Twenty seconds later Reese heard beep-beep, and someone responded.
“Yo, Johnny Lee, what’s up?” Music was in the background.
Beep-beep. “Moon Pie, this is Reese. I need a favor.”
Beep-beep. “Yo, dog, you got it.”
Beep-beep. “How quick can you be in West Point?” Reese got out of the truck to pace.
Beep-beep. “Twenty, twenty-five minutes.”
Beep-beep. “OK. Listen. This piece of shit dude just shot and killed Johnny Lee.”
Beep-beep. “Son of a…are you serious…shit…man, are you OK? Why? What the hell’s goin’ on?”
Beep-beep. “We were gonna rob him and he freaked out…it’s a long story. We’re chasin’ him through the woods right now. I want you to go to his house and see if anybody’s there. I want you to grab ‘em. I don’t care how ugly it gets.”
Beep-beep. “You think he’s got an old lady?”
Beep-beep. “Yeah, I’m bettin’ he does…and I wanna make him pay.”
Beep-beep. “Give me the address.”
Reese read it to him from the magazine.
Beep-beep. “I’ll call you back…I’m on it, dog.”
Reese got back into the truck, and with an evil smirk, he slowly, deliberately dropped the gearshift into drive, and started easing down the logging road, stalking Johnny Lee’s killer.
Within thirty minutes from the time the call went dead in Mick’s ear, he was at the camp gate. On the way, Mick tried unsuccessfully to reach Jake on his cell phone. He didn’t want to call Jake’s house at this hour. He wasn’t positive what was going on, and he for sure didn’t want to worry Jake’s wife. He had talked with her once before and was not eager to repeat the experience.
Mick sat in the truck for a minute, taking everything in. He knew the guys who owned this camp wanted the necessities like satellite TV but not a telephone. Inside, the camp house was dark, but all the floodlights were on. Mick noticed that Jake’s camper had all its lights on and its door was standing wide open.
Mick slowly got out of his truck and told Beau to stay.
“Jake?” he yelled.
“Jake?” he called louder.
He walked slowly to the camper and yelled out again, “Jake, are you here? Hello…is anyone here?”
Stepping inside the camper, he saw Jake’s hunting clothes. The two beds looked like they had been slept in. Nothing really looked out of place…other than the door being wide open. He then walked toward the camp house. Beau was whining in the back of the truck, wanting out.
“Stay!” Mick told him.
Inside the front screened porch, the main door to the camp house was also wide open. Mick stuck his head inside and began looking around.
“Hello? Is anyone here?” he yelled as he slowly stepped inside.
Mick walked past the pool table. Everything looked like he expected it would. Nothing was seriously out of place. Actually, the place was a mess, but since it was a hunting lodge, no one ever cleaned it up. It always looked like this. He went back outside. This is weird, he thought, as he petted Beau’s head.
After climbing into his truck, he backed up, looking around one more time. Something was gnawing at him, but he couldn’t place it. He said, “Aw, to hell with it. I’m too freakin’ exhausted for this crap.” He headed home to get some sleep.
When he arrived, his wife was sitting in the kitchen with a glass of milk and some warm raisin bread from the Mennonite bakery in Livingston, sheepishly grinning with guilty pleasure.
“I couldn’t go back to sleep,” she said. “What’s going on?”
“I don’t know. The lights were all on, but no one was there. It was kinda strange. I’m a little worried that something’s wrong…but…but I just don’t know what,” he replied.
“Mick, what’s that all over your pants legs?” she asked, pointing. The bottoms of his blue jeans were covered in something dark and wet.
Mick reached down, touching it. He rubbed his fingers together. “It’s blood!” he said with a scared look on his ashen face.
“Oh my God! Mick!”
“I’ll call the sheriff!” he said, reaching for the phone, worried at what this might mean.
“Sumter County Sheriff’s office,” a woman with a husky, cigarette-ravaged voice answered.
“This is Mick Johnson. I need to speak to Sheriff Landrum. It’s important.”
“Mick, he’s not in…It’s one thirty in the morning. But if it’s important, I’ll get him to call you. Are you at your house?” she asked, blowing smoke up into the air.
“Yes ma’am, it’s urgent.”
“I’ll have him call you right back. Do you need a deputy right now?” she replied and snuffed out her cigarette.
“If you can’t get Ollie, then I’ll need a deputy for sure.”
“Sure thing, Mick. Give me a minute. I think I can get him for you.”
Mrs. Martha O’Brien had worked for the sheriff’s office for twenty-three years. Since her husband had died four years earlier, she preferred to work the night shift. She couldn’t sleep anyway. Her favorite activity in the world was waking up the sheriff. She loved to aggravate him. She never hesitated to call at any hour concerning anything. It drove the sheriff crazy. But Martha O’Brien was irreplaceable. She knew where everything was, where everybody lived, and what forms needed to be filled out. The sheriff and his staff constantly asked her for guidance. She relished it. Her celebrity had grown when she slapped a prisoner for making a crude comment about her. The governor had cheerfully vindicated her actions. With true Southern politeness, most everyone called her Miz Martha.
Ollie Landrum was Sumter County’s first black sheriff. He was a county fixture now that he’d been in office nine years. Ollie had been a football hero at The University of Alabama-he’d blown out his knee beyond repair during a home game, ending his pro hopes. He’d been a deputy just a few years when the sheriff retired. The Alabama fans in the county showed Ollie how much they appreciated his football prowess in a landslide election to sheriff. He had married his college sweetheart, a lady who had dedicated her life to helping educate the poor about Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. Western Alabama leads the nation in SIDS, and she was consumed by her task. There were plenty of poor folks in western Alabama. She tried to educate them by day, and Ollie arrested many of them by night. Ollie and his wife hadn’t slowed down long enough to even consider having children.
The sheriff had fallen asleep on the couch watching Law amp; Order: SVU. He loved that show. New York City had the action, the serious crime. On the show, there were no boring driver’s license checks like he was forced to do weekly.
Even asleep, when the phone rang, Ollie knew it was Martha. This better be good, he thought, pulling himself off the couch. He glanced at the clock, cleared his throat, and said, “Hello.”
“Chief, Mick Johnson needs you to call him at his house. He says it’s urgent,” she said, skipping the pleasantries. She lit a menthol cigarette.
Rubbing his eyes, he asked, “Did he say what it’s about?”
“No, Chief, he just said it’s important,” she responded, ever the professional.
“OK, I’ll call him, and Miz Martha, please call me Ollie or Sheriff; don’t call me Chief,” he begged for the umpteenth time, knowing it wouldn’t do any good.
“Yes sir.” She gave him the phone number.
Ollie had been to Birmingham that day to play golf in a charity tournament at the Greystone Country Club. His football legacy made him an in-state celebrity. He was exhausted from the day’s events and the not-so-small amount of alcohol he had consumed on the sly. Golf simply wore him out. It must have been the sun. He slowly walked into the kitchen intending to microwave a cup of coffee. But he sat down on a barstool and picked up the cordless phone.