When he was through, he evened the papers out, folded them carefully back the way they had been, and put them in their envelope. He slid the envelope back across the desk toward me. I took it and put it back in my pocket. DeSpain leaned back in his swivel chair and folded his arms and looked straight at me.
"So?"
"You want to talk about Jocelyn?" I said.
"What's to say?"
"She's crazy," I said.
"Yeah," DeSpain said and his voice still seemed to rumble up from a place far down.
"She is."
I didn't say anything. DeSpain looked at me. There were deep grooves running from the wings of his nose to the corners of his mouth. I could hear his breath going in and out, slowly. He unfolded his arms, and rested his chin on his left hand, the elbow on the chair arm, the thumb beneath the chin, the knuckle of the forefinger pressed against his upper lip. He puffed his cheeks and blew small puffs of air past his loosely closed lips.
It made a small popping sound.
"She was crazy when I met her," DeSpain said.
"Only I didn't know it. She doesn't seem crazy, you know."
"I know."
"I was married," DeSpain said.
"Grown kids. Wife drank a little, liked a few belts before supper, got out of hand sometimes at parties, but we got along. Then this little broad comes in with a stalker story and I'm working investigations and I catch it."
DeSpain shook his head. In the shadowy room his eyes seemed simply dark recesses, buried beneath his forehead.
"And.. Jesus Christ. She feels my muscle, she wants to see my gun, she wants to know if I killed somebody, and what was it like, and would I take care of her, and she leaned her little tits on me and looked up at me, and I never had anything like it happen to me in my life. Second night on the case we're in bed and she's a volcano. The old lady did it in her flannel night gown, you know?
With her eyes shut tight."
"What about the stalker?" I said.
"The case was bullshit," DeSpain said.
"Guy wasn't stalking her.
She made a pass at him and he turned her down and she made it up.
"That didn't warn you?" I said.
"If she shot me in the belly it wouldn't have warned me," DeSpain said.
"I couldn't get enough of her."
"So you ditched the wife."
"Yeah. Don't even know where she is now. What happened to her. Kids won't talk to me."
He paused for a moment and leaned back. He pressed his hands together and looked at them as if they were new, and then began to rub them slowly together, leaning back as he spoke, so that all I could see of him now was the hands rubbing slowly together in the lamplight.
"Child-care supervisor, the one she said stalked her, he threatened to sue her for defamation, so I went up and knocked him around a little, you know, to discourage him, and the bastard got a lawyer and went right to the C.O."
"The bastard," I said.
"Yeah, well C.O. got him calmed down. Made some sort of settlement that didn't get all over the papers, and I had to go. C.O. liked me, but he had no choice."
In the darkened room DeSpain's voice sounded as if he were talking through a rusty pipe.
"But you still had jocelyn I said.
"Yeah. Except as soon as I moved in with her…" he shrugged.
"She lost interest. Told me I was just an animal, just after sex like some kind of dirty animal. Came home one day and she was gone.
No note, no thanks-for-the-memories."
"You weren't forbidden fruit anymore," I said.
"Sure," DeSpain said.
"But I still knew how to be a cop. I found her easy enough. So I come up here too. C.O. knew some people here. They needed a chief. C.O. gave me a plug."
"To be near her."
DeSpain didn't say anything. In the lamplight his hands were now still. Behind him through the window I saw small lightning shimmer across the sky. It was so far away that I never did hear the thunder.
"And Lonnie Wu?" I said.
"When did you hook up with Lonnie?"
"I never bothered her," DeSpain said.
He leaned forward now, his face back in the lamplight, his thick hands, still pressed together, resting on the desk top.
"I'd go see her sometimes in one of those asshole fucking plays she was in," he said.
"She couldn't act for shit. But I never went near her. Just liked knowing where she was, being around, maybe, if she needed help or anything."
"Lonnie?" I said.
"Fucking gook," DeSpain said.
"Was smuggling in Chinamen.
Been going on a long time. People on the hill that owned the mills, when the mills folded, moved into fish processing, and needed cheap labor."
"So most of the smuggled Chinese stayed here?"
"At first, then the fish plant jobs filled up. So Lonnie would smuggle in a few replacements for people who died, or saved up enough to get out, or got killed for not making the trip payments on time. And the rest he would funnel into Boston, and the tong would place them."
"Kwan Chang," I said.
DeSpain nodded.
"Lonnie was Fast Eddie Lee's brother-in-law," I said.
"I knew he was wired," DeSpain said.
"And he paid you not to see the smuggling."
"Yeah."
"You know who killed Sampson?" I said.
"Yeah."
"You know why?"
"He was fooling around with Rikki Wu."
"You know how he found out?" I said.
"Jocelyn told him," DeSpain said.
"You know why she told him?"
"Probably after Sampson," DeSpain said.
"I never cared."
"She was after Christopholous," I said.
"She thought Rikki was in the way."
DeSpain was silent for a time.
"So, right broad, wrong guy," he said finally.
"Why'd she fake the kidnapping?"
"To get my attention," I said.
"She was after you?" DeSpain said.
"It was my turn."
DeSpain rocked back in his chair and sat, his body slack, his arms limp, his hands inert in his lap. He didn't speak. I didn't either.
Behind him the lightning nickered again, and, distantly after it, some thunder, not very loud.
"You thought Lonnie took her, didn't you?" I said.
DeSpain didn't say anything.
"You figured since she'd told him about Sampson, then she'd know Lonnie did it, and he wanted her quiet."
DeSpain still sat looking at nothing at the edge of the lamplight.
"I figured she was squeezing him," DeSpain said.
"Be her style."
"And he wouldn't just kill her?"
"He knew about me and her. He knew he couldn't get away with killing her. I figured he took her and was going to negotiate something with me."
"So you went and got him and dragged him out to Brant Island and tried to make him tell you where she was," I said.
DeSpain was motionless and silent.
"Except, of course, he didn't know," I said.
The lightning flashed outside, shining for a strobic moment on the black-and-whites parked in the lot, and the thunder came, much closer behind it now, and rain began to rattle on the glass in DeSpain's window.
"So you beat him to death," I said.
DeSpain thought about that for a long time, his hands perfectly still in the circle of light on the desk top in front of him.
"Yeah," DeSpain said finally, "I did."
CHAPTER 51
It was raining hard now, and the water was washing down DeSpain's window in thick, silvery sheets when the lightning flashed. "You got her with you?" DeSpain said.
"She's with Hawk," I said, "and Vinnie over at the Muffin Shop."
"I'd like to see her."
"Use your phone?" I said to DeSpain.
He nodded toward it. I stood and picked it up an
d called Healy.
"I think you better come down here," I said to Healy.
"Port City Police Chief has confessed to murder. I'm in his office."
"I want to see her," DeSpain said.
I nodded as Healy was talking.
"Healy wants to speak with you," I said.
DeSpain shook his head.
"Won't talk to you," I said into the phone.
"We'll be in a place called The Puffin' Muffin, in the arcade at the Port City Theater."
DeSpain was on his feet when I hung up, and starting for the door. I followed along. Which was pretty much what I'd been doing since I came to Port City, just following along, about ten steps back of whatever was really going on. DeSpain went through the station without a word for anyone, and out the front door and down the steps. The rain was hard, and resentful when we walked into it. We turned left on Ocean Street and headed for the theater.
I had on my leather jacket and White Sox baseball hat. DeSpain was bare-headed, without a coat. The rain glistened on the handle of his service pistol, stuck on his belt, back of his right hipbone. His hair was plastered to his skull before we had gone five steps. He didn't seem to mind. My jacket was open and my shirt was getting wet, but I didn't want to zip up over my gun.
Jocelyn was facing the door as we walked in. Hawk was beside her and Vinnie was at the counter getting coffee. There were five women at the other end of the room drinking coffee, shopping bags on the floor beside them. A boy and a girl, high school-aged, were near the door. As we came in, Hawk leaned back a little in his chair so his coat would fall open. At the counter Vinnie put down the coffee cup and turned to look at us. He stood motionless, his coat open, his shoulders relaxed. The pink-haired waitress in her cute uniform looked at DeSpain nervously and walked rapidly back down to the other end of the counter.
DeSpain walked directly to Jocelyn and stopped. She looked at him the way you'd look at a dirty sexual animal. He looked at her face a moment as if he were seeing someone he thought he knew but wasn't sure about. Hawk glanced at me. I made a little let-it-go hand gesture. Hawk looked back at DeSpain.
"You murderous little cunt," DeSpain said and slapped her hard across the face. The slap knocked her sprawling out of her chair and onto the floor. Hawk stood and stepped between them.
"Get out of my way," DeSpain said.
Hawk was motionless.
"DeSpain," I said.
He tried to step past Hawk and Hawk moved in front of him again. I stepped in close behind him.
"DeSpain," I said.
Outside the lightning crashed and the thunder was simultaneous.
DeSpain looked back at me. Then he looked at Hawk and turned suddenly and stepped away from all of us. He had his hand near his hip.
"I had to do that. It was worth my life to do that," he said.
Jocelyn had stayed on the floor, lying on her side, her face blank with shock, blood coming from her nose.
"Now it's done," I said.
"Healy coming?" DeSpain said.
"He's sending some people from the Topsfield Barracks."
DeSpain nodded. His face was still wet with rain, his hair dripping wet, his soaking shirt stuck to his body. Suddenly he smiled, the old wolfish smile.
"Goddamn, I liked that," he said.
"She had that coming, and one hell of a lot more."
"I got no argument with that," I said.
"But I can't let you do it again."
"Don't matter," DeSpain said.
"Once was all I needed."
He grinned at me.
"You think you can hold me here for Healy?"
"Yeah," I said.
"I think we can."
DeSpain slowly reached back and unsnapped the safety strap on his holster. The smile was wider, more wolfish. The voice was strong again, and the eyes, still deep in their sockets, seemed almost to glow.
"Let's find out," DeSpain said.
"I'm walking. Anyone tries to stop me, I'll shoot him."
"There's three of us, DeSpain. That's suicide."
"Yeah." DeSpain's grin was wide.
"Maybe you never seen me shoot."
He moved toward the door, I moved in front of it and DeSpain pulled his gun. He had it half out of the holster when Vinnie shot him. Four shots in the middle of the chest, so fast it seemed one sound. DeSpain went backwards three steps, sat slowly, and fell over on his back, the front sight of his pistol still hidden in the holster. I looked at Hawk. He and I hadn't cleared leather. I let my gun settle back in the holster and went and sat on my heels beside DeSpain. I felt his neck. There was no pulse. I looked at his chest.
Vinnie had grouped his shots so you could have covered all four with a playing card. I looked over at Jocelyn; she was sitting upright now, still on the floor, hugging her knees. Her eyes were shiny, and her tongue flittered on her lower lip. I stood up. Vinnie had put the gun away. He picked up his cup and sipped some of his coffee. Everyone else in the restaurant was flat on the floor.
"It's all over, folks," I said.
"State police coming."
Nobody moved. I looked at Vinnie.
"Quick," I said.
Vinnie nodded.
"Very," he said.
Hawk reached down and hauled Jocelyn to her feet.
"The animal," she said softly.
"He hit me. I'm glad he's dead."
"Shut up," Hawk said.
Jocelyn started to say something and looked at Hawk and stopped and was silent. I stood and stared down for a while at DeSpain. One of the toughest guys I ever met. I looked over at Hawk. He was looking at DeSpain too.
"The short happy life," I said, "of Francis Macomber."
CHAPTER 52
I had the last French window into the new addition on the Concord house when Hawk's Jaguar rolled into the driveway on a bright blue day in November with no wind and temperatures in the forties. "I got lunch," Hawk said as he got out of his Jaguar and went around and opened the door for Mei Ling.
"We been to Chinatown and Mei Ling ordered."
"No chicken feet," I said.
"We don't do chicken feet."
"American people are quite strange," Mei Ling said.
She was carrying a very large shopping bag. Pearl the Wonder Dog, ever alert, honed in on it at once, sniffing furiously. Mei Ling looked nervous.
"What kind of dog is that?" she said.
"Pearl don't like being called a dog," Hawk said.
He scooped Pearl up in his arms and let her lap his face for a while until Mei Ling had gotten the food into the house.
It was too late in the fall now to eat outside, so the picnic table was inside, in a space that would one day be a dining room. Susan and Mei Ling cleared the hand tools off of it, and spread the blue tablecloth over it and began to set out the Chinese food. Hawk went to the refrigerator, which was next to the table saw, and opened it and took out two long-neck bottles of Rolling Rock. He handed one to me and we stood out of the way drinking it. Hawk was dressed for the country. Black jeans, white silk shirt, charcoal brown tweed cashmere sport jacket, and cordovan cowboy boots.
"You just come from a tango contest?" I said.
"Me and Mei Ling been, ah, recuperating from our Port City ordeal."
"Lunch," Susan said.
We sat. Pearl moved about the table, looking for an opening.
We had paper plates and passed the many cartons around. It was an exotic assortment of Asian cuisine, not all of which I recognized.
Hawk and I drank some beer. Susan and Mei Ling had wine. I suspected that the workday had ended.
"What will happen to Jocelyn?" Mei Ling said.
"Not enough," Hawk said.
"Can they charge her with filing a false report to the police?"
Susan said.
"On the kidnapping?"
"Yes."
"No. All she did was send me a tape of her pretending to be tied up. Healy's working on some kind of conspiracy rap with the DA u
p there, but they're not sure it'll hold water."
"She was responsible for three deaths, one way or another," Susan said.
"Yeah," I said.
"She went through Port City like a virus."
"At least you stopped the illegal immigrant smuggling," Mei Ling said.
She was sitting beside Hawk on the picnic table bench. She sat very close to him and looked at him all the time. He smiled at her.
"Didn't stop it. Just got it relocated," he said.
"Of course, this is true, all Chinese people know what can change and what cannot," Mei Ling said.
"So she may get away with it."
"She may," I said.
I gave Pearl a pork dumpling, and one for me. I drank some beer.
"Of course," Susan said, "while punishment would be satisfying, what she really requires is treatment."
"She's not likely to seek it," I said.
"Then she'll do more damage," Susan said.
"Maybe Vinnie shot the wrong person," I said.
Susan looked at me solemnly for a moment, thinking about it.
"American people too," Susan said and smiled at Mei Ling, "have to know what can change and what cannot, I guess."
"Maybe I can get her to come and talk to you," I said.
"I hope so," Susan said.
"And maybe I can't."
"As long as you keep coming around, Tootsie," Susan said.
"That will do fine."
Mei Ling took a shrimp dumpling off of her plate with chopsticks and offered it to Hawk. He opened his mouth and she plopped it in. Pearl watched this closely and went and put her head on Mei Ling's lap. Mei Ling looked a little scared but took another shrimp dumpling and fed it to Pearl. I looked across the table at Susan and felt the heaviness of Port City begin to ease.
"Yeah," I said.
"That will do fine."
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