Midnight Rambler_ A Novel of Suspense - James Swain [73]
“Shoot.”
“Is Russ really a criminal?”
“I told you, he's got a record and did time.”
“But is he a criminal? Does he walk around every day with bad intentions and evil thoughts? That's a criminal. Or is Russ a decent guy who did something dumb and has paid his debt to society? If that's the case, you ought to give him a break.”
“Aren't we being generous?” Sally said.
I turned and faced her. “I drove to Tampa this morning to apologize to my wife for fucking up our twenty-year marriage.
She forgave me. It was one of the nicest things anyone's ever done for me.”
“You're getting back together with Rose?”
I nodded, and Sally leaned across the seats and hugged me.
“Oh, Jack, I'm so happy for you.”
Sleep & Save was part of a nationwide chain, if the sign by the front desk was to be believed. In reality, it was a world-class dump, with rooms going for $29.99 a night and a bank of vending machines that sold soft drinks and candy in the main office.
The manager was a smiling Pakistani with two rows of perfect white teeth. He stood behind the counter, tapping the keyboard to a computer. Sally and I had worked several cases together, and I knew her well enough to let her take the lead. Pressing her stomach to the counter, she batted her eyelashes.
“Hi,” she said.
“Good afternoon,” the manager said brightly.
“Can you help me?”
“I will certainly try.”
“My brother is staying here, and we're supposed to be meeting him outside his room, only like a dummy I didn't write down the number when he gave it to me this morning. Can you help me?”
The manager stared at the Disney logo on Sally's shirt. Despite what Sally had said earlier, Disney ran Orlando and practically everything around it, and it wasn't uncommon for people to bend over backwards to help Disney employees. The manager flipped open the registration log lying on the desk.
“What is your brother's name?”
“Cecil Cooper.”
The manager ran his finger down the page. “Here it is. C. Cooper. Room 42. Your brother is staying on the second floor.”
“Oh, thank you so much. You're so sweet!”
Outside, we took a set of stairs to the second floor. The motel was beside the highway, and the endless drone of passing cars was giving me a headache. We found Room 42 at the end of the building, a do not disturb sign hanging from the knob. Sally extracted Cecil's room key from her purse, then grabbed my wrist with her other hand.
“You've been working out, haven't you?” I said.
“Promise me you won't take anything, Jack.”
“Didn't you believe me the first time?”
“No, I have trust issues with men.”
“I won't take anything,” I promised.
Cecil's room was about what you'd expect for $29.99 a night. Rickety furniture, threadbare carpet, smoky mirrored walls that desperately needed a shot of Windex, a slab for a bed. Sally shut the door behind us, and we were thrown into darkness. I heard her hand scrape the wall, then the lights came on.
Sally checked the bathroom while I looked around the bedroom. Except for an ashtray overflowing with cigarette butts and several dead soldiers in the trash, the room was clean. Next to the telephone was a notepad with deep indentations in the top page, indicating that someone had recently written on it. Holding the notepad beneath the light, I attempted to read the indentations, only they were too faint.
“Have a pencil?” I asked Sally.
“There's a mechanical one in my purse,” she said.
Sally's purse was on the bed. I removed the mechanical pencil from a side pocket and extended the lead. Holding the lead sideways, I used it to shade the top page of the notepad. Before my eyes, the indentations turned into words.
P: Tram, Peggy Sue
K: Shannon (age 3)
C: Ford Pickup
L: BSX 4V6
P: Magic Kingdom
KID LOVES MICKEY
Cecil hadn't impressed me as a detail guy, yet the notepad indicated otherwise. Cecil knew exactly who he was tracking, right