Quarterback Trap (Carlos McCrary PI Book 3)
QUARTERBACK TRAP
CARLOS MCCRARY PI, BOOK 3
DALLAS GORHAM
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CONTENTS
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Before You Go…
Dangerous Friends
Also by Dallas Gorham
About the Author
ONE
The woman stumbled from the elevator into the lobby, catching her spike heel in the crack between the elevator and the tile floor. Dammit, why did I wear these shoes? She glanced at her watch: 3:30 a.m. Too late to go back and change; he might wake up. She bumped open the lobby door into the parking garage with her hip. She thumbed the key fob of her rental car, listening for beep of the horn.
She jerked to a halt as a dirty white van, tires squealing, pulled sideways in front of her, blocking her way. The side door of the van opened like the mouth of a secret cave. Rough hands seized her from behind and half-carried, half-dragged her toward the dark hole.
“What the hell...?” Her red Prada purse dropped to the pavement, its contents scattering everywhere. Her cellphone skittered across the pavement and disappeared beneath the van.
Two men in black shoved her into the van and onto the second-row bench seat where a third sat. He grabbed her arm and yanked her over beside him. One man climbed in after her and turned back to the one remaining at the open door. “Grab her purse and find that cellphone.”
The man outside slammed the sliding door closed, scooped up the purse, and dropped to his knees to stuff the contents back in the purse. Closing the purse, he retrieved the phone. He trotted around to the driver’s side, jumped in, tossing the items onto the front passenger seat, and cranked the engine. As the van roared away, a tire rolled over the rental car key fob, crushing it.
Carlos McCrary
Bob Martinez eased through the crowded coffee shop toward my table, fist bumping and high-fiving breakfast customers as he went.
I stood and waved. Bob was a half hour late. That wasn’t like him.
“Hey, Eighty-Eight, great to see you,” he said in Spanish.
I had to smile. “It’s been twelve years since I wore number eighty-eight, Bob.”
“You’ll always be Eighty-Eight to me.”
We shook hands and Bob pulled out a chair. The starting quarterback for the New York Jets lifted the stainless-steel covers from the two plates. “This my breakfast? Pass the salsa, please.”
Bob was speaking Spanish, the language he spoke when something was bothering him. I went along with him and switched to Spanish as I slid the dish across the table. “Two orders of huevos rancheros with brown rice and refritos on the side, like your text said.”
“Thanks, buddy. Sorry I’m late. It’s always a madhouse when I’m in public.” He eyeballed his phone before he smothered his food with salsa. “I never know how long it’ll take to get anywhere.”
“You’re starting in the Super Bowl. It’s natural that everyone wants a piece of you. It must be like being on stage all the time. Is it tough to handle so much attention?”
Bob shrugged. “You do what you gotta do. I’m used to it by now.” He checked his phone again and frowned, then dug into his huevos rancheros. “These folks are football fans. It wouldn’t be right to ignore them.”
“Your text didn’t say what to order for Graciela. Where is your gorgeous fiancée?”
A frown flashed across his face. He stuffed a forkful of huevos in his mouth. “Gracie doesn’t eat breakfast,” he mumbled as he rolled a tortilla in his fingers.
A small boy approached the table and waited for my famous friend to notice him.
Bob set down the tortilla and wiped his hands on a napkin. “Hey, sport. How’s it going?” He asked in English.
The boy blushed and blurted out, “How come everybody calls you the Mexican Muscle?”
Bob grinned at the nervous youth. “What’s your name, son?”
“Travis McKinnon, sir.”
Bob shook hands. “Bob Martinez. Pleased to meet you, Travis.”
Over the boy’s shoulder, Bob noticed a middle-aged man in a Jets T-shirt watching from a nearby table. The man smiled and shrugged. “Is that guy in the Jets shirt your dad?”
Travis glanced back at him. “Yes, sir. I asked him why they call you the Mexican Muscle. He didn’t know.”
“Lots of people ask me that. A sportswriter for a Cleveland newspaper came up with the nickname when the Browns drafted me six years ago. I’m Mexican-American like my friend Eighty-Eight here, and I’m kinda big. The nickname stuck, even after the Browns traded me to the Jets.”
The boy pivoted to me. “Why does he call you Eighty-Eight? Do you play for the Jets too?”
“No. I wore number eighty-eight when Bob and I played together at Theodore Roosevelt High School in Adams Creek, Texas. I was a tight end and Bob played quarterback. We’ve been friends ever since.”
“Oh.” Travis leaned back toward Bob. “Can I take your picture?”
“Sure thing.” Bob waved the boy’s father over. “Why don’t you take a picture of Travis and me together?”
The boy’s father took out his cellphone.
Bob grinned at the boy. “Did you know that where I was born, Travis is a famous name?”
Travis’s eyes grew wider. “Where’s that, sir?”
“Texas. William Barrett Travis was a hero of battle of the Alamo. Lots of people in Texas are named after him.”
“I’m from New York.”
“Well, I am too—now. I live in New York City.” He wrapped his arm around the boy’s shoulder, and they both faced the camera. “Say ‘Go Jets.’”
After giving Travis’s father a fist bump, Bob picked up the tortilla and used it to scoop eggs onto his fork. “Kids like Travis make it worth all the hassle.” Bob was speaking Spanish again.
My friend should have been on
top of the world with the Super Bowl a week away, but instead he seemed troubled. “Something’s bothering you. What’s on your mind, amigo? Does it have anything to do with you checking your phone every five seconds?”
Bob had switched back to English. “I’m sure it’s nothing, really, Eighty-Eight.” He scooped up a mouthful of rice.
“When a guy says ‘it’s nothing, really,’ it means there’s something there. What is it?”
Bob’s mouth drew into a thin line. “Gracie wasn’t there when I woke up this morning.”
“Wasn’t where?”
“In our hotel suite. In our bed, for God’s sake. The players have a curfew before a big game, and there’s no game bigger than the Super Bowl. I left the party at 10:30 last night. Gracie was having a good time and said she wasn’t ready to leave. She said she’d be along later and not to wake her in the morning. She wanted to sleep in.”
He downed some orange juice. “The alarm woke me at six. Her side of the bed hadn’t been slept in. I’ve been calling and texting every five minutes since then. Her phone goes straight to voicemail. Frankly, I’m freaking out a little.” He finished his first order of huevos rancheros and attacked the refritos.
“Have you looked for her?”
Bob ate mechanically. “That’s why I was late to meet you, buddy. I asked at the front desk. Then I went to the concierge in case she left a message, a note, anything. Nobody’s seen her this morning.”
“Has Gracie ever done anything like this before?”
“What do you mean ‘like this’?”
“Disappeared without telling you.”
Bob glanced over his shoulder to make sure no one was nearby. He lowered his voice. “Once or twice... when she was using.”
I lowered my voice too. “Using? You mean drugs? That’s bad news.”
“Don’t I know it.” Bob chugged the rest of his juice and signaled the server to bring more. “I’m scared as hell that Gracie scored some drugs last night after I left. She could be off god-knows-where doing god-knows-what with god-knows-who.” He ate without enjoyment, refueling an empty tank. He scooped the last morsel of rice from the first plate, set it aside, and tackled the second plate.
I sipped my coffee. “When the three of us had dinner in New York two weeks ago, Gracie seemed fine.”
“She doesn’t talk about her, ah, former problem.”
“I never heard any rumors that Gracie was an addict.”
Bob shrugged. “So far, we’ve managed to keep it under wraps. I sent her to rehab last summer under another name while I was at training camp. She stayed there through the pre-season and came to our season opener against the Steelers. She’s been clean ever since.” He frowned and poked at his food. “At least that’s what she tells me.”
I figured Bob needed my help. “What do you intend to do?”
“I don’t know, Eighty-Eight. My schedule is jammed all day. I gotta go to the airport in an hour to ride into town on one of the team buses. That’s a big photo op for the local media. We have a team meeting after that. I can’t search for her any more until late this afternoon.”
“I don’t want you to worry all day. I’ll find her for you.”
“Hey, that’s right. You’re a private detective.” Bob’s mood brightened. “Can I hire you to find Gracie for me?”
“No, you can’t hire me. What are friends for if you can’t use and abuse them occasionally? You would do the same for me.”
“Chuck, the Jets pay me over fifty million dollars a year. If Gracie has gone and done something stupid, finding her will take more time than you think. I’ll pay you the going rate, whatever it is.”
“Are you sure about this, Bob? I don’t make fifty million a year, but I’m not cheap either.”
“Don’t forget the endorsement deals, Eighty-Eight. They’re good for another forty million. Yes, I’ll pay. Where do you want to start?”
I pushed the plate aside and slid a notepad from my pocket. “Where was the party?”
I dodged dozens of people wearing New York green and white or Dallas blue and silver as I pressed my way through the crowded hotel lobby.
The concierge desk took up a chunk of one wall. Banners for both teams hung on the wall behind the desk, the Super Bowl logo between them. Two men and a woman in hotel uniforms stood behind the marble desk.
Bob said he had talked to a man named Ronald earlier. I read the nametag of the nearest concierge. “David, I’m looking for Ronald.”
“That’s him.” He waved at the other man. “Hey, Ron, this guy wants to talk to you.”
Ronald walked over. “How may I help you, sir?”
“I’m trying to locate Graciela Perez, Bob Martinez’s fiancée. Have you heard anything from her since Bob was here earlier?”
“Are you a guest in the hotel?”
“Why do you ask?”
“I know Mr. Martinez and Ms. Perez by sight, but I don’t know you. I’m sure you understand.”
“I’m Chuck McCrary.” I showed him my private investigator’s license. “Bob’s a friend. I’m doing this as a favor—not professionally. You keep guest confidences, right?”
“Of course, sir.”
“Graciela was a no-show at breakfast. Bob is concerned about her. I offered to confirm that she’s all right. They may have gotten their signals crossed. Can you help me out?”
“I saw Ms. Perez and Mr. Martinez yesterday to hand them their dinner reservations, but I haven’t heard from Ms. Perez since. Sorry. Did you try their suite?”
I knocked and waited a minute. Graciela hadn’t answered the call I made from the concierge desk, so I didn’t expect her to be in the suite. I knocked again, then opened the door with Bob’s keycard.
“Gracie. Are you here? It’s Chuck McCrary. Hello?”
Silence.
I hung the Do Not Disturb sign on the doorknob and closed the door. The maid had not yet serviced the room. Two soft drink cans lay half-crumpled on the coffee table. Yesterday’s newspaper was scattered on the floor. A laptop on the desk was plugged into an outlet in the base of the desk lamp.
When I entered the bedroom, I noticed the bed sheets mussed on one side only. Opening the walk-in closet, I studied the clothes hung on both sides. Bob’s clothes occupied three feet on the left; Gracie’s took up the rest.
The shelf above the rod held a pink suitcase and an overnight bag with the initials GP. The pink suitcase was empty except for the normal travel stash of a packet of instant decaffeinated coffee and four wrinkled packets of coffee creamer and sugar-free sweetener. The overnight bag had a New Jersey highway map in a zipper compartment.
A variety of women’s clothing in different lengths, styles, and colors was wedged into the eight-foot length of the closet. Just what I would expect from a fashion model. Four boxes sat on the shelf above the closet rod; a dozen pairs of shoes lay haphazardly on the floor. I picked two shoes at random—one was size seven, the other a seven-and-a-half. Two negligees hung inside the closet door. A faint hint of perfume filled the air.
I opened the boxes that sat on the shelf. Two contained purses with logos of designers so famous that even I, a barbarian with as much fashion sense as a tree stump, recognized them. Each purse was empty except for a small pill box with two kinds of colored pills. The third box held a larger designer purse with a similar pill box and an envelope folded into a zipped inner compartment. Inside the envelope, I found a baggie containing white powder. This can’t be good, I thought.
After sticking my fingertip into the powder, I touched a little to my tongue. My tongue went numb. Cocaine. The fourth box was empty. I replaced then all.
Under Bob’s side of the bed were two brown leather suitcases. Three more pink ones, also with designer logos, were wedged beneath the other side.
The bathroom shelf held the usual toiletries. Two prescription bottles in Graciela’s name were shoved to the back of a cabinet drawer—methamphetamine and an anti-
anxiety drug advertised on television. The pills were identical to the ones I’d found in the purses. She keeps a handy-dandy supply of diet pills and downers in all her purses. Have drugs—will travel.
I opened the first of three louvered doors—the toilet compartment. The seat was up. That figured. Bob would have been the last one to use the toilet.
Another door led to the bathtub. Salon-brand shampoo and conditioner sat on the edge of the bathtub. The used soap in the dish was damp. So was the crumpled towel in the tub. The bathmat showed small footprints pressed in the plush nap. They looked like size seven.
A third door opened to the shower room. Bob’s shampoo and a plastic hair scrubber sat on the marble shelf. Bob’s soap was wetter than the soap in the other soap dish. A wadded towel lay across another plush bathmat, this one with man-sized footprints in the nap.
The only object of note in the kitchen was a pink tablet computer plugged into an outlet. The name Graciela was painted on the back in red nail polish that matched the shade of one of the bottles I had noticed in the bathroom. I stuck the tablet in a plastic laundry back from the closet.
I waited outside the locker room at the Jets practice facility for the team meeting to adjourn. Bob strolled out the door with a group of massive football players. It’s not often that I’m in a crowd where most of the people are bigger than I am. Bob waved at me.
We walked out to the field and sat on a sideline bench. “Here’s your keycard back.”
Bob slipped the card into a pocket. “What did you find in my room?”