“I’m on tonight anyway so I thought I might as well follow you home. I talked to Selma a little while ago and she told me what was going on. I’m glad you came back. She was worried you’d abandon ship.”
“Believe me, I was tempted. I’d rather be at home,” I said.
“I remember this Pinkie Ritter business. Ornery son of a gun. Was Margaret any help?”
“About what you’d expect,” I said, evading the issue. “I’m heading over to Tiny’s. She says he hustled one of the waitresses so I’ll see what she says. It might not mean anything, but I could pick up additional information. Maybe a jealous husband or a boyfriend was dealing out paybacks. You have any other suggestions?”
“Not offhand. You seem to be doing pretty good,” Macon said, but he didn’t sound convinced. “Why don’t you let me ask around and see what I can find out. Seems like the fewer people who know what you’re after the better.”
“My sentiments exactly. Anyway, I better get a move on before I freeze.”
Macon glanced at his watch. “How long will this take?”
“Not that long. Thirty minutes at best. I’m not even sure Alice works Saturdays. I’m assuming she does.”
“Why don’t I follow you as far as the parking lot? I can swing back at ten and follow you to Selma’s. If the woman isn’t working, have a Coke or something until I show up.”
“I’d appreciate that. Thanks.”
I rolled up the window and put the car in gear. Macon pulled out first, waiting for me to do a U-turn so I could follow him. With the boys entrenched in their poker game inside, I was feeling safer than I had all day.
The parking lot at Tiny’s was packed with cars, RVs, and pickup trucks with camper shells. I tucked the VW into a small gap at the end of the last row. Macon waited, watching me cross two aisles, passing through the shadowy spaces between vehicles. Once I was at the rear entrance, I turned and waved to him and he took off with a little toot of his horn. I checked my watch. 10:05. I had until 10:30 which should give me plenty of time.
Saturday night at Tiny’s was a rowdy affair; two alternating live bands, line dancing, contests, whooping, hollering, and much thumping of cowboy boots on the wooden dance floor. There were six waitresses working in a steady progression from the bar to the crowded tables. I spotted Alice with her gaudy orange hair half a room away and I pushed my way through the jostling three-deep bystanders ringing the room. I had to yell to make myself heard. She got the message and pointed toward the ladies’ room. I watched her deliver a sloshing pitcher of beer and six tequila shooters, then collect a fistful of bills that she folded and pushed down the front of her shirt. She angled in my direction, taking orders as she came. The two of us burst into the empty ladies’ room and pushed the door shut. The quiet was remarkable, the noise in the tavern reduced by more than half.
“Sorry to drag you away,” I said.
“Are you kidding? I’m thrilled. This is hell on earth. It’s like this most weekends and the tips are shit.” She opened the first stall door and stepped just inside. She took a pack of cigarettes out of her apron pocket. “Keep an eye out for me, would you? I’m not supposed to stop for a smoke, but I can’t help myself.” She shook a cigarette free and fired it up in no time. She inhaled deeply, with a moan of pleasure and relief. “Lord, that’s good. What are you doing here? I thought you went home to wherever it is.”
“I left. Now I’m back.”
“That was quick.”
“Yeah, well I know a lot more now than I did two days ago.”
“That’s good. More power to you. I hear you’re investigating a murder. Margaret Brine’s father, or that’s the word.”
“It’s slightly more complicated, but that’s about it. As a matter of fact, I was just at her place, asking about his last visit.”
Alice snorted. “What a horse’s ass he was. He hustled my butt off, the randy little shit. I pinned his ears back, but he was hard to shake.”
“Who else did he hustle? Anyone in particular? Margaret tells me he was horny as all get out-”
Alice held up a hand. “Mind if I interrupt for a sec? Something I should mention before you go on.”
I hesitated, alerted by something in her tone. “Sure.”
Alice studied the tip of her lighted cigarette. “I don’t know how to say this, but people around here seem to be concerned about you.”
“Why? What’d I do?”
“That’s what everybody’s asking. Grapevine has it you’re into drugs.”
“I am not! How ridiculous. That’s ludicrous,” I said.
“Also, you shot a couple of fellows in cold blood a while back.”
“I did?” I said, laughing in startlement. “Where’d you hear that?”
“You never killed anyone?”
I felt my smile start to fade. “Well, yes, but that was self-defense. Both were killers, coming after me-”
Alice cut in. “Look, I didn’t get the details and I don’t really give a shit. I’m willing to believe you, but folks around here take a dim view of it. We don’t like the idea of somebody coming in here starting trouble. We take care of our own.”
“Alice, I promise. I’ve never shot anyone without provocation. The idea’s repugnant. I swear. Where did this come from?”
“Who knows? This is something I picked up earlier. I overheard the fellows talking.”
“This was tonight?”
“And yesterday some, too. This was shortly after you left. I guess someone did some digging and came up with the facts.”
“Facts?”
“Yeah. One guy you killed was hiding in a garbage can-”
“That’s bullshit. He wasn’t hiding, I was.”
“Well, maybe that’s what I heard. You were lying in wait, which somebody pointed out was pretty cowardly. Word is, the most recent incident was three years back. It was in the Santa Teresa papers. Someone saw a copy of the article.”
“I don’t believe this. What article?”
Alice drew on her cigarette, regarding me with skepticism. “You weren’t involved in a shoot-out in some lawyer’s office?”
“The guy was trying to kill me. I just told you that. Talk to the cops if you don’t want to take my word for it.
“Don’t get so defensive. I’m telling you for your own good. I might’ve done the same thing if I’d been in your place, but this is redneck country. Folks here close ranks. You better watch your step is all I’m saying.”
“Somebody’s trying to discredit me. That’s what this is about,” I said, hotly.
“Hey, it’s not up to me. I don’t give a damn. You can whack anyone you want. There’s times I’d do it myself, given half a chance,” she said. “The point is, people are getting pissed. I thought I should warn you before it went too far.”
“I appreciate that. I wish you could tell me where it’s coming from.”
Alice shrugged. “That’s the way it is in small towns.”
“If you remember where the story originated, will you let me know?”
“Sure thing. In the meantime, I’d avoid crossing paths with the cops if I were you.”
I felt a pang of anxiety, like an icicle puncturing my chest wall. “What makes you say that?”
“Tom was a cop. They’re mad as hell.”
Alice dropped the lighted cigarette in the toilet with a spat and then she flushed the butt away, waving at the air as if she could clear the smoke with a swishing hand. “You want anything else?”
I shook my head, not trusting myself to speak.
I waited at the side exit, my hands in my pockets though the chill I felt was internally generated. I kept my mind on other things, defending against a mounting surge of uneasiness. Maybe this was why Macon was suddenly being so protective.
The night sky was overcast, and where the air should have been crystalline, a ground fog began to drift across the darkened parking lot. Two couples left together. One of the women was blind-drunk, laughing boisterously as she staggered across the icy tarmac. Her date had his arm across her shoulders and she leaned against him for support. She stopped in her tracks, held her hand up like a traffic cop, and then turned away to be sick. The other woman leaped backward, shrieking in protest. The ill woman lingered, holding on to a parked car ’til she was done and could move on.
The foursome reached their vehicle and piled in, though the sick woman sat sideways with her head hanging out the door for a good five minutes before they were finally able to pull away. I searched the empty rows of cars, checking the dark. The music from the bar behind me was reduced to a series of dull, repetitive thumps. I caught a flash of light and saw a car pull in. I stepped back into the shadows until I was assured it was Macon in his black-and-white. He pulled up beside me and sat there with his engine running. I moved forward, walking around the front of the patrol car to the window on the driver’s side. He rolled it down as I approached.