I found nothing.
Soon as I could, I walked around to the rear of the car, glanced up and down, right and left, found the sidewalks momentarily empty and went to work, picking the lock as quickly as I could.
I was in and out in less than a minute, finding absolutely nada, unless you counted a spare tire and a pair of jumper cables.
I closed up the trunk and started walking slowly back to my motel, enjoying the clean, clear cold. May in Iowa usually encompasses several seasons, including winter at least three or four of the thirty-one days. Sweater weather, the locals call it, evoking images of a blazing fireplace, a very hot hot toddy and a beautiful girl whose eyes dance with the reflection of the fire. I hoped my night with the high sheriff of New Hope would offer at least a few of those pleasures.
So Samuel Lodge was the man who’d met McNally at the Brindle farm this afternoon. Presumably, anyway, since it was definitely his blue Toyota I had seen entering and exiting the barn.
And now Samuel Lodge was the man who’d been murdered in my room and stuffed into my closet.
These two thoughts kept me occupied as I walked back to my room.
I was engrossed enough in them that my mind didn’t register the scene in the steak-house window until I was several feet past it. Then I did a sort of double take — a subtle one, of course, nothing that Laurel and Hardy fans would like — and turned around.
I walked back down the street and looked in the window, which had a skin of moisture on it from the cold, and there they were.
The good reverend and two of his flock, namely Kenny Deihl and Mindy Lane.
None of them looked especially happy to see me.
I went inside, told the cashier I was only popping in to say hello to a few good and true friends, and then wended my way through tables of older people sawing steaks and inserting pieces of them into their mouths, all that time gabbing, smiling and turning A-l bottles upside down.
“Mind if I have a cup of coffee?” I said to the reverend.
“Would Jesus deny you a cup of coffee?” he responded.
I wanted to point out that, strictly speaking, I hadn’t been addressing Jesus, I had been addressing the reverend, but I sat down and ordered my cup of coffee anyway.
Mindy looked exceptionally pretty in a low-cut white blouse with an oversized lace collar and her hair pulled up dramatically from her face. This, I assumed, was the Religious Mindy, the fleshy sexuality only hinted at in the somewhat sullen mouth and the dozy but shrewd green eyes.
Kenny Deihl offered everybody at the table a nervous smile, as if hoping to effect some sort of truce between all of us. In his Western shirt and empty handsome face, he was the perennial B actor whose purpose in the movie was to learn some tough lessons in life from a sardonic John Wayne.
Then there was the reverend, funereal in blue suit and blue shirt and muted red tie. There was too much gold in his watch and cuff links for him to ever be a true friend of the Lord’s but he tried to make up for it in the almost-oppressive piety of the gaze and the somnolent platitudes uttered by his TV voice.
The waitress took my order for coffee. But she wasn’t going to give up on me as a customer. “We’ve got some good meat loaf tonight,” she said, and God, how good it sounded — but I didn’t figure that the high sheriff of New Hope would appreciate my chowing down right before our date.
“Sorry,” I said.
I looked around the restaurant briefly at all the husbands and wives of so many years, some of them brides and grooms for sixty years, I imagined, and I sensed such peace and belonging in them that I felt cast out, to suffer in the darkness with these three who seemed, each in his way, profoundly troubled.
“I understand that the body was found in your room,” the good reverend said.
“Yes, unfortunately.”
“Did you know him?” Mindy asked.
I shook my head. “No, not at all.”
She smiled. “He had a mighty sweet tongue on him, that one.”
The Reverend shot her a look of instant displeasure.
“What I remember about him,” Kenny Deihl said, “was that letter he wrote the Clarion about us not getting a tax exemption.”
“It’s no time to be speaking ill of the man, Kenny,” the Reverend reminded him, straightening his left French cuff. “He was possessed of the Devil when he wrote those words. Maybe he got right with God before he passed on. You need to consider that, Kenny.”
“He didn’t get right with God,” Kenny said. “Not that cynic. No way.”
I already wanted to get up and run screaming from this odd trio. Maybe they were laying out all this bad dialogue for my sake — but it was even worse to think that they actually talked in this skin-crawling way when they were alone.
Not bothering to hide her amusement, Mindy said, “Sam didn’t think that religions should be given tax exemptions. He said the state had too many bills as it was and needed to raise all the taxes it could.”
“He especially disliked religions such as ours,” the reverend said. “Where we take our ministry to the people rather than praying to false gods in crystal cathedrals or towers of the papacy.”
Towers of the papacy. I’d have to remember that one.
“If Jesus was with us today, in the flesh that is,” the Reverend said, “He would own His own radio station.”
“Not TV station?” I said.
“You’re like Sam Lodge,” the Reverend said. “You mock without understanding.”
Mindy looked at me and smiled. “You don’t want to end up like Sam Lodge, do you?”
“That’s right,” the Reverend said. “That’s right indeed.”
I was still confounded by the youthfulness of his face. He was well into his thirties but he still resembled a student-council president from a prestigious Eastern university, all well-concealed ambition and blow-dry politics.
I looked at each of them. “So you all knew him?”
“Indeed, we all knew him,” the reverend said.
“Not out of choice,” Kenny said.
“Speak for yourself,” Mindy smiled.
If we didn’t know by now that she slept with the recently departed Sam Lodge, we were never going to get the hint.
“Did any of you kill him?”
“Is that supposed to be a joke, Mr. Hokanson?” Kenny said. “Because if it is, it isn’t funny.”
“It’s no joke,” the reverend said in his best patriarchal manner. “He’s being serious.”
“Well, I don’t think it’s funny, either,” Mindy said. She looked right at me. “Up until you asked that question, Mr. Hokanson, I sort of liked you. Maybe Kenny here isn’t the smartest person on the planet, and maybe I’m not always the good girl I should be, and maybe the reverend here spends a little more of the church money than he should — but we’re all basically good people. Good Christian people. And we certainly wouldn’t go around killing people.”
She was serious. I kept looking at her for the sardonic smile or the sarcastic phrase, something to indicate that she and I were still conspirators, that we knew the real truth about dopey Kenny and the relentless reverend, but now I saw, and saw with great vast disbelief, that she was actually one of them too — one of the Christian pod people.
I sighed a serious sigh, set down my coffee cup and stood up. “Well, just thought I’d stop in and say hello.”
“You really piss me off, you know that?” Mindy said, tears choking her voice and filling her eyes.
“Mindy!” the reverend snapped, seeing that other diners were watching us now.
She put her head down. “I’m sorry I used that word. Forgive me, O Lord.”
I stared at her a long moment. Here I’d had her all neatly filed away under Good-time Girl but she wasn’t that at all. She was something dark and mercurial and perhaps even dangerous.