ROGERS SHOWERED, DRESSED in his new clothes, and slipped his smartphone into his inside jacket pocket.
He drove over to the Grunt and parked in the rear.
He entered through the front door, and the stares he got from the folks working there told him quite clearly that his beatdown of giant Karl had made the gossip rounds.
Anyone making eye contact with him quickly broke it off.
That suited him just fine. He was not here to make friends. This was all about the cash.
He was directed back to the office, where Helen Myers was waiting for him. She had changed into a sleek black pantsuit with stilettos. Her hair cascaded around her shoulders and her face was fully made up.
“Where’s Karl?” he asked.
“He took the night off. He had to see to some things.”
Rogers nodded. He imagined Karl had to see to a broken finger, a nearly crushed windpipe, a bad leg, and a wrenched arm. But that wasn’t his problem.
Myers spent thirty minutes going over work details and the protocols and policies of the bar. “Half the IDs you’ll see are fake. Twenty-one is the legal drinking age. No one under that age is allowed in. No exceptions. Most of the people in uniform are nineteen or twenty. You err on the side of keeping people out. The last thing I need is to be put out of business for promoting underage drinking.”
“You’d think if you’re old enough to fight for your country you should be able to drink a beer.”
“I agree, but I don’t make the laws. Weekends are our big nights, obviously. We’re closed on Mondays to let everybody take a breather, but we’re open every other night of the week.”
“Anything else?” Rogers asked.
“You have to exercise discretion and good judgment, Paul. While we want to keep underage people out, we don’t want a rep of being a place where folks get turned away unnecessarily or get hassled or beat up, okay? That’s also not good for business.”
“I understand.”
“Each night we have a list of VIPs who you’ll let bypass the line. I sent the list to your phone earlier. They’ll come up and show ID. You match it to the name on the VIP list and in they come. They’ll be escorted to a special section of the bar by people inside. You’re to stay at the exterior door at all times unless you’re called inside. You are the first line of defense.”
“Who are the VIPs?”
“That’s no concern of yours,” she replied firmly. “Just clear them at the door. That’s your responsibility, all right?”
Rogers rubbed the back of his head. “All right.”
“You clean up well,” she said, running her gaze over him. “You’re in amazing shape. How old are you anyway?”
“Older than you probably think.”
“You must work out a lot. Insanity? P90X? MMX?”
He shook his head. “Good genes.”
She smiled. “Lucky you.”
Yeah, lucky me.
“You do not drink on duty. You can have whatever you want after you get off, for free.”
“I’m not much of a drinker.”
“Suit yourself. Well, good luck tonight.”
“Thanks.”
Rogers walked out and sat at the bar, counting down the minutes to when the place opened for business. He asked for a glass of water with a lime and the bartender poured it out for him.
There was a TV on the wall behind the bar. The news was on. A man killed in West Virginia near the Virginia border. A young boy left fatherless. A rare gun stolen.
The newscaster looked particularly indignant as he recounted the cold-blooded murder.
The police were following up leads. A car might have been seen leaving the site of the killing. The little boy had survived but emotionally was not doing well, apparently having witnessed the entire thing.
The bartender had turned to watch the screen with Rogers as he wiped down glasses. “Friggin’ sociopaths out there,” he muttered, glancing at Rogers. “Death penalty’s too good for ’em.”
Rogers didn’t reply. He had other things on his mind.
A car might have been seen.
He had ditched the car but used the same license plates from it. If someone had seen the plates?
Would the cops even look at a white van? They might. They might glance at the plates regardless; recognition might come. He would have to fix that.
He retreated to a corner of the room and sat at a table. He took out his phone and looked at directions to the Outer Banks. But he didn’t have Chris Ballard’s exact address.
A young waitress passed by and he said, “Got an old buddy I’m trying to find. I’ve got his name and area where he lives but not the street address or phone number. Anything on this phone that can help me with that?”
“You can try a search on the area and name. And Google has street view so you can see the house too when you find it.”
“Can you show me how to do that? I’m an old fart still uses a calculator. Just pick a name.”
She grinned, then sat and went through the key clicks.
Rogers quickly picked it up. He thanked her with a twenty-dollar bill and she went off carrying a tray of clean glasses.
He put in his search and refined it as he went along, adding as much information as he could remember. Finally, an address came back. He used street view to see the place.
It was a mansion on the water behind high walls with an imposing steel gate. He saw what looked to be a security shack right outside the gate.
Ballard had obviously retired a very rich man after spending his career selling stuff to Uncle Sam.
Rogers committed the address to memory and cleared the search from his phone.
He next tried to find Claire Jericho’s address. He found what he expected: nothing. He doubted that she had retired to the Outer Banks in a big house behind high walls.
Well, if he couldn’t find her on his phone, he would have to rely on Chris Ballard to fill in the blanks.
Rogers didn’t care if Ballard didn’t want to tell him.
The man would tell him.
He sat back, closed his eyes, and counted off the time until his career as a professional bouncer began.
He rubbed the back of his head hard, as though to tell the thing there to cool it. He didn’t need a loss of control right now. That would ruin everything.
And he had waited far too long to be stopped now.