The clerks cheeks are red. Will you be needing help with your luggage?
I need a bellboy who can earn that C-note with some useful information, thats what I need.
Perhaps someone can help you on one of the boats.
Walt walks away muttering loudly, I never heard of a deskman in an oil town who don't know nothin bout the local trim. He turns and shouts, Send a bottle of Makers Mark up to my room from the bar. You know what that is, don't you?
A full bottle?
Jesus, Brad, whered they find you? I want whiskey, and if you've got a pretty maid who can bring it up, send her up with it.
There was a time when the way hed behaved in the last five minutes wouldn't have shocked any hotel man in the South, and not many around the country.
I guess times do change,
Walt thinks.
But not that much.
The clerk would gripe to somebody about the old asshole hed had to deal with, then repeat what Walt had asked for, and soon enough, like ripples in the proverbial pond, word would reach the proper ear. It was simply a matter of waiting.
Any fisherman could tell you that.
CHAPTER
25
Do you have any food in your backpack? Caitlin asks. I think better when I'm eating.
No food, sorry.
Shes pacing the supply room of the
Natchez Examiner,
studying my handwritten transcription of the text message Chief Logan showed me, the one Tim sent to Linda Church shortly before he died. I've told Caitlin all I know of the case so far, but true to character, she has set aside the larger questions to focus on an immediate challenge. Shes something of a savant with puzzles, and nothing if not obsessive in all pursuits.
I don't think this is a password, she murmurs to herself. Its too long, plus its counterintuitive. Have you gone to this URL, www.thief.com?
Yes. I don't see how the site could be related to any of this. And theres no dot-com in the text message. Were just assuming that one follows.
Right, right. What
is
in the backpack?
A gun and a satellite phone.
She looks up, checking to see if I'm joking. When she sees I'm not, her gaze drops back to the message. I suppose there could be more to the Web address, and Tim knew Linda would know what the rest
of it was. But if thats the case, were not going to find that without Linda. Not easily, anyway.
Obviously it could be a code of some kind, but its not simple enough for me to break it.
Maybe, Caitlin concedes. But the words that follow don't appear to be random. Kill mommy. Squirt too. But they don't actually say that, do they? Are these letters exactly what you saw in the police station?
I think so, yes.
And you don't believe Tim would have tried to get rid of his wife and kid to run off with this Linda woman?
No way in hell. He lived for that kid. I'll be surprised if it turns out he was even having an affair with Linda.
I won't.
Caitlin makes another tight circuit of the room, then stops with her forefinger on the paper. You know what? she says, her voice suddenly bright with excitement.
What?
I think this message is just what it looks like!
Which is what?
A text message.
What do you mean?
Just a second. She rummages through her purse, then pulls out a small flat pen and a business card. Setting them aside, she taps at the keys of her cell phone for half a minute. Then, after scrawling on the back of the card for a few seconds, she drops the pen back in her purse and shoves the card at me with a look of triumph. There you go. Theres your message.
I look down and read aloud what shes written:
They know. Run.
Is that it?
That's it.
So he was warning her to get off the boat?
Yep.
How did you get that?
The cell phone Tim used to send this message was in predictive text mode. Either he didn't know that or he forgot, and he typed the message without looking at the screen. Otherwise he would have
seen what was happening to his intended message. Was this sent from his personal phone?
I don't yes. This actually makes sense. He was being chased in his car. He couldn't take time to try to use his extra phones, or even to look down at his own phone.
A lot of girls I know can do that, Caitlin muses. Not so many guys.
Tim probably could.
But he didn't warn her in time. Did he?
I don't think so. I think Linda Church is dead. Or worse.
Whats worse? I actually see the memory of my describing Tims tortured body come back to Caitlin. Oh. Never mind.
I turn over the card she gave me.
Zeitgeist Films HD.
Ah. Your friend. She gives me a look like
Give me a break,
but I don't. Whats the deal with that guy? What did you tell him?
He had interviews to do in New Orleans. I didn't.
Does he expect you down there?
Not so much. Look, he was starting to get on my nerves, if you want to know the truth.
And this little adventure gives you a good excuse to blow him off.
You don't want me to blow him off?
I just need to know I can count on you being here for three or four days. Without interference.
The answer is yes. And don't forget, I'm already paying my way. I just broke your code for you.
Thank you.
Should we tell anyone else?
No.
Then can we get out of here and get some food?
Not if you want to keep talking about the case.
She gives me a crafty smile, says, Give me forty seconds, then leaves the supply room. She returns in less time than that, a set of keys with a Chrysler ring in her hand.
This van is a mess, but theres no way its bugged. No one would even get into it without a hazmat suit. Come on. We can talk in there.
Walking out to the van, I scan the parking lot and the street. I don't see anyone watching, but that doesn't mean anything.
As predicted, the van is a wreck, but I do feel more secure in it. The best way to beat surveillanceor even terroristsis to abandon all patterns, to make random decisions. This is a good one.
Caitlin drives us over to Franklin Street, where a recent arrival has opened a Greek fast-food joint in an old fried-chicken restaurant. He still serves fried chicken and catfish, but now the black section of townwhere this restaurant isis getting a taste of pita and souvlaki. So far, the place is still open, and it has a drive-through window.
So what about your high school girl? Caitlin asks, after ordering gyro plates to go for both of us. You two still talk?
Give me a break. You know nothing happened.
Her eyebrows arch for a split second. So you say. Still at Harvard?
Yes.
I thought she might flunk out, pining away for you and all.
I shake my head and look away, pressing back thoughts of Mia Burke and what she might be doing tonight. She has e-mailed me several times, and I have responded twice. But I have kept her at a remove.
So, what are you