Adrift, p.1
Adrift, page 1

ADRIFT
A Folly Beach Mystery
BILL NOEL
Copyright © 2023 by Bill Noel
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
Cover photo and design by Bill Noel
Author photo and map by Susan Noel
ISBN
Enigma House Press
Goshen, Kentucky 40026
Enigmahousepress.com
Other Folly Beach Mysteries by Bill Noel
Folly
The Pier
Washout
The Edge
The Marsh
Ghosts
Missing
Final Cut
First Light
Boneyard Beach
Silent Night
Dead Center
Discord
A Folly Beach Mystery COLLECTION
Dark Horse
Joy
A Folly Beach Mystery COLLECTION II
No Joke
Relic
A Folly Beach Mystery COLLECTION III
Faith
A Folly Beach Christmas Mystery COLLECTION
Tipping Point
Sea Fog with coauthor Angelica Cruz
Mosquito Beach
Pretty Paper with coauthor Angelica Cruz
A Folly Beach Mystery COLLECTION IV
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
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
About the Author
CHAPTER ONE
I answered the phone to hear Virgil Debonnet, say, “Chris, you’ll never guess what I found.” My friend was out of breath, sounding like he’d run a marathon.
His call disturbed my early-morning cup of coffee as I sat in my seldom-used kitchen while pondering nothing.
“The fountain of youth.” I said, suspecting I was wrong. I had a difficult time being serious when someone starts a conversation asking me to guess something.
“Your guessing sucks.”
I smiled then said, “Want me to try again?”
I heard him exhale before saying, “No, you’ll never get it.”
I met Virgil a year ago and we’d quickly become friends. Like many of my acquaintances on Folly Beach, the small, South Carolina barrier island I call home, God bestowed upon him an abundance of quirks.
“What did you find?”
“A dead body. Can you believe that? It was—”
The fountain of youth would’ve been higher on my list.
“Where are you?”
“Boat ramp parking lot. Don’t you want to know—”
This wasn’t a conversation I wanted over the phone. “Meet me at the Dog. I’ll be there in fifteen minutes.”
“I have an open spot in my calendar.” He laughed as his breathing began to approach normal. “See you there.”
Virgil had countless open spots in his calendar. He was in his early forties but hadn’t worked in years.
I’d avoided exercise most of my sixty-nine years, but since I was a few, okay, more than a few pounds overweight, I was determined to walk whenever possible. The Lost Dog Cafe was fewer than six blocks from my cottage, so hoofing it didn’t provide much of a challenge. I stepped out the door and was surprised by the dense fog blanketing the island. Fog wasn’t unusual in April, but today’s version was fog on steroids. I felt I’d have to part it with my hands, an irrational feeling, but it still popped into my head.
The Lost Dog Cafe was a half-block off Center Street, the center of most retail establishments on my six-mile-long, half-mile-wide slice of heaven. Since I fixed food about as often as kangaroos knock on my front door, the Dog was my go-to spot for breakfast. Unfortunate for me, fortunate for the restaurant, it was also the favorite breakfast spot for countless vacationers plus many locals. I peeked in the door, looked around, but didn’t see Virgil. Being early, the restaurant wasn’t full, so I selected a table on the front patio. The hostess escorted me to the vacant table and before I had time to settle, Virgil rounded the corner.
He was my height at five-foot-ten but much thinner than I am. He wore a long-sleeve, button-down white dress shirt with frayed cuffs, navy blue chinos, and his prized possession, resoled Gucci loafers. His fashionably long, black hair was slicked back. One of his quirks was he wore sunglasses regardless of time of day or amount of sun. They looked even stranger this morning as he emerged from the fog.
“Sorry it took so long to get here,” he said as he took a seat. “The constabulary wouldn’t allow me to leave until I answered 3,000 questions. I pled the fifth amendment when that cute Officer Bishop enquired about the size of my Jockey shorts.”
“Virgil?”
He raised his right arm and pointed his hand at me, palm out. “Yes, Christopher, I made up that part. Regardless, there was a plethora of questions.”
Before he could make anything else up, Temple, one of the servers, appeared to ask what we wanted to drink.
I said coffee, Virgil asked if they had kopi luwak coffee.
Being the professional, Temple said no, without giving any hint if she knew what it was. I knew I didn’t.
“Good,” Virgil said, “It cost fifty-nine dollars a cup. I can’t afford it. How about a cup of normal-people coffee?”
“Coming right up,” Temple said. It may have been my imagination, but she left the table quicker than necessary.
Virgil watched her go, then turned to me. “Kopi luwak is the most expensive coffee in the world. I had a cup back when I was rich. Tasted like crap.”
I didn’t waste time asking why he asked if the Dog had any. Virgil had been a stock market analyst, had inherited a mansion overlooking the Charleston Harbor, all before losing everything through horrible investments, gambling losses, battles with illegal substances, and failed squabbles with the IRS. He now lived in a tiny apartment in a building that could best be described in need of a total remodel, or demolition.
Temple was quick with our coffee, then asked if we were ready to order.
Virgil said, “Perhaps give Mr. Landrum and me a few minutes, Miss Temple.”
She left to ask if the couple at the table behind us needed anything.
I said, “Dead body?”
“I’ve had more traumatic sunrise experiences than a vampire. Today topped them all. Chris, as you know, I’m unencumbered with a job, so I have countless hours to, well, to do whatever I choose to do. I’ve learned this enchanting island has a certain optimistic glow early in the morn. Optimism is a rare commodity in this era of mere glimmers of optimism, so I choose to seek it out. Early morning walks meet that need. In fact, I’ve been taking—”
“Virgil, dead body?”
“I’m setting the stage. You in a hurry to get somewhere?”
“Set on.”
Temple returned before Virgil could continue constructing the stage for his drama. This time we were ready for her. I said I’d have French toast, the breakfast I order most every visit to the Dog. Virgil said he’d have to stick with a bagel adding that his current net worth was slightly north of seven dollars. She headed to the kitchen to take a significant bite out of his life savings.
Virgil turned to me. “Most mornings I like to take in the sights of sunrise over the Atlantic. This morning, I decided to saunter the other direction seeing if any action was stirring at the Folly River. In hindsight, I grievously chose the wrong destination. As you can see, the fog has shrouded our island like a cotton blanket over, well, something under the blanket.”
I nodded, hoping construction on the stage would be completed before supper.
“I arrived in the parking lot for the boat ramp to find not a creature stirring, or if there had been, the fog made it impossible for me to detect movement. Only half the bridge off the island was visible through the thick low-lying cloud. Additionally, there were three vessels bobbing in the water, only three I saw, that is. Two medium-sized boats and one attractive sailboat drew my attention.” He hesitated, sighed, then said. “That is until I walked to the edge of the river where I noticed an aluminum jon boat trapped in the tall grasses at water’s edge.” Virgil closed his eyes, shook his h
Poor timing brought Temple to the table with our food. I thanked her, hoping it didn’t knock Virgil off his story. I’d heard enough about the stage.
Virgil spread cream cheese on his bagel, looked toward the small parking area in front of the restaurant, then said, “A gentleman was lying prone in the boat. Two thoughts came to mind. First, why didn’t I take my morning walk along the ocean? Second, a call to the local law enforcement officials seemed in order.”
“How did you know he was dead?”
“The boat was down the sharp decline in land so I couldn’t get to him.”
I repeated, “How did you know he was dead?”
“I suppose because he was lying in a puddle of blood that appeared large enough to stock a blood bank. Chris, I doubt any was left in him. Let me tell you, my friend, this was no way for me to begin an optimistic day.” He shook his head. “In hindsight, I should add my day was more optimistic than that of the boat man.”
“What happened next?”
“I was surrounded by more emergency vehicles than appear in the Christmas parade. I suppose the law enforcement officials who descended on the scene considered me the number one suspect in causing the demise of the boat man. I assured them I was the citizen who called to report the body which, I suppose, made me appear a bit less guilty. When Chief LaMond arrived, she first rolled her eyes when she saw me, then told the other cops she knew me, adding that while I could be a pain in her lovely posterior, I was probably not the person who ended the life of the boat man.”
Cindy LaMond, who held the official title of Director of Public Safety but was referred to by everyone as the Folly Beach Police Chief, was a good friend who knew Virgil as a result of a double murder a few months earlier. He, along with a couple of my other friends, had stumbled into solving the crime. That, for some reason, had left a lasting impression on the Chief.
“Virgil, do they know what happened to the man?”
“Possibly, but they didn’t choose to impart that information.”
“Did you recognize him?”
“Don’t know his name, but I’ve seen him in a couple of local drinking establishments with his butt parked at the bar. As you may know, when there is an uptick in my financial status, I enjoy an adult beverage, or two, or, well, you get the idea.”
I did. “Describe him.”
“Older than me. Maybe in his fifties, black hair going grey around the temples, I’d guess a couple inches taller although since he was dead he didn’t stand for me to compare. Had a distinguished air about him. Not this morning, but when he was in the bars. That’s about it. Know him?”
“Doesn’t sound familiar.”
“No need to. You won’t be running into him other than at a funeral home.” Virgil took another bite of bagel, rubbed his temple, then said, “Before I called you, I called Charles, you know, because he’s a private detective. I got his voicemail so I left a message where I might have mentioned that I found a body. Since you’re part of his detective agency, I called you next.”
Charles Fowler has been my best friend since I’d arrived on Folly Beach a dozen years ago. He and I had rapidly bonded even though we’re as alike as a raisin to a filet mignon. He’s also a self-proclaimed private detective, a status he claims to have earned by reading every detective novel written in the last two hundred years, an exaggeration, but only slight. Since I’d known him, he and, truth be told, I have stumbled into assisting the police solve several murders. The how is much too long a story to share.
I was now getting a glimmer of why Virgil made me the third choice of calls this morning.
My thought was confirmed when he said, “I have no idea how we’ll do it, but we’ve got to find out who killed him.”
Virgil’s ringing phone broke his proclamation. He nearly jumped out of the chair, indicating he wasn’t as calm as I’d thought. He stared at it like it was a cobra getting ready to strike, then answered. After listening to whomever was on the other end for a few seconds, Virgil said, “The Dog,” then seconds later, added, “Okay,” before returning the phone to the table.
I’m no psychic but would bet we’d be getting an addition to our table.
I said, “Charles?”
Virgil nodded.
“On his way?”
Virgil nodded again then repeated, “We’ve got to find out who killed him.”
No, we don’t, I thought, but history has taught me thinking and doing are two different things. Here we go again.
CHAPTER TWO
I heard Charles’s hand-carved wood cane he’s carried ever since I’ve known him tapping the walkway in front of the patio before I saw him. Despite several attempts over the decade to find out, he’d never explained why the cane was his constant companion. That can also be said about his obsession with wearing long-sleeve college-logoed T-shirts or sweatshirts regardless of the weather. Today it was a green and white Slippery Rock University T-shirt.
“Who turned on the fog machine?” he asked as he lowered his body in the chair. “Thought I was going to have to use the handy-dandy GPS machine in my phone to find my way here.”
Charles was a couple of years younger than I, a couple of inches shorter, more than a couple of pounds lighter, and with his three-day old, scruffy whisker growth, could pass as a street person.
“Morning, Charles,” Virgil said. “Glad you successfully weaved your way through the zero visibility we’re enjoying.”
Charles’s apartment was four blocks from the restaurant.
“Morning, Charles,” I said.
“Morning, Charles,” Temple three-peated, as she set a mug of coffee in front of my friend.
“Temple, you’re a lifesaver. Think you can round up another order of French toast, or did Chris eat up your supply?”
“Think I can find one,” Temple said, then pivoted before heading to find another order for Charles.
“Okay,” Charles said. “Enough welcoming me. Why did you drag me out of my cozy apartment while I was engrossed in a fascinating biography of Zachary Taylor?”
Another of Charles’s quirks is his interest in United States presidents. One of his irritating quirks is quoting them.
Virgil took a sip of coffee then said, “I believe it was you who invited yourself to our breaking fast.”
“Whatever. So, what were you talking about on the message machine? Something about a boat, a body?”
Virgil gave Charles an abbreviated version of his morning and the eventful walk to the boat landing. He also shared how he’d seen the victim in local bars but hadn’t had a conversation with him. Charles interrupted so many times with questions that Temple had time to bring his breakfast, return twice to refill our coffee, and would’ve had time left over to sing the entire soundtrack from Hamilton.
Charles’s interrogation ended with, “How are we going to catch the killer?”
Before I could explain we didn’t know if the man had been killed or if his death was accidental, share the obvious fact that regardless what had happened, it was a job for the police, without hitting my two friends in the head with the fact it was none of our business, Charles was asking me to call Chief LaMond to find out what’d happened.
“Charles, Cindy is probably at the boat landing. The last thing she needs is a call from a citizen butting into her business.”
“You’re right,” he said, then looked at his bare wrist where normal humans wear a watch. “So, you’ll call her in a half hour?” He nodded, then stuffed a bite of French toast in his mouth.
Virgil looked at Charles and said, “If I may be so bold, why don’t you call the Chief?”
