The Fallen (Amos Decker #4)

“Well, I guess that’s possible. I mean, you don’t have to meet the coach to sponsor a team. You just have to write a check.”

“But this is the only business-related photo here,” said Decker. “The rest are of mountains and rivers and the sights of the area. Costa might have been an amateur photographer. But why only this one photo here? The other Little League team pics are in his office.”

“I don’t know.”

He walked over to the window and pointed. “That must be John Baron’s place up there on the hill.”

Jamison joined him at the window. “Wow, even from here you can tell it’s huge.”

“And apparently falling apart.”

“Well, I can only imagine the upkeep. It must cost a fortune just to heat the place.”

“I don’t think Baron has a fortune, not anymore.”

“He might only live in a portion of it.”

“It wasn’t cheap to furnish this space,” said Decker, turning his attention back to the apartment.

“I guess Costa’s job paid relatively well. And I would imagine the cost of living here is pretty low. And he probably saved some bucks from his time in New York.”

“Granted, but why here?”

“What?”

“He worked on Wall Street. Why come to Baronville and work in a bank? Last time I looked, they had banks on Wall Street. This is like the exact opposite of what the guy was used to.”

“Some people want change,” replied Jamison.

“That much change? You come to a dying town? With what expectations?”

“That you’ll have an opportunity and things will turn around. Like his secretary said, he was happy, he was generating business. He had this place.”

“And he ends up dead from a gunshot, hanging from a chain in an auto repair facility with a brand on his forehead. Some opportunity.”

“Decker, he couldn’t have known that would happen,” pointed out Jamison.

Decker didn’t answer her. He just kept looking around.

Jamison said, “Green told us that Joyce Tanner was laid off from JC Penney. Nothing suspicious there. Five other people were laid off at the same time. And then the store ended up closing. No ties to Costa, at least that we can see. And none to Babbot. We haven’t checked into Michael Swanson yet. Maybe they were all buying drugs from him.”

“We didn’t find any drug paraphernalia at Babbot’s place. And none was found here or at Joyce Tanner’s apartment. And no one we talked to mentioned that they had seen signs of illicit drug use by Costa, Tanner, or Babbot.”

“But drugs might still be involved somehow. Babbot was on heavy painkillers. And the DEA is here, after all.”

Decker tapped his finger against the wall of glass overlooking the city.

“Maybe they have no connection to each other,” he said.

“Meaning their deaths were random?”

“Not necessarily.”

“Well, if they don’t have a connection to each other, then by default, doesn’t that mean their deaths were random?”

“Not if the four of them all had a connection to another person, but not to each other. The spider in the web, the hub of the wheel. That person might be the common denominator.”

Jamison sat down in a chair and mulled this over.

“But who could that person be?”

“Well, if I knew that I’d be able to solve the case,” said Decker. “Let’s go.”

Jamison jumped up. “Where?”

“Michael Swanson’s last digs.”

*



The last known address for Swanson, given to them by Detective Green, was a motel in an area of Baronville that was about as run-down as either Decker or Jamison had seen so far.

“Looks like where I used to live,” said Decker as he stared around the small room with a communal bath down the hall. They had been told by the manager of the motel that Swanson had left there two months ago. There was no forwarding address.

They went back to the manager’s office after looking over the empty room. “Did the police come by?” asked Jamison.

The manager, a grizzled, reedy man in his fifties, nodded. “And I told them the same thing I told you. Mike left here about eight weeks ago. Haven’t seen him since.”

“Well, you won’t see him again, since he’s dead,” noted Decker.

“Hell, everybody knew Mike sold drugs. You live in that world, you die in that world.”

“What else can you tell us about him?” asked Jamison.

“He was actually a nice guy. Not too much in the upstairs, if you catch my drift. But he helped out around here. Assisted some of the other residents. But for the drug stuff, he would have been okay. I’m actually sorry he’s dead.”

“So you let him stay here even though he was into drugs?” asked Jamison.

The man shrugged. “Hell, lady, if that were the case, I wouldn’t be able to rent to about half the people in Baronville, including my own mother, and she’s in her late seventies.”

“Anybody ever visit him here?” asked Decker.

“Not really. I don’t think he had many friends.”

“Did you see him shortly before he went missing?”

“Truth is, I hadn’t seen Mike since he left here.”

“Did he have any enemies?” asked Jamison.

“Not so’s I know. But he sold drugs, so he might have.”

“Did he have a car?”

“No. But he had a bike. He took it with him when he left.”

“Do you know what it looked like?” asked Decker.

“Yeah, it had two wheels.”

They walked out of the place not knowing much more than when they’d walked in.

Jamison leaned against the side of their truck and said, “Well, this case is moving about as fast as a bike without two wheels.”

Decker looked over her shoulder. “You really can see it from just about everywhere in Baronville. Must be a sore point for the locals.”

Jamison looked at where he was indicating.

“John Baron’s ancestral estate?”

“And our next stop.” Decker checked his watch. “He should be up by now.”





Chapter 26



DECREPIT.

That was the word that came to mind as Decker studied the outside of the Baron mansion.

He had pounded twice on the battered double front doors and had heard nothing in return.

Jamison said, “Maybe he’s not home.”

“It’s a big house. Maybe he has to walk a long way to answer the door. And he told me he’s usually here.”

A few moments later they indeed heard footsteps approaching.

The door swung open and John Baron the Fourth looked back at them.

Decker noted that he was wearing the same clothes as the other night. His hair was just as disheveled and his eyes were full of sleep.

“Did we wake you?” Decker asked, giving him a long look, since it was late in the afternoon.

Baron smiled and stretched out his long frame.

“Actually, you did. I was up before, of course. Rolled out of bed right around noon as usual. This was just a refresher nap before I go to bed tonight.”

He glanced at a wide-eyed Jamison. “And who do we have here?” he said.

“We have here, Alex Jamison,” said Jamison. “I’m Decker’s partner.”

“Lucky you, Decker,” said Baron. “Now, to what do I owe the pleasure of your visit?”

“We’re investigating the murders,” said Decker.

“So you told me.”

“We’d like to ask you some questions.”

The smile remained at full wattage. “And why’s that?”

“Just routine.”

“Right. That’s what they say when they have no grounds to ask questions but want to come in anyway. Well, I would be delighted, but only if the charming Alex here gets to ask questions too.”

He backed away and waved them in.

They stepped through and he closed the door behind them.

Jamison immediately shivered, because there was a chilly draft in the hall.

Baron noted this and said, “I don’t turn the heat on officially until January. So we have some months to go until warmth returns. Oil-fired furnace. Beastly expensive. And one must live within one’s means.”

He led them down the hall. As they passed open doorways on both sides of the grand passage they glimpsed rooms of immense size with decorations and furnishings from many decades ago. The atmosphere in each was one of decay.

“Quite a place,” said Jamison.

“Actually the craftsmanship was abysmal and the materials were the cheapest available.”