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Chapter 2
It was
after two o’clock by the time we reached the office. The drive
hardly took twenty minutes, but there had been the inevitable delays
while the police, the FBI and the Secret Service tried to put things
at Opryworld into some sort of perspective. Thanks to the
intervention of Detective Adamson, we were allowed through the
hotel’s guarded exit without excessive hassle. However, it didn’t
take an old-time investigator to deduce the reason for the dark
looks I got from a few of the cops at the door. Too many in the
ranks still viewed me as something of an enemy.
We had
scanned the radio dial on the way to the office but learned little
more than we already knew about the Opryworld affair. Dr. Elliott
Bernstein, chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, whom some people
called the second most powerful man in the country, had been killed
by a gunshot while being escorted through the Governors’ Lobby by a
group of convention officials and his two Secret Service bodyguards.
Both Metro Police and the FBI were on the scene, but no one in an
official position had commented on who the killer might have been or
what could be the motive. The media, however, had already plunged
headfirst into what it does best, speculating wildly on the
possibilities. In the wake of the World Trade Center tragedy, the
Iraq war, and continuing problems with Al Qaida, they called it a
likely terrorist act.
At any
rate, all was calm at the office of McKenzie Investigations when we
showed up at the strip center a few miles from our home in
Hermitage. This suburb on the southeastern side of Nashville was
named after Andrew Jackson’s historic home. Being a native of St.
Louis, I wasn’t all that conversant with our seventh president until
the Air Force sent me down here as a short-haired shavetail in the
sixties. After meeting Jill, I was quickly enlightened on the
Jacksonian references that abounded in the area. Old Hickory
Boulevard, for instance, which is our office address, came from the
general’s nickname.
Although
“boulevard” sounds fairly grand, our office was not. The space had
been occupied until recently by a small beauty shop. The large
window in front offered little in the way of privacy—not a good
selling point for clients who preferred anonymity. We had discussed
painting it with some kind of mural but couldn’t agree on the scene.
Jill wanted a seashore with palm trees. I opted for mountains with
colorful hardwoods. The only privacy we could offer at present lay
in the rear, namely a storage room and a small bath. Up front
McKenzie Investigations, being an equal opportunity employer,
provided identical his and hers desks, small but adequate. Client
chairs, a file cabinet, a paper shredder that gobbled up
no-longer-needed working papers, and a narrow table for the
essentials—coffee maker, fax, copy machine/printer and small
TV—occupied the rest of the space. Our lone computer sat on Jill’s
desk. As the only financial genius in the family, she served as
treasurer.
I
gathered the mail, mostly junk, from beneath the door slot and took
it to my desk. Jill stashed her handbag in a drawer, then headed for
the miscellany table.
“Let’s
see if the TV folks have learned anything new,” she said.
I started
tossing junk mail. “Or guessed at anything more deviously.”
I had
picked up an envelope that showed a possibility of interest when the
door opened and a woman wearing a short brown skirt and a
well-filled green sweater walked in. She appeared thirtyish at first
glance, though I upped that estimate by a few years when I saw the
crow’s feet in the corners of large gray eyes. She had long
reddish-brown hair and a shapely body that she maneuvered
seductively as she crossed the room. I found her face attractive,
even with a troubled cast to her eyes.
“Can we
help you?” I asked.
“I hope
so,” she said, stopping halfway to my desk. She glanced across at
Jill. “You’re the McKenzies?”
I smiled.
“Right on both counts.” I motioned to one of the client chairs.
“Won’t you have a seat, Miss—?”
“Molly,”
she said. “Molly Saint.”
I was
glad it wasn’t Saint Molly. She really didn’t fit my vision of
somebody ready for canonization. Apparently not my wife’s, either.
Jill quickly switched off the TV, strode over and leaned against the
side of her desk as Molly took a seat across from me.
“I’m Jill
McKenzie,” she said. “This is my husband, Greg.”
I thought
she put a little more emphasis than necessary on the husband part,
but I suppose it’s a woman thing.
“How can
we help you?” I asked.
“It’s a
problem with my husband,” Molly said.
Jill gave
her a sympathetic smile. “I’m sorry, Mrs. Saint, but we don’t handle
domestic relations cases. We can give you the names of some other
agencies that do.”
Molly
Saint had placed her denim-clad handbag on the floor. Now she
twisted her hands in her lap. “It’s not what you’re thinking,” she
said. “I’m not looking for somebody to snoop around and catch him in
bed with another woman. I haven’t decided about a divorce.”
She had a
voice that sounded somewhat argumentative. It made you want to hold
up your hands and say okay, I believe you. I leaned my elbows
on the desk. “Then what’s the problem?”
“I want
you to do what I guess you’d call a background investigation on
Damon.”
“How long
have you been married?” Jill asked.
“About
five years.”
I shook
my head. “Isn’t it a bit late to be checking on his background now?”
She
lowered her eyes. “Probably.”
“Then
what are you looking for?” I asked.
“I’m not
sure.”
I tried
to keep my voice from mirroring the skepticism I felt. “So why check
him out at all?”
She
stopped twisting her hands and looked up. “I’m afraid of him.”
Jill
frowned. “Has he been beating you up?”
“No.”
“Threatened you?”
“Not
exactly.”
“Have you
been to the police about this?” I asked.
“They say
there’s no grounds for them to do anything, so they won’t. But I
know he’s capable of violent things. I don’t think he realized I was
watching, but a couple of months ago I saw him take a large
knife—like a machete—and go after a neighborhood dog that kept
barking at him.”
“That’s
horrible,” Jill said, cringing. “Did he hurt the dog?”
“No.
Thank God the dog got away.” Seeing Jill’s sympathetic reaction,
Molly turned to her. “I’m really scared. If I tell him I’m leaving,
he’ll do something terrible to me. I know he will.”
“Then
don’t tell him,” I said. “Just take off. Leave a note if you want
to.”
“He’d
come after me,” she said, shaking her head. “I can’t quit my job.
I’ve worked too hard to get where I am.”
“Where do
you work?” Jill asked.
“Maxxim
Motor Freight Lines. I’m taking a few days off. My nerves are shot.”
She
didn’t look all that stressed out to me. I also couldn’t picture her
in the cab of an eighteen-wheeler but couldn’t resist asking. “Do
you drive a truck?”
That
brought a frown I took as irritation. “No. I’m an administrative
assistant. I work directly under Mr. Crenshaw, the owner.”
I had
heard of Grant Crenshaw. He was a wheeler and dealer around
Nashville, owning several large office buildings among other
investments. He had started out with the truck line and had a
reputation as a hard-driving businessman, the quintessential
laissez-faire entrepreneur.
“Has your
husband done anything else that concerns you?” Jill asked.
“I just
feel it in my bones,” she said. “It’s the way he looks at me. Things
he doesn’t say. Damon was in Vietnam. One of the drivers at work
told me about some guys who fought over there. He said they did some
real nasty things when they came back.”
I’d about
had enough of Miss Molly and her goofy generalizations. “That was
thirty years ago,” I said. “Those guys are either in prison or
mental hospitals or living on the streets. Most of the guys who
fought in Vietnam are no different from the rest of us. I doubt you
have anything to worry about. If your husband should start stalking
you or making threats, you can go to court and get a restraining
order.”
Jill
grimaced. “Come on, Greg. You know how that works. Restraining
orders don’t restrain men determined to do bodily harm. Why don’t we
find out a little more before we make any judgments?”
My wife
can be so damned rational at times.
“Tell us
about Damon, how you met him?” Jill asked. She wheeled the chair out
from behind her desk and sat facing Molly.
The young
woman rubbed her cheek with one hand and looked around. “You got a
water fountain? My mouth’s awful dry.”
“How
about coffee?” I asked. We were coffee drinkers, first and foremost.
“Just
water’ll be fine.”
We didn’t
have a water fountain, but we had a supply of soft drinks in a small
refrigerator in the storeroom. “We’ve got Cokes, Sprite, that sort
of thing,” I said.
“A Coke
would be nice,” she said.
I headed
to the back room as Jill rephrased her last question. “How did you
meet Damon?”
“It was
around five years ago,” she said. With the door open, I could easily
hear her reply. “I had just broken up with this guy I’d been with
for quite a while. I was at this bar having a few drinks one night
and somebody suddenly started talking beside me. He was a very
ordinary-looking guy, you know. I hadn’t paid any attention to him
before that. Anyway, when he spoke he had this deep voice like a
radio announcer. Only he talked real soft like and polite.”
She
accepted the Coke can and a plastic cup with a silently mouthed
thanks.
“So he
wasn’t the handsome prince?” Jill said with a grin.
“Hardly.
But there was something attractive about him. He was around your
height, lots of muscles, long black hair. I never went for guys with
long hair before that. I guess it was the eyes that really got to
me, though. They’re dark as night, and when he looked at me, I felt
like he was seeing right down into my soul. Whatever he saw, he must
have liked. He asked me out the next day.”
“Was it a
very long courtship?” Jill asked.
“Ha!” She
took a swallow of Coke. “I went out with him two or three times and
suddenly he wanted to marry me. Like I said, I was on the rebound.
He seemed nice enough. What the hell, I thought. Why not?”
I figured
there was more to it than that. Most likely some shenanigans in the
bedroom she didn’t care to go into.
“So you
married him,” Jill said. “How much did you know about him at that
time?”
“Not
enough, obviously.”
“How
about some specifics,” I said.
She
sipped on the Coke, then twisted the cup in her hands. “Well, he
said he was raised in an orphanage and had no family.”
“Where
was he raised?” I asked.
“Chicago.”
A big
city. It could be a little difficult to check out but was no big
deal. “What did he tell you about his military service?”
“Said he
served in Vietnam. He retired from the Army later and lived mostly
on his pension.”
“How much
pension does he get?”
“He never
said. It goes directly to his bank account, which is separate from
mine.”
She was
certainly on target when she said her knowledge of her husband was
pretty meager.
“You say
he lives mostly on his pension. What else does he do?” I asked.
“He works
for Heritage Car Rentals. Ferries cars back and forth between local
and out-of-town offices. They let him work as much or as little as
he wants to.”
“Is he
working today?” Jill asked.
She
nodded as she finished her Coke. “I called the office. He left for
Chattanooga this morning. That’s why I came over here now.”
Jill
turned to me. “What do you think, Greg?”
I spread
my hands and looked at Molly. “Nothing you’ve told us raises any
major alarms. Apparently he didn’t harm the dog you mentioned. He
was probably just chasing it off. I still don’t see any reason to
panic. And I have no idea what you want us to look for.”
Molly
clasped her hands again, stared down at them, then back up at me. “I
guess I’d just like to know more about him. You know, has he been in
any trouble? Has he hurt anybody? as
I want to know if my fears are real or just imagination.”
Before I
could reply, Jill jumped in. “Let us talk it over tonight, Mrs.
Saint. We’ll give you our decision in the morning.”
That was
not the reply I had intended to give. I sometimes wondered about
this monster I had created when I let Jill talk me into her being a
detective and my partner in crime. She had even bought a small
revolver that would fit in her handbag and took firing lessons,
despite having expressed great reservations over the necessity of my
carrying a gun while on active duty. She did really well on the
range, though with that little .38 the targets weren’t too far away.
My choice of weapon was a 9mm Beretta a bit smaller than the one I
was issued in the Air Force. We both had permits to carry concealed
weapons but, like most private investigators, saw no need to carry
them routinely.
At any
rate, I heard Molly exhale sharply as I sat there looking flustered.
“Don’t
call me,” she said. “I seldom know where he’s gonna be. I’ll call
you.”
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