It had not only been one hell of a day, it'd been one of those days that make you think about changing careers. I wasn't sure that Jase Conrad Investigations had a long future, at least, not if I had many more days like this. Surely, somewhere in Nashville, Tennessee, there was a rich widow who needed a live-in someone to polish her pipes, so to speak. I've seen some really sexy grandmas out there, and it'd probably be interesting to say the least. I mean, after sixty, a woman knows enough to get pretty creative, and if I could get paid too.... Damn, I gotta start getting more sleep.
As Mondays go, mine didn't start out all that bad, I guess. I woke up, showered with the last little piece of the soap I had forgotten to buy, and warmed up the coffee from yesterday morning, because I forgot to buy that too. I have a good excuse; Carla had come to Barney's just as I was finishing the last of my cheeseburger, and stayed at my place for the night.
Carla owns a recording studio, and I helped her divorce her husband. My exclusive video starring him and one very young, very horny blonde got rave reviews from both Carla's attorney and the judge. The defense attorney was less than enthusiastic in his comments, but I noticed he didn't return his copy of the tape. My reward, besides the generous cash payment, was the most shattering session of sex of my life, and she has sort of selected me as her on-demand lover. She never expects anything except really great sex, and after screwing me deaf and blind, she waltzes out of my life for a week or so. Then, she'll show up at Barney's or at my office/apartment ready for a scotch or two, or three, and we retire to my bedroom for the evening. Actually, my life hasn't changed all that much because of Carla. I did buy a bed, because it seemed tacky making love on my old couch, and I kept falling off on the floor on those occasions when we tried to sleep together. I've also started drinking high protein supplements, and it only takes me half a day to recover now. Somehow, scotch and pizza don't give you much staying power. Carla says I taste better too, so I guess the occasional bout of the green-apple quickstep is a small price to pay.
As I drank my coffee, I went over my schedule for the day. This means that I read the notes I had scribbled on the desk blotter calendar in the little box for Monday. Someday, I thought, I would have to get more professional with a real date book, but so far, I was doing OK.
"Bk-Ck" reminded me that I had to go down to 1st National and deposit the check from Mr. Clarence Downwoody. Last Friday, Mr. Downwoody had graciously paid my fee after I found his missing daughter. His little princess, Jennifer, was comfortably married and living happily with a Mr. Melvin Tibbideau. This revelation, gleaned from an hour's search at the county clerk's office, might seem rather mundane, until one understands that Jennifer is nineteen and the daughter of a Southern Baptist Sunday school teacher from Gallatin, while Melvin is thirty nine, and had, some years ago, crawled out of the swamps of southern Louisiana. A couple of searches through the on-line databases to which I subscribe told me Melvin owns a Harley Davidson motorcycle, so I headed out to the bar where some of the hard-core bikers hang out. It was just a hunch, but the guys who ride the big iron are usually hooked up with a club somewhere. The place was empty at one in the afternoon, except for a forty-ish looking blonde in leather pants and top, and the bartender looked really bored. I sat down at the end of the bar and ordered a beer. As I looked around the bar, I saw the blonde motioning for me to join her. Evidently, she had something to say, so I picked up the bottle and walked back. On the way, I decided flattery would get me everywhere and mentally composed my compliments. She drained her drink, and spoke before I could turn her into a blushing, gushing font of information.
"You look kinda outta place, Honey. Nobody ever comes'n this place dressed like that. Yur lucky none o' the Satans are here; they'd stick a pool cue up yur sweet li'l butt out and throw you out the door. I figger yur lookin' fur somebody. You a cop, 'cause if you are, you can stick that beer up yur ass, compliments of me? I ain't gonna help you do nothin' to one o' my boys."
Well, so much for the blushing part, and I figured any gushing was pretty much out of the question, too. I was going to have to play this easy. Her last drink was definitely not her first, and I had a feeling that she could probably handle that pool cue trick pretty well all by herself. My asshole sucked up to about the level of my ears at the thought. I took a pull on the beer to give myself more time to think.
"Well, I'm not a cop, but I am looking for somebody. Melvin Tibbideau."
"Well then, who the hell are you and just why the fuck would you wanna find Melvin?"
I started to tell the truth, I really did, but you know, sometimes I just can't. This little wave just sweeps over me and I have to lie. I can't help myself, but at least I'm good at it.
"I'm Harry Rumford, and I need to talk to him. My cousin in D.C. met him last Memorial Day. He called me last night and asked me to find out how to get in touch with Melvin. He's riding down with his girlfriend in a couple weeks and wants to hook up."
"Just tell him to come here on Thursday. He'll find Melvin sometime after midnight."
"Well, gee, I don't really know how to put this. My cousin's girlfriend and Melvin kind of hit it off, I guess, and my cousin says Melvin's wife likes her too, so they want to meet them for..., well he wouldn't tell me what for, but I can guess. My cousin's kind of from the wild side of the family, and his wife's right there with him; she even tried to get me in bed right after they were first married, but I couldn't do that to him. Anyway, they asked me to get Melvin's phone number or get directions to his house."
"Buy me a drink, and we'll talk a while. Melvin never said anythin' about any Rumford in D.C, but maybe yur tellin' the truth. Melvin always did have a way with women, and it sounds like him. His li'l bitch is hotter'n the doors o' hell, too, so I could see that too. She took on the whole club up at Sturgis last year. And you can call me Lucy."
I paid for her rum and coke. She took a healthy swig before standing up and leading me to some pictures of the club members that hung on the wall. She pointed out one of Melvin during a rally somewhere in North Carolina. Lucy was sitting on the bike behind him, wearing boots, a black leather thong, and a slightly drunken smile. The rest of her was pretty red from the sunburn. Her drink was gone again and she seemed to have loosened up some, and I decided this was the time to stroke her a little. I asked who the woman was behind Melvin.
"Why, that's me. Can'tcha tell?"
I made a show of looking at her, then at the picture, and then back at her. "Well, I'll be, it is. You just look different now."
"Well, my hair was longer then, and I'd burned the shit out of myself riding around with no top. It was a blast, though. Melvin and I had a ball. I was really pissed when he got married, but after the first month, he came back and brought his wife with him. Yur cousin's right about Jenny. She's as good with a woman as Melvin. Last weekend, out at the lake, I thought she was gonna make me pass out."
"I can see why Melvin would come back. If I may say so, you're quite a woman."