“Yeah?”
“Do you know a skip tracer?”
Herbie thought for a minute. “No,” he admitted.
“Sit down. I’m going to help you out.”
Stone pressed a button on his phone. “Joan, please get me Mike Freeman at Strategic Services.” He waited a moment.
“Mr. Freeman on one.”
Stone picked up the phone. “Mike?”
“Hello, Stone, welcome back from our nation’s capital. I read of your exploits in some of our worst newspapers.”
“Put it out of your mind, Mike. I have.”
“If you say so.”
“Mike, you’ve met a Woodman and Weld associate named Herbie Fisher, have you not?”
“I have. Nice young fellow.”
“And you know Marshall Brennan?”
“I do. I invest with him.”
“Good. Herbie was sent up to Yale to assist Marshall’s son, Dink, into a bucolic establishment in Connecticut where he was to receive attention for his gambling and drug problem.”
“Sounds like Winwood Farm.”
“One and the same. Unfortunately, in spite of Herbie’s stellar work, young Dink managed to extricate himself from the transportation provided and is now wild in the country.”
“Uh-oh.”
“Herbie is a bright fellow, but he has no experience in the tracing of missing persons. I thought, perhaps, that you might provide him with some assistance.”
“Who’s buying? Herbie?”
“Woodman and Weld, until they can bill Marshall Brennan.”
“I can do that,” Mike said. “Is Herbie with you?”
“Yes, he is.”
“Put him on the phone.”
“Of course.” Stone pointed at Herbie, then at the phone on the coffee table before the sofa in his office.
Herbie went to the sofa and picked up the phone. “Mr. Freeman? Yes, sir. No, sir, I cut up his credit cards and gave his cash to the driver of the Winwood Farm van. He was wearing jeans and a polo shirt and a brown leather jacket and sneakers. I picked him up at his Yale dorm room. No, sir, I don’t know the name of his roommate or his friends, and I don’t know if he has a girlfriend. Yes, sir, I’ll be there in an hour.” Herbie hung up, and turned toward Stone. “Mr. Freeman is on it, and I’m to go to his office.”
“Herbie, you’re about to have a very valuable learning experience. Watch how Mike and his people work and remember everything.”
“Okay, Stone,” Herbie said, getting to his feet.
“And don’t walk, Herbie, it makes you pant and sweat. Take a cab.”
Herbie took his leave.