Authors: James D. Doss
Jake Harper hung a hard right at the next corner, circled the block, and parked as close as he dared to Sunburst Pizza.
SCOTT PARRIS
gave Miss Muntz his semi-stern look. “So what’s all this about you seeing Harper?”
“Young man, I hope you will not think me unreasonable, but I do not wish to be interviewed in a parking lot.” The prim little lady glanced at the restaurant. “I suggest that we go inside.”
Well, I haven’t had my lunch yet.
“Tell you what—how about I buy us both a bite to eat?”
“How sweet of you.” She took the offered arm, which felt like a cedar post. “I generally stop here about once a week.”
As they crossed the threshold, Parris took a hard look at the grimy interior and began to have doubts. “The eats here okay?”
“I can recommend the calzone.” She turned her face to smile at the brawny policeman.
He looks rather dapper in that old-fashioned hat.
“But I generally get a take-out order. I prefer not to dine here—the ambience does not appeal to me.”
“Yeah. I see what you mean.”
It’d have to get better to qualify as a dump
. He led her to a moderately clean booth, scooted onto the seat opposite her, and withdrew a menu that was wedged between a napkin holder and a plastic sugar dispenser.
I wonder if I could handle a pepperoni and green chili.
His small intestine, which was a fractious organ, answered the question with a sharp pain.
An attractive, gum-chewing waitress arrived. The elderly lady might have been invisible, but the girl exchanged big smiles with the big cop, asked what looked good to him.
Parris resisted the temptation to tell her. “Coffee and a meatball sandwich.” He restored the menu to its rightful place. “Don’t be stingy with the marinara sauce.”
Pretty Face giggled and wriggled. “I’ll tell the chef to slop on an extra glop.”
After getting the waitress’s attention with a barely audible cough, the elderly lady ordered a tossed salad. House dressing. Cup of tea. “And please ask Alvin Burkowitz to come to our table.”
The gum chewer ceased masticating long enough to say, “You mean Al?”
“Yes.”
“Awright.” She cast a parting smile at the broad-shouldered cop. “I’ll go get ’im.”
“Thank you.” Eyeing grease spots on the table with no little dismay, Miss Muntz held her purse in her lap.
After enjoying the shapely young lady’s departure, Parris returned his attention to his elderly companion. “So tell me when and where you think you saw Harper.”
Miss Muntz was about to reply when a man in a red-and-yellow Sunburst Pizza vest appear in the kitchen doorway. She waved. “Yoo-hoo—over here!”
Like a wary coyote being offered a scrap of meat at a cowboy’s campfire, he approached in a wary, shuffling gait.
Miss M lifted a gloved hand to indicate her luncheon date. “Alvin—allow me to introduce my friend Mr. Parris. He is the chief of police.”
The cop nodded at the rat-faced fellow, who averted his gaze.
She spoke crisply to the Sunburst employee. “There is some unfinished business between us, young man—involving a cal-zone delivery.”
Burkowitz gawked at the elderly woman.
“You needn’t be concerned that I have a complaint about the food. As it happens, I have not taken a bite of it—it is in my freezer.”
The pizza deliveryman took a step backward, stumbled, grabbed a plastic chair for support.
The policeman’s face prickled with suspicion.
This punk’s pupils are big as dimes—he’s high on something.
Did Miss Muntz show the least sign of discomfort? Certainly not. Breeding will tell. The polite little lady continued as if nothing awkward had occurred. Smiling at the Sunburst employee, she said, “But I can assure you that the calzone shall not remain amongst the frozen foods much longer. I intend to share it with a friend.” She shot a meaningful glance at Parris.
Still grasping the chair, Burkowitz might have been miles away. As he stared over Miss M’s gray head, his eyes rolled upward, and his lower lip begin to jerk in spasmodic little tics.
Parris saw it coming.
This yahoo’s gonna pass out
. He tensed for action.
I’ll try to grab him before he hits the floor.
Apparently oblivious to the possibility that the deliveryman might fall flat on his face, Miss Muntz continued her monologue. “The issue has to do with your gratuity, which was not where I told you to look for it.” She removed a letter-size envelope from her purse, held it out to him. “Please accept my apology—and this.”
The wild-eyed man steadied himself, stared at the offering like it was a snake about to fang him.
Parris snatched the envelope from the lady’s fingers and jammed it into Burkowitz’s vest pocket. “That’ll be all, Alvin.”
But I’ll be checking on you later.
There had been street talk about someone dealing drugs from Sunburst Pizza.
The deliveryman hurried away, bumping into tables and chairs.
Parris addressed his elderly companion. “Okay, the wacko’s got his tip. Now tell me about seeing Jake Harper.”
Miss Muntz snapped her purse shut. “As you already know, on the night when Mr. Wetzel was shot to death, I drove his stepdaughter into town. I had agreed to drop Nancy off at the Silver Mountain Hotel so she could attend that sweet little Indian girl’s birthday party. On the way, I stopped here.” She paused, pursed her lips. “Aren’t you going to write this down?”
“Sure.” Parris found the necessary equipment in his shirt pocket.
“My, what a fancy little leather-bound notebook.”
“Thank you.” A silly grin. “It’s a present from my girlfriend.” He resumed the official expression. “So what happened when you made your stop at Sunburst?”
She tapped a gloved finger on the table. “I was inside placing my order when I noticed a vehicle that pulled up very close to my Buick, where Nancy was waiting for me. When I came outside, it was apparent that she was having a conversation with the driver. And the moment I appeared, off he went.” She waved her hand to demonstrate the rapid departure.
Parris’s arched eyebrows said,
So?
In preparation for the punch line, Miss M inhaled. “The driver had a beard, and the car was one of those boxy little Jeeps—just like the newspaper account said the suspect in the Wetzel homicide was driving.” She clamped her mouth shut.
Disappointment fairly dripped from Parris’s face. “You think you might’ve seen Harper here in his Jeep on the night Hermann Wetzel was shot?”
I was hoping she’d spotted him today.
A pert nod. “That is correct.” She cocked her head as if expecting some expression of thanks.
“Well . . . that’s very interesting, ma’am.” He pocketed the notebook.
At about this time, the salad and meatball sandwich were delivered.
Aside from a few remarks about the food and the nice weather, they dined in silence.
After Parris had signed the credit-card receipt and half-heartedly flirted with the saucy waitress, he escorted his elderly date to her automobile.
Clutching at Scott Parris’s arm, Miss Muntz inquired whether her possible sighting of Harper’s Jeep—tardy as the report was—might be of any help in his ongoing investigation of the Wetzel homicide.
The gallant lawman did the best he could. “You can never tell what’ll turn out to be the critical piece of information.” He
smiled at the senior citizen, tipped the venerable hat. “I sure do appreciate your help.”
She appreciated these encouraging words, and as Miss Millicent Muntz watched the chief of police’s automobile roar away at twice the posted speed limit, she shook her little gray head.
Such a nice young man. If I had a son I would be quite satisfied if he turned out to be just like Mr. Parris.
She was reminded of an exception.
Except for that little potbelly. He really should cut back on his calories.
A HALF
block away, crouched behind the wheel of the classic Camaro, the bald, beardless version of Jake Harper watched the little old lady get into her Buick.
I wonder how much she knows. And what she’s told that cop.
Cops Get Heartburn Too
Jake Harper was not the only fellow in Granite Creek County who needed a place to hide out and lick his wounds.
The third time the district attorney had called to demand an “up-to-the-minute progress report,” Scott Parris had (through clenched teeth) advised that assertive public servant to pack a bag and go straight to—But that unseemly travel suggestion does not bear repeating. And getting the DA off his back did not measurably ease the stress on the harried chief of police. The phone line fairly hummed with impertinent inquiries from journalists who posed smart aleck questions like: “How’d this desperado manage to slip away from you guys twice—he been dipped in grease or what?” Then, there were alarmed citizens who figured that they were next on Harper’s hit list. Typical of these was a nervous widow lady whose home was within two blocks of the Wetzel “murder house.” Without stopping to catch her breath, she demanded to know, “Why is this bloodthirsty killer still on the loose right here in my neighborhood and what do we pay these outrageous property taxes for—to buy fancy uniforms and expensive cars for dumb cops who couldn’t find their [vulgarity deleted] with both hands? Next election I intend to vote for a whole new slate—we’ll throw all of you bums out and start over!”
By midafternoon, Scott Parris was desperate for someplace to escape the ongoing persecution. He jammed the felt hat
down to his ears, stalked out of the station without a word to anyone about his destination, which was the one place on earth where he could count on a warm welcome, a free meal, and—best of all—a few hours of peace and quiet. Charlie Moon’s Columbine Ranch.
As Daisy Perika was saving her appetite for an evening out, and Sarah Frank was absent from the ranch headquarters, Scott Parris and Charlie Moon dined alone.
Following a hearty supper of melt-in-your-mouth beefsteaks, baked and buttered Idaho potatoes, and hot apple pie, the best friends took their coffee onto the west porch, seated themselves on sturdy redwood chairs, and settled down to view the evening’s prime-time performance—a pink-and-violet sunset so stunningly gorgeous that it took their breaths away. But, as is the way of temporal blessings, the soul-warming glow over the snow-capped peaks soon faded, and as the rainbow-hued display was relegated to that secret place where cherished memories are kept, a chill breeze passed by to rattle cottonwood leaves and sweep dust off the porch. Then came twilight, that bittersweet foretaste of true night. Crisp shadows tugged impotently on solidly built horse barns and sturdy tree trunks. Even though the rainbow presentation had gradually faded to black-and-white, this was the Ute’s favorite portion of eventide, when day fled and took all its worries with it.
By and by, the highlands were abandoned to dusk’s cool hand.
Was it quiet? The Ute could hear his heartbeat. Perfection.
The white man shattered the silence. “Where’s Sarah?”
“Spending the night over at the cabin.”
Parris’s brow furrowed. “The one by the lake?”
Moon nodded. “She took some things to eat and a couple of books.”
Sarah’s a good kid.
“Is that little girl all by herself?”
The Ute grinned. “She thinks she is.”
“You posted a guard.”
“Two keen-eyed men with Winchesters.” Charlie Moon clasped his hands behind his head.
Inspired by the breeze in the eaves, Parris sighed. “There’ve been some breaks in the Wetzel homicide.”
The rancher closed his eyes.
The town cop sipped some brew from his coffee mug. “If you’re interested, you don’t have to go to all the trouble of saying so—just grunt.”
I’ve hurt his feelings.
“Has Jake Harper been picked up?”
“Not yet.” Parris blushed. “But it won’t be long before we’ll nab the bastard.”
“Then you must’ve arrested Nancy Yazzi.”
The blush was promoted to a tingling burn. “Afraid not.”
Count a dozen ticktocks of the clock.
Ol’ Charlie’s drifted off again. This is like trying to have a conversation with one of them knotty-pine cigar-store Indians.
Parris leaned back in the redwood chair, stretched his legs. “I got a fax today from FBI forensics. They’ve traced that .38 Smith & Wesson that Officer Martin found in Wetzel’s front yard. The ballistics report verifies that it’s the firearm used to shoot Wetzel, which is what we expected all along. But you’ll be surprised to know that—”