28
Petra starts to ask something, then changes her mind.
“What?” Cheerful asks.
As pretty as the woman is, Cheerful's getting tired of her sitting around the office waiting for Boone to get back. It's a bad idea, clients involving themselves in the minute-by-minute of a case. They should pay the bill, back off, and wait for results. He mumbles something to that effect.
“Sorry?” Petra asks.
“If you have something on your mind,” Cheerful says, “get it off.”
“Boone used to be a police officer?” Petra asks.
“You already knew that,” Cheerful says. This girl does her homework, Cheerful thinks. She'd have done due diligence on Boone.
“What happened?” Petra asks.
“Why do you think that's any of your business?” Cheerful asks.
“Well… I don't…”
Cheerful looks up from the adding machine. It's the first time he's seen this girl nonplussed. “What I mean is,” he says, “are you asking as a client, or as a friend?”
Because there's a difference.
“I'm not asking as a client,” Petra says.
“Boone pulled his own pin,” Cheerful says. “He wasn't thrown out. It wasn't for taking money or anything like that.”
“I didn't think that,” Petra says. She saw the interaction between Boone and the detective at the motel. She didn't hear what was said, but she saw that Boone had to be restrained. It was rather intense. “Money doesn't seem to be a priority for him.”
“Boone's too lazy to steal?” Cheerful says.
“I'm not trying to pick a fight. I was just wondering.”
“It had to do with a girl,” Cheerful snaps.
Of course, Petra thinks. Of course it did. She looks at Cheerful as if to say, Go on, but Cheerful leaves it at that.
She seems like a good person, but it's early.
Some stories have to be earned.
29
Rain Sweeny was six years old when she disappeared from the front yard of her house.
Just like that.
Gone.
Her mother had been out there with her, heard the phone ring, and went in to answer it. She was only gone a minute, she'd say between sobs at the inevitable press conferences later. A beautiful summer day, a little girl playing out in her yard in a nice middle-class neighborhood in Mira Mesa, and then Tragedy.
It didn't take long for the cops to get a lead on who did it. Russ Rasmussen, a two-time loser with a “short eyes” sheet, was renting a room in a house just down the street. When the detectives went to interview him, he was gone, and the neighbors said that they hadn't seen his green '86 Corolla parked on the street since the afternoon that Rain went missing.
Coincidence, maybe, but no one believes in that kind of coincidence.
An APB went out on Russ Rasmussen.
Boone had been on the force for three years. He loved his job; he loved it. It was just perfect for him-active, physical, something new happening every night. He'd come off his shift and go straight to the beach in time for The Dawn Patrol, then get some breakfast at The Sundowner and go home to his little apartment to grab some sleep.
Then get up and do it all over again.
It was perfection.
He had his job, he had Sunny, and he had the ocean.
Never turn your back on the ocean.
That's what Boone's dad always taught him: Never get relaxed and turn your back on the ocean, because the second you do, that big wave is going to come out of nowhere and smack you down.
A week after Rain Sweeny was kidnapped, Boone was cruising one night with his partner, Steve Harrington, who had just tested out and was headed to the Detective Division. It had been a quiet night, and they were taking a spin down through the east part of the Gaslamp District, over near the warehouses that the tweekers liked to break into, when they spotted a green '86 Corolla parked in an alley.
“Did you see that?” Boone asked Harrington.
“See what?”
Boone pointed it out.
Harrington pulled over to the entrance to the alley and flashed a lamp on the car's license plate.
“Holy shit,” Harrington said.
It was Rasmussen's car.
The man was sound asleep in the front seat.
“I'd have thought he'd be far away by now,” Harrington said.
“Should I call it in?” Boone asked.
“Fuck that,” Harrington said. He got out of the cruiser, pulled his weapon, and approached the car. Boone got out on the passenger side and walked behind him and to the side, covering him. Harrington holstered his weapon, jerked the Corolla door open, and yanked Rasmussen out of the car. Before Rasmussen could wake up and start screaming, Harrington dropped a knee on his neck, twisted his arm behind his back, and cuffed him.
Boone slipped his revolver back into its holster as Harrington hauled Rasmussen to his feet and pushed him against the car. Rasmussen was a big man, over two and a half bills, but Harrington lifted him like he weighed nothing. The cop's adrenaline was screeching.
So was Boone's as he walked back to the cruiser.
“Stay off that fucking radio,” Harrington snapped.
Boone stopped in his tracks.
“Help me get him in the car,” Harrington said.
Boone grabbed one of Rasmussen's elbows and helped Harrington drag him to the black-and-white, then held Rasmussen's head down as Harrington pushed him into the seat. Harrington slammed the door shut and looked at Boone.
“What?” Harrington asked.
“Nothing,” Boone said. “Let's just get him to the house.”
“We're not going to the house.”
“The orders are-”
“Yeah, I know what the orders are,” Harrington said. “And I know what the orders mean. The orders mean under no circumstances do you bring him in until he's told you what he did with the girl.”
“I don't know, Steve.”
“I do,” Harrington said. “Look, Boone, if we take him to the house, he'll lawyer up and we'll never find out where that little girl is.”
“So-”
“So we take him down to the water,” Harrington said. “We hold his head under until he decides to tell us