Read When Old Men Die Online

Authors: Bill Crider

Tags: #Mystery & Crime

When Old Men Die (17 page)

BOOK: When Old Men Die
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"I didn't even want to go see Hobart," Dino said.
 
"And that's legal.
 
I'm sure not going in those warehouses."

"You'll miss all the fun."

Dino smiled.
 
"I hope so," he said.

Eighteen
 

T
he cotton warehouses at the bottom of Broadway had once been jammed with bale after bale of cotton to be shipped all over the world.
 
The warehouses went on for blocks and extended far back from the street.
 
There were probably miles of them, but they were all empty now.
 

Cotton was no longer the state's big cash crop.
 
When I was a kid you could drive along the highways and see cotton growing in field after field, but these days it's not that way.
 
You hardly ever see it, and whatever gets shipped must go out of Houston.

There were signs hanging on the gates of some of the warehouses, signs identical to the one I'd seen on the gates at the marine lab:
 

 

KEEP OUT

U. S. GOVERNMENT PROPERTY

TRESPASSERS WILL BE PROSECUTED

 

I was beginning to think that the government was the biggest property owner in Galveston.

But since the government was the people, that meant I was free to enter and do as I pleased.
 
That's what I told myself, and it sounded just as false and hokey as it had when I'd tried it earlier.
 

But what the hell.
 
I had to tell myself something to justify what I was about to do, which was climb the fence and start searching the warehouses.

I parked the Jeep on the lot of a convenience store and hoped they wouldn't have it towed.
 
Maybe I'd be out before they even noticed the Jeep was there, though that didn't seem likely.
 
There were a lot of warehouses to go through.

I didn't try the fence on Broadway, of course.
 
There was far too much traffic and someone would have seen me for sure.
 
They might not have reported me; in fact, I was pretty sure no one would even care.
 
But I didn't want to take that chance.

Next to one group of warehouses there was a boarded up building fronted by a large unlit parking lot with weeds growing up through the cracks in the concrete.
 
I walked along the fence until I was at the back of the building, standing in the shadows it cast.
 
It didn't take me long to get over the fence.

When I was on the other side, I pulled the Mauser from my waistband and took the flashlight from my back pocket.
 
There was no need to turn it on just yet.

The first warehouse wasn't exactly a "house."
 
It was long, empty, and open on both sides.
 
I could see from one end of it to the other.
 
There was no one there.
 
I stepped up on the floor and turned on the light, sweeping it along to see if I'd missed anything.
 
I hadn't.

I stood there for a minute, listening.
 
All I could hear was the wind and the cars whishing along Broadway.
 
I wondered how many bales of cotton this place might have held, and I thought about hot green fields, about the cotton pickers bent over as they moved along the rows, dragging the long white cotton sacks behind them.

I walked across the floor and stepped down, then crossed a narrow, weed-filled area.
 
The next warehouse was also completely open, and I found it as deserted as the previous one.
 
The floor had been swept clean by the Gulf breezes; there wasn't even a sign that a rat or a mouse had ever been there.

I walked through another open warehouse just like the first two before I came to one that was partially enclosed.
 
One end was open, but the other was protected by sheet metal walls.

I didn't announce my presence.
 
I'd learned my lesson at the marine lab, not that it made any difference this time.
 
There was no one hiding in the enclosed end of the warehouse.
 
I was beginning to think that I was wasting my time, but there were plenty of warehouses left.
 
I kept going.

Four or five warehouses later, I found Ro-Jo.

He was lying on the floor, and I knew he was dead as soon as I saw him.

 

T
he warehouse I was in was almost completely enclosed, and Ro-Jo was lying at the end nearest Broadway, where there were several cubicles that had probably served as offices of some kind, though they appeared to be completely empty now.
 
Shadows jumped all around as I shone the flashlight through the openings in their walls.

Ro-Jo was lying just outside the door of one of the cubicles, and his head was twisted unnaturally on his shoulders.
 
I shined the light in his face.
 
His lips were cut and swollen.
 
Someone had hit him hard, and I wondered how much more damage would have shown up if he hadn't died before he had time to develop bruises.

His supermarket shopping basket wasn't far away.
 
Somehow he'd managed to get it through the fence.
 
The beam from my Mag-
Lite
sparkled off its silvery wires.
 
I didn't bother going through it.
 
It didn't appear to have been disturbed.
 
Whoever had killed Ro-Jo wasn't interested in the basket.

And whoever had killed him hadn't used a pistol.
 
He'd been beaten and his neck was broken.
 
I wondered if he'd told his killer how to find Harry or whether he'd lied as he'd lied to me.

Or maybe he hadn't lied to me.
 
Not exactly.
 
Maybe he'd wanted me to go to the marine lab because that was where he'd told the others to go.
 
Maybe he'd hoped I could stop them.

If that was true, he'd been very wrong.
 
They hadn't found Harry, but they'd found Ro-Jo again.
 
And this time they'd killed him.

I tried not to feel guilty about that, but feeling guilt is one of the things that I do best.
 
If only I'd done better at the lab, Ro-Jo might still be alive.

On the other hand, he might still be alive if he'd told me the truth in the first place.
 
It was too bad that he hadn't trusted me enough to do that.
 
He wasn't going to get a second chance, and I was more convinced than ever that if I didn't find Harry before the other lookers did, Harry wasn't going to survive for long.

I didn't know whether to tell Barnes about Ro-Jo or not, but I supposed I had to.
 
I couldn't just let the body stay where it was until someone else stumbled across it.

I turned to leave, and I'd taken two steps when I heard a noise behind me.
 
I started to turn, but I wasn't fast enough.
 
There was a step behind me and something hit me hard, square in the right kidney.

I dropped both the flashlight and the Mauser.
 
The light went skittering across the floor, and the Mauser flew about six feet through the air, hit, and bounced twice.
 
I landed on my knees, which didn't do either one of them any good.

I was hit again, in the head this time, before I had a chance to react.
 
I pitched forward, rolled, and tried to come to my feet.
 
I might have made it if my right knee hadn't collapsed underneath me.

When I struck the floor this time, I rolled to my right and kept on rolling on the pitted wooden floor.
 
I was hoping I could get to the Mauser, but my attacker was quicker than I was.
 
He kicked it out of the way and then aimed a kick at my head.

He was not only bigger than I was, he was a lot quicker, and that was all I could tell.
 
I couldn't see what he looked like because he had on a ski mask.
 
I could see his foot, though.
 
It looked like an aircraft carrier as it flew toward my head.

I tried to grab it, like hotshot private eyes do in the movies, but it was coming too fast.
 
I barely managed to deflect it, so that it missed most of my head, though it nearly took off my ear.
 
I also felt a popping in my left little finger and then a sharp pain, as if the finger had been dislocated.

My attempt at self-defense did throw my attacker off balance, and he stumbled forward and almost tripped over me.
 
I tried to help him along with a friendly shot to the groin.
 

Neither one of us had made much noise up until that point, but when I connected with his crotch, he let out a loud moan and went flailing into the shopping basket, which rolled into the wall of one of the cubicles before he was able to dislodge himself.
 
There was a ringing noise as he kicked the cart away from him.

Meanwhile, I was looking for the Mauser.
 
I saw a dark lump on the floor and made a dive for it.
 
My fingers closed around the butt, and I brought it up to fire, but my assailant was gone.

The shopping basket was lying on its side near the doorway to one of the cubicles, and Ro-Jo's possessions were scattered on the floor.
 
I was pretty sure that Ro-Jo's killer was inside the cubicle where he'd been hiding when I entered.
 
Now he was just waiting for me to make a move.

I decided to oblige him.
 
I fired a shot at the wall.

The Mauser isn't a .45, but its cartridges have enough power to send a bullet through a wall if the wood isn't too thick.
 
This wood wasn't.
 
The bullet whacked through, and the echo of the shot rattled off the sheet metal walls.

The man inside the cubicle had a gun.
 
I'd been hoping that he was unarmed, but apparently he'd just been trying to keep things quiet.
 
Now that I'd started the shooting, he was no longer shy.

I saw the dark outline of his head and then he fired off two quick shots, both of which missed me.
 
One of them hit the flashlight, however.
 
It hit the lens instead of the barrel, and the warehouse was plunged into darkness.

Nineteen
 

I
was moving almost before the light went out, and I assumed that the man in the cubicle was doing the same.
 
I popped off a round in that direction just to keep him awake, but I wasn't sure that I hit even the wall.
 
It was so dark that I had no idea what was in front of me.

He fired back at my muzzle flash, but I was five feet away by that time and able to return his fire.
 
I missed again and the bullet pinged through one of the sheet metal walls of the warehouse.

Then there was a sound like rattling thunder, and I thought for a second that a storm had hit, but it was only my big friend, who had crashed into the wall my last bullet went through.

He was blundering around in the dark like a bull rhino.
 
I decided to join him.

My knee held up long enough for me to stand, and I started toward where I thought the killer might be.
 
Sure enough, we ran together, and each of us made a grab for the other.

He won.
 
He got both arms around me and started to squeeze.
 
I still had the Mauser in my right hand, and while I couldn't direct it at a vital spot, I could still pull the trigger.

The pistol was pointed straight down at the floor, and it was very close to the killer's leg.
 
The muzzle flash burned him, as the bullet buried itself in the floor, and he relaxed his grip long enough for me to bend my knees and spring upward, banging the top of my head into his chin.

His teeth clicked together and he let me go, stumbling backward into the wall again.
 
I thought of shooting, but I was afraid I might actually hit him, not that I would have minded wounding him.
 
I didn't want to be responsible for his death, however, no matter what he'd done to Ro-Jo.
 
That kind of rough justice wasn't in my job description.

He rebounded from the wall, and either by accident or design ran right into me like a blitzing linebacker running into the opposing quarterback.

I hit the floor hard, the air whooshing out of my lungs.
 
My head bounced once, and there was a bright flash behind my eyelids.
 
For a second I thought that the lights had come on.
 
They hadn't, of course.
 
I lay there limp as a string and waited for whatever was coming next, a foot in the face or a bullet in the brain.
 
Whatever it was to be, there wasn't a thing I could do about it.

BOOK: When Old Men Die
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