felt compelled to drink with this forlorn man only two hours after sun-up.