“Sit tight,” Macklin said to Fran and JD. “Don’t answer the phone unless it’s me. Monitor the calls on the answering machine. We’ll be back in half an hour.”
Mr. Smith and the Indian went out the door and Marcy was alone with the two strange men. They both looked at her silently for a moment and then ignored her.
The Stiles Island Patrol was part of a security company called Citadel Security, which was run by a former Marine captain named Kurt Billups. Billups dressed his men like drill instructors complete with campaign hats tilted sharply down over their noses. There were no fat, aging rent-a-cops on the Stiles Island Patrol. All his men were trim and neat. Their pistol belts were polished. Their shoes gleamed. The khaki shirts had military creases in them. The red and white Ford sedans they drove were always clean. Like most of the patrol, Michael Deering and Dan Moncrief were Marine Corps veterans. Deering had been to the Gulf. Moncrief had spent his full enlistment in San Diego. Deering was driving, and both were drinking the first coffee of the day as they came over the hill on Sea Street with the morning sun warming the car.
They were on the seaward side of Stiles Island, at the point farthest from the bridge. There was a long section of Sea Street reserved as green space by the resort planners. There were no houses on that section, and the trees came down to either side of the road. Kids used it sometimes to drink beer and smoke pot. And people with dogs brought them here to let them run despite the Island leash law. This morning there was a maroon Chevy van skidded off the road, and a man lying in the street beside it. As Deering and Moncrief drove toward the scene, a man struggled out of the van and crouched beside the prone figure. Deering pulled over on the opposite side of the street, and he and Moncrief got out and walked across.
“What happened?” Deering said.
The man on the ground rolled over onto his back and shot Deering through the forehead. Moncrief didn’t even get his hand onto his gun before the man on the ground shot him through the forehead too.
“Nice,” Macklin said.
Crow got up, let the hammer down on his gun, dropped the magazine from the handle, methodically replaced the two rounds, slapped the magazine back up into the handle, and holstered the weapon. Then he and Macklin pulled the two dead men by their ankles into the woods. Macklin stripped the uniform shirt from Deering. Crow began to cover them with leaves and branches. Macklin drove the patrol car into the woods on the other side of the street and piled boughs they had already cut to conceal it.
They got into the van together, Macklin driving, and pulled away. The killings and concealment had taken three minutes and eight seconds.
“Gatekeeper?” Crow said.
“Yep.”
“Who you going to put in there?”
“On the bridge? Fran. He says he can blow the bridge from there.”
“Perfect.”
Chapter 45
Jesse was in the donut shop with Suitcase Simpson. Suitcase had two Boston cream donuts on a paper plate in front of him.
“Suit, those things will kill you,” Jesse said.
“Then I’ll go happy,” Suitcase said and put half of the first donut into his mouth. As he chewed, he fished in his shirt pocket and got out his notebook. Suitcase put the notebook on the counter and leafed through it with his left hand while he held the donut in his right, leaning over the counter so that it wouldn’t leak onto his notebook.
When he got enough of the donut chewed and swallowed, Suitcase said, “I got some stuff on this guy Macklin.”
Jesse sipped his coffee. It was 10:00 in the morning. The donut shop was almost empty after the early commuter rush, and the counter people were bustling around cleaning up napkins and newspapers and throwing away stray paper cups. A guy in a white apron and tee shirt brought out a big basket of new donuts, and the smell of them mixed happily with the scent of coffee.
“Macklin’s a career criminal,” Suit said. “Mostly armed robbery. Got out of MCI Concord about six months ago. Done time in Arizona and Florida and Michigan. Got a girlfriend named Faye Valentine been with him as far back as we go.”
“Description?”
“Better,” Suitcase said and produced a mug shot.
“Harry Smith,” Jesse said.
Suitcase nodded. He was proud of any detective work he did, even if it were simply back-checking. Jesse handed the picture back to Suitcase.
“Nice work, Suit,” he said.
Suitcase’s naturally high color deepened. “There’s more,” he said. “There’s a notation that anybody got information on Macklin should contact a homicide detective at Boston Police Headquarters.”
“Which you did,” Jesse said.
“Yeah, I went to see him.”
Jesse knew that Suitcase could have called, but the chance to go into the big city police station and talk with the big city homicide cop, man to man, was more than the kid could resist. It made Jesse want to smile. But he didn’t. And it wasn’t a bad thing for a young cop to be excited by the job. Suitcase took a moment to finish his first donut. He wiped some cream filling off the corner of his mouth.
“Sergeant named Belson,” Suitcase said. “Been trying to catch Macklin for ten, fifteen years, he said.”
“Homicide cop?”
“Yeah. Says he knows Macklin murdered some people but he can’t prove it, and he has taken, like, a personal interest.”
“Macklin’s his hobby,” Jesse said.
Suitcase looked at Jesse with nearly blatant admiration. “Yeah, that’s just the expression Belson used. Hobby. Macklin is his personal hobby, he said.”
Jesse nodded. He knew that Suit would file that phrase and eventually somewhere in his career would use it, and, because he was going to be a good cop, would in fact make somebody his personal hobby some day.
“He tell you about it?”
“Yeah. He says Macklin’s a stone killer. Says there was a hostage situation in a liquor store heist couple years back in Brighton, before Macklin went to Concord. Robber held the clerk and two customers hostage when a silent alarm tripped and the cops showed up and caught him in the act. Store was in a mall, and they sealed off the front and the back. But he apparently found a way out by going through the cellar and up the stairs into one of those discount department stores next door. Nobody ever got a good look at the robber, except the hostages. When our side got in, the hostages were shot dead and the perp was gone.”
“Belson thinks it was Macklin.”
“Says he knows it was. Says a snitch he trusts told him off the record. But he could never come up with anything other than the snitch’s word, and the snitch wouldn’t testify.”
“Scared of Macklin?”
“Terrified, Belson says. And even if he wasn’t, it wouldn’t be enough. It’s hearsay.”
“Why’s he so sure it’s Macklin?”
“He was in the area. They’ve established that. He’s living good with no visible means. Weapon was a nine-millimeter handgun. Not a rarity, but Macklin’s gun of choice. And, Belson says, it’s Macklin’s style. He doesn’t mind killing people. Back as far as Belson can trace him, he’s solved his problems by shooting them. Doesn’t seem to bother him at all.”
“Belson know anything about Wilson Cromartie?”
“No.”
“Anything about Faye what’s-her-last-name?”
Suitcase checked his notebook. “Valentine,” he said. “Just that he knows that she’s been with him a long time.”
“Odd a guy like that is faithful,” Jesse said.
“Maybe he ain’t,” Suitcase said. “Maybe she is.”
Suitcase was getting older every day, Jesse thought.
“Belson got any thoughts on what Macklin might be doing in Paradise?”
“Nothing legal. Belson’s been chasing him fo
r years, says he knows him better than he knows his wife. Says he’s a crook because he’s good at it and he likes the hours, but also because he’s a thrill junkie.”
Jesse nodded.
“Sorta like you said about him flirting with you,” Suitcase said.
“Sort of,” Jesse said.
“Belson says anything he’d be happy to help anyway he can.”
Jesse nodded.
“And he said another thing,” Suitcase looked a little uneasy and braced himself with a mouthful of Boston cream donut. “He said if we got a chance to arrest Macklin and he were, ah, killed resisting, that wouldn’t be a bad thing. He said it would be a very efficient thing.”
Suitcase took another bite of donut.
“He asked me to tell you that too,” Suitcase said.
“Sounds like Macklin has been his hobby too long,” Jesse said.
“I asked him if it was personal,” Suitcase said. “And he looked kind of mad when I asked him, but all he said was that one of the hostages Macklin killed was twenty-two years old and pregnant.”
Jesse nodded and finished his coffee.
“Well,” Jesse said, “we’ll keep it in mind.”
Chapter 46
When he got back to the station, Molly was waiting for him.
“Talk, Jesse, alone?”
“Sure.”
They went into his office and closed the door. Molly was carrying a small notebook.
“You tell your ex-wife about Mrs. Hopkins trying to get you fired?” Molly said.
“Christ, what did she do?” Jesse said.
Molly smiled without any pleasure. “She assaulted Mrs. Hopkins.”
Jesse leaned back in his chair and stared at Molly without speaking. He was thrilled that Jenn cared enough about him to do that. He was annoyed that he would have to deal with it. He was depressed that Jenn was still so far out of control that she would assault someone. He was amused at the image of her in full assault.
“Where is she now?” Jesse said.
“Down the hall,” Molly said. “Cell number one.”
Jesse nodded slowly. Molly couldn’t tell what he was thinking.
“Tell me about it,” he said.
“Well,” Molly said. “Kay Hopkins was at the women’s Republican breakfast at the Village Room. She was supposed to give a report on her committee’s findings about citizen participation in town government. It was in The Shopper’s News, maybe that’s where Jenn saw it. Anyway, she shows up. And when Kay Hopkins gets up to give her report, Jenn gets up and says,” Molly looked down at her notes, “‘Before you give your report, maybe you ought to explain to these ladies why you are interfering with the police department in the performance of its lawful duties.’”
Jesse leaned back in his chair and closed his eyes.
“‘Lawful duties,’” he said softly.
Molly was still reading from her notes.
“And Kay Hopkins says, ‘The chair has not recognized you. Please sit down and be quiet.’”
“Uh-oh!” Jesse said softly.
“You got that right,” Molly said. “Jenn calls her a bitch. Mrs. Hopkins says something like ‘How dare you talk to me that way?’ And Jenn marches up and whacks her across the face and everybody starts screaming and pushing and shoving and people are trying to help Mrs. Hopkins and somebody calls us. Peter Perkins was there because he was in the nearest cruiser, and when he got there he saw it was a woman and asked me to come.”
“And?”
Molly tried to control a smile. “And it wasn’t a pretty sight. Jenn had torn most of Mrs. Hopkins’ blouse off and given her a bloody nose. Mrs. Hopkins has got blood all over her skirt and her bra, which looked, may I add, as if it had been laundered a couple times too often. Jenn’s got blood all over her blouse. As far as I know she’s not hurt. It’s Hopkins’ blood, I’m pretty sure. There were two or three women trying to hold onto Jenn, who was kicking people and, as I arrived, was actually head-butting Gertrude Richardson, who’s the chairwoman or whatever they call her. Peter Perkins wasn’t exactly sure what he was supposed to do and looked so grateful when I showed up. I thought he was going to kiss me.”
“You get her calmed down?”
“No, not really. Peter and I had to pretty well wrestle her down, and I had to cuff her before we could get her under control. Thing is neither Peter nor I recognized her at first. I seen her on TV a couple times after Suitcase told me she was your ex-wife and she was a weather girl.”
“Curiosity,” Jesse said.
“Absolutely,” Molly said. “But, you know, her hair was mussed and her shirttail was hanging out and one of her high heels was broken off and she didn’t look the same. But man can she swear. She called Mrs. Hopkins stuff I haven’t even heard around the station. And I’ve heard a lot around the station.”
“Jenn was always a good swearer,” Jesse said. “She tell you she was my wife—ex-wife?”
“Yes. When we got her in the cruiser and were bringing her back. The restaurant is going to bring some sort of charge once their attorney tells them what it is. I think she broke a table and certainly some crockery. I can talk to the owner. I know her. I think she’ll back off when she finds out the whole story.”
“Mrs. Hopkins planning to press charges?” Jesse said.
“Oh, I imagine,” Molly said. “And she probably won’t back off.”
Jesse nodded as much to himself as to Molly.
“Be a surprise if she did,” he said. “How is Jenn now?”
“Scared I think,” Molly said. “But still mad as hell.”
“She’s sort of a television celebrity,” Jesse said. “The press showed up yet?”
“Not yet.”
“She want to see me?” Jesse said.
“Yes.”
Jesse took in a long breath.
“Okay, I’ll go down and talk to her. Alone.”
“Of course,” Molly said.
She left the office. Jesse sat for a moment. Then he took a bottle of Irish whisky from his desk, poured some into a paper cup, looked at it for a moment, and then drank it. He crumpled up the paper cup and threw it into the waste basket. He put the bottle back in the desk drawer. Then he stood and walked down the corridor toward the holding cells.
Chapter 47
Macklin left the real estate office at 9:35 P.M. and walked toward the guard shack at the bridge fifty yards away. Crow walked with him. J. T. McGonigle, who had been there the first time Macklin came to Stiles Island, was on duty again. He was not cut from Captain Billups’ pattern. He was what the captain considered “a civilian employee.” While he had on the tan regulation uniform shirt, he wore no hat, and he carried no weapon. If there was trouble, he called the patrol.
Macklin spoke to him as he reached the shack.
“How you doing, Mac?”
McGonigle put his clipboard down. There were no cars coming in either direction.
“Good, Mr. Smith, whaddya need?”
“Just wanted to say good-bye,” Macklin said and shot McGonigle in the forehead.
He stepped away as McGonigle started to fall. Crow stepped in and caught McGonigle on his shoulder and picked him up. Fran, carrying a briefcase and a folding sign, came from the real estate office as soon as he heard the shot. As Crow carried J. T. McGonigle away, Fran, wearing the tan shirt of the dead Michael Deering, placed the sign in the roadway by the gate and slipped into the guard shack.
Fran took a small remote control mechanism that looked like a garage door opener from the briefcase and put it on the counter beside the clipboard. He brought out a cellular phone and put it beside the remote. He took a big stainless steel Ruger .357 Magnum revolver with a walnut handle from the briefcase and laid it beside the phone. Finally, h
e placed a pair of binoculars beside the Ruger.
Crow reached the real estate office and bent forward and allowed McGonigle’s dead body to slide to the ground, where it was concealed by two decorative cedar shrubs behind the building. Then he went back into the real estate office and waited for Macklin.
JD was sitting at the desk, toying with two cellular phones on the desk in front of him, turning them idly, in slow circles. On the couch Marcy was trying not to look at anything. Nice-looking woman, Crow thought. Macklin came back into the real estate office.
“Okay,” Macklin said. “We got the bridge secured. JD, you ready to kibosh the phones?”
“Five minutes,” JD said, “from whenever you say.”
“After you do it,” Crow said, “what do I hear, I try to use the phone?”
“Busy signal,” JD said, “either way. Calling in, calling out. People call, get a busy signal, hang up. Be a while before anyone catches on that something’s wrong.
“Every minute we can buy, helps us,” Macklin said.
He looked at his watch.
“I got seven minutes before ten. Crow and I are going to start rounding people up at ten-fifteen. I want the phone lines fucked by then.”
“Easy,” JD said.
“Once you fuck the phone lines, you can cut Marcy loose. But keep her here. She wants her purse, give it to her. I’ve already checked it. She can go in the lav and lock the door, she wants. There’s no window.”
“Be easier to leave her like she is,” JD said. “Then I don’t have to watch her.”
“We want you to do it our way,” Macklin said. “Don’t we, Crow?”
“We do,” Crow said and held JD’s look until JD looked away.
JD shrugged as if Crow didn’t scare him, which Crow did. And both of them knew it.
“Sure thing,” JD said.
Macklin picked up one of the cell phones and followed Crow out the door.
Chapter 48
“We’ve got to stop meeting this way,” Jenn said when Jesse came in.
Robert B Parker: The Jesse Stone Novels 1-5 Page 40