Freddie Baker had come along with Sheriff Bob and had been observing Baxter and Williams carefully. Now he said. “Where you all get this information?”
“We have our sources,” the pockmarked one said.
“Name one.”
The pockmark showed his bad teeth.
“Dont matter the source,” the blond one said. “I guarantee you he didnt lie.”
“Listen,” the pockmark said, “we thought you’d be interested, thats all. We heard you been wanting to catch this particular fella for a while and we thought the information might be of use to you, thats all. If you’re not interested, well, all right. We’ll be one our way.”
Freddie Baker said: “Maybe we’ll just lock up both your big-city asses for withholding information pertainin to a criminal investigation.
The pockmarked man and the blond one stared at him.
Bob Baker laughed lowly. “Hell, Freddie, these boys dont want to withhold nothin. They come to make a deal. So get to it, boys. What is it
The pockmark cleared his throat and looked about. Then said: “We heard you’re putting together a special squad to stop runners through Palm Beach. That would cause problems for us. What we want is for you to let our whiskey trucks slide. Let our boats unload on the beaches.”
Bob Baker regarded them for a moment. Then looked at Freddie Baker who pursed his lips in order to disguise his smile. Freddie knew Bobby had no intention of interfering with the booze supply coming through Palm Beach County. Certain interested parties in Broward County, which lay just south of the Palm Beach line, had recently advanced to him some sizable “campaign contributions” in exchange for his assurance that the Palm Beach portion of the booze pipeline would not be shut down.
“How much you givin the Ashleys?” Bob Baker said.
The pockmark regarded him intently for a moment before answering. “Who says we’re giving the Ashleys anything?”
Bob Baker smiled thinly. “Hell, boys, I know that family bettern you know the feel of your own peckers. Only way you could be runnin booze through Palm Beach is they’re lettin you—and if they’re lettin you it’s because you’re payin them.”
“If thats true—
“Because if they shakin anybody down it’s only people like you,” Bob Baker said. “I aint never felt it ought be illegal to steal from a thief.” He grinned.
“And we never felt it should be illegal to make a buck selling the public what it wants,” the pockmark said. “We aint crooks, we’re businessmen. If you dont like booze, Sheriff, take it up with the folks who voted you into office. I’ll give you two-to-one most of them like a drink now and then and are doing their part to keep us in business.”
“I never said I didnt like booze,” Bob Baker said. “I just dont much care for crooks. And what I said in the first place was, how much are you givin the Ashleys?”
The pockmark looked at the blond man as if he could read some meaning in his neutral aspect. Then turned to Bob Baker and said, “What the hell, we’re payin em, yeah, so what? They get seven percent of every load that comes through. It’s worth it to avoid the headaches they can give us.”
“Bullshit,” Bob Baker said. “You aint gettin by for no seven, not past them. They gettin ten if they gettin a dime. Come on, boy, tell the truth and shame the devil.”
The pockmark looked away and heaved a huge sigh, then looked back at Bob Baker and shrugged, “It burns our ass that they get ten. They had us over a barrel.”
“Eleven,” Bob Baker said.
“Huh?” the pockmark said.
“They get ten percent, I want eleven.”
The pockmark laughed and looked away again. Then nodded and said, “Well hell, I guess you got us over a barrel too.”
Bob Baker went through the careful ritual of lighting a cigar. Why not, he thought. Grab him and put him away for good. He wouldnt be cutting off Ashley whiskey to the local businesses who needed it, not if he put the arm on John but let the old man’s business be. And it would be good publicity for a crime-fighting sheriff sworn to keep the county safe. So do it. He could give himself a half-dozen reasons to do it. Practical reasons. Not that he didnt heave plenty of personal reasons too. The humiliations. Julie.
Now he had the cigar burning evenly and took a few puffs and then looked at the pockmarked man and said, “All right, Tell me.”
Laura Upthegrove had a sense for things amiss. Raised from childhood in the Devil’s Garden she possessed a wildland creature’s acute sensitivity to the surrounding world and all things in it. She could intuit trouble in a subtle tightening of her skin, in the altered hum of her blood.
It was commonplace for John Ashley to take his leave of her every so often on an early evening with the explanation that he had to pick up a load or deliver one, and she’d never questioned his need to do it. Bootlegging was mainly a nighttime business, after all. One evening as they lay in a tangle of arms and legs and both of them still breathing hard from the thrash and tumble of their coupling, he told her he had to make a late delivery in Riviera, and he slid out of bed and began to get dressed. But as she watched him from the bed she quite suddenly knew he was lying. There was nothing in his manner to rouse her suspicions. There had been no abatement at all in his ardor for her when they made love (they’d learned to grip sticks between their teeth to mute their mating sounds when they coupled in the sidehouse at Twin Oaks). And yet she knew he was lying, knew it just as surely as she’d always known when a moccasin was nearby or a panther was watching from the shadows or Indians were in proximity of her house. She could
He checked the magazine in his .45 and then snicked it back into the pistol butt and slipped the gun into his waistband at the small of his back and pulled his shirttail over it. He put on his hat and gave her a wink and went out the door. She listened to him crank the truck and heard the motor catch and then stutter until he was behind the wheel and adjusted the levers and the engine’s idling became smoother. Then the gears chunked into action and the truck clattered away toward the pinewoods trail leading to the highway.
She flew into her overalls and pulled on her brogans without lacing them and went out hatless into the moonlight-dappled yard just as his headlamp beams disappeared into the trees. She jogged to the Ford roadster and cranked it up and got behind the wheel and set out after him without turning on her lights.
Sipping bush lightning and smoking in the recessed darkness of the front porch, Old Joe Ashley and his boys Frank and Ed watched the truck and then the roadster depart. Ed spat out into the moonlight and said, “Looks like ole Johnny might could be in for more excitement tonight than he bargained for,” and they all laughed lowly. Ma Ashley came to the door and looked at them and then out to the woods where the Ford chugged away faintly in the dark. She sighed tiredly and said, “Kids,” and shook her head and went back inside.
Laura kept a quarter-mile back from the single red taillight of his truck as they bore south under a white crescent moon and a sky so think with stars she thought she might reach up and swirl them with her hand and they’d trail sparks of every color. They’d been driving for almost an hour when they reached Riviera and when he didnt stop there she knew her hunch had been right. She almost shouted her anger into the night. Goddamn him! Goddamn all men and their stupid hankering dicks!
At West Palm Beach he slowed and turned off on a side street. She followed at a distance. A few blocks farther on he turned onto a muddy street where the air assumed the smell of brackish water. He drove past a row