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“Still a coincidence we can’t ignore.”

“Anything from your credit card check?”

“What credit card check?”

“On the son of your protected witness.”

Silence.

“Hello?” said Mahoney. “You still there?”

“How’d you know?”

“Did the math. Pro hit, spring break, your job specialty. Adds up to trouble.”

“Card dead-ends at the Panama City motel. Hasn’t been used since, but he did pawn his class ring in Daytona. Tracked down his motel there-another uncanny coincidence.”

“Serge on security cameras?”

“And two more bodies.”

“Kids?”

“No, pros. Weird murders.”

“That’s more like Serge.”

“I need your help,” said Ramirez. “Anything you got on him.”

“You don’t have that much storage space.”

“Then just the latest. Here’s my e-mail…”

Mahoney jotted it down.

“One more thing,” said Ramirez. “Nobody else can know we talked or what you send me.”

“Informant?”

“You’re as good as I’d heard,” said Ramirez. “Someone else was asking around at the pawnshop before I got there.”

“Serge?”

“Don’t know. But the APB that turned up the sale of the class ring was for law enforcement eyes only.”

“That’s a rodent smell, all right.”

“Can I count on you?”

“Like blackjack.”

Agent Mahoney strolled off the pier and returned to his room. A vintage alligator briefcase sat on the dresser. Mahoney considered it for the longest time. Doubt. But he’d given Ramirez his word.

“I know I’m going to regret this…”

He flipped brass latches. Out came a laptop. He opened it and located a dedicated folder for Serge. The first item was a scanned Christmas message. The next two were digitized videos of commencement addresses-one at least a decade old from the University of South Florida, the other more recent. Mahoney involuntarily chuckled at the thought of the second. He’d practically fallen out of his chair when it first came in. Of all things, Serge delivering the graduation address at a kindergarten.

The agent attached them, plus lengthy data files, and sent the whole batch to Ramirez’s e-mail.

Then another long look at the gator-skin case. He reached in a back pocket and removed the original copy of the Christmas message: a greeting card with a barefoot Santa lying against a palm tree on the beach. Inside was a folded sheet of paper with single-spaced typing. Mahoney sat on the edge of the bed, slipped on bifocals and began reading…

December 25

Dear friends and enemies,

Season’s greetings! It’s me, Serge! Don’t you just hate these form letters people stuff in Christmas cards? Nothing screams “you’re close to my heart” like a once-a-year Xerox. Plus, all the lame jazz that’s going on in their lives. “Had a great time in Memphis.” “Bobby lost his retainer down a storm drain.” “I think the neighbors are dealing drugs.” But this letter is different. You are special to me. I’m just forced to use a copy machine and gloves because of advancements in forensics. I love those TV shows!

Has a whole year already flown by? Much to report! Let’s get to it!

Number one: I ended a war.

You guessed correct, the War on Christmas! When I first heard about it, I said to Coleman, “That’s just not right! We must enlist!” I rushed to the front lines, running downtown yelling “Merry Christmas” at everyone I saw. And they’re all saying “Merry Christmas” back. Hmmm. That’s odd: Nobody’s stopping us from saying “Merry Christmas.” Then I did some research, and it turns out the real war is against people saying “Happy holidays.” The nerve: trying to be inclusive. So, everyone…

Merry Christmas! Happy Hannukah! Good times! Soul Train! Purple mountain majesties! The Pompatus of Love!

There. War over. And just before it became a quagmire.

Next: Decline of Florida Roundup.

– They tore down the Big Bamboo Lounge near Orlando. Where was everybody on that one?

– Remember the old “Big Daddy’s” lounges around Florida with the logo of that bearded guy? They’re now Flannery’s or something.

– They closed 20,000 Leagues. And opened Buzz Lightyear. I offered to bring my own submarine. Okay, actually threatened, but they only wanted to discuss it in the security office. I’ve been doing a lot of running lately at theme parks.

– Here’s a warm-and-fuzzy. Anyone who grew up down here knows this one, and everyone else won’t have any idea what I’m talking about: that schoolyard rumor of the girl bitten by a rattlesnake on the Steeplechase at Pirate’s World (now condos). I’ve started dropping it into all conversations with mixed results.

– In John Mellencamp’s megahit “Pink Houses,” the guy compliments his wife’s beauty by saying her face could “stop a clock.” Doesn’t that mean she was butt ugly? Nothing to do with Florida. Just been bugging me.

Good news alert! I’ve decided to become a children’s author! Instilling state pride in the youngest residents may be the only way to save the future. The book’s almost finished. I’ve only completed the first page, but the rest just flows after that. It’s called Shrimp Boat Surprise. Coleman asked what the title meant, and I said life is like sailing on one big, happy shrimp boat. He asked what the surprise was, and I said you grow up and learn that life bones you up the ass ten ways to Tuesday. He started reading and asked if a children’s book should have the word “motherfucker” eight times on the first page. I say, absolutely. They’re little kids, after all. If you want a lesson to stick, you have to hammer it home through repetition… In advance: Happy New Year! (Unlike 2008-ouch!)

DAYTONA BEACH

Serge and the gang pulled out of town as a custom motor coach rolled in.

Male motorists honked at the bus, as they always did wherever it went, because of the topless women painted on the side with strategically positioned CENSORED labels.

Someone near the front of the bus hung up a phone and walked to the back. He knocked on the RV’s rear suite with circular bed.

Other side of the door: “Not now.”

“Sir, it’s important.”

The door opened a crack. Camera lights. Seventeen-year-olds. Rood stuck his head out. “Can’t it wait?”

“Sir, we’ve been sued again by parents. Ten million dollars. This time they said she was sixteen.”

“So handle it like you always do.”

“Sir, that was Charley. He quit. Remember?”

“Bastard!” Rood fumed at the thought of his former chief assistant walking out in Panama City. “After all I did for him.”

“What do you want me to do?”

Rood looked back. “Guys, get the dildos.” He stepped outside and closed the door. “Offer five hundred thousand, the cost of doing business.”

“I don’t think they’ll take it. Pretty mad.”

“Their lawyer will get them to take it.”

“Their lawyer’s booked them on TV.”

“Everyone has a price,” said Rood. “You make an appointment to see him and negotiate.”

“But I’m not an attorney.”

“Not as a lawyer. A potential client.”

“I don’t understand.”

“He’s only going to get a third of the five hundred K we’re offering to settle for, which is why he won’t take it.” Rood lit a fat cigar. “So you say your company’s staff attorney is a fuck-up and you want to hire him on retainer. Million a year.”

“What does my company do?”

“I don’t give a shit. Widgets, copper mines.”

“But he won’t have any work to do.”

“He’ll know that.” Smoke rings drifted toward the ceiling. “It’s a legal bribe.”

The assistant coughed. “Isn’t that unethical?”

“That’s why it’ll work.”

“Won’t he wonder that I walked in out of the blue?”

“Tell him you admire his lawsuit-that you hate my guts and am glad to see I’m getting what’s due.” Another big puff. “Say you hope he can wrap up a settlement in my case fast, a week tops, because your company needs him available right away or you’ll have to go somewhere else. Then he’ll be ready to accept my lowball five hundred K offer.”