Only ten feet separated us. A million miles of ten feet and I had to squeeze in all those twenty years of thinking and dreaming about what I had thought was completely lost, then suddenly face it up close, only ten feet away.
She hadn’t changed at all.
Her beauty was still untouched — shoulder-length brunette hair, the narrow oval face, the pert nose, the ripe full mouth. In a pink short-sleeved top and white shorts and open-toe sandals, she was fresh and vital and tanned, a long-legged beauty still seeming to emanate an invisible radiance and I knew it was something that only I would see.
I said in an unhurried voice, “I’m your new neighbor, miss...”
And something odd happened to her face.
It was a bee-sting reaction without any pain, a brief moment of total consternation, and if I weren’t very much aware of what was happening, I wouldn’t have noticed before she quickly returned to a perfectly normal stance.
A voice she hadn’t heard for twenty years had been suddenly awakened in her memory, but it didn’t last long. How many times before could that have happened? When another few seconds passed I knew that she had frozen the episode in her memory banks.
“I’m Jack Stang, ma’am. It’s nice to see you.”
My voice located my face for her and she looked directly at me without seeing a damn thing. There was no opaqueness to the pupils of her big hazel eyes. They were the same color she’d always had and when she blinked she kept every expression absolutely normal.
Few would ever suspect that she was totally blind.
She called back, “And I’m Bettie Brice from Staten Island! Mr. Kinder, the manager here, said you’d be arriving. I hope you enjoy Sunset Lodge, Mr. Stang. Do you have friends here?”
I let out a chuckle and nodded, even though she couldn’t see it. “Oh, yeah, I have quite a few here already.”
“That’s nice,” she said. Then she frowned and added, “For some reason your voice is familiar, but I’m sure we haven’t met before.”
“Well, we’ve met now,” I told her, “and that’s what’s important.”
“Yes, it certainly is,” she answered, then gave me an airy wave and went down the steps to the sidewalk, Tacos, the greyhound, leading the way. He almost hugged her legs, alert to her every move.
When she stopped for a second it was as if she were going to retrace her steps, then she made a tiny shrug and went toward the end of the street.
Chapter Four
The new black Ford was identified with a lettered logo on its front doors that read
Beneath it in smaller letters it said,
All very simple. Nothing ostentatious. The only difference was the sound the engine made. It wasn’t an ordinary Ford vehicle at all. This was a highly refined chase car that could match any vehicle the state of Florida had on the highways. The sound wasn’t noisy. It radiated power. Maximum power.
Darris Kinder came out from under the wheel, scanned the area quickly and quietly and shut the door very softly. No dome light had gone on over his head when the door opened and I felt a touch of identity with the “Captain/Manager.” He was a rangy, fifty-ish guy with a dark crewcut, light blue eyes and Apache features. When he walked up the path to my porch, it was with a military tread.
I held out my hand and said, “Semper Fi, Captain Kinder.”
He grinned back at me and answered, “It shows?”
“Only to another old gyrene. Come on in.”
Before he walked through my door he gave another long glance around the neighborhood, then walked in and parked himself in the big rocker.
I said, “How long were you a cop?”
“Fifteen years in Newark. Made Lieutenant before I got this deal offered to me down here. Instant Captain, a fivefold increase in pay and a budget bigger than a lot of cities set aside for their police departments.” He paused, his eyes searching my face, “You had a great record, Captain Stang.”
“Call me Jack. I’m retired, Captain.”
“I think you know better than that,” he said. “We never really retire, do we?”
My answer was silence and a grin.
“I always make courtesy calls to new arrivals, but you are not new to me at all. When Dr. Brice purchased Miss Brice’s house, he made me a confidant in the situation that had occurred, and to what would happen... if any word of this leaked out.”
“And?”
“It’s not very comfortable,” he told me.
“She’s been here years,” I stated, “and there’ve been no leaks.”
“That damn pack of hoods never gives up. You know that. They aren’t dumb, either. They were able to tuck old Jimmy Hoffa away in a place where all the resources of the U.S. Government couldn’t find him. They influence political activity and control industrial actions through union membership and they don’t take too kindly to anyone throwing a wrench into their machinery.”
I thought for a moment, then nodded. “How thoroughly did you research the facts?”