Zintner
exhaled smoke.
Â
"Looking for Harry, just like you were."
I hadn't expected him to admit that, but then I hadn't expected him to admit any of the things he'd told me so far.
"Why was he looking for Harry?" I asked.
Zintner
stubbed out his cigarette in a little glass ashtray that was already full of butts, probably a pack and a half's worth.
Â
And that was just from today.
"It's a long story," he said.
"I have time."
"All right.
Â
First of all, Macklin was working for me."
"I thought so.
Â
I know you're one of the investors who are thinking about buying The Island Retreat."
"I won't ask you how you found that out, but you had to dig.
Â
We've been trying to keep it a secret.
Â
Anyway, you're right.
Â
I think it's time for gambling to come back to the Island, and I think there's a lot of money to be made from it.
Â
There's plenty of opposition, like always, but I think this time the gamblers are going to win.
Â
And I wanted a part of the action."
"That's no reason to be looking for Harry," I said.
He got out another Camel and lit it with the Zippo.
Â
I sat and watched him smoke.
"You know Dale," he said finally.
I didn't know what that was supposed to mean, and I said so.
"Dale's got all kinds of snitches, all over the Island.
Â
They like to tell him things."
"They tell him because they're afraid he'd beat the hell out of them.
Â
Like he did Ro-Jo."
"You want to hear this or not?"
Zintner
asked.
I said that I wanted to hear it.
"Then let's forget Ro-Jo for a minute.
Â
Like I said, Dale's got ears everywhere, and he heard that somebody had killed
Braddy
Macklin in the Retreat.
Â
The realtor had let me have a key to the place, and
Braddy
was checking it out for us.
Â
You know, see what kind of equipment was there, how much we'd have to spend to fix it up, that kind of thing.
Â
Somebody didn't like that, so they killed him."
"And Harry saw it."
"That's what Dale heard.
Â
But he couldn't find Harry.
Â
Now and then Ro-Jo told Becker things, but he swore he didn't know where Harry was.
Â
Said he hadn't seen Harry in a long time, but that there were places Harry used to hang out.
Â
That old lab was one."
"You know you've got competition for the Retreat?" I asked.
"You mean the boys from back East?
Â
Yeah.
Â
I know about them.
Â
You met Alex Minor?"
"I've met him."
"Well, then.
Â
You know the kind of people we're up against.
Â
We wouldn't want that in Galveston."
"You think Minor killed Macklin?"
"He's what you might call the logical suspect.
Â
He's about as hard to find as old Harry is, though."
"Have you told the police all this?"
Zintner
laughed, coughed, and laughed some more.
Â
Then he crushed his Camel in the ashtray.
"Those things are gonna kill me someday," he said.
Â
"No, I haven't told the cops.
Â
After I find Harry, maybe I will."
"I thought you told me you were the policeman's friend."
"You knew better, though.
Â
Besides, I might be wrong.
Â
Minor might not have killed
Braddy
.
Â
I gotta be sure.
Â
Maybe there's somebody else in on this, somebody I don't know about."
I thought about Dino.
Â
Then I put that thought out of my mind.
Â
I also thought about Lawrence Hobart, but I didn't mention him, either.
Â
I wasn't going to tell
Zintner
everything I knew.
Â
I figured he wasn't going to level with me, either, not all the way.
"Assuming you're telling me the truth about all this, why did Becker try to kill me?" I asked.
Zintner
smiled a thin, mean smile.
Â
"Now who says he was trying to kill you?
Â
Just because he took a few shots, that doesn't mean a thing.
Â
The way Dale told it to me, he was just trying to scare you."
Well, he'd certainly succeeded, but I wasn't going to give
Zintner
or Becker the satisfaction of admitting it.
"The way Dale tells it,"
Zintner
went on, "he could have finished you off last night, but he didn't.
Â
At first, yeah, he was shooting at you.
Â
He thought you were the killer coming back to make sure that Ro-Jo was dead or something.
Â
He didn't get a good look at you until you were out cold on the floor.
Â
When he realized who you were, he didn't try anything else.
Â
He just left you right where you were, sleeping like a baby."
I'd wondered why I'd survived.
Â
Now I knew.
Â
The man I'd tangled with -- Becker -- hadn't wanted to kill me.
Â
Or so
Zintner
wanted me to believe.
"When he was shooting, the bullets came awfully close to me."
"I told you:
Â
he wanted to scare you.
Â
He didn't know why you were looking for Harry.
Â
For all he knew, you were the one who'd killed Macklin."
Â
He smiled again.
Â
"We still don't know you aren't, not for sure."
"Let's say I didn't kill Macklin.
Â
And let's say Becker didn't.
Â
Then who killed Ro-Jo?"
"That's what we'd like to know.
Â
You didn't, not unless you were doubling back to check on the body, and Dale didn't.
Â
Who does that leave?"
Dale was big enough to have done it, but then so was Alex Minor.
Â
I hadn't seen Minor following me last night, but maybe he was ahead of me like everyone else seemed to be.
"Minor?" I said.
Zintner
shrugged his narrow shoulders.
Â
"Could be."
"I think we should go to the police," I said.
Zintner
didn't laugh.
Â
He just looked at me.
"All right, maybe that's not such a good idea."
"Damn right it's not.
Â
You and Dale might get thrown under the jail."
"We know a bondsman," I said.
Â
"He'd get us out."
Zintner
smiled, and this time it wasn't so mean.
Â
"I don't think he'd take the risk."
"Look," I said.
Â
"My only interest in this whole thing is finding Harry.
Â
If I can do that, I'll forget the rest of it.
Â
We could work together."
"What you mean is that you want me and Dale to tell you everything we find out, but you won't tell us anything.
Â
Is that about right?"
It was, but I couldn't say that.
Â
So I said, "No.
Â
I'll cooperate."
Â
Just like I was cooperating with Barnes.
"Tell you what,"
Zintner
said.
Â
"Not that I don't trust you, but why don't we just go on like we are.
Â
Maybe you and
Dale'll
quit stumbling over each other.
Â
It doesn't matter which one of you finds Harry, just as long as one of you does."
It made a difference to me, all right.
Â
I didn't want Harry to wind up like Ro-Jo had, but I don't think
Zintner
really cared one way or another.
Â
All he wanted was information, and if he couldn't get it from Harry, he'd get it some other way.
Â
And the truth was that I'd just about run out of places to look.
Â
I wanted the kind of information Becker could get from his collection of snitches.
On the other hand, I had a few things to work on that
Zintner
knew nothing about.
Â
Or that he hadn't said anything about.
Â
That didn't mean he didn't know.
"All right," I said.
Â
"We keep on working separately.
Â
But if Dale gets in my way again, he might get hurt."
"From the looks of you, I'd say you won't be hurting anybody for a while.
Â
By the way, Dale's sorry about the fight here in the office.
Â
He wouldn't have got into it with you if you hadn't pushed him."
I said, "Tell him that if it happens again, I'm going to pull that gold earring right out of his earlobe."
Zintner
laughed and reached for his Camels.
Â
"Now there's a sight I'd like to see."
W
hen I went home, the little red light on the answering machine was flashing.
Â
I ignored it and called Cathy Macklin in the hopes that she might go out for dinner with me.
She told me that she didn't feel like going anywhere.
Â
She'd gotten word that the autopsy on her father was complete, and she'd scheduled the funeral for the next morning.
Â
I was sorry that she didn't feel like seeing me that evening, but the truth was that I wasn't feeling much like going out myself.
Â
I told her I'd see her at the funeral.
Nameless was rumbling around my legs as I talked, so I hung up and fed him.
Â
As soon as he gobbled his food, he wanted back out.
Â
He probably had a date.
After letting him out, I listened to my messages.
Â
There were three of them, and they were all from Patrick Lytle.
Â
He wanted to know whether I'd found Harry, why I hadn't called, and when he could expect to see me.
Â
I didn't feel like talking to him, so I erased the messages and listened to Elvis on the CD player while I read a few pages of
Look Homeward, Angel
.
Â
I put the book aside after a few minutes because I couldn't keep my mind on what I was reading.
Â
I was too wrapped up in other things.
Â
And the thing that bothered me most was something about Lytle.
Â
I knew how Becker and
Zintner
had found out about my looking for Harry.
Â
That had been my fault.
But who had told Patrick Lytle?
T
here was to be no memorial service for
Braddy
Macklin, so the next morning a little before nine, I drove the Jeep to the old city cemetery on Broadway.
Â
The cemetery predates the Civil War, and some of the headstones are faded now with time and age.
Â
There are soaring monuments topped with angels, too, and marble tombs streaked with rust-colored weather stains.
I drove through the gate at the 40th Street entrance and wound my way around until I saw a small group gathered near a mausoleum.
Â
There was a hearse parked nearby, and the name of a local funeral home appeared in one of its windows in tastefully small silver letters.
Braddy
Macklin wasn't going to be buried, as it turned out.
Â
He was going to be entombed alongside his wife.
Â
On the Island you can't dig down very far before you strike water.
There were several people at the tomb when I arrived.
Â
They included Cathy Macklin, Gerald Barnes, and a man whom I supposed was the minister designated to say a few final words about Macklin.
Â
There were also two men in black suits who probably worked for the funeral home.
Â
All those were people I'd expected to see.
I hadn't expected to see Patrick Lytle and his grandson, Paul, however.
Â
They were there, not far from the hearse, Patrick in his wheelchair and his grandson standing right behind him.
Â
There was a smile of fierce satisfaction on the elder Lytle's face, as if he had waited years for what he was about to see.
Â
The grandson, on the other hand, looked completely detached, almost bored.
Â
He wasn't even watching the funerary proceedings; he was watching a white gull sailing through the intensely blue sky.
I hadn't expected Dino and Evelyn to be there, either, but they were, and after saying a few meaningless words to Cathy, I walked over to join them.