Authors: Lorhainne Eckhart
“Is Marcie sleeping?” Diane peeled off her coat and tossed it over a kitchen chair. She pushed up the sleeves of her black sweatshirt, her gun still holstered. Underneath her bloodshot eyes, puffy bags with a hint of grey seeped through her normally pale complexion. She poured herself another cup of coffee from the banged up ceramic percolator and dumped in a spoonful of sugar. Every mug Marcie owned was littered across the narrow counter and coffee splattered on the stove, floor and the table.
Two agents swept the front room with a handheld bug tracer. Leave it to Jesse, he’d demanded and coerced until finally it arrived. Jesse was like a dog with a bone, convinced there had to be some type of audio transmitter planted. Sam crossed his arms and leaned against the stove. He didn’t know what to think, so he watched.
“She fought it, but she’s finally asleep. These guys find anything yet?”
“Nothing.” Diane dumped her spoon in the cluttered sink. “Somebody had better clean up before Marcie sees this.
“Later. Do you have any news on our pirate?”
“Dan’s being held right now on assault and possession with intent to sell.”
“Intent to sell is quite a stretch. I can’t believe the DA went for it.”
“Well, it doesn’t really matter since his lawyer ‘Big Frank’ Hawking appeared in Port Angeles before they could question Dan.”
“You got to be kidding. Big Frank, the marijuana lawyer. He’s Lance Silver’s attorney. Any hope for a link to Lance Silver?”
Diane shook her head and blew on the steaming coffee. “No, sir. Same with the connection to Dan’s brother Greg. Nothing, they covered their tracks well.
“So right now the DA’s leaning on Donny, trying to get him to talk and tell us where the drugs are. But he won’t talk. I didn’t see him throw the marijuana floating in the water.” Diane shrugged.
“Dan said it’s Marcie’s, and he’s doing a damn fine job of shining the light on her. And after this fuck up tonight, nothing will stick, except maybe the assault on Marcie.” Sam shook his head and turned away.
“Come on, Sam, maybe if we can get Donny to tell us where the all the marijuana went, we can locate it and get Donny to testify Dan arranged to exchange all the bud for cocaine. And that has some real teeth.”
“That’s quite a leap, Diane, especially since no cocaine was discovered. So where’s the crime?” Sam pushed up his heavy sleeves.
“We’ll get him on the cocaine when it’s found, and we’ll find it.”
Sam sensed the fierce determination that transformed Diane, wishful thinking on her part. She wanted Dan and Lance Silver behind bars as much as he did. But one thing was apparent. For now, these two were untouchable.
“We found something. Excuse me, sir.” One of the agents shouted, as he pulled out the stove and lifted a tiny piece of metal, similar to a small watch battery, from the back of the stove.
Jesse stomped in, ripped it out of the young agent’s hand and held it up. “Probably optical. This is high-end stuff and definitely costs money. My bet, it works on radio frequency. Here’s your leak and how Dan McKenzie knew all about our plan. What do you want to bet, Lance Silver’s behind this?”
Sam wiped his hand over his eyes. “Of course he is. He’s close enough to pick up the radio signal. So, while we’re at his house bugging it, someone had already planted one here. They expected us. Obviously, what we heard was staged. I knew it was too easy getting in there with his security.”
Sam threw his hands in the air. But let them drop just as quickly, his heart pounding in his throat, the moment he fully comprehended what just happened. “Guys, they would have heard Richard. They’d know he was part of the set up. Shit, I just told Marcie that Richard and Maggie are safe, they won’t be.”
Diane yanked out her cell phone and hurried outside to get a better signal. A few minutes later, she was back. “Dexter’s sending two agents over to Richard’s right now.”
“So now what?” Sam asked.
Jesse yanked his windbreaker off the back of the chair. “I hate to say this, hoss, but I think you’re done. Cut your losses. The drugs are gone. You ain’t going to find them. These guys are untouchable for you.” Jesse jabbed his finger at Sam. “Dan’s got all Marcie’s marijuana. The cocaine never arrived. He needs nothing from her, not anymore. Read the writing on the wall. It’s time for you to make a deal to protect your own, before someone gets hurt. Then go on a vacation.”
“And let him win? What, are you kidding?”
Jesse grabbed Sam by the shirtfront. “Open your eyes. You know dirt when you see it. This case is done for you. Let the DEA build another one against Dan and Lance without you. And if you didn’t notice, Dan McKenzie didn’t win. You got the girl.” Jesse slapped Sam on the chest and headed for the door. He gestured to one of the agents who lingered in the doorway. “Come on. Get me to the dock where the DEA guys and Coast Guard are still hanging out. I’ll hitch a ride back with them to the mainland. Then I’m going home to my wife.”
Fire blazed off Jesse as he jabbed a finger at Diane. “You make sure he listens. This is done. Take a break. There are times you got to cut your losses, admit defeat. This is one of them.”
He opened the door, his deep chocolate eyes latched onto Sam before a big sloppy grin plumped out those priceless dimples. “My wife and I expect an invite to the wedding.”
Then Jesse left, chuckling while he watched Sam stagger back a few steps, as if he’d been bashed over the head.
Marcie stood behind the fifth wheel in darkness. It was the night of the fire on Dan and Richard’s Gardiner property. Only this time she lingered in the shadows. Watching as Dan and Sandra loaded 200 pots of marijuana in a horse trailer. She recognized the time, before the house burned. She watched her own presence like a doppelganger. A scene taking place on the other side of the shed inside Dan’s fifth wheel trailer, she undressed and climbed up into the bunk. She remembered vividly the red T-shirt, carelessly tossed on the worn bench seat before climbing into bed.
Dan closed up the horse trailer, and Sandra opened the driver’s door while Dan said something behind her. Their arrogant manners were filled with cocky sureness. Marcie couldn’t make out their words. It played out like an old time movie. Sandra started the truck and slipped out the back way. Dan closed up the shed and strode to the RV. She remembered now that night when he climbed in beside her; his desire for her was strong, unusually attentive to her needs while he satisfied his. Disconnected she observed the person she used to be through a veiled connection with Dan, physical only. No emotional or spiritual bond of any goodness lingered there. A murky gray cloud shrouded her third eye. No wonder she couldn’t see through the thick block. But now as she watched from a safe distance, awareness formed inside Marcie. Every time he touched he, she allowed him to take her energy. This was her doing. Lying in that RV beside Dan, she coveted the block. And she clung to him while her life force weakened.
She was asleep when Dan crawled out of bed and dressed. He became stronger every time he used her. He softly stepped out and latched the door behind him. Time seemed irrelevant, but Marcie sensed several hours had passed.
Headlights turned off on a black pickup truck, which slipped in from the back of the property. The truck appeared to slither down the rutted dirt road and stopped just before the shed. Whoever was inside killed the inner light before they popped open the door. The pale moon illuminated the figure from the surrounding darkness, Richard.
With his hands fisted, he stepped forward and faced off with Dan. Dan was smug when he reached out and patted Richard’s shoulder. But there was no mistaking the searing fury when Richard knocked his hand away.
Their words appeared heated. From a distance, she bounced in place, up and down, yelling at Richard not to do it. But her voice was silent and her lips stuck as if they’d been glued.
Richard nearly knocked Dan over, when he brushed around him. The darkness swallowed him up. The air visibly shifted when he entered the rundown, vacant house. When she looked back at Dan, he viewed the house with a coldness she’d never seen portrayed on his face before. Moments later, smoke spiraled from the windows, filling the house, engulfing the entire structure at an accelerated speed. She couldn’t see Richard. She turned in a circle in the darkness. When she turned back to the house, she saw the end of the devastation. The fire department, the sheriff, Richard and Dan, followed by a familiar scene when Richard rigidly walked over to her, physically turned her and pushed her away. She remembered now the clear warning. “Get out of here.” This time though she watched his reaction when she walked away. His face hardened with animosity when he glanced over at Dan. When he looked at her, his eyes softened, as one’s did when you cared deeply for someone.
Time stood still when Elise, Sam’s dead wife, emerged from nowhere, dressed in blue jeans, white T-shirt and a jean jacket with a sidearm strapped to her side. Her long blonde hair flowed over her shoulders.
This time, confusion filled Elise’s eyes as she held out the palm of her hand and in it was a key to the shop, where two hundred potted marijuana plants were stored.
Elise held up her hand, pointing her finger like a gun taking aim and firing. Except this time, Marcie looked behind her and she saw the dead grandson of Mama Reine.
She knew now she had misunderstood. Elise was part of Dan and Lance Silver’s sideline—making sure the marijuana arrived and distributing it in New Orleans. Leon, she recruited. When he got greedy, she eliminated him.
The early morning sun was just clearing the horizon when Marcie hobbled into the kitchen. Diane and Sam lingered around the kitchen table with a cup of coffee. Both wide eyed as if pumped full of a week’s worth of caffeine.
“Where’s Jesse?”
Sam lifted his foot off the kitchen chair and slid it out with the toe of his black boot. “On his way home; I just got off the phone with him. He’s in Seattle. Plane just landed. His flight to New Orleans will be leaving in a few hours.”
Marcie felt some added layer of protection fall away. She lowered herself in the chair beside Sam.
“I don’t understand, I thought he was helping you build a case against Lance Silver and Dan?”
Sam and Diane shared a knowing look. Sam let out a heavy sigh. He leaned closer to Marcie and linked their fingers. “It’s over, babe. The task force will evaluate whether they want to start again. This case’s blown. The weed’s gone, and who knows where the cocaine ended up.”
“You’re just going to walk away, let Dan get away with this? Let him screw some more innocent people. And what about Lance Silver? Both he and Dan tried to set you up, Sam.”
“It was a message, Marcie, to back off. And you know what? You and I are out of it. But it doesn’t mean they win. I promise you, neither one will come after me or you again”
“You can’t be sure of that, Sam.”
He stood up, leaned down and kissed her. “I got to go out for a bit.”
Sam grabbed his black windbreaker off a hook by the door and left.
Marcie held out her hands, gaping at the closed door and then at Diane. “What the hell’s that about?”
“He needs some fresh air. Adrenaline’s still pumped. He damn near lost you last night, and I think he’s come to realize what’s really important.”
Marcie’s telephone rang from the front room. Diane jumped up. “I’ll get it.”
Marcie was exhausted and lost in her head as she stared at the door. Sam, her man, a fighter like none she’d ever seen. Her head was still coming to grips with everything that happened. She felt physically and emotionally derailed from this battle. Yet at the same time, an amazing peace existed in her tummy when she realized the link between her and Dan was forever severed.
Was Sam out of danger? For the first time since this mess started, maybe he was.
Marcie leapt when Diane touched her hand.
“Didn’t you hear me? Maggie and Richard are on the phone.”
Because it was an old landline, and she still used her granny’s old rotary phone, she had to go into the front room to talk. Marcie shuffled to the phone and picked up the receiver lying on the end table beside the easy chair.
“Hi guys.”
“Are you all right? We heard you went for a swim.”
“I’m fine. Richard, nothing went as planned. Dan knew everything. There’s someone on the inside, isn’t there?” Marcie could hear Diane rattling around in the kitchen.
Richard let out a heavy sigh. “Look Marcie, there always has been.”
“Sam said we’re done. He doesn’t want to investigate Lance and Dan any more.”
“Smart man. Maggie and I are out of it too. That underworld isn’t so black and white, Marcie, some ties run so deep and powerful—they’re not going to get caught. There’s dark stuff, and many people are involved leading picture perfect lives. What you see, and what are real, are two different things.”
“But Dan’s going to get off?”
“Marcie, they have nothing on him. Let it go, he’ll get what’s coming to him. Most likely, from the same underworld he’s been screwing now. Retribution doesn’t always come in the way we expect. So make peace with what happened. My instincts are pretty good. And I think you’ve found yourself a good man in Sam. Focus on the life you started with him and forget Dan.”