I eased along with the tra ffi c until I got to the curb cut. “I’ve got to go,” I said.
Sal said, “Wait! We got a deal on the contracts?”
“I’ll give you one free contract,” I said. “You already made fifty Gs giving my name to that homicidal midget.”
“Which one?”
“You know more than one homicidal midget? Vic … tor,” I said, imitating my newest client.
Sal laughed. “I met the little fuck. He’s got dreadlocks.”
“You’re shitting me.”
“Long, nasty dreads, swear to Christ!”
We hung up, and I parked my Avis rental in one of the visitor’s parking slots and asked the guys out front where I could find Chief Blaunert. They directed me to the kitchen area of the station house. I walked in and asked the one guy sitting there if he happened to be the fire chief.
“Until October,” he said. “Then I’ll just be Bob, living on a houseboat in Seattle. You’re the insurance guy, right?”
I nodded. “Donovan Creed, State Farm.”
“Seattle’s cold this time of year,” he said, “but no worse than here. The wife has a brother, owns a marina up in Portage Bay near the university.”
From under the table, he positioned his foot against the seat of the chair across from him. His brown leather shoes were well-worn, but the soles were new. By way of invitation, he gestured toward the chair and used his foot to push it far enough away from the table for me to sit down. “Ever been there?” he asked. “Portage Bay?”
“Haven’t had the honor,” I said. I grabbed a Styrofoam cup from the stack near the sink and helped myself to some co ff ee from the machine.
“Well, some don’t like the rain, I guess. But to us, it’s as close to paradise as we’re likely to get.” The old Formica table in front of him had probably started out a bright shade of yellow before decades of food and co ff ee stains took their toll. I sat in the chair he’d slid out for me and tasted my co ff ee. It was bitter and burnt, which seemed fitting for fire house co ff ee.
“How’s the java?” he asked.
“Wouldn’t be polite to complain,” I said. “Of course, in seven months, you’ll have great co ff ee every day.”
He winked and gave me a thumbs-up. “You know it,” he said. “Seattle’s got a lot of nicknames, but Co ff ee Town’s the one I use.” He savored the thought a moment. “Course they’ve got Starbucks and Seattle’s Best. You probably don’t know Tully’s, but that’s a great co ff ee.”
We were both quiet a minute, two guys sipping bad co ff ee.
“You have much fire experience, Mr. Creed? Reason I ask, we weren’t expecting an insurance investigator.”
I raised my eyebrows. “Not ever?”
For the slightest moment, he seemed uneasy, but he adjusted quickly. “Not this soon, I meant.”
Chief Blaunert didn’t look much like a fi re marshal. He looked more like the love child of Sherlock Holmes and Santa Claus. He had white hair, a full white beard, and thick glasses with large, round frames. He also had an engaging smile and wore a wrinkled brown tweed suit over a white shirt and knit tie. All that was missing was a pipe and the comment, “Elementary, my dear Creed.”
Lou Kelly had set up the impromptu meeting while I picked up the rental car in West Manhattan. Lou had given Chief Blaunert my State Farm cover story, and Blaunert put Lou on hold a long time before agreeing to meet me. He said he was doing a field inspection at the Pine Road Station, but if I hurried, I could speak to him before the meeting. Finding him wearing a suit instead of his uniform, I doubted he was conducting an inspection. At the moment, I noticed he was eyeing me carefully.
“I’m more of a grunt than an arson investigator,” I said. “I interview the firemen, the neighbors, check the site. In the end, I tell the company if I think a fire’s accidental. Of course, even if I think it is, they’ll still want to send a forensic accountant to check the insured’s
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