One of the fishermen, see? It was like, who the hell are these outsiders coming in telling us what we can and can't do? So I can understand that a little bit. It was pretty nasty. Seeing it happen, you know? What happened to the people.'
I said, 'Oysterman, huh?'
He held out his arms and smiled. 'I didn't get these forearms in a weight room. Tonging oysters; a forty- five-pound rake. My grandfather'd drop a galvanized chain off the stern of the boat. He could tell when we were on oysters by holding the chain, feeling the vibrations. Made a pretty fair living, too. I bought myself my first car with tonging money. But it wasn't the environmentalists who finally put us out ofbusiness. It was the way the water quality went to hell when all the new people started flooding in.'
I said, 'So you do know a little bit about it.'
He was nodding. 'About the kind of people involved. I imagine they're about the same. Most of them are pretty good people. Solid. Don't ask for anything, stay out of trouble. In D.C., the kids couldn't wait until they were old enough to qualify for welfare. First of the month, some of the lines were four blocks long. On the Chesapeake, a lot of those men and women, the government couldn't force them to take it. Welfare? Not them—they had too much self-respect. Personally, Ford, I admire that. I don't know much about the situation here. Maybe it was smart to ban the nets, maybe it's all a bunch of crap. I do know it's a shitty situation. And I know . . . well, there was this thing that happened when I was a kid.' He made an effort to continue, then: 'Ah, hell—'
I tried to goad him along. 'You mean with the commercial fishermen.'
Jackson thought for a moment, not sure he wanted to go into it. Finally, he said, 'Let's just say I saw what can happen when people are pushed into a corner. I was like, seventeen, and this kid I knew got burned really bad. For what? Some idiotic demonstration. Trying to get even because his dad had to sell out, look for new work. It's not a nice thing to see.'
'No, I imagine not,' I said.
'Five thousand people get laid ofFby General Motors, it's no big deal, right? But somehow, it's different when it happens to people who . . . just do what they do, on their own. No unions to back them up, just them, just people. Know what I mean? So what I'm saying is, I'd like to get in there, if I can, and stop some of it before it starts. Yeah, I'd love to nail the whole Jimmy Darroux business shut. But I'd also like to get the right people under my thumb before anyone else gets hurt.' He looked at me. 'To do that, to stop anything, I need information.'
Which I had already guessed. I said, 'You think because Tomlinson is involved with Hannah Darroux, I can pry information out of him, then feed it to you.'
'Maybe. She's an important woman on that island. People wouldn't tell me much, but I learned that. She's an insider, and I'd be willing to bet she knows a hell of a lot more than she told me or the A.T.F. guys. But no—' He was making his gesture of impatience again. Apparently, we were getting off track. 'Where you could help is, the people I talked to on Sulphur Wells, the people I've talked to around here. Your name kept popping up.'
'Oh?'
'Yeah. That surprise you?' Jackson had a crafty, troublemaker's smile. 'Maybe you were with the National Security Agency so long you're not used to that. Where you were a ... a paper shuffler, right?'
Who the hell had he been talking to? 'What I am,' I said, 'is a biologist.'
His expression said:
'I know quite a few of them, yeah.'
'This guy on Sulphur Wells—Tootsie Cribbs?—he told me you were about the only so-called sportfishing guy who came down on the side of the netters. He said you spoke for them a couple times at meetings.'
I'd known Tootsie since high school. He ran a little fish wholesale place in Curlew. 'I did that. Yeah.'
'People on both sides of the line know you, they respect you. That's the way I read it. Couple of people on Sulphur Wells mentioned you. Said you come over there sometimes and buy fish and stuff for your lab. Know what they said?' He looked very smug—I was the guy he'd lured into a schoolyard footrace. 'What they said was, they think you're fair.'
I said, 'Spare me the flattery.'
'No, I'm serious. Fair. That's the word.'
'They think that? Good. But what you're saying is, you think I can act as an intermediary. My question is: What's left to mediate?'
'For one thing, I know some of the sportfishing guys are going around with guns. That's bullshit. They catch someone stealing their outboard, what they gonna do, blow them away? Kill somebody over a motor? You can start there. Talk it around among your friends. Reason with them. They ever shoot anybody before? They have any idea what it's like?'
I got the impression that Ron Jackson had . . . and did.
'And on Sulphur Wells . . . some of the other commercial places, too. I've heard—not from a very good source—but I've heard they have some real nasty stuff planned. Most of it's probably talk. People, you get them loaded up on whiskey . . . hell, you know the type. They like to talk big, but very few are actually stupid enough to do the big deed. That report about somebody stretching a cable across some markers—' He gave me a nudge:
'That's your proposition? I find out what I can, help you keep a lid on things?'
He was nodding. 'How many times do cops have a chance to stop trouble before it starts? Yeah, you could help me do that. Little things. You hear something, you give me a call. We get back, I'll give you my cellular number, my beeper. Anytime, day or night.' Ron was pleased with how this was going. I could tell. 'Up on the Chesapeake,' he said, 'maybe if some cop had jumped into the middle of things, Terry . . . that friend of mine . . . would have lived beyond the ripe old age of nineteen.'
'There's one thing you've left out.'
'There is?'
'Yeah. The bomb. Tell me about Darroux's bomb. Why it's got you on the move. Why you don't believe he built it by himself.'
'I never said that.'
'Let's not play games. Darroux was the impulsive type, right? He gets mad, he starts a brawl. His wife tries to lock him out, he smacks her. A guy like him wants revenge, he might steal some engines, or he might dump some gas and light it. My guess is, you read him the same way. But your people found something at the marina, something at the bomb site, that tells you whoever made the bomb had to do a little tinkering first. They had to sit down and think it out. That wasn't Darroux's style.' In reply to his quizzical glance, I said, 'You know a little bit about fishing. I know a little bit about bombs. Accelerant flare, remember? Point of detonation?'
'Okay. So, if you were a pissed-off netter and wanted to torch some boats, how would you have done it?'
'You trying to steer me off the subject?'
'No. I'm trying to decide if it would make any difference me telling you something I'm not authorized to tell you.'
I thought for a moment before saying, 'Do you want casualties, or just structural damage?'
'That's the scary thing. I don't think the people who built this bomb cared.'
'That simplifies it. Then all you need is an initiator, a power source, and the accelerant. The accelerant is easy—go to a gas station or any hardware store.' I touched the cheap Ironman model watch on my wrist. 'I've got enough voltage right here to detonate a standard commercial blasting cap. So power source is no problem. But even that's a lot more complicated than it needs to be.'
I described a couple ofbasic explosive devices—booby traps, they were once called.
When I was done, Jackson gave a soft whistle. 'The first two, I've heard about. Lids from a tin can, a clothespin. Sure. Very effective, very easy. But that last one. A Ping-Pong ball and a hypodermic needle? Jesus, that