Sandberg said nothing.
I heard a wasp fly next to me. Sandberg said, “Okay, we’ll question him. I’ll get paperwork for DNA testing.”
“Ultimately, the man who made Palmer’s bond, probably Pablo Gonzales, which I suspect is the king puppeteer, is responsible for Palmer’s murder and the other three.”
“They hung Palmer to send a message, O’Brien. Drug lords invented terrorism. Palmer on ice can’t testify against his nephew Izzy. Neither, obviously, can Molly and Mark. Izzy, assuming we could ever pick him up, walks away.”
“Maybe not.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“We found Palmer, maybe we can find Izzy Gonzales.”
“You might have to track him to Mexico. And who the hell’s we?”
“A friend of mine. He’s Seminole. He can track almost anything that leaves a trail, even to Mexico.”
“I’ve kept Sheriff Clayton at bay because the media have let up some. But now that there’s another killing in the forest, and this one’s a former suspect in the other three murders, we might have to stretch crime-scene tape around the whole fucking Ocala National Forest. You and your Indian pal need to get your assess outta there now. Where exactly is the body? We need to roll units.”
“It’s the intersection of Highways 40 and 19. Go north on 19 one mile. You’ll come to an unmarked spur road on the left. Take it as far as it goes and then you’re on foot for about a half mile due west heading northwest of Juniper… Sandberg… Sandberg can you hear me?”
Nothing but static. “Did you get the directions, Sandberg?” No response. I looked at the satellite phone. The picture symbol for battery was gone, replaced with a weak pulsating dot. Then the phone lost all power.
“Let’s move on, Joe. We have a few hours until nightfall. I bet this place gets darker than the bottom of a deep cave.”
SEVENTY-NINE
Billie and I’d walked about a half mile when he said, “Over there, I see some coontie plants.” I looked in the direction where he pointed and still had a hard time distinguishing the coontie from surrounding foliage. We approached it, and I griped the shotgun a little tighter. Billie knelt by one of the plants. He reached in and lifted a caterpillar from a leaf. The caterpillar was blood orange red with two rows of bright yellow dots like match flames along its back. “Birds won’t eat it.”
“So I hear. How’d you know that?”
“One way is the bright color. Also, these caterpillars emit an odor. Nature warns the birds that this caterpillar, and the butterfly it will become, is not to be eaten. I think the songbirds develop a sixth sense, too.” He set the caterpillar back on the coontie leaf.
I thought of Molly, thought of her smile that day in the restaurant and what she said, “Have you ever held a live butterfly on the palm of your hand, Sean? They like the human touch… the warmth that comes from our hands, and maybe our hearts.”
I felt Billie tap my shoulder. “Ready?”
“What?
“Ready to move on?”
“I was just thinking… yeah, let’s keep moving.”
Billie nodded and walked between a few of the coontie plants, heading deeper into the forest. We hiked through scrub oak and dry sandy soil. Billie pointed to a gopher tortoise digging a hole, its front feet and claws tossing sand. Then, there were more coontie plants and a wall of oak and pines that seemed to go on forever.
Billie stopped. I thought he’d spotted a rattlesnake. He studied the landscape directly in front of us for a few seconds, and looked to our far right. “The springs are to the east,” he said.
I saw what he’d found. We both knelt down at the same instance, his brown hand touching the hose. It resembled a typical garden hose. Olive green, blending well with the surroundings. But more than two feet of it was visible. An animal, maybe an armadillo, had dug up the soil around the area exposing a few feet of hose. I lifted the uncovered part and could see it ran from the direction of the spring to the north.
“It’s roto-rooter time,” I said, handing Billie the shotgun. Pulling gloves from my pocket, I slipped them on and used both hands to lift the hose from the few inches of soil that covered it. I headed the opposite direction from the springs, uprooting the hose as it led me toward another shadowy section of the forest.
Billie followed behind me. I saw vultures riding air currents high above the forest. When we were within fifty feet of the next bank of trees, I dropped the hose.
I looked to my right and stopped. I recognized the area.
The image was trapped in my memory. Unlike a digital picture, it couldn’t be deleted from my mind. This was where Molly and Mark had taken the photos. The adrenaline poured into my bloodstream. I held up my hand. “What is it?” Billie asked.
I whispered, “This is the place. It’s where Molly and Mark first took all of the pictures.” I didn’t want to turn my body, only allowing my eyes to scan to the right and left, aware that a rifle bullet could come from the shadows. “Let’s go this way.” We crouched behind a strand of pines and looked through the bushes and scrub.
There they were. Tall as stalks of corn in an Iowa field.
Marijuana. Hundreds of plants. And many were harvested, drying and ready to be stripped of leaves.
EIGHTY
We saw no one. The only movement came from the wind stirring the marijuana leaves. There was no sign of human activity. But there were signs they’d been here. Open bags of fertilizer. Empty and broken bottles of pesticides and fungicides. Shovels, axes and discarded cans of refried beans littered the ground.
The growers had done a good job tucking the marijuana plants between the native vegetation. Spacing just right. Sporadic enough to keep from forming any kind of discernible pattern. Some of the crop was cut and hanging upside down on a long wooden rack, like tobacco leaves drying under the hot Florida sun.
The water hose was connected to a pump that was coupled to a large diesel generator. The hose was fitted with three splitters from the pump, feeding the base of each marijuana plant in a drip irrigation method. The generator and pump were turned off. I looked just above the generator and saw the shimmer of heat rising from the steel casing. If they were gone, I knew they hadn’t been gone very long. “Let’s have a closer look,” I whispered, reaching for my shotgun. “You want my pistol?”
Billie shook his head, his eyes seeming to scan the very air in front of us. We walked quietly with the only sounds around us coming from the humming of bees, the scamper of field mice, and the flutter of hidden birds in the trees. Billie knelt down beside shoeprints in the damp earth. He examined them. “They were just here. They left quickly. One man running, but they’re not gone.” Billie touched one of his fingers to the moist soil at the toe of a print. He looked up at me. “Odd shoe patterns. Almost like moccasins. Same prints we found leading to the body. No tread.”
I thought of Ranger Ed Crews, thought of his lopsided grin, his dyed hair, his left boot with a tiny piece of duct tape on the right heel. “They may know we’re here. They’re probably watching us.” I considered Dave’s satellite phone in my backpack, its low battery. Maybe I could charge it back at the Jeep. I crouched down beside Billie, the smell of earthworms, pesticide and refried beans welling from the ground. “We have to get better cover. Let’s stay down, hang on the fringe and do a zigzag run to the generator. It’ll be more difficult for them to aim, less chance for bullets to hit us. On three, let’s go. Got it?”