What happened was that a door opened and shut, leaving me alone in the warehouse with the body of Ro-Jo lying not six feet from me.
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I knew that the killer was getting away, and I wished there was something I could do besides lie there on the floor, but I couldn't think of a thing.
My head didn't feel as if it were attached to my body, and I wondered if that was a bad sign.
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I didn't want to think about it, so I thought about fishing and how good it felt to hook a flounder in the bay or a speck from the dock.
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My head began to hurt a little less.
I kept on thinking for a while about fishing, about Cathy Macklin, about Harry, and eventually I discovered that there was something I could do besides just lie there and think.
Â
I discovered that I could go to sleep.
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So I did.
I
don't know how much time passed before I woke up.
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Probably not long, maybe fifteen minutes, maybe a little more.
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I was feeling much better.
Â
My head was feeling attached to the rest of me again, which was good in one way, but bad in another
Â
It made me aware that I was feeling pain in a lot of places that I had never felt pain before, from my hair to my toenails.
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I told myself that the pain would pass.
Most of it did pass after another fifteen minutes or so, and I was able to sit up.
Â
I was even able to find the Mauser, which I stuck back in my waistband.
After that I crawled around the wall, trying to find the door.
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I was slow, but I was careful, and I finally found it.
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I pulled myself up on the frame, opened the door, and stepped outside.
I
stood in the cold air and took stock of myself.
There was a knot on the back of my head, but it was hard, not soft.
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I took that as a good sign.
My head was pounding sort of like the drumbeats in "Peggy Sue."
Â
That wasn't a good sign, but it wasn't a bad one.
My ear was painful to the touch and seemed to have fever.
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That wasn't so bad either.
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At least it was still attached to my head.
My little finger looked like a cup handle.
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I grabbed the end and pulled as hard as I could.
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It popped back into place with no more pain than I might have felt if someone had hit it with a hammer.
I congratulated myself for not yelling and told myself that I had nothing to complain about, at least not compared to someone in Ro-Jo's condition.
Thinking of Ro-Jo reminded me of something.
Â
Leaving the door open, I went back inside the warehouse.
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There was enough light coming in from the outside to allow me to locate the Maglite.
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I pocketed it and left.
T
he trip back over the fence was a lot harder than the first one had been, but I was walking more or less normally by the time I got back to the Jeep.
There was a pay phone beside the convenience store, and I used it to call the police.
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I didn't ask for Barnes or mention my name.
Â
I just reported the body in the warehouse.
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I could talk to Barnes later.
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Maybe.
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Hey, what had he done for me?
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I certainly didn't have time for him right at the moment.
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There were places to go and things to do.
L
awrence Hobart, aka the Hammer, lived in a house that was typical of those in its neighborhood:
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peeling paint, bad roof, more dirt in the yard than grass. It was up on blocks in case of flooding, and the porch was a good four feet off the ground.
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I could see a light through one of the front windows, so I supposed Hobart was home.
If I was lucky, he'd be panting and at least a little bruised, but I didn't think that would be the case.
Â
I'd hate to think that a man in his seventies could run over me like that.
I climbed the tall steps and knocked on the door.
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It was opened by a man who looked a little like
Braddy
Macklin must have appeared before he was killed, sort of like Charles Atlas gone slightly to seed and wearing a bad hairpiece.
Â
Hobart had less gray in his hair than I did, but at least my hair was my own.
"What do you want?" he said, looking at me with narrowed eyes.
"Lawrence Hobart?" I said.
"Who wants to know?"
"Truman Smith.
Â
I have to talk to you."
"Bullshit you have to talk to me."
He was shutting the door as he spoke, but I put my shoulder into it and slammed it open, knocking him backward a step or two.
Â
He definitely wasn't the guy who'd run over me.
"Get your ass outta here or I'll call the cops," he said.
"Good idea.
Â
Ask for Gerald Barnes.
Â
Tell him to put a little hustle in it."
He thought about that and decided that calling the cops might not be such a good idea.
"I was a few years younger, I'd whip your ass," he said.
"I don't doubt it.
Â
Right now, your grandmother could probably do the job with one hand."
"Yeah, you don't look so good.
Â
What the hell you want, anyhow?"
"You know who I am?"
"Hell yes.
Â
You're that snot-nosed little fart used to hang around with Dino.
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Still do, from what I hear."
"Could you shut the door?" I said.
Â
"It's cold in here."
"Don't like to waste money on heat," he said, but he shut the door.
"Thanks," I said.
Â
"I've had a rough night."
"Yeah, it looks that way.
Â
What happened to you?"
"I tripped on a rug.
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You wouldn't happen to have an ibuprofen tablet would you?"
"What's that?"
"Never mind.
Â
How about an aspirin?"
"Never touch the stuff."
"I have a pretty bad headache," I said.
"Big deal.
Â
You're a young guy.
Â
You can take it."
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He gave me a crooked smile.
Â
"What'd you want to talk about?"
"Gambling," I said, hoping he was right about my ability to take the headache.
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"Also
Braddy
Macklin.
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And Patrick Lytle."
The smile disappeared when I said Macklin's name.
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I was glad Hobart wasn't twenty years younger.
Â
Or even ten.
Â
He could have mopped the floor with me even if I was at my best.
"I don't know anything about those topics," he said.
"Sure you do.
Â
I'm old enough to remember that fight you had with Macklin.
Â
Anyone who's lived on the Island for over a month has heard that story.
Â
And gambling?
Â
I know what led up to that fight.
Â
You had a habit."
His brow furrowed, and he looked at me as if he might like to dismember me.
Â
I hoped he wouldn't try it.
Â
I didn't want to get hurt.
Â
After a second or two, his brow smoothed out, however, and the fire dimmed in his eyes.
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I let myself relax.
"Damn right, I had a habit," he said.
Â
"Now it'd get me a spot on one of those TV talk shows.
Â
Gambling addiction, they call it.
Â
Everybody would feel sorry for me and try to get me some help.
Â
They even got a hotline number on the back of the lottery tickets.
Â
You can call if you got a problem.
Â
Back in the old days, nobody cared.
Â
They figured if you couldn't control it, you were just stupid, or weak.
Â
They didn't know it was an addiction.
Â
They got twelve-step programs for that kind of thing now."
I wondered if he watched the same shows that Dino did.
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It sounded like a distinct possibility.
"What about Patrick Lytle?" I asked.
"Don't know him."
I winced as a particularly good drumbeat split my head.
Â
I'd switched from "Peggy Sue" to Sandy Nelson slamming the skins on "Teen Beat."
"Try again," I said.
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"Lytle's wife was a good friend of Macklin's, a very good friend.
Â
Don't tell me you didn't know about that."
"Maybe I remember a little about it, now that you mention it.
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It's all ancient history."
"Not to me.
Â
I thought maybe you could tell me a little about her."
He thought that one over.
Â
"You wanna sit down?"
He didn't have to ask me twice.
Â
The room we were in was furnished in early Salvation Army Thrift Store, and I sat on a sofa older than Dino's if not in nearly as good a condition.
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The foam rubber showed through several holes in the fabric.
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Hobart sat in a platform rocker that had a bed pillow in it in place of its original cushion.
"She was a real looker,
Miz
Lytle was," he told me after he'd settled himself.
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"Red hair.
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I always liked red hair on a woman.
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And real white skin, with a freckle or two.
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I don't mind freckles.
Â
Lots of red-haired women have 'em."
That wasn't exactly an earth-shaking revelation.
Â
I asked him about her gambling habits.
"She gambled, all right.
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Her husband, too."
Sally West hadn't remembered about Lytle's gambling.
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Or maybe she hadn't known.
Â
What I was looking for was a way to explain how Lytle had lost his money.
"Big losers, were they?"
He shook his head.
Â
I thought I saw the hairpiece move, but I could have been wrong.
Â
My head still wasn't quite right, and it was affecting my vision.
"Nah," he said.
Â
"They were big winners.
Â
At least she was. I couldn't say about him."
"I didn't know there were ever any big winners at the uncles' tables," I said.
He got a faraway look.
Â
"Sometimes there were.
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It could be managed, especially if they were good-looking women that
Braddy
Macklin liked a whole lot."
I was shocked -- shocked! -- to discover that there might have been rigged gambling at The Island Retreat.
"Do you have any idea how much she might have won?"
The faraway look faded.
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"That was a long time ago.
Â
A damn long time."
"It was.
Â
But I think you can remember."
"OK, maybe I can.
Â
It was a lot.
Â
Not all at once, but over a year or so she took a lot of money out of the Retreat.
Â
Probably never spent a penny of it, either.
Â
No need to.
Â
She had two men taking care of her."
"But you don't remember about Lytle?"
"I didn't pay attention to him.
Â
I always had a weakness for a red-haired woman, and if there's one thing I don't blame that son of a bitch Macklin for, it's for taking her away from her husband.
Â
He was a spineless little bastard anyway."
I tried to get Hobart's mind off the woman.
Â
"About Lytle's gambling . . . .?"
"Dammit, I told you I didn't pay any attention to him."
"He wasn't a winner, then."
That puzzled Hobart for a second, but then got my point.
"You're right," he said.
Â
"If he'd been a winner, I'd have known about it.
Â
There weren't too many of 'em."
"Would Macklin know?"
"You trying to get smart with me?
Â
I know that asshole's dead, and I don't give much of a damn one way or another."
"Seen him lately?"
"What's that supposed to mean?"
"You and he were both talking to people about bringing gambling back to the Island.
Â
Except that you were on opposite sides.
Â
You must've crossed paths."
"Well, we didn't.
Â
I haven't seen that son of a bitch in thirty years.
Â
Never wanted to.
Â
I'll see him one more time, though.
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Wouldn't miss his funeral for the world."