9:30 a.m.
The next morning I called my client. “Nothing. Is there a
back entrance to house?” I’d have to hire someone else to watch both doors, if
she okayed the expense.
“Yes, but
it just goes out to an alley. He doesn’t have a car.”
“What about
George?” I was tired. I’d given up at 4 a.m., come home and gone to bed without
waking Rachel, and now I was functioning on coffee and the need to pay bills.
“He’s got a
car, I don’t know what kind. But it’s not like he sleeps over, as far as I
know.”
“Okay.” I
needed a new strategy. “I can’t do it again tonight. Maybe . . . Is your father
ever gone during the day?”
“Sometimes
George takes him to the gym. Wednesdays, I think.” Today was Tuesday. “I can
check. What do you want to do?”
“Search the
house. Do you have a key?”
“I’m a
co-owner.”
Good. That
would make it at least kind of legal. “If you could find out when he’ll be
gone, I can look around. That might tell us something.”
“All—all
right.” She sounded nervous. “I’ll call you later.”
Rachel
peeked around the partition separating our workspaces in the office and punched
my shoulder. “What time did you get home last night?”
I sighed.
“4:30. And I got nothing except six hours to bill to the client.”
“You okay?”
“I may need
a nap later.” But I had other cases to work on.
“Well, let
me know.” She punched my shoulder again. “I might be up for a nap too.”
1:30 p.m.
The next afternoon I was parked across the street from Trevor
Lamb’s house, two houses down from Elly’s home in the Irving Park neighborhood.
She’d given
me a ring of keys. “This is the front door. I don’t know about all the rest.”
She seemed nervous. “I insisted on all of them. They should be gone for two
hours.”
“I’ll be
quick.” I was nervous too.
At 1:30 a
white Nissan pulled up to the house, and a young Hispanic man walked to the
door. George, apparently. He was short, with a wrestler’s build, and he wore a red
baseball cap. A few minutes later he and Trevor Lamb got into the car and drove
off.
So after a
deep breath and a swallow of water, I locked my Honda and walked up to the
house.
Two stories
and an attic. Plus a basement. I’d have to be fast.
I didn’t
spend much time on the main floor. The second story bedrooms took a little
longer, searching dressers and running my hands underneath the drawers and
below the mattresses. I didn’t know what I was looking for—I only hoped I’d
recognize it when I found it.
The attic
was dusty and almost empty, except for a few boxes of old clothes and
photographs. I didn’t bother with those, figuring I needed more recent
information.
That left
the basement. I checked the time. One hour left.
Downstairs
I found a typical mancave: bookcases, a bar, a dartboard—and a door next to the
paneled wall behind a big flat-screen TV.
The door
was locked. I fumbled with the keys, one at a time, until I found one that
clicked. Then I stepped into a dark hallway.
I pulled on a cord dangling from
the ceiling—
And found
an arsenal.
Shotguns,
pistols, assault weapons—all hanging on hooks, with cleaning materials and
boxes of ammunition on a shelf at the bottom. Two big .45 automatic handguns
that looked like WWII vintage were mounted at the top.
A long
black coat drooped from a nearby hook, a wide-brimmed fedora hat hanging above
it, along with a leather shoulder holster dangling alongside.
I ran my
hands up and down the coat. It felt old and weathered, as if rain had battered
it for years. I picked up the hat and put it on my head. Too big—it sunk down
over my ears.
On the hook
next the hat hung a half-dozen red domino masks, the kind that just cover your
eyes for costume parties. I left them in place as hung the hat back up. Then I
kept moving down the shadowy hall.
A few yards down I found a flight
of stairs. At the top I unlocked another door and flicked a light switch.
A big black
car sat in front of a garage door. It looked like a tank—or at least a
gas-guzzling steel behemoth that Detroit had stopped making even before the Japanese
took over the auto industry.
I turned
and tried to orient myself. If I was right, the door opened onto a street one
block behind Lamb’s house. I’d have to check it out after I was gone.
I took a
picture. Then I leaned down, reached into my pocket, and attached a small
magnetic tracking device behind the rear bumper. Part of being a private
detective is getting to play with cool technology.
Back Inside the basement mancave I
relocked the door and checked the time again. I still had 30 minutes.
I didn’t
want to push it, but I spent a few minutes looking through the bookshelves.
Bestsellers, coffee table books, photo albums, a few scrapbooks . . .
I flipped
through one. Vacation photos with his young wife. Another one—Elly Lamb growing
up. Cute little girl. The third . . .
Newspaper
clippings from the 1960s. About a mysterious criminal the papers called “The Red
Serpent,” and his numerous murders of Chicago gangsters. He was known for
leaving a stamp on the foreheads of his victims—an inked seal of a snake.
That was
weird.
I took a
few ore pictures. Then I put the books back, looked around to make sure I
hadn’t changed anything, and headed upstairs.
Back at the apartment I fired up my computer.
Rachel was
working on a webpage in her half of the office, headphones over her ears. She’s
a graphic designer, and she likes punk rock while she’s working. I go for
classic 80s rock. It was part of the negotiations.
I kept my radio low while I
searched. It didn’t take too long.
“Wow,” I murmured.
“Hey!” Rachel slugged my arm. “You
know I can’t work if you’re talking all the time!”
“Ow.” I turned my radio off. “You
were on your headphones listening to the Dead Ramones, or whoever.”
“I needed a break.” She leaned
down. “What are you looking at? What year is this?”
I started saving files. “In the
early 1960s, a lot of gangsters got killed by someone who left some kind of red
stamp on their foreheads. It looked like a snake. They called him the Red Serpent.
Look.”
I pulled up a newspaper page.
MOBSTERS KILLED IN HOTEL, ran the headline buried on page six.
Lonnie Dixon and Lewis “Ace” Alford
were found dead in the Montgomery Hotel on Clark Street last night. Both are
reputed to be members of a mob organization. Police say they were found with
the image of a snake stamped on their foreheads—a clear sign of the killer some
in police circles and even in the underworld are calling The Red Serpent.
“What are
you saying?” Rachel crouched down. “That guy—the Red Serpent—is the Forehead
Killer? After what—60 years?”
“I’m just
trying to find out the connection. No one ever figured out the Red Serpent’s
identity. He just faded out of sight.”
“Maybe he
was killed?”
We might
never know. “The question is, what’s the connection between him and my client’s
father?” I told Rachel about the weapons, the car, and the scrapbook.
“What are
you going to do? Call Sharpe and ask about the forehead stamp?” Detective Anita
Sharpe was my contact with the Chicago Police Department. She didn’t exactly
like me—none of the cops I knew did—but we’d worked together reasonably well on
vampire cases.
“I can’t.”
Not yet. “If I ask whether it’s the Serpent mark, and that turns out right,
she’ll want to know how I know. And that could be—awkward. At least I have to
talk to my client first.” I picked up my phone.
7:30 p.m.
We met at Elly Lamb’s house that
night. I brought Rachel, and Trevor Lamb brought George.
Lamb
looked pretty fit for 72. A broad chest, lean legs, and silver hair. George had
a friendly smile and a scalp shaved to a trim crew cut.
We
sat in a small living room. Elly served coffee and cookies.
“Dad,
this is Thomas Jurgen. He’s a private detective.” Elly was nervous.
Unerstandably.
“And
my associate Rachel,” I added. Rachel waved a hand. She was in jeans and a
jacket, and her laptop case sat next to her feet.
Lamb
nodded. “Nice to meet you,” he said in a gravelly voice.
“I
hired Mr. Jurgen because I was worried about you. You’ve been going out at
night, and I don’t know where. You have these bruises and aches. I asked him to
follow you, but he couldn’t. So, I, uh . . .” Elly looked at the carpet. “I
gave him the keys to your house.”
I
wasn’t sure what to expect. An explosion? Denial? Storming out of the house?
Instead Lamb looked me over calmly. “What did you find?”
“Firearms.”
I glanced at Elly. “A car in another house. And a scrapbook about the Red Serpent.”
He
sighed. “I wish you hadn’t found all that.”
Elly
reached out. “What’s going on, dad?”
Rachel
pointed at George. “Hey, wait—”
George
pulled something from his pocket and hurled it onto the ground. It looked like
a marble—until it burst, spewing smoke into the air.
I
grabbed Rachel and tried to shove her toward the front door, but the smoke
spread fast—too fast to be normal. It smelled like eucalyptus and rubbing
alcohol, and I couldn’t stop myself from inhaling it.
George
helped Lamb stand up, and they ran for the door. Rachel tried to follow, but
she tripped and dropped to the carpet, gasping. I leaned down to check on her,
but a dizzy spell sent me tumbling next to her.
I
felt Elly Lamb fall behind me. Then everything went dark.
Guns, cars, a mask, smoke bombs - not your AARP type.
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