Lady Midnight (5 page)

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Authors: Timothy C. Phillips

BOOK: Lady Midnight
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“Are you working on a case right now?”
 

“Yeah. As a matter of fact, Sally’s was the meeting place for my contact, the guy who set the whole thing up.”
 

“Tough one?”
 

“It doesn’t seem like it’s going to be. I’m looking for a young woman. Her dad thinks she might be in a little trouble with the wrong type of guy.”
 

“Got a description on her?”
 

“Sure. Five-five, long blonde hair, blue eyes. Twenty-three years old.”
 

“Say, Roland, sorry, can you hang on a minute?”
 

“Sure.”
 

Broom put me on hold while he took another incoming call. A couple of minutes later, he came back on the line.
 

“Roland, that was a call from dispatch. Somebody found a body over in the Cahaba River.”
 

“I’ll let you go then.”
 

“I think you’d better tag along. The body is that of a young woman. That girl you just described to me? I think it might be her.”

 

Chapter 5

 

I parked on the shoulder behind a half-dozen police cars, and carefully made my way along a path that slanted sharply down the steep overgrown bank to a wooded bend in the river. Broom and Cassandra stood on the bank. The highway roared above us, almost directly over our heads. Cassandra nodded. “We sure are seeing a lot of you lately, handsome.”
 

“Yeah, I guess so. Sorry it always has to involve someone dying.”
 

“That’s the biz we’re in,” she said.
 

Broom beckoned me over to where he stood. A young evidence tech worked nearby with a digital camera, reviewing her work. She was a light-skinned black girl, very thin, with big doe eyes. She reminded me of my mother, dead five years now.
 

“The mounted patrol says a fisherman found her a couple of hours ago.”
 

I looked down the bank toward the spot where the dead girl’s body had been found. It was a weedy and overgrown place. Litter clung to the high weeds, deposited by the waters of the river when the rain swelled them, and left to mingle with the other detritus when the waters receded again. The Cahaba River flowed straight through the middle of Birmingham, and the river knew all the city’s secret sins.
 

At one time, the Cahaba River had flowed past the fledgling town, nourishing and feeding its farms and industries; it had been the city’s life’s blood. Now, it is a largely forgotten estuary, below the level of the highways that carries the masses to and fro over the tenements, the slums, and the fallow lands left vacant by decades of urbanization. The commerce flows on the highways that arches over the Cahaba’s slow and forgotten waters. The long rivers of pavement carry the never-ceasing flood of cargo out of the factories in Leeds, in Ensley, in Fairfield, to the world beyond. No need for a river anymore.
 

The city had been born because the elbow of a river is a great place to set up shop. Here, enterprising business men had founded a settlement, nurtured by the river that would provide the labor for their mills and mines. The river provided water, transportation, motive force. Those industries had prospered and the settlement had grown to a town, the town to a city. But now Birmingham had outgrown its old friend, the river. Now, the waste of the city came to rest here: empty oil drums, wine bottles, the odd boot, all bobbing along in the Cahaba’s dirty currents. What the city used up found its way here, to eventually sink in the forgotten waters.
 

So it came as little surprise to the detectives of Homicide Division when the body of an unknown girl was found drifting in the swilling black water. She, too, had been used up and cast aside. The very presence of her body told much about how she ended up there. Her young frame showed that she had completed the cycle of a long slow death, a tortured journey of long misuse. She wasn’t the first, and she wouldn’t be the last.
 

Now they would have to find her killer, or at least try. She had a single identifying mark, revealed when the evidence technicians rolled her body over, a tattoo on her left shoulder blade that read “Dixie.” Crossed above it was a tiny confederate flag on a pole and a red rose. Her long blonde hair was the color of straw, and bits of leaves and other unclean things clung within its tresses. Her open eyes were like dull blue oysters.
 

“Country girl,” mused Cassandra.

“Maybe she used to be.” Broom pointed an index finger that was the size of a roll of quarters at the inside of the dead girl’s arm. “See those needle marks? It’s been a while since she was down on the farm.”
 

“Poor kid, she can’t be twenty-five. What a shame.” Cassandra shook her head.
 

I said nothing. I was remembering another dead girl with needle marks on her arms. She hadn’t quite been twenty-five, either. But I tried to put that thought away.
 

Broom turned to me and put a hand on my shoulder. “Sorry, Roland, I know this is tough. Let’s see if she’s your girl.”
 

They gently turned her over. She hadn’t been in the water long. Her friends and family, if she had any, would still easily recognize her. The old anger crawled up in my gut again when I saw the look that was frozen on her face, a frightened, lost look. I had seen that same lost look on the face of someone I’d cared for, someone who had died with a needle in her arm.
 

Lena.
 

Lena Walker was the name of a girl who’d been lost, and I had found, who was sinking slowly in the muck she had made of her life. I had thought that I could save her, but I had been wrong. I looked at this dead girl, now, and saw many of Lena’s mistakes, written in the telltale signs of her own slow decline.
 

The red anger that welled up in my heart, in part came from the fact someone hadn’t even tried to help this girl. Instead, they had allowed her to slowly die in this hard and dirty way, and threw what was left of her away, like so much rubbish. I suddenly wanted very badly to find the ones responsible, and make them sorry for what they had done.
 

Not your case
, my eternally nagging inner voice told me.
This one’s Broom’s. He’ll handle it. Let her go
.
 

I heaved a heavy sigh. “Thanks, Les. But she’s not the one. They look enough alike to be sisters, but it isn’t her.”
 

All the little parts of the last forty-eight hours swirled like a tempest in my head: Baucom and the dead man, Bowman, who looked like two peas from the same pod; Senator Patrick’s reckless daughter, slumming somewhere in Atlanta where Bowman had lived and worked; and Bowman, who ended up in front of Sally’s Diner, just in time for me to watch him die.
 

I had watched him die across the street from Sally’s Diner, where Baucom sat patiently waiting to talk to me about meeting Mr. Washington. If Lester Broom didn’t like coincidences, I downright despised them. Questions were already piling up, way too quickly. What I wanted was answers. If Bowman had somehow been involved in Patrick’s daughter’s disappearance, maybe he was waiting to talk to me, or perhaps even to Baucom.
 

I had no facts, and was merely speculating. Whatever Bowman had known died with him. Something told me he was mixed up in the case, though. Since I was heading over to Atlanta, anyway, I reasoned that I might as well pay a visit to Bowman’s partner, and find out what he knew.

 

Chapter 6

 

The drive to Atlanta is a very green one, along the Interstate that winds the hundred and fifty odd miles from one Southern metropolis to the other. Then suddenly, Atlanta looms ahead, a vast city lost in a wilderness. Traffic goes from laid back to horrendous in a hurry, here in the city that houses the world’s busiest airport. The green gives way to gray, and the quiet of the country that accompanies you on the drive over vanishes abruptly and completely amid the engines of the cars of hundreds of thousands of motorists, the roar of jet engines, the rushing pace that is everywhere.
 

Atlanta is like a girl who is too booked up to ever meet you somewhere quiet for lunch or drinks. You have to see her on the fly; your talks with her are always of the superficial kind, the kind you have with someone on the cell phone while they are negotiating rush hour traffic or power shopping in the mall. In the end, you come to realize that you’ll never get to know her very well, no matter how much you like her. It’s best to move on before you get too attached.
 

The truth is, maybe there’s nothing much beneath the surface and the bluster to get to know. It was all freeze dried, packed away, and shipped off somewhere else a long time ago. There is a lot in Atlanta to look at, but there is nothing to feel. Move along, everyone’s glare seems to shout out to you. What’s the matter with you, aren’t you as busy as the rest of us?
 

My cell phone rang. I was just beginning to mentally berate Senator Patrick for being a micro manager, when a glance at the screen revealed that it was Detective Lester Broom calling again.
 

“Hi, Les.”
 

“Roland, what’s shaking?”
 

“I’m over in Atlanta following up on that missing girl case.”
 

“Any luck?”
 

“I’m really just getting started; I’m driving into Atlanta right now.”
 

“Well, I thought I’d let you know that I got a call from the partner of that dead private eye, Bowman. Fellow name of Grant.”
 

This was timely news, indeed. “Did he have any idea why Bowman was hanging around Brooks Plaza that day?”
 

“He said he didn’t.”
 

“What did he say when you told him that another private eye was watching while his partner got killed?”
 

“This is an ongoing investigation, so I didn’t share that information with him. If you got it in your head to do some snooping, I thought you might want to preserve the element of surprise.”
 

“I appreciate that. I was wondering why the guy was there, who wanted him dead. I might ask Grant that, if I get a chance.”
 

I suddenly felt a strange impulse, as if everything in the last few days was connected. I thought of the similarity in the appearances of Connie Patrick and the dead girl in the river. Almost before I realized that I was going to, I said, “Les, that girl in the Cahaba River. Did you find out her name?”
 

“The girl? No, Cassandra and I have been really beating the bushes on that one. We must have shown her picture to every pimp, prostitute, junkie and pusher in the county, but so far, nothing.”
 

“Don’t give up on her.”
 

“You know better that that, old friend. She’s somebody to somebody. We’ll find out her details, eventually.”
 

“All right, Les. If I find out anything on the Bowman angle, I’ll give you a shout back.”
 

“Thanks, Roland. I hope you find the girl safe.”
 

I hung up and pointed my Buick back out into the rush hour hell of afternoon Atlanta. Sometimes I wanted to laugh at the futility of what Broom and I, and the men and women like us do every day, trying to find people lost in so much chaos, trying to reach down to those who willingly plunge into the abyss, and pull them back to safety and sanity. Sometimes, I really wonder just what in the hell I am trying to prove, and to whom. But then, as always, I take a deep breath and get back into the ring, because I am Roland Longville, a private detective, and that is all I really know how to do.
 

* * *

The offices of Bowman and Grant were located in the New South Bank Building, a cool, marble and glass, post-modern structure in downtown Atlanta. I figured the rent was about a billion dollars a month. I had decided to drop in on Grant unannounced. If you tell people you’re coming, and tell them why, they have a habit of thinking up lies to tell you before you get there, if lying is their plan.
 

Questions out of the blue often get the straight dope out of people a lot more efficiently. Of course Grant had talked with Broom and other detectives, but he couldn’t be expecting me to show up at his office. Luckily, Broom had kept mum on the fact that I had witnessed Bowman’s death.
 

The world’s most silent elevator whisked me effortlessly to the twenty-third floor, and the doors opened onto a corridor that was sterile, silent and serene. Neat plants and subtle agreeable smells guided me down the hall to a mahogany door with a tastefully etched brass plate. The plate discreetly notified me that I had reached the offices of Bowman and Grant, Security Consultants and Private Detectives, Inc.
 

I went in without knocking. There was a receptionist behind a desk. She was a smart-looking young white woman, with dark brown hair pulled back into a ponytail. She was lean and fit-looking beneath a cobalt-gray jacket, crisp white shirt, and short black skirt that revealed attractive, muscular legs, when she came around the desk and greeted me with a polite smile.
 

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