Authors: Jeff Abbott
His breathing grew harsh. ‘You’re goddamned leaping to conclusions. No reason to think that note’s a fake. Boy might have
just gone partying in Corpus. You’re making all kinds of unsubstantiated claims, bothering Lucinda. I won’t have it, I won’t
have it from an officer of mine.’
She started to speak again. ‘Delford …’
‘Shut up. You’re fired, Claudia.’
Whit and Gooch barreled on deep into Friday night, north, heading for Missatuck, Texas. They had left Gooch’s car parked in
a brightly lit trucker’s stop on the outskirts of Beaumont. The easternmost slice of Texas unfolded ahead of their headlights,
an endless ribbon of road bordered by tall loblolly pines. The weather cleared, the cool night the luxuriant reward for a
too-long, sweltering summer. Whit drove, and Gooch sat in the front seat, reading a battered Mickey Spillane paperback by
penlight.
‘I can’t read in a car, it makes me sick,’ Whit said. There had been little conversation between them since leaving Beaumont,
although Whit’s mind was full of questions over Gooch’s ability to make felons disappear.
‘I’m highlighting the appropriate tough guy phrases for you so you know what to say the next time you encounter an Anson type.
You’re a little too Larry McMurtry for that crowd.’ Gooch glanced. ‘Although you acquitted yourself well against that slab
of a kid.’
‘I feel like I broke every finger in my hands on his face.’
‘If you did, you couldn’t steer,’ Gooch said matter-of-factly. ‘Enough self-congratulations. What matters is that Junior thinks
you’ve got his moolah.’ He shut the Spillane. ‘Moolah, there’s a word that needs a renaissance.’
‘Perhaps Pete hid the money somewhere before he died.’
‘For what purpose? Stealing from mobsters, even the IQ-challenged contingent that Junior represents, is an extremely bad idea.’
Gooch shrugged. ‘We may be crediting
Pete with greater brains than he deserves. He may have only had one large working organ. I think that Junior-boy had Pete
killed.’
‘So where is the money? I would think if Pete doesn’t have it. Velvet might.’
‘I’m sitting in slack-jawed amazement. You generally consider Velvet as some whore with the heart of gold, pardon the cliché.’
‘If she had the half million, wouldn’t she give it back to Junior, having seen what happened to Pete? And if she took it she’d
be gone, and Junior and Anson would be off in hot pursuit.’
‘We don’t know Pete ever kept it on the boat, but they thought it was on the boat.’
‘Where else might he hide it?’
‘Gee, in a bank?’ Gooch asked. ‘Has anyone looked in the poor schmuck’s accounts?’
‘Yes. Claudia researched his bank accounts. It’s not there.’
‘So who could have taken it?’
‘Velvet. Anyone who came on the boat … me, Claudia, Delford, Gardner, the other cops. Heather Farrell. Sam Hubble.’
‘Who do you like?’
‘I don’t see either of the kids taking it. They were too rattled.’
‘Didn’t you say Delford Spires was blasting you and Claudia?’
‘Yeah.’
‘He’s probably threatened by Claudia in that she has twice the IQ,’ Gooch said. ‘Unless … maybe the Deloaches already had
a different purpose attached to the money.’
‘As in?’
‘Drug money. Money that’s due to be freshly laundered
and shouldn’t be given away. Or money to grease local palms, perhaps Delford’s.’
Whit considered. ‘Okay. Say Papa Deloache gives poor Junior an operation to run. Off the beaten track from main centers of
illicit commerce, like Houston or Galveston. Port Leo would qualify. Not too far from Corpus Christi or San Antonio, only
hours from major markets like Houston and Austin.’
‘And not too far from South Padre, where your seasonal business is. Junior would mix well with the college students, the old
frat party guy with a thick wad of cash.’ Gooch stared out at the darkness, the outlines of the pines etched in black. ‘Of
course, the frat boys and sorority girls would be laughing at Junior behind their hands.’
‘Are you ever going to tell me what happened back there in Beaumont?’
‘Jesus, quit bitching. Not a hair on their sainted little asses was hurt.’
‘You’ve got friends in the police department there?’
‘I’m not on the witness stand in your courtroom, am I?’ He fell silent; topic over. ‘So what do you hope to learn from this
mystery woman Pete had called so often?’ Gooch asked.
‘She clearly expected money when she called Pete. She clearly didn’t know he was dead.’
Gooch cracked a window, and the thick, earthy smell of the pine forests, stirred with the odor of gasoline fumes, streamed
into the Explorer. ‘You want me to drive for a while? You tired?’
Whit nodded. They pulled over and Gooch took the wheel. Whit moved to the passenger seat, feeling too revved to relax. But
as the nighttime road unwound, he slept.
*
Whit and Gooch crashed at a cheap motel off the highway around two a.m., rose at seven, and arrived in Missatuck, a town three
miles off the main highway with one bumpy major street and two stoplights, around nine Saturday morning. Missatuck was little
enough that asking for a local address at the small grocery got results.
Kathy Breaux lived at 302 Cotton Creek Road. The house was a brick duplex in a very modest neighborhood, the only kind Missatuck
offered. Ill-kept flowerbeds dominated the yard, and a motley crew of lawn gnomes congregated in one untilled bed.
‘Let’s be careful,’ Gooch warned. ‘Anyone who collects lawn gnomes is not to be trifled with.’
Whit rang the bell. No answer. He rang again and knocked. No answer. The door to the other duplex creaked open, and a woman
in purple jogging sweats, holding a purple mug of coffee, stepped out onto the concrete slab that served as a joint porch.
She was tall and skinny, with raven-dark hair pulled into a sloppy ponytail and a bevy of unfortunate whiskers on her chin.
‘Awful early to be pounding on a door,’ the woman observed in a gravel-bruised voice.
‘I’m sorry,’ Whit said. ‘I’m Judge Whit Mosley. I’m a justice of the peace in Encina County, down on the coast, and this is
my associate—’
‘Dr Guchinski,’ Gooch interjected and Whit kept his neutral smile in place.
Doctor. God help us.
‘I’m looking for Kathy Breaux,’ Whit said.
The woman sipped her coffee. ‘What do you want with her?’
‘A man committed suicide in my jurisdiction, and he had called the phone number at this address repeatedly,’ Whit said. ‘We’re
trying to establish the reason for the suicide, and we thought Ms Breaux might know his mental state.’
The woman blinked. ‘Who is this man?’
‘His name is Pete Hubble. Does that name ring a bell?’
‘Well, do you have some identification?’ she asked.
Whit produced a laminated card with his name and title issued by the Texas secretary of state. He didn’t offer her one of
his regular business cards to keep because what he didn’t want was her phoning the Encina County authorities. Buddy Beere,
if given half a chance, would make widespread hay about any wild-goose chases Whit pursued right before the election.
She studied the card, then handed it back to him. ‘Kathy’s at work, got a double shift. It’s about ten, fifteen minutes away.
I can give you the address.’
‘Thanks,’ Whit said.
The woman returned with hastily scribbled instructions.
Follow Highway 363 to the Louisiana border, where it becomes Louisiana FM 110, go straight until you get to Deshay, Memorial
Oaks nursing home is on the left after the second light.
Deshay, Louisiana. A nursing home. A tremble rose along Whit’s spine.
‘Thanks,’ he said.
‘She’s not in no trouble, is she?’
‘No, I don’t think so,’ Whit lied.
‘ ’Cause she’s a pretty good renter,’ the woman added, as though this were a treasured commodity in Missatuck.
‘Promptness with rent is always to be admired,’ Gooch said. ‘Thanks again.’
The woman shut the door, and they went back to Whit’s Explorer.
‘A nursing home in Deshay,’ Whit said. ‘That’s where that Ballew girl vanished from, the one whose wallet they found outside
of town. Her face has been all over those blue flyers, Claudia mentioned the case to me. It can’t be coincidence.’
They drove thirty miles over the speed limit, zooming into Louisiana.
Deshay was the kind of town repeated ten thousand times across America: an unhealthy selection of fast-food chains, a neon-lit
doughnut shop, a pair of peeling strip centers, a furniture store with plastic-sheeted inventory overflowing into the parking
lot, and five gas stations lining the main road. Memorial Oaks squatted on a corner. Bricks the color of creek dirt lined
the concrete walkways and ill-clipped Japanese boxwoods stood beneath the windows. The home didn’t look dirty or unhealthy,
just glum, a sad coda for lives in their final movements.
‘Despicable the way we treat the elderly in this country,’ Gooch said. ‘When I hit sixty I’m moving my ass to China, where
the old are revered.’
‘I hate nursing homes,’ Whit said under his breath. ‘They’re like parking garages for people.’
‘Would you rather die young? I could call Anson and see if he’ll hook up with us again.’
When they asked at the information counter for Kathy Breaux, the dour receptionist nodded toward a hall that fed off from
the central hub.
‘She’s down in the television room, probably doing a little feeding,’ the woman said.
Gooch whispered to Whit as they walked: ‘A feeding. How evocative. Is there a trough?’
The room was large but fusty, its cornerstone a sparkling new TV that dangled the joys of the outside world. A trashy morning
talk show blared from the set, mothers having their mouthy, punk- and Goth-dressing daughters made over into pink-angora debutantes.
Several patients watched with blank stares fixated on the lives on the television instead of anything else in the depressing
room, blankets covering their laps. An array of shiny black dominoes lay spread out on a table, awaiting players. No nurse
loomed to greet them. One patient, in her early eighties, glanced up at them as they came in and gave them an intelligent
smile. She was reading
The Norton Anthology of English Literature, Volume
2, her bony, mottled finger stuck in the mammoth book, the other hand holding a magnifying glass.
‘Hello, ma’am,’ Whit said. ‘How are you today?’
‘Lovely. How are y’all doing?’
‘We’re fine, ma’am,’ Gooch said. ‘We’re looking for Kathy Breaux.’
The old woman puckered in distaste. ‘Kathy is no doubt outside, sucking a cigarette down to the filter, as I would if she
gave me half the chance. She ought to be back in a minute.’
‘Which way, ma’am?’ Whit asked.
The old woman nodded toward a door that opened into a hallway. Whit thanked her and moved toward the hallway.
‘I’ll stay here,’ Gooch said, ‘in case she comes back.’ He leaned down toward the woman to see what she was reading. She flopped
open her book for him.
‘Robert Browning?’ Whit heard Gooch say good-naturedly. ‘You’re not wasting your time on him, are you? He’s a psychobabble
bore.’
‘Nonsense,’ the old woman said. ‘Now, when
I
taught Browning …’
At the end of the hall Whit found a bay of large windows that opened out onto a grove of mossy oaks. In the foyer formed by
the windows, a bathrobe-clad crone hunched in a wheelchair while a spare, trim woman, dressed in the bright magenta scrubs
of the nursing staff, mopped up around the chair.
‘Bad bad girl,’ the woman chirped in a singsong voice
reminiscent of a preschooler ditty. ‘You keep your hands off your diapy-diap now so I don’t have to clean up after you again.’
A half grunt, half wail was her answer from the poor old woman in the chair.
‘Excuse me,’ Whit said. ‘Are you Kathy Breaux?’
She gave him a bright smile he suspected was reserved only for visitors. ‘Yes?’
‘I’m here to talk to you about Pete Hubble.’
The smile barely dimmed. ‘Who?’
‘The man who placed several phone calls to your house over the past week.’
The grin stayed as fixed as stone. ‘I’m sorry, I didn’t catch your name.’
‘Judge Whit Mosley. I was a friend of Pete’s. He’s dead.’
Her grip whitened against the handle of the mop.
‘I’m conducting the inquest into Pete’s death and I’d like to talk to you about why Pete was calling you,’ Whit said.
‘You know, I would love to help you with whatever this is, but I can’t talk now. I’m working.’ She tucked a lock of hair behind
her ear with a coy little flick of the wrist.
‘Considering this is an investigation into a possible homicide, I’m sure the home’s administrators would be glad to provide
us with a private office and time alone.’ Whit kept his tone friendly. He’d heard enough voice to know she was the woman who
had called on the boat. ‘He was shot. In the mouth.’
‘Please,’ she said, ‘let me get her cleaned up and then I’ll talk with you.’ She turned and wheeled the woman around in the
foyer, then said, ‘Oh, why don’t you just come with me while I get her settled and then we can talk?’ A tenseness framed her
face. ‘Just come right along with me.’
Whit got the distinct feeling she didn’t want him out of her sight. ‘Actually I need to borrow a rest room.’ He had noticed
a men’s room right off the foyer. He didn’t wait for her permission, he turned and ducked into the bathroom. He washed his
hands while counting to one hundred, and then came out. Kathy and her incontinent charge were gone. He hurried back to the
main room; Gooch was still there, arguing the merits of Victorian poetry with his new friend. No Kathy. Whit wandered back
down the hallway, peeking into the rooms. One room was tidy with its lack of occupants. Another held an ancient black woman,
napping and snoring loudly.
The third room was occupied. Whit peered into the dimness. An emaciated figure lay in a bed, a rope of drool uncoiling from
his slack mouth, his eyes at half-mast. His dark hair was cut in a crisp burr, and an ugly scar split the hairline. His skin
was sun-starved, his cheeks sunken, but Whit could see the man was young. Too young.
‘Oh, my Lord,’ Whit said.
It was Corey Hubble.