“No. Why? Is something wrong?”
“She left. I just talked to Gochay, and he said she quit. She picked up her belongings and walked out on him.”
Walker said, “Just like that? She didn’t say anything like that to me.” He felt a sudden emptiness, a sense of loss so deep it surprised him. He had never gotten an address and telephone number for her except Gochay’s. She had never offered one.
Stillman intruded on his thoughts, as though he could read them. “She’s perfectly capable of finding you anytime she wants.” He lifted the telephone again and punched in a number, then punched two more digits, listened in silence for a few seconds, then hung up. “Uh-uh.”
“What was that?”
“My bug in Jim Scully’s house. It’s plugged into the phone jack, and whatever it hears is recorded on a little sound-actuated recorder. It doesn’t ring, just plays back what it’s heard. It hasn’t heard anything. Forget Serena for a minute. We’ve got to figure out how to get from Scully to the other dead guy—this cousin of his.”
Walker sighed and forced himself to think. “You made some acquaintances—the waiter, the druggist, the old guy in the coffee shop. In a town that size, I’m sure one of them must have known Scully.”
“It takes time to get people to talk. We’re liable to be asking about him an hour before or after the FBI announces he’s been killed by two guys who can only be us.”
“The Coulter police, then?”
“I’ve been thinking about it. They probably know what we need to know. Guys who grow up to carry guns for a living usually get noticed long before they turn pro. Say we take the direct approach. We go to the station, identify ourselves, and tell them what we want—a short list of Scully’s friends and relatives. There’s no rational reason for the police to give it to us. If they do, what’s our next move? We can’t go to their houses, break in, and look around. In fact, if the police know Scully’s house has been broken into, we’d be confessing to that.”
Walker was frowning as he stared at the wall.
“What is it?” asked Stillman.
“That town. I guess I wasn’t sleeping very deeply, because when I woke up, I was already running the statistics.”
“The statistics?”
“Well, think about it. Coulter has four hundred and twenty-eight people in it. From looking at it, I’d say there are about a hundred and sixty-five houses: eleven purely residential streets with around fifteen houses each. That’s roughly two point six people per dwelling. The average family in the country has two point six four people, so that works out about right. About a third are kids under eighteen, so you figure a hundred and forty-three of those, and two hundred eighty-five adults.”
“The school looks about right for that. Maybe a bit on the roomy side,” said Stillman. “But there might be farm kids bused in.”
“Yeah, it’s okay,” said Walker. “Even without them. There’s obviously money in town for public works, so you’d expect it to be better than minimum. But there are sixteen cars in the lot of the police station.”
“Seemed a little high, didn’t it? I’ve been wondering about that too.”
“It was two-thirty in the afternoon when I looked for the last time. You have to figure some of the cars were out, don’t you? Looking for speeders, or something?”
“There were,” said Stillman. “We saw two out in the morning.”
“That’s right. Let’s be conservative and say we saw all the police cars in town. Eighteen. Suppose only half are ever manned, so each of the three shifts has nine cops. If there’s no chief, dispatcher, watch officer, or anybody but those nine cops, you still come up with twenty-seven cops. That would mean roughly one in ten adults in Coulter is a police officer.”
“It’s a lot of cops,” Stillman mused. “I can see we’re lucky we didn’t get our asses tossed in jail for burglary. What do you think is going on?”
“I don’t know,” said Walker. “The place seems to have a lot of money. Maybe they’re using it to keep people employed.”
“That’s a possibility,” said Stillman. “At least they’re not suspects. You know, maybe in a town this size that’s the way to narrow down the field. If a person has a job, he’s not running around Florida killing people. Where else do people work?”
“How about New Mill Systems?”
“How many people do you figure work there?” asked Stillman.
“We saw at least thirty cars in the lot. Since there’s nobody in town who doesn’t live within easy walking distance of the place in good summer weather, figure that’s half the work force. That would be at least sixty people. If you figure two hundred and eighty-five adults, you’ve got about a hundred and forty-five women and a hundred and forty men. Sixty percent of all women over eighteen work outside their homes. That’s . . . what? Eighty-seven women. Of all men over eighteen, seventy-five percent are employed outside. That’s a hundred and five. The work force is a hundred and ninety-two. Twenty-seven are cops. That leaves a hundred and sixty-five. If sixty of them work for New Mill Systems, that’s one in every three working adults. If another third live by selling goods and services to the company and its employees, it’s two-thirds of the economy.”
“Interesting,” said Stillman. “Nobody seems to know what they do in that building. One says computers, one says communications, and one says high tech, which means nothing.”
“It could be all three,” Walker said. “It doesn’t matter. If we want to use it to eliminate people who work there, we need to know who they are.”
“I know one way that might do it,” said Stillman. “Another burglary.”
“On what?”
“The pharmacy. The old guy said it was the only drugstore in town. That makes it the only place you can fill a prescription. There are federal record-keeping requirements. Paper, not computers. Over the years, just about everybody needs a prescription once.”
“So our guy would be in the records. How do we know which he is?”
“Same way: the process of elimination. Some are women. The ones who work for New Mill Systems will all have the same health insurance. The ones who work for the city will have another. Some would be paid by Medicare, and that would mean they’re over sixty-five.” Stillman paused. “There may be other things that I haven’t thought of yet that will eliminate others. I’ll let you think of those.”
Walker glared at Stillman for a moment. “It’s a lousy idea. Let’s go do it.”
Stillman immediately began packing his lock picks and video camera and flashlights into his leather bag. “Get that jacket I bought you in Nashua, the navy blue one. And put on a different shirt. Green would be good. And dark shoes. I’ll meet you in the car.”
When they were on the road again, Stillman stopped sorting his equipment. “You didn’t happen to look closely at the door locks in that place, did you?”
“I don’t remember very clearly,” said Walker. “The ones on the front door were old brass. There was a long handle with a thumb latch.” He squinted. “I think there was a dead bolt above it.”
“What did the keyhole look like—the regular kind, or a weird shape, like a circle?”
“Regular, I think,” Walker answered. “Why this uncharacteristic concern?”
“I told you about security systems,” said Stillman. “Some are simple and easy.”
“I take it this won’t be one of them.”
“I doubt it. Even in small towns, the drugstores are full of drugs. In some circles, money is a second choice. Having cash just puts a middle man between them and what they really want. We might run into some features we can’t easily defeat.”
“If we can’t get in, what are we doing?”
“Oh, we can get in,” said Stillman. “The only thing that’s at issue is how we get out.”
When they reached the COULTER sign, Walker made the turn. He was getting comfortable with the road now, and soon they were in the open between the two fields. Stillman said, “Slow down and watch this side.”
“For what?”
“There’s a dirt road up here. There . . . stop.”
Walker stopped, and Stillman got out. He lifted a section of fence rail that served as a gate and walked with it, then waved Walker in. Walker drove off the road and found himself on a dirt surface. Stillman closed the gate and