they separated. And when she quickly agreed to a divorce after his world fell in, well, he couldn't say he'd spent a lot of time crying about it.
And yet he'd survived it all and rebuilt his life. And now?
He slowly climbed back on board the jet boat, wrapped a towel he kept in the boat around his middle and drove back. Instead of going to his dock, he cut the engine and running lights and pulled into a small cove a few hundred yards down from his place. King quietly dropped the small mushroom anchor in the water to keep his boat from drifting into the muddy bank. Up near the rear of his house a beam of light was arcing back and forth. He had visitors. Perhaps it was the media sniffing around. Or perhaps, he thought, Howard Jennings's killer had come looking for another score.
11
King quietly waded to shore, put his clothes back on and was now squatting in the darkness behind some bushes. The light still swung back and forth as someone moved through the area that ringed the eastern perimeter of his property. King made his way toward the front of his house shielded by a wall of trees. There was a blue BMW convertible parked in the driveway that he didn't recognize. He was about to go over to it when he decided the best course of action was to get some hardware. With a nice big pistol in hand, he'd feel a lot better about things.
He slipped inside the dark house, got the gun and went back out a side door. The arc of light had disappeared now, and that had him worried. He knelt down and listened. The sharp
He launched himself, hitting the person low and hard and landing on top of him, King's pistol right in his face.
Only it wasn't a him. It was a her! And she had a pistol out too. It was pointed at him, the barrels of the two guns almost touching.
'What in the hell are you doing here?' he said angrily when he saw who it was.
'If you'd get off me, I might have the breath to tell you,' she snapped.
He took his time climbing off, and when she reached a hand out for him to assist her, he ignored it.
She was wearing a skirt, blouse and short jacket. The skirt had slid up to nearly her crotch during the collision. As she struggled to regain her feet, she tugged it back down.
'Are you in the habit of mugging all your visitors?' she said testily as she put her gun back in the waist clip and brushed herself off.
'Most of my visitors don't go sneaking around my property.'
'Nobody answered the front door.'
'Then you go away and call another time. Or didn't your mother teach you?'
She folded her arms across her chest. 'It's been a long time, Sean.'
'Has it? I hadn't noticed. I've been kind of busy with my new life.'
She looked around. 'I can see that. Nice place.'
'What are you doing here, Joan?'
'Came to see an old friend who's in trouble.'
'Really? Who's that?'
She smiled demurely. 'Murder in your office. That's trouble, isn't it?'
'Sure it is. I was talking about the ‘old friend' part.'
She nodded toward the house. 'I've driven a long way. I've heard about the southern hospitality around here. Care to show me some?'
Instead, he contemplated firing a round over her head. Yet the only way he would find out what Joan Dillinger was up to was to play along. 'What sort of hospitality?'
'Well, it's almost nine o'clock and I haven't had dinner. Let's start with that and then go from there,' she said.
'You show up unannounced after all these years and expect me to cook you dinner? You've got some guts.'
'That shouldn't surprise you by now, should it?'
As he fixed the meal, Joan explored the main level of his home, carrying the gin and tonic he'd given her. She perched on the counter in the kitchen while he worked away. 'How's the finger?' she asked.
'It only hurts when I'm seriously ticked off. Sort of like a mood ring. And just so you know, it's throbbing like hell right now.'
She ignored the barb. 'This place is spectacular. I heard that you built it yourself.'
'Gave me something to do.'
'I didn't know you were a carpenter.'
'I worked my way through school building things for people who could afford it. Then I decided what the hell, I'd do it for myself.'
They ate at the table off the kitchen that had a commanding view of the lake. With the meal they drank a bottle of merlot he'd fetched from his wine cellar. Under different circumstances it would have been a very romantic setting.
After dinner they carried their wineglasses into the family room, with its cathedral ceiling and walls of window. When he saw she was shivering some, King turned on the gas fireplace and tossed her a throw blanket. They sat across from each other on leather couches. Joan kicked off her heels and curled her legs up under her and then placed the blanket over them. She raised her glass to him. 'Dinner was fabulous.' She breathed in the wine's bouquet. 'And I see you've added sommelier to your list of credentials.'
'Okay, your belly's full, you're suitably buzzed. Why are you here?'
'When something extraordinary entailing a major criminal investigation happens to a former agent, everybody's interested.'
'And they sent you to see me?'
'I'm at a level where I can send myself.'
'So this is unofficial on your part? Or are you just here to spy for the Service?'
'I'd characterize it as unofficial. I'd like to hear your side of things.'
King cradled his glass, fighting an urge to throw it at her. 'I don'thave a side of things. The man worked for me for a short time. He was killed. Today I found out he was in witness protection. I don't know who killed him. End of story.'
She didn't respond but just stared into the fire. She finally rose, padded over to the fireplace and knelt in front of it, running her hand along the stone facade.
'Carpenter
'I subbed that out. I know my limitations.'
'That's refreshing. Most men I know won't admit to having any.'
'Thanks. But I still want to know why you're here.'
'It has nothing to do with the Service and everything to do with you and me.'
'There is no ‘you and me.' '
'Well, there was. We worked together at the Service for years. We slept together. Given different circumstances we might have moved on to a more permanent arrangement. And I would like to think that if you heard that a man who happened to be in witness protection had been murdered at a place where I worked and my past was being dredged up again, you might come and see how I was coping.'
'I think you'd be wrong about that.'
'Well, that's why I'm here. I wanted to make sure you were all right.'
'I'm glad my miserable situation afforded you this wonderful opportunity to exhibit your compassionate