Victoria kept quiet, but he could read her cross-examining mind.
'Havana Viejo,' Junior helped out. 'Great Cuban food. Plus, Delia's on the Monroe County Environmental Advisory Board. Dad brought her into his circle, tried to get her support. Even offered her a consultant's job in food services at Oceania. Big bucks, little work.'
'In other words, a bribe?' Steve said.
'A well-intended favor,' Junior replied. For a beach bum, he had a way with words.
'If I know Delia, she wouldn't go for it,' Steve said. Feeling Victoria alongside, shifting onto one hip on the love seat.
'Delia told Dad that Oceania was a blight,' Junior continued. 'Worse than drilling for oil. She raised all the bugaboos. Pollution in the Gulf. Traffic congestion at the hydrofoil ports. Increase in crime up and down the Keys. Gambling addictions, poor slobs tossing the rent money into the slots. She was gonna blow the project out of the water. Her exact words.'
'I can picture Delia saying that,' Steve said, 'but I don't see her killing anyone.'
'How would you know that?' Victoria asked, her tone even.
'Some things you intuitively know about people.'
'Just how well do you know her?' Her voice still neutral, so clean as to be positively antiseptic.
'Before you and I met, like a couple years before we met, Delia and I. .'
What was the word? What was the phrase they were using these days? 'Hooked up'? But that was so juvenile, and he was, after all, an adult, at least chronologically.
'Fucked each other's brains out?' Victoria suggested. Ever helpful.
'Well,' Steve said. 'Not only that.'
Her thing was having sex out-of-doors, something that seemed more enticing in the telling than the doing, once you've rolled bare-assed over pine needles a few times. Their long-distance coupling-it's a four-hour drive from Miami-lasted three months. Either she'd run out of locations to expose her ass to the moonlight, or he'd gotten tired of her roasted pork and sweet plantains. He couldn't quite remember which. So his 'not only that' was both misleading and destined to bring another unwanted question.
'What else was it besides sex?' Victoria's tone took on the flavor of the prosecutor she once was. 'Just how would you describe the relationship?'
'Brief,' Steve said. 'I'd describe it as brief.'
'Well, perhaps you'll have some insight into Ms. Bustamante when we interview her.'
Was Steve imagining it, or did Victoria hit the 'we' a little hard?
On the screen, several things happened in the next few moments. Delia seemed to say her good-byes to Fowles and Robinson. Then Fowles offered an arm so she could step onto the dock, showing some tapered calves as she left.
Moments later, the salon door opened again and Griffin walked out, talking over his shoulder to someone following him. Ben Stubbs. Looking considerably better than he had in the ICU. A slim man, in his forties. Skinny legs under baggy khaki shorts, a papershuffler's paunch visible under his polo shirt, deck shoes with socks. He actually looked like a Washington bureaucrat on vacation.
A few more flicks of the cameras, and Griffin was gesturing toward Stubbs. One hand, then the other, then both. Were they angry gestures?
Steve leaned forward. 'Was your father arguing with Stubbs?'
'Don't know. I was up on the bridge, and the radio was on.'
'Did you know your father was stopping at an island to pick up lobsters?'
In the darkness next to him, Junior shrugged. 'Never mentioned it to me.'
On the screen, Robinson and Fowles stepped onto the dock. That left just three people on the boat, the two Griffins and Stubbs. Then Hal Griffin climbed the ladder to the fly bridge, the captain about to take command. Stubbs stayed in the cockpit, plopping down in one of the fighting chairs. On the dock, Fowles came back into view, kneeling near the bow, untying a line from a cleat, and tossing it aboard. Back on the fly bridge, Griffin said something to Junior and gave him an affectionate clop on the shoulder. Junior climbed onto the rail and balanced there a moment, looking like some ancient statue intended to deify the human form. He turned to face the water, his profile to the camera. Even on the grainy video, one thing was clear-that damn bulge in his Speedos.
On the screen, Junior reached over his head, flexed his knees. Then he did a perfect swan dive into the water, clearing the starboard side of the boat by inches and disappearing from view.
'Like I told you before, I went for a swim,' Junior said, casually.
'Really?' Steve said. 'I thought you were auditioning for La Quebrada.'
'The Acapulco cliffs? I dived them when I was in college. Spring break. You?'
'I would have but I was getting arrested in Daytona Beach,' Steve claimed. On the screen, the boat blocked any view of Junior. 'Where'd you swim to?'
'Around the island. Five miles. I do it every day.'
'So when you finished your swim, the cameras would have picked you up again, right?'
'They would, if I'd come back to the dock,' Junior explained. 'But I always finish at the beach, and there aren't any cameras there.'
Meaning an incomplete alibi, Steve thought.
On the dock, Fowles tossed the stern line aboard, and water churned as the engines started up.
Griffin steered the boat toward open water. Stubbs got out of the fighting chair and walked to the rail, smiling and waving to someone onshore. In a moment, the boat was out of camera range.
'So that's it,' Junior said. 'Everybody connected with Oceania was there.'
'But everybody got off the boat, except your father,' Victoria said.
'That doesn't rule out somebody finding a way to get back on,' Steve said.
'Okay,' Junior said. 'Then you've got Clive Fowles, Leicester Robinson, and Delia Bustamante. Three suspects.'
'Four, actually,' Steve said, looking straight at Junior.
Thirteen
The old Caddy was just north of mile marker 106, headed toward Miami. Steve drove, Victoria alongside, with Bobby reading in the backseat. His grandfather had bought a Harry Potter book, but Bobby had left it behind and brought along a collection of John Updike's early stories. The little wizard-Bobby, not Harry- had already gone through his Philip Roth stage.
' 'He was robed in this certainty,' ' Bobby read aloud, ' 'that the God who had lavished such craft upon these worthless birds would not destroy His whole Creation by refusing to let David live forever.' '
'What the hell's that?' Steve demanded.
' 'Pigeon Feathers,' ' Bobby said. 'A boy shoots some pigeons in his family's barn. It's all about the inevitability of death.'
'Jeez, Vic. Did you give that to him?' Steve said.
'Bobby wanted something challenging,' Victoria said.
'How about cleaning his room?' Steve suggested. 'That seems to be quite a challenge.'
'Don't discourage Bobby from reading fine literature,' Victoria said.
'Or how about doing your homework for once, kiddo?'