“I don’t need to get to her; I already have it.”
“What?” Nick’s eyebrows arched, like two dark crescent moons. “I’m almost afraid to ask how you got it.”
“I was wearing a sports coat the day I met Andrea. There were no napkins at the table in the Starbucks. Inside the front pocket of my jacket was a clean, white handkerchief. When Andrea started crying, I handed her the handkerchief. She used it to wipe her eyes and nose. I remember seeing a smudge of her red lipstick on it, too.”
“Where is it?” Dave asked.
“In a Ziploc bag in the pocket of my jacket, and that’s hanging in the closet on Jupiter.”
Dave shook his head. “That little plastic bag and its contents could prove to be a Pandora’s Box for Senator Lloyd Logan and his two-hundred million dollar campaign to become the next president of the United States.”
Nick said, “But to get Courtney’s DNA, you got to find her. That’s not gonna be easy. In the meantime, Bandini may have put a price on her head.”
Dave said, “Carlos Bandini will be small potatoes compared to Senator Logan’s camp if this thing swirls out of the box or plastic bag. If the connection is ever close to being made that Courtney Burke is his wife’s biological child, a ‘love child’ who may have grown into a killing monster, what would they do to keep it from becoming public?”
I leaned down, picked up Max, and thought of something Courtney said on my boat, “This little dog is smart. I wish I’d had a dog when I was a little girl.”
33
Courtney Burke stood next to a window in the Airstream trailer and watched as the moon climbed above the dark waters of Bullfrog Creek. She listened to the chorus of frogs along the creek bank, their frenetic bellowing in the night taking Courtney back to her childhood. She remembered the time her gypsy parents parked their Volkswagen camper-bus on the bank of the Edisto River in South Carolina’s Low Country.
They were there for three days, living off the land, eating river mussels, rabbit, and fried squirrel. Her father spent a dollar to buy a half-dozen catfish and shrimp from a black man who sold them from a Styrofoam cooler on the side of the road, the yellow-bellied catfish and shrimp covered in shaved ice. Her mother fried them in a cast-iron skillet on a campfire her father built. After each meal, mama rinsed the grease out of the pan, usually in the river, and stored the pan in two crumpled brown paper bags she kept in the back of the camper bus.
Courtney blinked at the rising moon and buried her memories. She reached for a flashlight on a small table near the window, opened the screened-door, and stepped outside. The humid air smelled of moss and blooming orange blossoms. She thought of Boots’ warning about water moccasins and turned on the flashlight, its narrow beam shining over the dark water. There were more than a dozen sets of red eyes, some moving on the surface, others simply staring toward the light. Alligators. She could make out the head of one large gator, its red eyes spaced at least a foot apart. The gator swam slowly, blinking once, and coming to within twenty feet of the creek bank before sinking beneath the murky surface.
A dog barked. Courtney whirled around, looking up the long, sloping yard toward Boots Langley’s old 1950’s-style ranch house. Somewhere inside the screened back area, the large cockatoo, Clementine, sat on her perch barking like a dog. Courtney smiled, the slow, loud bark coming from the small throat of the bird and giving the frogs a run for their money.
Courtney swatted at a mosquito hovering around her face. She took a step toward the wrought iron bench seat under an old oak. She stopped walking, shining the light on the empty bench. Was a water moccasin lying on a low-hanging limb ready to slither down around her shoulders? She thought of the snake that Boots carried around on his shoulders, the snake’s cool skin touching the back of the little man’s thick neck.
The screened door slammed. Courtney looked up toward the house. Boots Langley stepped from the porch and shuffled down the yard, flashlight in one hand, a can of insect repellent in the other. He walked up to Courtney. “Saw your flashlight. Thought I’d bring you some mosquito spray. You stay out here long enough and you’ll be a quart low. If you don’t believe in vampires, watch a mosquito feeding on a human. They’ll gorge themselves on blood, increasing their body mass by fifty percent in one feeding. They’re such gluttons, sometimes they can’t even fly away.” He handed her the repellent.
“Thank you.” She sprayed it on her exposed arms, legs and neck. She closed her eyes and sprayed some quickly across her face. “I don’t know what’s worse, the bug bites or the junk in the spray.”
“Often the art of life is about rotating our poisons to prevent buildup.”
“I was gonna sit on the bench, but I didn’t want one of those moccasins falling from the tree.”
Boots grinned, a diamond stud in his left ear catching the moonlight across the wide creek. “Those cottonmouth moccasins would rather bite a fish or frog than you. At night, most of them are out hunting. Don’t worry about one being in the trees, just watch where you step.”
“Okay.”
“Let’s sit down.” They sat on the park bench, Boot’s feet a foot above the grass, the rising moon reflecting off the black water, the bearded profiles of Spanish moss like toothed shadows hanging from the tree limbs. “Now, Courtney, you want to tell me a little about what Isaac mentioned? He said you’re in search of something. Sounds like a person, and maybe that person took something of yours, correct?”
Courtney looked out across the flowing creek, her face drenched in the soft moonlight. She turned toward Boots and said, “You and Isaac are related. I can tell.”
“Did he tell you?”
“No.”
“How did you know? Is it because those hauntingly beautiful eyes of yours see what most others can’t?”
“It’s more of a feeling than anything. Who’s the oldest?”
“Me, by seven minutes. We’re fraternal twins. I like to think of myself as the older, and wiser brother.”
Courtney smiled and Boots said, “You have a lovely smile. It’s the first time in two days that I’ve seen you smile.”
“I haven’t had a lot to smile about lately.”
“I believe it’ll get better. I’m impressed that you knew Isaac and I are brothers. Except for our size, there are no similar features. Although he’s the Guesser, you dear, are not to be outdone. My brother tells me you’re looking for someone who took something. Who is it and what is it?”
“Boots, you’ve been kind to me. Allowing me to stay here. They’d arrest you, too, if they thought you were helping somebody like me.”
He smiled. “I’m not helping somebody like you. I’m helping you, and I’m not so sure there’s another quite like you. And that’s good because you’re unique.”
“Thank you. I’m looking for someone who owes my family something. He’s a little bit of a magician, hypnotist, and country preacher. He’s my uncle, and he’s pure evil.”
The sound of a dog barking fast came from the screen-enclosed porch behind Boots’ house. “That’s Clementine. And that bark is not the good bark.”
“You said it’s a warning. What does it mean?”
“It means someone or something is coming.”
“What do we do?”
“Shhh, keep your voice down. My gun is in the house.”
“I have one in my bag.”
“Now’s the time to get it.”
34
They kept the flashlights off. As Courtney opened the screen door on the Airstream, Boots said, “Don’t turn on the lights. Just hand me the pistol. I may have to hold it in two hands, but I know how to use it.”