“So you went over to the house.”

Mike let out a brief sigh. “I did. I wanted to call the police. It was an accident, I told her. They’d understand. But she refused to let me. She said we had to hide the body.”

“So you grabbed the tarp from your truck.”

“I couldn’t think of anything else to do,” Captain Mike admitted. “I wanted to take the body out of the house, put it in the truck, and dump it somewhere in the woods behind Sedley’s place. Make it look like an accident. No one would have ever known what’d really happened to him. But Charlotte almost went to pieces on me. It took all our efforts just to get the body down to the basement.” He paused, and looked over at her. “She offered to pay me. She talked about a lot of money. But I told her no.”

“Why?” Candy asked, tilting her head in surprise.

He looked down at the table. “Well... I’d rather not say.”

Suddenly, seeing the look in his eyes, Candy knew. “You cared for her, didn’t you?”

He still wouldn’t look up at her. “Yup. Yup, maybe I did.”

Candy sat back and was silent. After a few moments, she said, “Can I ask you another question?”

Captain Mike chuckled. He finally looked up. “What else do you want to know?”

“Well, last night. You knew I was digging around town, trying to find out what happened to Charlotte and Mr. Sedley. So why give me those clues yesterday like you did? And why help me last night? You knew I might figure out what really happened. And yet, you and your friends saved us — me and Bob.”

“We did.”

“Why?”

Captain Mike eyed her again. “Well, that’s what we do in this town, Miss Holliday. We help each other out when we’re in trouble. You would have done the same thing for me, wouldn’t you?”

“Of course,” Candy said, and she meant it.

“ ’Course you would. You’re a Caper. It’s what we do around here. That’s one reason I helped Charlotte. She needed my help. I couldn’t say no to her.”

Candy smiled. “Thanks,” she said.

“For what?”

“For calling me a Caper.”

He smiled too. “Well, you are, aren’t you? Might as well admit it. And I’ve read your column, you know. Yup, I’ve read it. And, well, it’s pretty damn good.”

“Thanks, Captain Mike.”

“Anytime, Candy.”

“So.” She leaned forward again and crossed her arms on the table. “One last question.”

He grinned. “Last one? Promise?”

“Promise.”

“Okay, shoot.”

“What happens now?”

Captain Mike’s expression turned serious again. “I was afraid you were gonna ask me something like that. But, of course, you’re right, ain’t ya? We gotta do something about this, don’t we?”

“We do.”

“And I suppose you have a suggestion?”

“I do. We have to go to the police and tell them exactly what happened.”

“Do we now?”

“We do.”

“I have another suggestion,” Captain Mike said.

“And what might that be?”

“Well, you see,” and he pointed out the front door with a steady finger, “I have a boat moored right out there at that dock. And I’m thinking about taking her out right about now.”

Candy thought about that for a moment. “Where would you go?”

“Oh” — he waved a hand in a general eastward direction — “out that way somewhere.”

“When do you think you’ll be back?” Candy asked.

Captain Mike took a long swig of beer, smacked his lips, and shook his head. “I don’t really know.”

Candy looked toward the tavern’s wall, and beyond it, as if she could see right through it, all the way past the buildings and the trees and the rocks, and out over the coastline to the sea beyond. “It looks like it’s pretty rough out there today.”

“I know,” Captain Mike said with a satisfied look on his face, “and that’s just the way I like it.”

Forty-Three

Four days later, on Saturday afternoon, Candy and Maggie sat at an outside table on a second-floor deck overlooking the busy wharves of the city of Portland and the Fore River beyond. They were at a popular chowder house, sipping strawberry margaritas and enjoying the unseasonably warm day. Most of the tables around them were filled with chattering guests, and Candy could hear music playing somewhere nearby. From where she sat, she could see, out on the river, an amphibious duck boat chugging upstream, giving sightseers an aquatic view of the city.

“This is nice,” Maggie said, tilting her face back to catch the sun’s rays. “I’m glad we decided to do this.”

“Me too,” Candy agreed.

“Too bad Wilma Mae can’t be here to enjoy it with us.”

“Yes, it is. But I think she’ll be happy. It’s probably for the best.”

“True, true. Still, I’m going to miss her. She’s a sweet old lady. And we were becoming such good friends. Although she kept beating me at pinochle. I think she cheated.”

Candy laughed. “Wilma Mae didn’t cheat.”

“Sure she did. I think she kept a few cards stuffed up her sleeves — or maybe down her blouse.”

They both laughed at the disjointed image of prim and proper Wilma Mae Wendell cheating at cards.

They’d dropped Wilma Mae off at the Portland Jetport earlier in the day. The elderly woman was flying out to California to move in with her sister. A change in scenery was just the thing she needed, she’d decided a couple of days ago, right after Mr. Sedley’s funeral on Thursday morning. Wilma Mae’s sister had invited her out for a permanent visit. She’d even booked a cruise, just for the two of them. They were headed up the Pacific coast to Alaska on a fourteen-day seafaring adventure the following week, and Wilma Mae was greatly looking forward to it.

It had been a frantic forty-eight hours, getting the elderly woman packed and her house closed up. Candy and Maggie agreed to keep an eye on it for her until she decided what to do with it. But she knew she’d never live in it again.

And they knew they might never see Wilma Mae again.

“Well, at least things can start getting back to normal,” Candy said, and she looked over at her friend. “Even for you. So you’re going back to work, huh?”

Maggie beamed. “I sure am. I heard from Mr. Gumm yesterday. I start working at the hardware store on Monday.”

“And how much do you know about hardware?” Candy asked.

Maggie beamed even broader. “Absolutely nothing! But Cameron promised to teach me everything he knows. I can’t pass up a deal like that. But mostly I’m just going to run the cash register to start.”

“Well, that certainly sounds exciting.”

“It’s not much money,” Maggie said with a sigh, “but it’s a start. I’ll work my way back up in this town again. Just you wait and see.”

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