a blur. I’ve never seen a human being move so quickly.
“Before we could turn to see it, Mr. Blackman had the creature by the back of the neck and had cut its throat with a knife.”
“Did the animal squeal?”
“It never made a sound. But my daughter and I certainly did. It was appalling and I told Mr. Blackman so.”
“You registered your displeasure?”
“He said the animal was useless now for anything but a hat. Then, in front of us all, he held the poor thing up and sliced it open like a wet bag.”
“He skinned it? In front of the children?”
“Exactly.”
As I read, Billy had gone out and refilled my coffee and set the cup in front of me. I took a substantial swallow but did not look up.
“And then what happened?” read the attorney’s question.
“Well, my husband came back into the campsite with Mr. Gunther and when he saw this, this, atrocity, he confronted Mr. Blackman.”
“And what was Blackman’s reaction?”
“He pointed his knife at Henry.”
“At your husband?”
“Yes.”
“In a threatening manner?”
“I thought so.”
“Did Mr. Blackman say anything threatening?”
“He said something about how the children ought to learn about the real wilderness instead of pretending. Then Mr. Gunther stepped in and calmed everyone down.”
At that point in the deposition the attorney steered the woman away from any more talk of Gunther’s peacemaking efforts and went on about the children’s mental anxieties and recurring nightmares and other bullshit to bolster his case. I closed the folder and took another long swallow of coffee.
“W-Want to g-guess what the sk-sk-skinning knife m-might have 1-looked like?” Billy said, leaning back in his chair.
Brown, Ashley, Gunther, Blackman, I thought. One moved in and out of the world like a ghost. One was dead. Another I had saved from dying. And last turned out to be as odd as any of them.
“G-Gunther n-never t-told me the details. He said the clients w-went after him because he w-was the owner of the b-b-business.
“I tried to call this f-family but the wife r-refused to talk. She said her husband told her to f-forget it.”
Billy said he’d tried to call Gunther but he was out of the hospital and his business and home phone had been disconnected. The pilot had apparently made good on his vow to leave the state.
“So you’ve been busy, counselor,” I said, smiling at Billy.
“Only 1-looking up alternatives,” he said. “In case y-you were the only suspect they s-settled on and p-pushed into an indictment.”
And they’d had enough to get their indictment. But the most recent target was now on a slab. It was neater that way. Maybe it was over. Maybe they got all they needed.
“M-maybe you could s-second guess the bait thing?”
“Kinda late,” I said. “Right now, I’m going to get in a beach run and then go shopping,” I said. “You game?”
“I w-will drive.”
I finished my coffee and went running. The tide was out and the sand was packed but nothing like the South Jersey shore beaches where the tide could run out and leave a swath of hard brown sand thirty yards wide on the barrier island beaches of Wildwood, Cape May and Ocean City. I’d tried for months to run Lavernious Coleman’s dead face out of my head on those beaches. But his ghost was always waiting for me back on the city streets.
The Florida beach was not nearly as wide but twice as hot, and within a mile the sweat was dripping into my eyes and had glossed across my chest. The nights of little sleep, the drain from my bout with dehydration and the ache from my fistfights with the Glades and its oddballs had left me weakened. At the two-mile mark I turned and headed back, my legs already feeling tight and my calf muscles stinging in the too-soft sand. The last mile I had to push through, my lungs grabbing for air instead of using it, my throat rasping and burning instead of letting my breathing flow. The blood was singing in my ears over the last fifty yards when I tried to sprint it home. The exercise gurus talk about the release of endorphins that bring true runners a high that keeps them hooked on such self-punishment. If it’s true, I never met them, the chemical or the pure distance athlete.
After I showered and dressed and ate a breakfast of toasted muffins and fruit, Billy drove us to an outfitter’s store well out on Southern Boulevard.
Southern was like the majority of South Florida, it wasn’t Southern at