No Sunscreen for the Dead Read online




  Dedication

  For Pat Mitchell, who commanded more respect in the trenches than anyone I’ve ever met.

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Prologue

  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

  Epilogue

  About the Author

  Also by Tim Dorsey

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  Prologue

  Central Florida

  Late one night in the state’s largest retirement community, a sixty-eight-year-old woman and her younger boyfriend were arrested for having public sex in the town square.

  The police officer found them at ten thirty with underwear down, still going at it against the side of something called the Bait Shack.

  The press went ape.

  Media around the country eagerly picked up the story, and the Daily Mail from London actually flew an undercover reporter across the ocean, who came back with sordid tales of a thriving swingers’ scene, a black market in Viagra, and drunk driving in golf carts.

  The community quickly swung into action. A local bar introduced a new rum drink called “Sex on the Square” for $3.75 that sold briskly during the early-bird hour. The morning paper published the recipe.

  A Few Weeks Later

  An hour northeast of Disney World, a banana-yellow 1970 Ford Falcon took the Wildwood exit off Interstate 75.

  The muscle car zigzagged its way across Sumter County until it parked at a curb outside the manicured entrance of a gated community with large cursive letters on a decorative sign:

  The Villages.

  Serge raised heavy binoculars. “There it is. Biggest retirement biozone in the known universe, the size of Manhattan, a hundred and twenty thousand strong.”

  Coleman fired up a doobie with one hand and drained a Schlitz with the other. “You mean the place with the sex scandal you’ve been talking about?”

  “It’s age discrimination, I tell you!”

  Coleman fit the end of the joint into a citrus marmalade jar. “Explain.”

  “Where do I even begin?” Serge threw his arms up. “Total prejudice against seniors, not to mention gender bias. Nearly every headline was like, ‘Grandma Arrested for Public Sex.’ Grandma! You never see a headline ‘Grandpa Elected President.’”

  Coleman exhaled a hit. “It’s just wrong.”

  “But then there’s the upside,” said Serge. “The nation has all these viciously unfair stereotypes about Florida’s beloved retirees down here in ‘God’s waiting room.’ Bluehair, cotton-top, geezer, old biddy, old bag, old coot, old codger, old fart, over the hill, worm food, corpse-lite, junior varsity cadaver. What better way to combat the false images than outdoor fucking? Admittedly it might be a bit of an overcorrection, but you can only push people so far.”

  “She did what she had to,” said Coleman.

  “But here’s the worst part,” said Serge. “She got sentenced to six months! When I first heard that, I’m thinking suspended sentence, probation, community service. But no, a half year in a real jail. Even with time off for good behavior, she still ended up serving a full four and a half months. And to protect us from what? Has the whole world gone crazy?”

  “What about all those highway signs around here announcing Silver Alerts when some confused old dude gets ahold of the car keys?” asked Coleman.

  “Down here they find an average of one guy a day driving the wrong way on the interstate,” said Serge. “Just validates my point even more. See, these people are crazy like foxes. They’ve figured out that advanced age is a VIP pass to aberrant behavior. Because of the rampant prejudice against seniors, almost any stunt they pull is dismissed as befuddlement. So whenever they feel like it, they just take off on an adventure until the police gently step in. ‘Sir, hand me the car keys and we’ll get you back to the home and everything will be okay.’ Meanwhile, he’s giggling his ass off again with that strip-club smell.”

  “Never thought of it that way.” Coleman looked down at himself. “Serge, why are we dressed like this?”

  “I told you. We’re retired.”

  “But I thought you meant like in those movies when a legendary safecracker says he’s retired, and it means he’s decided to give up the life and go straight.”

  “No, I meant literally retired.” Serge picked up a camera with a giant zoom lens and aimed it out the window. “The country has changed drastically in the past few years, and not for the better. I’m tired of the growing sector of young people in this country who have so much, yet bicker relentlessly. They blame anyone who looks, talks or smells different. They blame anyone who has more money than they do. They blame anyone who has less money. And if someone has the exact same amount of money, they must have cheated, so fuck them, too. Their middle fingers are permanently extended while driving . . .”

  A horn blared as a Chevy went by. “There’s one right now,” said Coleman. “I think you’re blocking a lane.”

  “. . . Retirees, on the other hand, have the gift of wisdom in spades. No time for pointlessness. They spend each precious day on this little rock of a planet just being happy because it’s the only agenda that makes sense. True, they talk a little too long with the grocery cashier about their spastic colon, but among their people that’s like a peace pipe.”

  “What about the so-called Condo Commandos?”

  “A Samsonite chair is occasionally flung at the monthly meetings, but that’s the exception that proves the rule. I’m looking forward to the aqua-aerobics classes.”

  Coleman looked down again. “I don’t know about these clothes.”

  “I do,” said Serge. “That’s another gem of their life philosophy that should be a song: ‘Dress Like You Just Don’t Care.’ . . . See? I’ve got my orange shorts, my calf-high black socks and, most important of all, my white belt. White belts are key.”

  The car began slowly rolling forward. The camera poked out the window toward the sidewalk. Click, click, click.

  Coleman scratched his head. “You’re taking photos of that old woman on a motorized scooter?”

  “To accompany my oral-record project.” Click, click, click. “These people have so much knowledge to share that could soon be lost forever. I missed out on the Greatest Generation, and I’m not about to repeat that mistake.”

  “What’s an oral record?”

  “Observe,” said Serge, crossing over to the wrong side of the street and pulling alongside the scooter. He stuck a microphone out the window. “Hey, Grandma! . . . Oops, sorry, I screwed that up. I meant sage, oracle, guru . . . Just a few questions for the permanent record. The sex scandal in your town square: Bum Rap or Badge of Pride. Your thoughts?”

  “Get lost, pervert.” The scooter inched away.

  Serge sighed in disappointment.
“The healing process isn’t complete.”

  Coleman pointed. “Here comes another scooter.”

  This time an old man in a porkpie hat. The microphone went back out the window. “Hey, Gramps! . . . Damn! Did it again. I meant mahatma . . . How does it feel to be part of the Second-Greatest Generation?”

  “Don’t hurt me!”

  “What? No! You misunderstood!” Serge stopped at the curb and let the scooter drive away. “Good luck with the colon!”

  “Uh-oh,” said Coleman. “Don’t look now, but it’s the police.”

  Serge turned around. “No, just a security guard. They think they’re the police, which is scarier, and it’s safest for all to play along with the delusion. Hide the dope.”

  A golf cart stopped next to the muscle car, and the guard approached the driver’s window. “Excuse me, but what’s with that camera and microphone?”

  “And on the wrong side of the road,” said Serge. “I’m confused.”

  “What?”

  “I’m retired. You have to let me get away with anything.”

  The guard stood upright and squinted. “Retired? But you’re not old.”

  “I’m wearing a white belt.”

  The guard paused. “What exactly are you doing here?”

  “Looking for a place to live in the Villages.”

  “But it’s age-restricted,” said the guard.

  Serge tapped the white belt.

  “Look,” said the guard. “Technically, you’re not doing anything wrong, except wrong-side parking, but . . . it’s just weird.”

  “What if I promise to put the camera and microphone away?” said Serge. “Then can we go in the Villages and look for a place to buy? For when we’re old enough? What do you say, Officer?”

  The guard thinking: He called me Officer. For some reason, I kind of like this guy. “Well, okay, but don’t bother anybody.”

  “Thank you, Sergeant.” They drove away from the curb and pulled through the entrance.

  “Look at these cool homes.” Coleman’s head hung out the window. “They’re all so . . . clean.”

  “It’s the Villages,” said Serge. “I even know a few people who live here. Couldn’t be nicer folks. That’s why it hacks me off when people snicker about this place . . . Really? Some woman copulating al fresco is this community’s idea of a crime wave? What’s your neighborhood like? . . . But they still talk.”

  “Because of the scandal?”

  “Actually started a couple years before that when it was reported that this place had the highest STD rate in all of Florida.”

  “Wow.” Coleman looked out the window at residents pruning yards. “These people are cool!”

  “I know,” said Serge. “Except the press reported it like it was a bad thing. But the way I see it, if you can put Joe DiMaggio–like STD stats up on the scoreboard, it means you’re too busy with the important stuff to waste time bad-mouthing restroom policies and Mexicans.”

  “You always see the big picture,” said Coleman.

  “And I’ve seen enough here,” said Serge, turning the car around in the town square. “I can’t hang with the construction methods. As nice as these people are, everything’s so new.”

  “New is bad?” said Coleman.

  “Except for seafood and toilet paper, new is terrible. New is a crisis,” said Serge. “Give me a retirement home with jalousie windows and terrazzo floors and I’ll die a happy man. Oh, and those old racks of folding trays every home used to have. You’d open one of the trays in front of a chair in the living room to eat a TV dinner. And not today’s fraudulent microwave stuff that isn’t even called a TV dinner, but the original ones that spelled quality with real aluminum foil and niblets.”

  “What about lawn jockeys?”

  “Coleman, can we please have a serious discussion?”

  “Sorry.” Coleman furtively re-lit the joint between his knees. “So what happens now?”

  “We need to find a vintage retirement home, and I know just where to look,” said Serge. “Florida already has the Gold Coast, the Treasure Coast, the Space Coast, the Nature Coast. But over here, from Sarasota to Venice to Naples and all the way to Marco Island, southwest Florida is the Retirement Coast. I just coined that.”

  “So what do I have to do to be retired?”

  “Don’t work and do whatever you feel like all day.”

  “I’m officially retired.”

  The Falcon sped south.

  Washington, D.C.

  A large, austere concrete building stood at 935 Pennsylvania Avenue, just down the street from the White House. Architecturally anemic. If the windows were narrower, you’d think it was a federal prison. Inside, some of the nation’s most important and sensitive business.

  Men in black ties sat around a conference table in one of those fortified rooms that couldn’t be penetrated by microwaves. A map of Florida hung on the wall with colored pushpins scattered from Orlando to the Everglades.

  The national headquarters of the FBI.

  A man named McCreedy entered the room, and everyone stood.

  “Sit, sit.” He opened a file code-named Wildfire. “Any updates?”

  “Two more victims discovered this morning,” said an agent on the end. “Cleanup detail already on-site.”

  McCreedy flipped pages. “Pattern?”

  “Still mostly in retirement communities.”

  “That would fit the timeline.” McCreedy closed his file. “Now, does anyone have any idea how in the hell this could ever have happened? I was told we had safeguards.”

  “We do,” said the agent. “But there was a data breach. Stolen, leaked, hacked—it’s anyone’s guess.”

  “Take Johnson and Barber and use my jet. Coordinate with the local office.” He stood, and everyone got in motion.

  Chapter 1

  The Mouth of Tampa Bay

  Cargo ships and fishing boats and yachts. Pelicans and gulls and dolphins. Gopher tortoises sunned on islands in the stream. It was another postcard-ready afternoon as a 1970 Ford Falcon crossed the Sunshine Skyway Bridge on its way to Interstate 75 and points south.

  “Binoculars!” said Serge.

  “Check!” said Coleman.

  “Camera!”

  “Check!”

  “Tape recorder with anti-static microphone!”

  “Check!”

  “Checklist!”

  “Check!”

  Serge took his hands off the wheel and rubbed his palms together. “This is going to be so excellent! The first stop on the Retirement Coast! Our quest begins for the perfect place to spend our golden years, and Florida has everything! Which demands evaluating all options, or we could pick the wrong place, and then we’re stuck in a reverse-mortgage gulag with a life sentence of silently playing bridge together and reading the obituaries with magnifying glasses.”

  Coleman pulled out a paring knife and piece of fruit. “So where to?”

  “Our fantastic initial destination! Sarasota, the internationally famed City of the Arts!” Serge grabbed a 7-Eleven cup of coffee from a drink holder and chugged. “Their official slogan is actually ‘Where urban amenities meet small-town living.’ You can look it up. But thankfully that little chestnut is like a crazy uncle they keep locked in the attic. Otherwise, the place is a magnificent jewel on the Gulf of Mexico with sophistication on steroids: the opera house, the repertory theater, the ballet, the galleries, the Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall, the Ringling Museum, the Asolo, the WPA-era auditorium, schools of architecture and design, and myriad other public sculptures, paintings, film fests and all-purpose art jamborees spraying out everywhere along the roadsides as if the city’s cultural sphincter needs attention. True, most of the retirees near the bay live in prohibitively expensive villas, but inland along the interstate are many affordable and adorable retirement trailer parks.”

  “Trailers?” asked Coleman.

  “I know what you’re thinking,” said Serge. “Another unfair stigma. That’s
why the trailer companies have been working on their image like the cure for cancer. It’s the only industry where the primary objective is to make their product not look like their product. And it succeeded! They’re now producing beautiful house-like hamster warrens with little to indicate that they’re secretly mobile homes, except when a hurricane comes through, but that also destroys the evidence.” Serge looked sideways toward the passenger seat. “A bong out of a pineapple?”

  “Healthier.” Coleman lit the bowl.

  “And more conspicuous,” said Serge. “What will a cop think if he drives by?”

  “That I’m eating a pineapple.”

  “And setting the top on fire? Not to mention that most people cut the outside off first.”

  “Is that the part with those pointy things that keep sticking me in the face? It hurts.”

  “Another marvel of nature’s balance. Many plants and animals have developed ingenious defenses against predators. Lizards changing color to blend in with rocks, an octopus shooting ink to escape in a cloud, pineapples poking potheads . . . Stay sharp, we’re getting close.”

  “But, Serge, retirement sounds too good to be true!” said Coleman. “There must be a catch!”

  “And that’s what everyone thinks,” said Serge. “The populace has been brainwashed. The key to life is realizing that all our years are golden, and the sooner you retire the better. Except the deal is so fabulous that secret global interests are rationing retirement to retirees. We may need fake IDs.”

  “I like the idea of adult diapers,” said Coleman. “There’s too much pressure as it is, so that’s just one less thing, you know?”

  “My favorite part will be hanging out with cool seniors who learned life’s real values from growing up in the old times,” said Serge, “and aggressively shunning the rest of today’s society that’s racing off the cliff. Who would have thought our culture would end this way? My money was on the rise of totalitarianism and thought-police in black visors swinging down on ropes crashing through our windows. Or maybe the computers would become self-aware and rise up, sending out the Terminator robots, and survivors are forced to live underground with stockpiles of canned Friskies. But no, the current collapse is a dystopia of crabbiness.”