“I have reason to believe that you are interfering with an ongoing investigation,” Johnny says. “I have reason to believe that you have knowledge material to at least one homicide investigation. I'll get the warrant to search your place, but in the meantime, I'm taking you in on a vandalism charge.”
“Vandalism?”
“Pushing your van through a municipal guardrail,” Johnny says. “Causing a fire on a public beach.”
Boone turns around and puts his hands behind his back. Johnny gets his handcuffs out.
“Cuffs, John?”
“Hey, you want to act like a skell…”
“Is there a problem, Officer?”
A woman comes to the door. Dressed, sort of, in Boone's clothes. Her hair is damp, as if she just came out of the shower. Johnny recognizes her as the woman Boone was with when he arrived at the Crest Motel, the woman who went over and looked at the body. Her accent is clearly English.
“Who are you?” Johnny asks.
“Petra Hall, attorney-at-law.”
Johnny laughs. “Boone's lawyer?”
“Among other things, yes.”
From the looks of her, Johnny has a good idea about what the “other things” are. It's unlike Boone to sleep with clients, but it's hard to blame him in this case. The woman is a stunner, and the voice and the accent are… Well, it's hard to blame him.
“Sorry, Boone,” she says now, “but I couldn't help but overhear a bit of your conversation. I don't know what you think you saw, Officer-”
“Detective,” Johnny says.
“Sorry, Detective, ” Petra says, “but I can assure you that Mr. Daniels was not on any beach tonight. I can… quite personally.. vouch for the fact that he's been snug and warm right here all evening. As for removing Mr. Daniels in handcuffs, I can also assure you that my client will have nothing further to say, that, based on my representations, you no longer have a justification for detaining him, and that, if you do so, I will have a writ of habeas corpus awaiting you when you arrive at what I believe you refer to, somewhat quaintly, as ‘the house.’ Release my client, Detective, immediately.”
Johnny lowers the handcuffs and clips them back on his belt. “Hiding behind women, now, B?”
Boone turns around to look at him. “I've evolved.”
“Apparently,” Johnny says. He looks at Petra. “Tell your ‘client’ that I'll be back with the appropriate paper. Advise him not to go anywhere, Counselor, and I suggest you further advise him that he's risking his PI card with this bullshit. And on the topic of ‘cards,’ I'm sure you know that any attorney, as an officer of the court, who lies to the police in the course of an ongoing investigation-”
“I know the law, Detective.”
“So do I, Counselor, ” Johnny says. He looks at Boone, “I'll be back with a warrant.”
“You do what you have to do, Johnny.”
“Don't worry about that,” Johnny says. “I'm glad you're alive, Boone. But you're riding this one all wrong, selling out for an insurance company. It's turning you into a real jerk.”
He turns and walks down the pier.
Boone watches him go.
Wondering if he'll have any friends when this is over. This case is tearing The Dawn Patrol apart, Boone thinks, and he doesn't know if they'll ever be able to put it back together again.
85
Teddy D-Cup stumbles through the reeds.
Trips, falls, picks himself up, and pushes toward the light of a small campfire in the clearing in front of the little caves.
He's greeted with a shotgun. A teenage boy grabs a machete and gets up. The old man just sits by the fire and looks up at him. Then the man with the shotgun sees Teddy's face and lowers the barrel. “Doctor…”
“їTomas, dуnde estб Luce?”Teddy asks.
“Gone. With the others,” Tomas says.
“їDуnde la encuentro?”Teddy asks. Where do I find her? He's learned a little Spanglish in his days in the reeds.
“You don't.” The guy learned a little English from his days in the reeds.
Teddy sits down heavily in the dirt and puts his head in his hands.
“A madrugada,”Tomas says.
Wait until dawn.
86
Boone stands with one foot on the railing and looks out at the ocean.
Might as well be out in the open. There's no real danger now-Tide's crew has the pier covered. Red Eddie would never try to go through them, and he wouldn't let Dan Silver do it, either.
Johnny B. has gone to try to find a judge in the middle of the night- good luck with that-but has called a black-and-white, which is parked at the end of the pier. Maybe Johnny was right, Boone thinks. Maybe I am becoming an asshole. Just look at what I thought about Tide, that he sold me out to Red Eddie.
A total asshole thing to think.
Johnny was right about something else: Tammy Roddick is a dead woman if she testifies. If they can't kill her to prevent it, they'll kill her to avenge it. And I should have thought of that. Would have thought of it if I wasn't so busy proving to Pete what a hotshot PI I am.
Asshole.
He stares out at the ocean, the whitecaps barely visible in the fog and faint moonlight. The ocean is ripping, getting itself geared up for the big party.
Petra comes up behind him.
“Am I intruding?” she asks. “I mean, any more than usual?”
“No, no more than usual.”
She stands next to him. “Is your swell coming in?”
“Yup.”
“You'll be able to catch it now.”
“Yup.”
“I thought that would make you happy,” she says.
“I thought it would, too,” Boone replies. “You know what the best thing is about a wave?”
“No.”
“A wave,” Boone says, “puts you in your exact place in the universe. Say you're just all full of yourself, you think you're the king of the world, and you go out, and then this wave just slams you-picks you up, throws you down, rolls you, scrapes you along the bottom, and holds you there for a while. Like it's God saying, ‘Listen, speck, when I let you back up, take a gulp of air, and step away from yourself a little bit.’ Or say you're really low; you go out and you're feeling like crap, like's there's not a place for you in the world. You go out there, and the ocean gives you this sweet ride, like it's all just for you, you know? And that's God saying, ‘Welcome, son, it's for you and it's all good.’ Awave always gives you what you need.”
It's cold out. She leans into him. He doesn't move away. A few seconds later, he puts his arm around her shoulders and pulls her tighter.
“I've been thinking about it,” she says.