Back Story. Part 34
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"Sho 'nuff," Hawk said.
We finished our coffee. I got out and went to the snack bar and got us two more cups.
"We can go in and get her," Hawk said. "Or we can lure her out."
"Place is like a Norman keep," I said. "We go in, and a lot of people will get hurt."
"And we likely to be two of them," Hawk said.
"So how do we lure her out? Aside from the Solly Hemings ploy."
We thought about that for awhile. In front of the car, a squabble of gulls fought loudly over half an orange.
"We got her daughter," Hawk said.
"Even if she cares about her daughter, I can't do that."
"Use the daughter to trap the mother?"
"That's right."
"Man, you're confusing," Hawk said. "And not amusing. Couple days ago, you shot three guys. Now you won't use the daughter against the mother."
"I confuse myself sometimes," I said.
We drank coffee. The gulls squawked at one another. A Ford pickup went past us, toward town, towing a large sailboat.
"We gotta go in," I said.
Hawk took in a long breath and let it out slowly and didn't say anything.
"You know we do," I said.
"Uh-huh."
Two teenage girls in designer shades and miniscule bathing suits went past us, carrying beach bags and a blanket and a portable radio.
"Too young," I said.
Hawk nodded sadly. "I know," he said.
Our coffee was gone. Hawk went and got some. Keep drinking it. It was bound to work.
"The house backs up on the water," I said.
Hawk looked at me. His face brightened. "Think it got a private beach?" he said.
"If you had all that dough and owned that property, would it have a private beach?"
"It would."
"And if you were Bonnie Karnofsky Czernak and you were shut up in there with Mom and Dad, what would you decide, sooner or later, to do?"
"After I watched The View?"
"After that," I said.
"Might take my blanket and my radio and go down to the sea."
"Me too," I said.
"We need a boat," Hawk said.
"We need a lot of things," I said. "But at least we have an idea."
"Don't happen often," Hawk said.
"No," I said. "I'm surprised I recognized it when it came."
58.
Hawk and I were with Jesse Stone in the town launch, which was throttled back and wallowing a little, one hundred yards off sh.o.r.e on the ocean side of Paradise Neck. The boat was being steered by the harbormaster, a heavy man named Phil who wore blue jeans and suspenders.
"That's Karnofsky's beach," Stone said. He had on his chief s.h.i.+rt with his badge on it, jeans, a baseball cap, and sneakers. He carried a Smith & Wesson.38 with a short barrel, just like mine. The perfect choice. Hawk, ever self-amusing, wore a blue blazer and white pants, and one of those boating caps with the long bill, like Hemingway.
"Can we a.s.sume they've spotted us?" I said.
"Sure. But it doesn't matter. They're used to us coming by."
"That little gully runs straight up between the rocks to the top of the hill behind Sonny's house," Stone said. "Got aerial photos, you want them."
"I do."
Stone nodded.
"On the other side of the rocks, maybe two, three hundred feet," he said, "is neighboring property."
"How about the other side?"
"Further," Stone said. "Other side of that point. There's a right of way down to the water."
The harbormaster kept the nose of the boat into the waves, idling just enough to hold our position.
"They use the beach much," I said.
"Sonny, never. The old lady, some." I scanned the rocks and trees around the beach.
There was a raft with a springboard anch.o.r.ed fifty feet from sh.o.r.e.
"Their raft?" I said.
Stone nodded.
"They use it?"
"Daughter comes to visit sometimes. She and her husband use it."
"How deep is it by the raft?"
"Phil?" Stone said to the harbormaster.
"Twenty feet," Phil said. "Drops off pretty sharp from the beach."
We were quiet, while far out into the Atlantic beyond us some sailboats were swooping about, and a couple of fis.h.i.+ng boats plodded into the wind. On sh.o.r.e, nothing moved except a couple small seabirds with long beaks, which poked around in the rocks without any visible result. I knew how they felt.
"How often do they use the raft," I said.
"We don't check it every day," Stone said. "But when the weather's good, she's down here. She bakes for awhile and then goes in and swims to the raft. I a.s.sume it's to cool off. Hubby goes sometimes. Sometimes doesn't."
"I don't suppose we can use your boat," I said.
"It's the town's."
"I still a.s.sume we can't use it."
"You can't."
"You don't talk much," I said. "Do you."
"It's an experiment," Stone said. "If I got nothing to say, I try not to say it."
"Maybe I'll try it sometime," I said.
"You got a plan?" Stone said.
"We off the record here?" I said.
"I look like a f.u.c.king TV crew?" Stone said.
"I'm planning to s.n.a.t.c.h Bonnie Czernak, nee Karnofsky," I said.
"Good thing I'm not a f.u.c.king TV crew," Stone said.
"Where do you stand on that," I said.
"Off to the side."
"I'm not asking you to do anything but leave it alone," I said.
"I do that well," Stone said.
59.
We set up on the other side of the point at the bottom of the path that formed the right of way. The Zodiac that Hawk had acquired bobbed on the gentle chop of the water that lapped the rocks in the shelter of the cove. Hawk and I had a picnic basket to explain what we were doing on the rocks if anyone came by. Though, in truth, Hawk didn't look that much like a picnic guy. But at the least it served to carry the bunch of sandwiches we'd bought at a takeout shop in Paradise. We had binoculars and a bird book to explain them, though Hawk didn't look much like a birder, either. I was watching Karnofsky's beach through the gla.s.ses, peering over the edge of the rock, while Hawk ate a roast beef sandwich and drank coffee from a Thermos.
"Can you actually drive that thing?" I said.
"Course I can," Hawk said. "Used one for a year once."
"Doing what?"
"Covert stuff," Hawk said. "In Burma."
"Everything you do should be covert," I said.
"This the third day we be here," Hawk said, "and we ain't seen nothing but some seagulls."
"I looked in that bird book," I said. "They are officially known as herring gulls."
"Hot d.a.m.n," Hawk said.
He took another bite of his sandwich and another sip of coffee.
"Susan okay?" Hawk said.
"Yep. Quirk was there last night."
"What I like," he said, "is when I thinking 'bout Quirk marching over there to relieve Ty-Bop on guard duty."
"I'm just hoping Ty-Bop doesn't get a snootful of c.o.ke and shoot up West Cambridge."
"Ty-Bop be clean till we done," Hawk said. "How long we going to hang here?"
"Until she shows up or we think of something better," I said.
"That's how long I figured," Hawk said. "How's Susan taking to the security stuff."
Back Story. Part 34
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Back Story. Part 34 summary
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