"Have a seat," I said.
Minor looked at the couch with distaste.
"It's clean," I said.
Â
"The cat hasn't started shedding yet this year."
Minor sat down.
Â
I left him there and went into the kitchen.
Â
Nameless was standing patiently by his bowl, and I put about half a pack of Tender Vittles in it.
Â
He started purring and eating at the same time.
Â
I don't know how he does that.
Minor was still on the couch when I went back into the living room.
Â
I'd sort of hoped he'd be gone, though of course I'd known he wouldn't.
"They tell me you find people," he said.
I sat in one of the chairs.
Â
"Who's 'they'?"
"Cop named Barnes."
It figured.
Â
If you're a guy like Minor, you want to let the cops know you're in town.
Â
They're going to find out soon enough, and if you've already talked to them, you're covered.
"He's wrong," I said.
Â
"I
used
to find people.
Â
That was a long time ago."
"That's not what Barnes says.
Â
He says you're looking for some guy right now."
"Barnes has a big mouth."
Minor nodded.
Â
"Cops are like that."
Â
The voice of experience.
"Who did he tell you I was looking for?" I asked.
"Guy named Harry."
There was no use in denying it.
Â
"All right.
Â
I'm doing a favor for a friend.
Â
What does that have to do with anything?"
Minor put his right ankle up on his left knee.
Â
His shoes were handmade and worth more than Dino had paid me so far.
Â
I thought about asking for a raise.
"I'm looking for the same guy," he said.
Somehow I wasn't surprised.
Â
"Why?"
"I'm an attorney," Minor said.
Now
I was surprised.
Â
"An attorney?"
"Right.
Â
Like I went to law school, passed the bar.
Â
You got a problem with that?"
The problem was that he didn't look like an attorney.
Â
He looked like somebody's hired muscle, if not something worse.
Â
Naturally I didn't want to tell him that.
Â
He might take the opportunity to prove that I was right.
Â
He certainly looked as if he'd enjoy it.
"No problem," I said.
Â
"I was just wondering why you were looking for Harry.
Â
What's his last name, by the way?"
"What, you don't know it?"
"Not until today," I said.
Â
"And he's been around here all my life."
"It's Mercer, Harry Mercer.
Â
And don't ask me his middle initial.
Â
I don't know it."
"Why are you looking for him?"
Minor didn't hesitate.
Â
"He has some money coming to him."
I held in a laugh.
Â
"Money?
Â
Harry?"
"He had a sister," Minor said.
Â
"In Dallas."
Â
He pulled an envelope out of his suit coat and handed it to me.
Â
"It's all in there."
I took the envelope and removed the letter.
Â
The sister,
Gennie
Mercer, said she was employing the firm of Minor and Douglass to look for her brother in the matter of an inheritance.
Â
It could have been written by any one; it could even have been genuine.
"I didn't know Harry had a sister," I said.
That didn't bother Minor.
Â
"You didn't know his last name until today."
He had me there.
Â
"What do you want from me?"
"I want you to help me find Harry Mercer," he said.
W
hen Minor had gone, I went into the bedroom, put on the five-CD set of Elvis' 'fifties recordings, set the player to shuffle, and listened for a while.
Â
Nameless came in, but he didn't listen long.
Â
He went to sleep.
Minor was lying about why he wanted Harry, and he was no more an attorney than I could sing like Elvis.
Â
Barnes would have known that too, and he'd probably
sicced
Minor on me just to stir the pot and see what rose to the top.
I figured that Minor was tied in with one or the other of the gambling interests, maybe even the same people that Macklin had been hooked up with.
Â
If that was the case, then he was in town to find out who'd killed Macklin.
If that weren't the case, Minor might even be the killer.
Â
He certainly looked the part.
But how did he know about Harry?
Â
The answer had to be Barnes again.
Â
I'd underestimated Barnes.
Â
He'd figured out from my questions that I thought Harry was in the Retreat when Macklin was killed.
Minor would have gone to the cops first, found out all they knew, and then start using it.
Â
He would have had plenty of time to fix up the phony letter.
Â
The right people, and he would know them, could have told him all about Harry.
Â
Even that he had a last name.
Minor's attorney cover didn't have to stand up to close inspection.
Â
All he had to do was stay out of trouble long enough to find Harry.
Â
Then Harry would tell him who killed Macklin.
Â
Or Minor would kill Harry to eliminate the only witness.
Â
I didn't know what Minor's job would be after that.
I'd told Minor the same thing I told Lytle, that I already had a client and that I couldn't help him.
Â
He tried to make it "worth my while," as he put it, but I didn't let him.
He took my refusal better than I'd thought he might, but I knew that didn't mean a thing.
Â
I'd have to watch my back from here on out.
Â
If Minor couldn't find Harry on his own, he'd be lurking around.
Â
Of course I'd been intending to keep a close watch on my back.
Â
After all, I'd already been shot at.
Which reminded me.
Â
I got out of the chair and walked to the little closet in the side wall of the room.
Â
I had to reach high up on the shelf to get the box I wanted.
Â
I took it over to the bed and opened it.
Â
The sheepskin-lined leather case was still there.
Â
I took out the case and undid the zipper.
Â
The 7.65 mm Mauser -- you can call it a Luger if you want to -- was inside.
Â
I returned the box to the closet.
There was another box I had to get, but it was in a drawer in the kitchen.
Â
I follow gun safety precautions.
Â
I keep the pistol and the cartridges in separate rooms.
Of course, if anyone were to break in the house with evil intentions, I'd be dead before I could find the pistol, run to another room for the cartridges, and load the clip.
Â
On the other hand, I would never shoot myself with a pistol that was supposed to be unloaded.
I took the cartridges into the bedroom and got the pistol.
Â
Nameless watched me with gray-green eyes, not any more interested in what I was doing than he was interested in the voice of Elvis Presley, who was now singing "I Was the One."
Â
I took the pistol and cartridges into the living room.
Â
The TV set was on a cabinet with sliding wooden doors.
Â
My pistol cleaning gear was in the cabinet.
Â
I got it out and enjoyed the oily smell of the rags for a minute before I cleaned the Mauser.
Â
Then I loaded the clip.
OK, so it was against the law to carry a pistol.
Â
I was going to take the chance; it would be a lot more effective against a threat on my life than carrying something equally illegal like, say, a half dozen dildos.
Â
If someone took another shot at me, I was going to shoot back, though I didn't intend to kill anyone, not if I could avoid it.
Â
I just didn't like working at a disadvantage.
I put the pistol back in the case and zipped it up.
Â
I read a few more chapters in
Look Homeward, Angel
, and then it was time to go to work.
I
t wasn't really work, however.
Â
I was talking to Cathy Macklin again, so it was more pleasure than business.
Â
For me.
Â
She looked at things a little differently.
"I told you before, Mr. Smith.
Â
I don't really know anything about my father."
"Call me Truman," I said.
She smiled at that.
Â
It was a very nice smile, and it lit up her blue eyes.
Â
"I didn't know anyone was named Truman anymore," she said.
"There aren't very many of us.
Â
But we're all men of sterling character.
Â
Also we're hungry all the time.
Â
Would you go to dinner with me?"
She didn't know how to take that.
Â
Maybe I was rushing things a little.
"It might be easier to talk over a meal," I said.
Â
"And you might even find out that you liked me."
"Anything's possible," she said, though she didn't sound as if she really believed it.
"Is that a yes?"
"I have a motel to run," she said.
Â
Then, seeing my disappointment, she added, "But I suppose I could get Barbara to take over."
I asked her who Barbara was.
"She's a friend.
Â
She's also my assistant manager when I need a break.
Â
She comes in and answers the phone, takes reservations, handles registration for the drop-ins."
"Do you take a lot of breaks?"
"Very few, actually, but you look like you might be worth talking to."
"Some people think I tell interesting stories," I said.
Â
"Most of them are a lot older than you, though.
Â
The people, I mean, not the stories."
"I suppose it wouldn't hurt to take a chance," she said.
Â
"I don't take many of them, either, and Barbara tells me I should take a few more."
I liked Barbara already.
W
e went to Gaido's, which I liked because of the giant mutant crab perched over the door as much as the food, even though the food was quite likely the best on the Island.
Â
It was also considerably more expensive than my lunch had been, though that didn't matter.
Â
The company made up for it.
During dinner I found out a little more about Cathy Macklin, about how she felt about growing up with an absentee father, about how easy and difficult at the same time it was to plan a funeral for him, about her college days at TCU, about the husband who'd left her after a brief marriage, about how much she liked living on the Island and being able to walk across the street anytime she felt like sticking a toe in the Gulf.
Â
"A lot of BOIs don't like the Gulf," I said.
"That's their problem," she told me, cracking a crab claw.
Â
"I love it."
I told her a little about myself, too, about coming back to the Island to look for Jan, about finding Dino's daughter, about the murdered alligator.
Â
I didn't tell her much about looking for Harry, however.
Â
Finally, over a truly decadent dessert -- vanilla ice cream rolled in pecans and topped with hot fudge -- I got around to asking about her father's old enemies.
"There were probably a lot of them," she said.
Â
"But that was a long time ago."
"Can you remember anyone in particular?
Â
Anyone who might still be around?"
"I don't see what this has to do with finding your friend," she said.
I decided to trust her.
Â
You have to trust someone, and I didn't trust anyone else in this mess.
Â
So I told her my idea about Harry having witnessed the murder.
Â
I also told her about Alex Minor.
"So you have some competition," she said.
"That's right.
Â
And I don't want him to find Harry before I do."
"Why do you think he came to you?
Â
Was that smart?"
I'd been wondering about that, myself, and while I had an answer, I wasn't sure it was the right one.