stayed at the shelter. She turned up dead in Paradise. Norman Shaw lived in Paradise. Norman Shaw knew Gino Fish. Put all of that together, give it to a skilled prosecutor, who’ll take it to the grand jury, and there will be no chance of an indictment. He could bust Garner and try to turn him, but the chances that Garner would testify against Gino were very slim. And it would send everybody else scurrying underground. If Shaw was in fact being supplied with very young girls, it probably would happen again. We know that, Jesse thought, maybe we can turn him. What about Joni Shaw? Could she be married to a pedophile and not know it? Did pedophiles have active adult sex lives? Joni was a lot younger than Shaw. Was she the first wife? If she wasn’t, what had ended the previous marriage?

He got up and walked to the front desk where Molly was reading an issue of Martha Stewart Living.

“You ever read Norman Shaw’s books?” Jesse said.

“Sure. I got every one,” Molly said. “He’s great.”

Jesse nodded, but not as if he believed her.

“How many are there?”

“Ten, I think. At least in paperback.”

“You got them at home?” he said.

“Sure.”

“I’ll take the desk,” Jesse said. “Go home and get them.”

“All ten?”

“Yeah.”

Molly stared at him for a moment. But she didn’t say anything. Jesse was Jesse. She dog-eared Martha Stewart, put it down, got up, and went.

While she was gone, Jesse took a call about a missing bicycle, and a call reporting a rabid skunk and could someone come over and shoot it. Jesse took down the missing-bicycle information and left it on the desk for Molly. He called John Maguire on the radio and told him to go shoot the skunk.

“Make sure there’s no bubble gum wrappers in the shotgun barrel,” he said.

“Hey,” Maguire said, “I’m a law-enforcement professional.”

“Yes you are,” Jesse said. “Go enforce that skunk.”

Molly came back into the police station with a plastic supermarket bag filled with paperback books. Jesse turned the desk over to her and took the books into his office. His coffee was gone. He poured some more. Added a lot of sugar. The less booze he drank, the more coffee he drank. Jittery was better than drunk. He sat down and pulled one of Shaw’s books out of the grocery bag. The title Outcast was embossed in raised gold letters on the front cover. On the back cover was a picture of Norman Shaw. He looked a lot younger in the picture than he had with his forehead resting on his grilled scrod the last time Jesse had seen him. Jesse glanced through the text. The book was 456 pages long. Jesse wasn’t sure he had read a total of 456 pages in his life. In the front of the book were three pages of quotes from newspaper reviews, all of them favorable, another page listing Shaw’s other books and a dedication page. The dedication in Outcast was “To Joni, who rescued me in time.” Jesse looked for a date. The book had been published the year before. Jesse looked through the front matter in the other books. The previous book was dedicated “To Arlene: Toward the sunset—together.” The publication dates were four years apart. Three books previous had been dedicated “To Cheryl: Till the End of Time.” Jesse read a few pages of Outcast. He didn’t like it. He put the books away and finished his coffee and got up and walked across the street to the Paradise Public Library.

He liked the library. It was one of those nineteenth-century brick-and-brownstone buildings that could just as easily have been a fire station or a jail. The research librarian smiled at him as he went by the desk. She didn’t seem like a librarian. She had a good body. She wore tight clothes. And she always looked at him as if they were sharing a private joke.

He sat at a table and looked up Norman Shaw in Who’s Who. He had been born in Bronxville, NY, August 26, 1945 s. Samuel G and Andrea (Vogal) L; m. Cheryl Anne Masters, June 5, 1975 (div. 1979); m. Arlene Marie Greene, April 21, 1980 (div. 1985); m. Felicia Jane Feinman, Oct. 16, 1989 (div. 1996); m. Joan Harriet Roth, May 21, 1999.

No book for Felicia? Or a dedication to his lawyer?

Jesse copied the Shaw entry and took it back with him across the street to his office. He handed the sheet to Molly.

“Do your phone magic,” he said. “See if you can come up with one or more of the ex-wives.”

“In between times,” Molly said. “When I’m not running the department.”

“That would be good,” Jesse said.

Chapter Fifty-three

“Are you still seeing Dix?” Jenn asked.

They were on the footbridge over Storrow Drive, near the Hatch shell, walking toward the river.

“I am,” Jesse said.

“And?”

Jesse shrugged.

“And I’m talking with him.”

“Do you feel you’re making progress?” Jenn said.

“I might be,” Jesse said.

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