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“We’ve been in contact,” he said. “I told you that at the hospital.”

“So you know about this man named Harwood?”

He tapped his fingers on his desk. “You say Rocky has this number?”

“Yes,” I said. “I’m not even going to ask you if I can have my pad back.”

“You’ve had a long day, Mr. McKnight. We should let you go home now.”

“I can’t go anywhere,” I said. “My tires are flat and the gas station is out of air.”

“We’ll see if we can find you some,” he said. “Then you can be on your way.”

“It’s a long drive home,” I said. “And I’ve been up since four this morning. I think I’ll grab a room for the night.”

“Won’t find one here,” he said. “Closest motel is in Whitehall. They’re probably full, though. Your best bet would be Grand Rapids.”

“So you’re all out of rooms, too,” I said. “April is your peak tourist season.”

He just looked at me. He almost smiled. “You’re a funny man,” he said. “Let’s go pump up your tires.”

He let me sit in the front seat this time on the ride back to the gas station. We passed a small motel called the Orcus Arms. It was a little six-room affair facing Lake Michigan. The chief caught me looking at it, and the empty parking lot in front. “It’s closed,” he said. “Doesn’t open until June.”

The sign in front of the motel was decorated with a big cannon in a mound of sand, just like on the chief’s hat. “What’s with this cannon, anyway?” I said.

“Goes back to the turn of the century,” he said. “When a ship got caught in a storm, it would try to get as close to the shore as it could. There’d be a crew of men here who would use the cannon to fire a rope out to the ship. They could fire that thing a good half mile if they aimed it right.”

I tried to picture it. It would take a hell of a shot to hit a boat that far away.

“Just goes to show you,” he said. “A gun doesn’t always kill you. Sometimes it saves you.”

With that thought ringing in my head, we pulled into the gas station. Stu managed to find some air to put in my tires. He pumped up my tires himself and then he stood next to the chief while I climbed into the cab. When I closed the door, the chief stepped closer and rapped a knuckle on my window. I rolled it down.

“Sleep well tonight, Mr. McKnight,” the chief said, “and then have a safe trip back home tomorrow morning. I hope you enjoyed your visit to Orcus Beach.”

There were a couple things I could have said to him, but I decided to keep my mouth shut. I turned the key and gunned the engine.

“Seriously, Mr. McKnight,” he said. “I know we’ve got some pretty extreme characters around here. You gotta understand-people in this town, they just have a habit of acting very protectively. You know what I mean? As a matter of fact, I’d say overall, you caught us on a good day. The next time, we might not be so friendly.”

I pulled away and left him standing there in the light of the gas station. He got smaller and smaller in my rearview mirror as I headed south, away from Orcus Beach and everyone who lived there.

“Good night, Chief,” I said as he faded out of sight. “I’ll be seeing you.” In my mind’s eye, I pictured the pad of paper and the license numbers I had written down. I recited the numbers to myself, just to make sure I remembered them. One for Maria. And the other for whoever was driving that white Cadillac.

CHAPTER 15

I woke up the next morning in a strange bed, in a motel room in Whitehall, Michigan, twenty miles south of Orcus Beach. I had pulled in around eleven o’clock, my eyes burning from driving all day, my stomach empty. The motel was called the Whitehall Courtyard, and each room had a bright green light above the door that made you think you were in an aquarium. I asked the man at the front desk if there was a restaurant open at that hour. He just looked at me and laughed. “In Whitehall?” he said. “That’s the best one I’ve heard all day.”

So I settled for cheese and crackers and Oreo cookies from the vending machine, and then I closed the blinds against the green light and went to sleep. I had disjointed dreams about shotguns and woke up suddenly in the middle of the night, dead certain that I was about to feel the hot blast of buckshot in my chest. It took a few seconds to remember where I was, and what I was doing there. I went back to sleep for a few hours. When the morning came, I sat up in the bed and reached for the telephone. Leon picked up on the second ring.

“Alex!” he said. “Where are you?”

“I’m in a motel in a town called Whitehall,” I said. “I need you to run a couple plates for me.”

“Whitehall? Where’s that? What’s going on, Alex?”

I gave him the five-minute version. Seeing Randy in the hospital, going back to Leopold’s house, then my adventures in Orcus Beach.

“How can you be sure it’s Maria?” he said. “You didn’t even talk to her.”

“I know it’s her,” I said. “It has to be. Let me give you those plate numbers.”

“All you gotta do is call the secretary of state,” he said, “and give them your PI number.”

“That’s right,” I said. “I remember you telling me that now.”

“I’ll do it,” he said. “You’ve got another call to make.”

“What’s that?”

“A Dr. Havlin called here looking for you,” he said. “Early this morning. He had one of our cards, so he tried both numbers.”

“What did he say?”

“They’re going to operate.”

“Is it… I mean…”

“He didn’t say, Alex. He just said you should call him.”

“Okay,” I said. “Thanks. I’ll do that.”

“So give me those plate numbers.”

“Here’s Maria’s plate,” I said. I closed my eyes and called up the three letters and three numbers.

“This could get us her current address,” he said.

“It might,” I said. “And whatever name she’s using now.”

“Okay, give me the other one.”

I gave him the three letters and three numbers from the white Cadillac, then told him he’d have to run it two ways, with a Y and a V.

“This white Cadillac,” he said. “You really think it’s the same guy who was staking out her family’s house? There are lots of white Cadillacs in the world.”

“Maybe it’s the same guy,” I said. “Maybe it isn’t. If it is, then somehow he found Maria.”

“Maybe Randy went to Leopold’s house,” he said, “and then to Orcus Beach, and this guy followed him.”

“If that’s true,” I said, “then I helped make it happen.”

Leon didn’t say anything for a while. “I’ll run these plates,” he finally said. “And I’ll call you right back.”

“No, let me call you,” I said. “As soon as I call the doctor, I’m gonna get something to eat. Or I’ll need a doctor myself.”

I said good-bye, then punched in the doctor’s number. A woman at the hospital in Grand Rapids answered. She told me that Dr. Havlin was in surgery.

“Do you know the name of the person he’s operating on?” I said. “It may be the man I’m calling about.”

“You’re going to have to speak to the doctor directly,” she said. “I can’t discuss it over the phone.”

I told her I’d try later. Then I got dressed and went out to see if the town of Whitehall had a place where you could get a decent breakfast. I ended up finding a restaurant with a seven-dollar all-you-can-eat buffet, and I ate enough scrambled eggs and bacon and hash browns to make it the best seven dollars I ever spent. The man who showed me to my table, the woman who took my money, the boy who kept taking my empty plates away-they all looked genuinely happy that I had chosen to visit their little town. It restored my faith in the people who live in Michigan, and it made me wonder why Orcus Beach was so different. I had a few minutes to think about it as I drove back up that lonely two-lane road.

I pulled out my cell phone on the way and tried to call Leon. The call didn’t go through. I barely overcame the temptation to open my window and throw the phone into the lake.

I got to see Orcus Beach in the daylight this time. It was a sleepy little shoreline town that had seen better days. You wouldn’t have thought it was much different from a thousand other towns, until you happened to stop in and sample the local hospitality.