Bright Futures: A Lew Fonesca Mystery (Lew Fonesca Novels) (5 page)

“I think he’s a kind of companion,” I said.

“We talked to Corkle,” Viviase said.

“What did Corkle tell you?” I asked Viviase, making another effort to get up. Ames reached for my arm.

“Lie down, partner,” he said.

I did. The thin pillow felt just right behind my head, and I wanted to go to sleep. I was sure I had been given something to ease the pain.

“Corkle had nothing much to say,” said Viviase. “He did refer to himself in the third person and compared life to a game of poker twice. He tried to give me a box with a Wonder Chopper inside. I told him I couldn’t take it. Your mini CD player and the CDs are being held as possible evidence.”

“Of what?” Ames asked.

“I don’t know,” said Viviase. “I have a headache and I don’t know. Just answer the questions, Fonesca, and don’t ask any. I have places to go and things to do, and my wife promised me that she would have chicken in duck sauce for dinner tonight. I plan to be there for it.”

I nodded. Ames stood straight and silent.

“You moved to a new place,” Viviase said.

“Yes. Had to. DQ is gone. My office building goes down tomorrow. I’m right around the corner, off of Laurel.”

“Life goes on,” Viviase said.

“Even when we don’t care.”

“The Chinese guy?” said Viviase.

“He’s moving with me, I think.”

“You’re nuts,” said Viviase.

“No . . . Maybe. It doesn’t matter.”

“Get better. Come and see me,” he said taking a deep breath. Then he turned his head toward Ames and added, “Take care of him.”

“I aim to,” said Ames.

When Viviase was gone, I stood again, this time without Ames’s help.

“We going to look for whoever took the shot?” he asked.

“We are,” I said. “Either that or I buy a car and head out of town forever.”

“That won’t work.”

“I guess.”

“Where do we start?”

“In juvenile detention,” I said, adjusting my Cubs cap and noticing that it had a slight but real tear on the right side. “First we talk to Augustine.”

 

I didn’t fall on my face as we moved to the elevator to go up to the private fourth floor room where Jeff Augustine was lying on his back. He wore a white hospital gown with a thin white blanket pulled up to his chest. An IV was going. His left eye was closed. His right eye was covered by a taped-down gauze pad. His hands were folded in front of him. He looked like a one-eyed saint.

“Jeff?” I tried.

Augustine made a sound but didn’t open his eye. I tried again.

“Augustine.”

This time his left eye popped open and he let out a pained groan as he reached up with his right hand to touch the injured eye.

“Hurts,” he said.

“I know,” I said.

“How would you know?”

“I have a natural empathy. Besides I got caught by flying glass.”

“We get a medal or something?” Augustine asked, closing his eye again and explaining, “Hurts less when both eyes are closed. I may lose the eye.”

“Maybe so,” said Ames.

“Who is he?” Augustine said, being careful not to turn his head.

“My friend,” I said. “Ames McKinney.”

“Weren’t we both in an episode of
The Yellow Rose
?”

“Not an actor,” said Ames.

“I could have sworn, but . . . Damn, what if this killed me? My obit would make a single line in
Variety
, ‘Bit Player Killed by BB Gun.’ Bitter irony.”

Alana Legerman walked in. She wafted perfume and looked sleek, dark, and beautiful.

“What happened?” she asked, moving to the side of the bed next to Augustine.

She was as tranquil as her offspring Greg was wired.

“Someone shot BBs at us,” said Augustine. “Hit me in the eye.”

“Who did it?” she asked.

No one had an answer, but Alana Legerman had a question.

She looked at Augustine and said, “Are you all right? Are you going to lose your eye?”

She tried to say it nice, but it was as if she were asking if the dime dropped on the floor was his. I couldn’t be sure if she was just saying the right thing or if she had shown concern to her father’s employee beyond that of an heiress.

“I’m all right,” Augustine said. “I’ve still got one twenty-twenty eye.”

“I’m all right too,” I said.

There was no way even a casual glance would have failed to reveal the scratches on my face and neck.

“I’m sorry,” said Alana Legerman. “How are you, Mr. . . .”

“Fonesca,” Ames supplied. “Mr. Lewis Fonesca. And my name’s Ames McKinney.”

“And what have you got to do with my father and Jeff?”

“Your father has asked me to look into the murder of Philip Horvecki.”

“You’re a private investigator?”

“No, a process server.”

She was unimpressed.

“You think my son’s friend killed Horvecki?”

“The police think so. The television stations, the newspaper and most of the people in Sarasota probably think so.”

“Why don’t you just ask Ronnie Gerall what happened?”she asked.

Jeff Augustine’s left eye was open wide and looking at Alana Legerman. I moved toward the door, Ames at my side.

“I think we’ll do that,” I said.

 

 

 

 

 

3

 

 

T
HE PROBLEM WAS IMMEDIATELY CLEAR
after we talked to Ronnie Gerall across a table in the visitors’ room in the county jail. I got the impression that he worked at being independent, superior, and unlikable, but I could have been wrong. He could simply and naturally be what my uncle called a
Merdu
, which roughly translated from the Italian means “dickhead.”

Ronnie was about six feet tall and had the build of an athlete, the drawn-back, almost blond hair of a teen movie idol, blue eyes, and a look of total boredom. He could easily have passed for twenty-one, which I was sure he did when it suited him.

It had started badly. Gerall had been ushered in. He wore a loose-fitting orange jail suit and a look that said, “Look at what those jerks sent me.” He didn’t offer his hand to Ames and me or ask or say anything at first; he just sat in the wooden chair with his right leg extended and half turned as if he planned to escape at the first sign of ennui.

Ames and I took seats. The full-bellied, uniformed guard, who looked almost as bored as Ronnie Gerall, stood with his
back to the door, arms folded. The room was large enough that the guard wouldn’t hear us if we whispered. Ronnie had no intention of whispering.

“Greg Legerman told me you were coming,” he said.

That required no answer so I just kept sitting and watching him.

“Please do me a favor before we have anything that resembles conversation,” he said.

“Yes.”

“Would you mind taking off that dopey baseball cap.”

“Yes, I would.”

“I watched you and an old man drive up on a motor scooter,” he said, ignoring my answer.

“And . . . ?”

“You can’t afford a car?”

“Don’t want the responsibility,” I said.

“How did Greg Legerman find you?” he asked shaking his head and looking first at Ames and then at me.

“Luck,” I said.

We sat in silence for about a minute, during which he found his fingernails fascinating and the palms of his hands, particularly the right one, profound.

“I did not kill Philip Horvecki,” he said, looking up.

“Tell us what happened.”

“Why not? I’ve got time. It was Thursday night. He called, said he would meet with me. Horvecki said he wanted to talk.”

“You sure it was Horvecki?” I asked.

“Old men all sound alike, either like sick hummingbirds or gravel pits. This was gravel pits. Pure Horvecki.”

He looked at Ames, who could have been number five on Mount Rushmore.

“Go on,” I prompted.

“I went to his house.”

“Right away?”

“Yes.”

“You told someone you were going?”

“No. Can I go on?”

“Yes.”

“I rang the bell. No answer. I tried the door. Open.” I went in. The place is a nightmare. Black wood, black tile floors, white walls. Even the paintings are almost all black and white. No wonder someone killed him.”

“I don’t think you should say that,” I said.

“You don’t think so?” Ronnie said with a smile.

“He doesn’t think so,” said Ames. “And you’d best heed what Mr. Fonesca tells you.”

“Or what, old man?”

“Or I reach across this table and slap you three or four times. And you won’t stop me, because even though I just warned you, you won’t be able to,” said Ames, eyes fixed on Ronnie Gerall’s face.

“He’ll do it, too,” I said.

“Then he’ll be in here with me,” said Ronnie.

“Is that where you want him? Respect means a great deal to Mr. McKinney.”

The uniformed guard slouched a little more. He wasn’t interested in what we had to say.

“You found Horvecki,” I said.

“On the floor in the hallway. Definitely dead. Lots of blood on his face and shirt. Mouth open. I thought I saw someone in an open doorway on the right. Then I saw someone go out the window.”

“And you followed him,” said Ames.

“No. I mean yes. I went out the front door looking for him. Whoever it was was gone.”

“You saw nobody?” I asked.

“No . . . wait. There was a man in a pickup truck, but it wasn’t the one who was in the house. The guy in the pickup was
there when I got to Horvecki’s. I thought he was waiting for somebody.”

“Could he have seen the man who jumped out of the window?” I asked.

“Could have? He would have had to,” said Ronnie.

“Can you describe the man or the truck?” I asked.

“It was a small pickup, not old, not new. Guy in the truck had on a baseball cap. Couldn’t see his face. I think he was black. Maybe. Couldn’t tell you how . . . Wait, I had the feeling he wasn’t an old guy like Stokes over here.”

Ames did not take kindly to the remark, but he held his tongue.

“And I don’t know how tall he was,” Ronnie went on. “He never got out of the truck. I only saw him for a few seconds.”

“Did he look at you?” I asked.

“Yes.”

“We’ll find him,” I said.

I must not have filled the room with my infectious optimism, because Ronnie said, “You don’t believe me.”

“No matter if we believe you,” said Ames. “It matters if we find him.”

“What did you do after you went outside and didn’t see him?” I asked.

“I went back in the house to be sure Horvecki was dead. Before I could call 911, I heard the door to the house open. Then a voice saying, ‘Throw your gun toward the door and stand up slowly with your hands high and your palms showing.’

“I did. I was read my rights and arrested.”

“Did you tell them about the person in the doorway and the man in the truck?” I asked.

“I did. They didn’t believe me, either. I’m glad Horvecki’s dead, but I didn’t kill him.”

“You have a lawyer?” I asked.

“You’re not a lawyer?”

“No,” I said.

“Goddamn it!” he shouted loud enough to make the guard almost slump to the floor. “I’ll kill Greg when I get my hands on him.”

“You really know the right things to say,” I said.

“What the hell are you then?”

“A process server,” I said. “And someone who finds missing people.”

“Who the fuck is missing here?”

“The person who shot Philip Horvecki,” said Ames, “provided that person is not you.”

“And,” I added, “whoever might have been standing in the open doorway when you went into Horvecki’s house.”

“Guard, get these two out of here,” said Ronnie. Then he turned to me and said, “I’ll get my own lawyer.”

“Suits me,” said Ames rising.

I got up, too. The guard was alert now.

We got to the door. Then Ronnie Gerall said, “Wait.”

I turned as the guard moved toward the prisoner.

“I think the person in the doorway was a woman.”

“Horvecki’s daughter?” I asked.

He shrugged. “I don’t know.”

“Whoever it was might have seen the person who went through the window kill Horvecki,” I said.

“Or might have been the person who killed Horvecki,” said Ames.

“I’ve got no money, but I don’t want a public defender,” Ronnie said. It sounded like a challenge.

“I’ll see what I can do,” I said.

Ames and I went past the guard and into the corridor.

“He’s scared,” Ames said.

“He’s scared,” I agreed as we walked toward the thick metal door.

“Full of hate,” Ames said.

“Full of hate,” I agreed.

“You gonna help him?” Ames asked as we got to the door.

“It’s why I get the big bucks,” I said.

 

“Philip Horvecki,” I said.

There were twenty-two wooden steps leading up to the three rooms under a pitched roof into which I had moved. This was on Laurel, around the corner and about half a block from the departed Dairy Queen. The steps had once been white. The railing, which shook if you put a hand on it, had once been green. I couldn’t call it an apartment. You had to move carefully under the ceiling or you would bump your head. The first room was a big, blank square with a bathroom across from the front door. The second room, about the size of a prison cell, looked as if it had originally been installed by indifferent Seminoles and recently painted white by someone who wanted to set the record for speed painting. There was a third room, a little bigger than one of Superman’s phone booths. With luck you might be able to get a rocking chair into it.

The walls of the big room were white painted plaster board under which the smell of sad and ancient wood managed to persist. The big and little rooms were connected by a varnished wooden door. There were no overhead lights, but Flo Zink, who had found the place, had not only painted it but put two bright floor lamps in each room. I had met Flo shortly after I came to Sarasota. I had found her husband, Gus, who was dying from too many diseases to count. Gus had been kidnapped to keep him from voting on a land issue in the City Council. Ames and I had gotten him to the meeting, where his last act on earth was to cast the deciding vote. He left Flo with enough money to sustain five widows comfortably for a lifetime. Flo felt responsible for me. Finding my new home was just one of the ways she had shown it over the last four years.

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