was done. My search had told me everything and nothing. But had it been worth the risk?
At least I’d managed to find a fresh shirt. None of my own clothes were where I’d left them, but I remembered seeing something crumpled up behind the small bar by the pool. I made a small detour through the lanai and found it, a rather tatty man’s striped shirt with a white collar and cuffs. Still, it didn’t look so bad once I’d put it on and rolled the sleeves back three or four times. It had the added advantage that at least it didn’t have blood on it.
The tails were long, almost down to the bottoms of my shorts, but I left them untucked nevertheless. At least that way it covered the fact I’d shoved Sean’s SIG into the back of my waistband. The gun was momentarily chill against my skin but it took on body heat fast. I couldn’t deny that the weight of it was reassuring.
I’d splashed cold water on my face in the bathroom before I’d ventured out. It had taken down some of the puffiness around my eyes and the redness out of my nose. Still, it didn’t take a genius to spot I’d been crying like a spoilt kid. I had eleven years on Trey, but right now I felt little better than his baby sister.
I slipped through the smallest gap in the gates, closing them behind me. Outside, beneath the dappled shade of the rows of palm trees, the street looked as quiet and deserted as it had done when I’d arrived. I tried to use its very normality to calm my shattered nerves.
I’d almost made it back to the Mercury when a man’s voice froze me in my tracks.
“Hey there!”
After the briefest hesitation, I kept walking, picking up the pace. The man called again and this time I heard his footsteps approaching behind me.
Just for a second, I considered the wisdom of drawing the gun but dismissed it just as quickly. The SIG was my safety net. My last resort. I wasn’t quite that far gone yet.
I halted, turned, trying to contrive a faintly irritated expression. Behind me a trim upright guy in his early sixties was hurrying down the paved driveway of the house next door.
Livingston Brown III had seemed an unlikely friend for a computer nerd like Keith Pelzner. I’d wondered if their paths would have crossed at all except for the accidental fact that the company Keith was working for had rented the property next to Brown’s, but the two of them seemed to hit it off strangely well.
Brown was a tall slightly gangling figure, tanned to the colour of a pecan and just as wrinkled. He was one of those perfect adverts for why you should use sunblock and big floppy hats in this kind of climate. He wasn’t wearing either today and the perspiration pasted thin wisps of grey hair to his scalp.
“Hi there,” he said, puffing, as he caught me up. “Thought I’d missed ya. Carly, isn’t it?”
“Charlie, sir,” I said. “Hello, Mr Brown.” I kept my voice polite but noncommittal, as though he was keeping me from some minor task.
Now he’d got me, he seemed a little lost as to what to do with me. “I saw the truck this morning,” he said at last. “Couldn’t get over the fact that Keith never said he was moving out sooner.” He pulled out a voluminous handkerchief and blew his nose loudly, peering at me over the top of it. “So, you forget something?”
“You saw them go?” I said, sharper than I’d intended. “What time was this?”
“Oh, well now, lemme see,” he said, so slowly I could have rattled him. “Well, I do believe I’d just had my midmorning swim. Fifty lengths every day, come rain or shine, did I ever tell you that?”
“Yes sir,” I said dryly. He’d mentioned his daily constitutional on both of the occasions we’d met over the last couple of days, but I’d already worked out that men as rich as Livingston Brown III did not accurately recall names or conversations with their neighbours’ staff unless you gave them undue reason to. It wasn’t rudeness particularly, he’d just had money for so long that he couldn’t remember what it was like talking to people who dared interrupt his ramblings.
Now, he beamed at me and stuffed the handkerchief back into his pocket. “Well now, yes, I heard the sound of the truck arriving and I came out for a little look-see, ‘cos it’s pretty quiet round here. Must have been right around eleven.”
“Who was with the truck?” I demanded now. “Did you see them?”
Brown frowned, unaccustomed to quick-fire questions. I wondered how he’d managed to accrue the personal fortune through shrewd property dealings that he was rumoured to possess. Maybe he just delegated to smart cookies and let them get on with it.
“Well, just a couple of ordinary-looking guys, I guess,” he said, in the kind of doubtful tone that discredits eyewitnesses the world over. “Like I said, I came out and there was this U-Haul truck backed right on up to the front steps.”
“And you didn’t see any sign of Mr Pelzner?”
“Oh yeah,” he said, surprising me. “Keith came on over to the fence when he saw me out front. Seemed in kind of a hurry – not like him. He’s always been a laid-back guy, y’know? Anyways, he said as how he was having to move out kinda unexpected.”
“Did you see anyone else – Jim Whitmarsh, or Sean?”
Brown rubbed the back of his head, fluffing his hair up from its comb-over style across the top of his scalp. “Sean?” he repeated, puzzled. “Oh, you mean the Brit guy? No, no, I don’t think so. Come to think of it, I didn’t see any of the usual guys either. Just the ones with the truck, I think.”
A nondescript beige Buick saloon turned in to the end of the street then and started to slowly cruise down in our direction. Inside were two suited men wearing sunglasses. Neither had their seatbelt on. They both had big necks and square jaws and could possibly have been double glazing salesmen who liked to work out a lot, but I wouldn’t have bet on it.
“Did Mr Pelzner say where he was going, or give you a forwarding address?” I asked quickly, starting to edge towards the Mercury. If it hadn’t already been telling me it was time to go, my mind was now screaming “
“No, no he didn’t, which I must admit I thought was kinda strange, but he did ask me if I’d pass on a key to the realtor. He seemed kinda nervous, y’know? On edge. Said they’d be stopping by this afternoon to see about leasing the place out for the summer. I guess they might know. I think I maybe have a card some place in the house if you wanna come in for a mo—”
“No!” I said. The Buick had come to a halt about halfway down the street. It was hard to tell if the two men were watching me, because I couldn’t see their eyes, but they were sitting very, very still.
“No,” I said again, less vehement this time as I took in his offended face. “Look Mr Brown, I’m sorry, but I’m afraid I have to go now. I don’t want to keep you standing out here.”
He was around four or five strides away at that point. Too far for me to be sure of getting him into cover if things went bad now. We were both way too exposed.
“Oh, well OK,” he said, still looking a little put out.
Longer, I calculated grimly, than it would take the two men to draw and fire the guns I just knew they were carrying.
I took another couple of steps towards the Mercury, keys already out in my hand, when Brown called a final question.
“Say, young lady, weren’t you supposed to be looking after Trey today?”
“Oh,” Brown said, clearly nonplussed at my cavalier attitude towards proper childcare. “Oh well, that’s OK then I guess. You take care now, Carly.”
I didn’t bother to correct him again, just jumped in and cranked the Mercury into life. In the rear-view mirror I saw Brown shaking his head as he turned back into his own driveway. I waited until he’d got another few steps