Read When Old Men Die Online

Authors: Bill Crider

Tags: #Mystery & Crime

When Old Men Die (22 page)

BOOK: When Old Men Die
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Zintner
exhaled smoke.
 
"Looking for Harry, just like you were."

I hadn't expected him to admit that, but then I hadn't expected him to admit any of the things he'd told me so far.

"Why was he looking for Harry?" I asked.

Zintner
stubbed out his cigarette in a little glass ashtray that was already full of butts, probably a pack and a half's worth.
 
And that was just from today.

"It's a long story," he said.

"I have time."

"All right.
 
First of all, Macklin was working for me."

"I thought so.
 
I know you're one of the investors who are thinking about buying The Island Retreat."

"I won't ask you how you found that out, but you had to dig.
 
We've been trying to keep it a secret.
 
Anyway, you're right.
 
I think it's time for gambling to come back to the Island, and I think there's a lot of money to be made from it.
 
There's plenty of opposition, like always, but I think this time the gamblers are going to win.
 
And I wanted a part of the action."

"That's no reason to be looking for Harry," I said.

He got out another Camel and lit it with the Zippo.
 
I sat and watched him smoke.

"You know Dale," he said finally.

I didn't know what that was supposed to mean, and I said so.

"Dale's got all kinds of snitches, all over the Island.
 
They like to tell him things."

"They tell him because they're afraid he'd beat the hell out of them.
 
Like he did Ro-Jo."

"You want to hear this or not?"
Zintner
asked.

I said that I wanted to hear it.

"Then let's forget Ro-Jo for a minute.
 
Like I said, Dale's got ears everywhere, and he heard that somebody had killed
Braddy
Macklin in the Retreat.
 
The realtor had let me have a key to the place, and
Braddy
was checking it out for us.
 
You know, see what kind of equipment was there, how much we'd have to spend to fix it up, that kind of thing.
 
Somebody didn't like that, so they killed him."

"And Harry saw it."

"That's what Dale heard.
 
But he couldn't find Harry.
 
Now and then Ro-Jo told Becker things, but he swore he didn't know where Harry was.
 
Said he hadn't seen Harry in a long time, but that there were places Harry used to hang out.
 
That old lab was one."

"You know you've got competition for the Retreat?" I asked.

"You mean the boys from back East?
 
Yeah.
 
I know about them.
 
You met Alex Minor?"

"I've met him."

"Well, then.
 
You know the kind of people we're up against.
 
We wouldn't want that in Galveston."

"You think Minor killed Macklin?"

"He's what you might call the logical suspect.
 
He's about as hard to find as old Harry is, though."

"Have you told the police all this?"

Zintner
laughed, coughed, and laughed some more.
 
Then he crushed his Camel in the ashtray.

"Those things are gonna kill me someday," he said.
 
"No, I haven't told the cops.
 
After I find Harry, maybe I will."

"I thought you told me you were the policeman's friend."

"You knew better, though.
 
Besides, I might be wrong.
 
Minor might not have killed
Braddy
.
 
I gotta be sure.
 
Maybe there's somebody else in on this, somebody I don't know about."

I thought about Dino.
 
Then I put that thought out of my mind.
 
I also thought about Lawrence Hobart, but I didn't mention him, either.
 
I wasn't going to tell
Zintner
everything I knew.
 
I figured he wasn't going to level with me, either, not all the way.

"Assuming you're telling me the truth about all this, why did Becker try to kill me?" I asked.

Zintner
smiled a thin, mean smile.
 
"Now who says he was trying to kill you?
 
Just because he took a few shots, that doesn't mean a thing.
 
The way Dale told it to me, he was just trying to scare you."

Well, he'd certainly succeeded, but I wasn't going to give
Zintner
or Becker the satisfaction of admitting it.

"The way Dale tells it,"
Zintner
went on, "he could have finished you off last night, but he didn't.
 
At first, yeah, he was shooting at you.
 
He thought you were the killer coming back to make sure that Ro-Jo was dead or something.
 
He didn't get a good look at you until you were out cold on the floor.
 
When he realized who you were, he didn't try anything else.
 
He just left you right where you were, sleeping like a baby."

I'd wondered why I'd survived.
 
Now I knew.
 
The man I'd tangled with -- Becker -- hadn't wanted to kill me.
 
Or so
Zintner
wanted me to believe.

"When he was shooting, the bullets came awfully close to me."

"I told you:
 
he wanted to scare you.
 
He didn't know why you were looking for Harry.
 
For all he knew, you were the one who'd killed Macklin."
 
He smiled again.
 
"We still don't know you aren't, not for sure."

"Let's say I didn't kill Macklin.
 
And let's say Becker didn't.
 
Then who killed Ro-Jo?"

"That's what we'd like to know.
 
You didn't, not unless you were doubling back to check on the body, and Dale didn't.
 
Who does that leave?"

Dale was big enough to have done it, but then so was Alex Minor.
 
I hadn't seen Minor following me last night, but maybe he was ahead of me like everyone else seemed to be.

"Minor?" I said.

Zintner
shrugged his narrow shoulders.
 
"Could be."

"I think we should go to the police," I said.

Zintner
didn't laugh.
 
He just looked at me.

"All right, maybe that's not such a good idea."

"Damn right it's not.
 
You and Dale might get thrown under the jail."

"We know a bondsman," I said.
 
"He'd get us out."

Zintner
smiled, and this time it wasn't so mean.
 
"I don't think he'd take the risk."

"Look," I said.
 
"My only interest in this whole thing is finding Harry.
 
If I can do that, I'll forget the rest of it.
 
We could work together."

"What you mean is that you want me and Dale to tell you everything we find out, but you won't tell us anything.
 
Is that about right?"

It was, but I couldn't say that.
 
So I said, "No.
 
I'll cooperate."
 

Just like I was cooperating with Barnes.

"Tell you what,"
Zintner
said.
 
"Not that I don't trust you, but why don't we just go on like we are.
 
Maybe you and
Dale'll
quit stumbling over each other.
 
It doesn't matter which one of you finds Harry, just as long as one of you does."

It made a difference to me, all right.
 
I didn't want Harry to wind up like Ro-Jo had, but I don't think
Zintner
really cared one way or another.
 
All he wanted was information, and if he couldn't get it from Harry, he'd get it some other way.
 
And the truth was that I'd just about run out of places to look.
 
I wanted the kind of information Becker could get from his collection of snitches.

On the other hand, I had a few things to work on that
Zintner
knew nothing about.
 
Or that he hadn't said anything about.
 
That didn't mean he didn't know.

"All right," I said.
 
"We keep on working separately.
 
But if Dale gets in my way again, he might get hurt."

"From the looks of you, I'd say you won't be hurting anybody for a while.
 
By the way, Dale's sorry about the fight here in the office.
 
He wouldn't have got into it with you if you hadn't pushed him."

I said, "Tell him that if it happens again, I'm going to pull that gold earring right out of his earlobe."

Zintner
laughed and reached for his Camels.
 
"Now there's a sight I'd like to see."

Twenty-Four
 

W
hen I went home, the little red light on the answering machine was flashing.
 
I ignored it and called Cathy Macklin in the hopes that she might go out for dinner with me.

She told me that she didn't feel like going anywhere.
 
She'd gotten word that the autopsy on her father was complete, and she'd scheduled the funeral for the next morning.
 
I was sorry that she didn't feel like seeing me that evening, but the truth was that I wasn't feeling much like going out myself.
 
I told her I'd see her at the funeral.

Nameless was rumbling around my legs as I talked, so I hung up and fed him.
 
As soon as he gobbled his food, he wanted back out.
 
He probably had a date.

After letting him out, I listened to my messages.
 
There were three of them, and they were all from Patrick Lytle.
 
He wanted to know whether I'd found Harry, why I hadn't called, and when he could expect to see me.
 
I didn't feel like talking to him, so I erased the messages and listened to Elvis on the CD player while I read a few pages of
Look Homeward, Angel
.
 

I put the book aside after a few minutes because I couldn't keep my mind on what I was reading.
 
I was too wrapped up in other things.
 
And the thing that bothered me most was something about Lytle.
 
I knew how Becker and
Zintner
had found out about my looking for Harry.
 
That had been my fault.

But who had told Patrick Lytle?

 

T
here was to be no memorial service for
Braddy
Macklin, so the next morning a little before nine, I drove the Jeep to the old city cemetery on Broadway.
 
The cemetery predates the Civil War, and some of the headstones are faded now with time and age.
 
There are soaring monuments topped with angels, too, and marble tombs streaked with rust-colored weather stains.

I drove through the gate at the 40th Street entrance and wound my way around until I saw a small group gathered near a mausoleum.
 
There was a hearse parked nearby, and the name of a local funeral home appeared in one of its windows in tastefully small silver letters.

Braddy
Macklin wasn't going to be buried, as it turned out.
 
He was going to be entombed alongside his wife.
 
On the Island you can't dig down very far before you strike water.

There were several people at the tomb when I arrived.
 
They included Cathy Macklin, Gerald Barnes, and a man whom I supposed was the minister designated to say a few final words about Macklin.
 
There were also two men in black suits who probably worked for the funeral home.
 
All those were people I'd expected to see.

I hadn't expected to see Patrick Lytle and his grandson, Paul, however.
 
They were there, not far from the hearse, Patrick in his wheelchair and his grandson standing right behind him.
 
There was a smile of fierce satisfaction on the elder Lytle's face, as if he had waited years for what he was about to see.
 
The grandson, on the other hand, looked completely detached, almost bored.
 
He wasn't even watching the funerary proceedings; he was watching a white gull sailing through the intensely blue sky.

I hadn't expected Dino and Evelyn to be there, either, but they were, and after saying a few meaningless words to Cathy, I walked over to join them.

BOOK: When Old Men Die
10.75Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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