31
STONE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT. HE AND DINO GOT
DRESSED and into a car and drove to the Colony Hotel; he wanted to
question the front desk man. As they pulled into the parking lot,
he spotted Detective Riley and Lieutenant Lundquist sitting in an
idling car thirty yards away. Stone walked over and rapped on the
window, startling them both.
“What are you doing here, Stone?” Lundquist asked.
“You’re going to spook the guy.”
“What guy?” Stone asked.
“Bartlett.”
“Bartlett has decamped.”
“What?”
“Come with me.” Stone started for the hotel
lobby.
Lundquist caught up and fell into step with Stone.
“What do you mean, ‘decamped’?”
“I mean, Bartlett has checked out of the hotel, and
he didn’t leave a forwarding address.”
“How do you know that?”
“Because I telephoned him half an hour ago, and
that’s what the desk clerk told me. I want to find out if it’s
true, or if Bartlett simply bought the front desk man, and I want
you to flash your badge at him so he’ll talk to me.”
The desk clerk stared blankly at the badge.
“You’re a police officer? Where? Your badge doesn’t look
familiar.”
“He’s from Minneapolis,” Stone said. “I can have a
Palm Beach badge here in thirty seconds, if that will refresh your
memory.”
“My memory about what?”
“First of all, has Paul Bartlett really checked
out?”
“Yes, I saw him go.”
“What forwarding address did he give?”
“I’ll show you his registration card,” the clerk
said, riffling through a stack of them. “Here.” He held it up. The
space for a forwarding address was blank.
“Did you check him out of the hotel?”
“In a manner of speaking. He didn’t even wait for
his bill, said he had to catch a plane and I should mail it to
him.”
“To where?”
“To the address on the card.”
Lundquist checked the card. “It’s his Minneapolis
address. The guy’s gone home.”
“How much luggage did he have?” Stone asked.
“A lot; three or four bags.”
“And where did the bellman load his car?”
“Down on the street,” the clerk said, pointing at
the side door.
“That’s why he got past you,” Stone said to
Lundquist. “I’d like to see his room, please.”
The man pressed a few buttons on a machine, and a
plastic card was spat out. “It’s suite four-oh-four. Help
yourself,” he said.
Stone led the way to the elevator and pressed four.
A moment later they were standing outside the suite, and Stone got
the door open.
“Easy there,” Lundquist said, pushing past Stone.
“I’d better go first.”
“It’s not a crime scene,” Stone said, following
him. “Unless there’s a corpse stashed under the bed.”
Lundquist looked under the bed. “Nothing.”
“No kidding?” Stone looked around. The room had
already been cleaned that morning, and the bed had not been used
since. He went around the room, looking in closets and opening
drawers.
“What are you looking for?” Lundquist asked.
“I don’t know,” Stone replied.
“Whatever he can find,” Dino said.
Lundquist started opening drawers, too.
Stone went back into the sitting room and looked
around. The place was neat as a pin, the wastebaskets were empty,
and there was not so much as a trace of Paul Bartlett, or whoever
he was.
“What now?” Lundquist asked.
“The airport,” Stone replied. “He told the clerk he
had to catch a plane.”
The three men left the hotel, and Lundquist got
into the rear seat of Stone’s convertible.
“I should be wearing sunscreen,” Lundquist said as
they pulled out of the parking lot.
“Yeah, that pale Scandinavian skin will fry every
time,” Dino said, half to himself, chuckling. “World’s whitest
white men.”
“That’s what you call me,” Stone said.
“You, too.”
At the airport, they went to the nearest ticket
counter, and Lundquist flashed his badge and asked about flights to
Minneapolis.
“None of the airlines flies directly to Minneapolis
from Palm Beach,” the woman behind the counter said. “You’d have to
change, probably in Atlanta.”
“Will you check reservations for a Paul Bartlett?”
Lundquist asked.
The woman turned to her computer terminal, tapped a
few keys and looked at the screen. “I’ll do a search for the name,”
she said, tapping more keys. “Nope, nobody by that name.”
“Try Paul Manning,” Stone said, because he couldn’t
think of anything else to do.
She tapped the keys again. “Nope, no
Manning.”
“Do you recall, in the past hour or so, a tall man,
six-three or -four, mid-to-late forties, dark hair going gray,
fairly good-looking?”
“No, and I think I’d have noticed,” the woman said,
smiling.
“Thanks for your help,” Stone said. He turned to
Lundquist and Dino. “Let’s hit the charter services.”
“How do we find those?” Lundquist asked.
“There’s a big sign outside, pointing to them all,”
Stone replied.
They went outside and checked the sign; there were
half a dozen.
“Ebbe, you go in the car with Riley and check the
north side of the field; Dino and I will check the south
side.”
“Okay.” Lundquist jumped into the car with
Riley.
“Well,” Dino said as they got into the Mercedes.
“Lundquist isn’t the brightest tulip in the garden, is he?”
“Tulips are Dutch, not Scandinavian, and remember,
he’s a lieutenant, like you.”
“Well, he can’t be all bad,” Dino said.
They checked all four companies on the south side
of the field and came up with nothing. As they left the last one,
Lundquist and Riley drove up.
“Nothing on the north side,” Riley said.
“Nothing over here, either,” Stone said. “Where’s
the chief?”
“Probably in his office,” Riley replied.
Stone punched the number into his cell phone and
asked for Griggs.
“Chief, Bartlett has checked out of the
Colony.”
“Well, shit,” Griggs said. “You think he’s left
town?”
“He told the desk clerk he had a plane to catch,
but we’re at the airport now, and he didn’t fly out of here.”
“I guess he could have driven to Miami,” Griggs
said. “It’s only an hour and a half to the airport.”
“Can you check the flights out of there for a
Bartlett or Manning?”
“I’ll put somebody on it. Where do you think he
went?”
“The only address we have is Minneapolis, but I
don’t think he’s there.”
“Where do you think he is?”
“I think he’s still in Palm Beach. Remember, he
checked out of the Chesterfield, too, without leaving a forwarding
address, and he went directly to the Colony. Maybe, before you
check the Miami flights, you should alert the other hotels in town
to call you if he checks in.”
“Okay, Stone, I’ll do that.”
“It seems that every time we start to get a line on
the guy, he changes hotels.”
“I’ll get back to you.”
Stone hung up.
“You think he’s in another hotel?” Dino
asked.
“That’s my guess,” Stone said. Then he thought for
a moment. “Unless . . .”
“Unless what?”
“Come on,” Stone said, “let’s get back to the
yacht, quick.”