“And it was mailed from Miami,” Jesse said.
“I didn’t notice,” Blondie said. “But that’s what Harrison told me.”
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“So if she were really here with her daddy,” Jesse said, “she couldn’t have mailed it to him.”
“Somebody could have mailed it for her,” Blondie said.
She poured herself some wine.
“Why would she go to that trouble?” Jesse said.
“Haven’t got the foggiest,” Blondie said. “You’re the damn master detective.”
“Yeah,” Jesse said. “That would be me.”
He sat and looked at the second half of his sandwich.
Blondie drank some wine.
“Do you remember when she went ashore to see her father?” Jesse said.
“Nope.” Blondie said. “No idea really. You know, Florence wasn’t a big deal to me.”
Blondie picked up a small tangerine segment from her California Salad and ate it.
“How was she when she came back?” Jesse said.
Blondie drank some wine and swallowed, pursed her lips and looked at the corner of the room for a moment.
“I don’t think she came back,” Blondie said.
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E -ZPass transponder number you gave me,”
Healy said, “belonging to Willis Plum of
Miami?”
“Yeah.”
“Was used between June first and June fourth in Mary-land and Delaware and Jersey and New York, and in the Fast Lane entrances on the Mass Pike inbound at Sturbridge and at Brighton. It was used going the other way between June seventh and twelfth.”
“Why would he have an E-ZPass transponder, living in Miami?” Jesse said.
R O B E R T B . P A R K E R
“Lot of people who drive to New York a lot have them,”
Healy said. “Nice to zip past the tollbooth backups.”
“And our system works with theirs,” Jesse said.
“Convenient,” Healy said.
Jesse and Healy leaned on the iron railing at the edge of the pier above the float where the small boats docked. In the dark water along the edge of the wharf, an occasional dead fish floated, and orange peels, and indestructible bits of Styrofoam, scraps of seaweed, an occasional crab shell, one condom, and a red-and-white bobber that had come loose from a fishing line.
“Found her right there,” Jesse said. “Against the float.”
“With the other flotsam,” Healy said.
“Fancy word,” Jesse said.
“Yeah. Sometimes I read things.”
They were quiet, watching the slow water slap gently at the pier. Jesse raised his eyes and looked at the mouth of the harbor. He thought he could pick out the Lady Jane anchored there. He took in a big breath and let it out slowly.
“Maybe I should reformulate my theory of the case,” Jesse said.
“What would your new formulation be?” Healy said.
“That I don’t know what the fuck is going on and I don’t know who to believe and I have been chasing my own ass up to now.”
“You know this business,” Healy said. “You have to as-2 6 8
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sume everyone’s lying to you. But you have to act as if they weren’t.”
“The bastard was up here,” Jesse said.
“His car was up here,” Healy said.
“She went ashore to see him and never came back.”
“Blondie says.”
“Why would she lie,” Jesse said, “about this.”
Healy smiled.
“Yeah,” Jesse said. “She’d lie about the time of day if it seemed like a fun thing. Or she had an itch she felt like scratching.”
“Still,” Healy said. “He probably was here. He is probably a pedophile. He probably molested his daughters. He’s a lying bastard. What’s Cruz think of him.”
“She thinks there’s something really wrong with him.”
Healy smiled.
“I’ll bet she’s right,” he said.
“So why would he decide all of a sudden to drive up here and kill her?”
“If that’s what he decided,” Healy said.
“I know,” Jesse said. “I know. I can’t prove it yet. But let’s assume he killed her.”
“Okay,” Healy said.
“Why would he suddenly drive up here and kill her and drive home?”
“Maybe she told him it had to stop,” Healy said. “Her, the twin sisters, all of it.”
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“As far as I know she came up with Darnell from Miami, so she was around there before June. Maybe they had the falling out then.”
“And she left in a huff and came north with Darnell,”
Healy said.
“And he decided to follow her.”
“Why not kill her right there, during the falling-out moment?” Healy said.
“Maybe it was in front of the mother and he couldn’t do it then.”
“She knows, you think?” Healy said.
“Cruz says she does.”
“She know he killed their daughter, assuming he did?”
Healy said.
“I don’t know. It might be a nice piece of leverage to shake her loose.”
“Course, your original theory might actually be true,”
Healy said. “Darnell, or Ralston, or both.”
“Or they’ve just been lying every step of the way because they’re afraid of getting caught in the sex ring stuff.”
“Most of which is not illegal.”
“True,” Jesse said. “But it is not universally popular in the best yacht clubs.”
“Everybody has things to cover up in this thing,” Healy said.
“Most things,” Jesse said.
Healy grinned at him.
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“Ah, Laddy Buck,” Healy said. “The job is making you cynical.”
“Anyway, I’ve got them on the stat rape charge,” Jesse said.
“Nice to have a fallback position,” Healy said.
Jesse smiled for a moment.
“At least I can arrest somebody,” he said.
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W e’re going to have to talk to the Plum twins again,” Jesse said to Molly. “Can
you stay sober long enough to sit in?”
Molly blushed.
“Shut up,” she said.
“Let’s have a little respect here,” Jesse said.
“Shut up, Chief Stone,” Molly said.
Jesse nodded.
“Better,” he said. “Get Steve to cover the desk.”
“We doing good cop, bad cop again?”
“Play it by ear,” Jesse said. “But it doesn’t do any harm if they like you and fear me.”
S E A C H A N G E
“They bring a lawyer?” Molly said.
“Nope.”
“Wow,” Molly said. “They are dumb.”
“I’m counting on it,” Jesse said.
The twins sat beside each other in front of Jesse’s desk.
Molly sat as she had before, behind them, near the door.
“We want to stay together,” Corliss said.
Jesse looked at them without expression.
“Maybe I can get you adjoining cells at Framingham,”
Jesse said.
“Framingham?” Claudia said.
“Women’s Reformatory,” Molly said behind them.
They both turned toward her.
“Jail?” Corliss said.
“We might go to jail?” Claudia said.
“It happens,” Molly said. “If you don’t let us help you. It could happen.”
Jesse glared at Molly.
“What are we, the Salvation Army?” he said.
“Part of our job is to help people,” Molly said.
“I don’t want to help them,” Jesse said. “I want to put them in jail.”
Both girls turned back toward Jesse. He could see Molly behind them, while they weren’t looking, take a deep breath.
I know, Jesse thought, I know.
“You have lied to me,” Jesse said to the girls, “every time you could, since the first time I talked with you.”
“We didn’t do anything, like a crime,” Corliss said.
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Jesse let his chair tip forward. He stood and came around his desk and bent from the waist and put his face an inch away from Corliss’s face.
“I don’t like you,” he said. “I hate everything you are. So you keep sitting there lying to me, it makes me happy. It makes it easier and easier for me to put your degenerate asses in jail for ten years.”
“Leave her alone,” Claudia said.
Jesse shifted his face a half inch toward her.
“Both of you,” he said.
“We’re not lying,” Corliss said. “We haven’t even said anything.”
“You don’t know that your father was up here in June,”
Jesse said.
Both of them said “Ohmigod” at the same time.
“You didn’t feel like you should tell me that, huh?” Jesse said.
“Jesse,” Molly said. “They’re kids.”
Jesse raised his eyes and stared at Molly.
“I’m getting sick of the bleeding heart, missy,” he said.
“You don’t like how I question suspects, you can leave right now.”
“I can’t leave them in here alone with you, for God’s sake,”
Molly said.
“Then button it up,” Jesse said.
“If I have to go to the selectmen, I will,” Molly said.
“Fuck the selectmen. I nail these two degenerates, they’ll give me a raise.”
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“Did Daddy kill Florence?” Corliss said.
Jesse was still for a moment. The anger left his face. Then he straightened and rested his butt against the edge of his desk, and folded his arms. His voice was gentle when he spoke.
“You think?” he said.
“We were afraid of it,” Claudia said. “It’s why we came here and why we wanted to get a private detective.”
“To whom you wouldn’t reveal a name.”
“We got too scared,” Corliss said.
“Of Daddy?” Jesse said.
“Yes,” Claudia said.
“If he found out,” Corliss said.
Jesse nodded.
“Let’s run over that videotape you made of your sister and the two guys,” Jesse said.
“It was for Daddy,” Claudia said.
Jesse could hear Molly exhale. He nodded softly.
“Okay,” he said. “Okay.”
He went around the desk and sat down.
“She hated Daddy,” Corliss said. “She said this was her kissing him off.”
“And she sent him the tape?”
“A duplicate,” Claudia said. “She had a bunch of duplicates made. I think she was going to keep sending them to him, you know? Every month? Drive him crazy?”
They both spoke rapidly, the words flowing out as if through the widening crack in a dam.
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“So how did a copy end up on Harrison Darnell’s boat?”
Jesse said.
“We talked about that,” Corliss said. “Me and Claud. We thought maybe Florence brought a copy to show him. Harrison liked stuff like that.”
“I think it was mailed from Miami,” Jesse said.
“That’s the other thing we thought,” Claudia said.
“Which was?” Jesse said.
“Maybe Daddy sent it,” Corliss said.
“Why would he do that?”
“Daddy’s odd sometimes,” Claudia said.
“We thought maybe he sent it to Harrison to embarrass Flo,” Corliss said.
“He didn’t know that it wouldn’t?” Jesse said.
“I think he thought Flo had a nice upper-class wealthy beau,” Claudia said.
“He thought we did, too,” Corliss said.
“What were you afraid Daddy would do if he found out you had hired a private detective to investigate him?” Jesse said.
“We thought he’d kill us,” Claudia said.
She looked at Corliss. They both nodded.
“Who told you about your sister’s death?” Jesse said.
“Mom,” Corliss said.
“So why did you tell me Kimmy Young told you?”
“Kimmy?” Claudia said.
“We told you Kimmy?” Corliss said.
“Yep.”
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“God, why would we do that?” Claudia said.
“That was what sort of tore the cover off,” Jesse said.
“We were scared,” Corliss said. “I guess we just said a name.”
“We were afraid if we told you Mom, that would sort of lead you to Daddy,” Claudia said.
“Because you didn’t want to get him in any trouble,” Jesse said.
“Yes,” Corliss said.
“We love him,” Claudia said.
“And he loves us,” Corliss said.
“And you were afraid he might kill you,” Jesse said.
“Daddy gets so mad sometimes,” Claudia said.
They looked at each other again and nodded.
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K elly Cruz met Jesse at the gate in the Miami airport. She had a short black haircut and a wide mouth and nice posture. Her
ass was, in fact, perky. She was wearing white heels and white slacks and a blue linen jacket and holding a handmade sign that said stone. Jesse was glad that she was good-looking. They shook hands and he followed her outside where they got into a maroon Crown Victoria parked under a no-parking sign in front of the terminal. Kelly Cruz got into the front beside the driver. Jesse got in back.
“Jesse Stone,” Kelly Cruz said. “Raymond Ortiz.”
The driver turned and said hello.
S E A C H A N G E
“Raymond works Homicide,” she said. “Here in Miami.”
“Nice to have an official presence,” Jesse said. “In case we want to arrest somebody.”
“That’s me,” Ortiz said. “Official presence.”
“How you want to handle this?” Kelly Cruz said as they headed east from the airport on the Dolphin Expressway.
“My usual approach,” Jesse said, “is to blunder in and shake the sack and see what falls out.”
“Works for me,” Ortiz said.
“It’s your case,” Kelly Cruz said.
“But you know the people,” Jesse said. “Got a suggestion?”
“The wife’s ready to pop,” Kelly Cruz said. “The old man is buried so deep inside somewhere that I got no clue on him.”
“And the help’s nowhere,” Jesse said.
Kelly Cruz shook her head.
“Nowhere,” she said. “Working for the Yankee dollar. Got no other interest.”
“You’re Cuban,” Jesse said.
“My mother is,” Kelly Cruz said.
“And Raymond.”
“Si,” Raymond said in a parody Latino accent.
“And that doesn’t help.”
“Not a bit,” Kelly Cruz said. “About as much as you being a gringo will help with the Plums.”
“Gringo?” Jesse said.
“I’m trying to sound authentic,” Kelly Cruz said. “I was you I’d go for the mother, and how the pervert killed her daughter.”
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Jesse nodded. Kelly Cruz glanced at her watch.
“Eleven-fifty,” she said. “They’ll be drinking by the time we get there.”
“Good or bad?” Jesse s
aid.
“Doesn’t seem to have much effect,” Kelly Cruz said.
“We’re expected,” Jesse said.
“We are, if they remember,” Kelly Cruz said.
The valet service knew a cop when they saw one. Nobody offered to take the Crown Vic, and nobody objected when Ortiz parked it right in front of the main entrance and got out. In the lobby, Ortiz showed his badge to the concierge.
She called upstairs, and when they got out of the elevator at the penthouse, the maid was waiting for them at the front door of the Plums’ vast condo. She led them through the un-ruffled living room to the terrace where the drink trolley had been wheeled into place, and a small buffet was set up.
Mrs. Plum, in a frothy ankle-length turquoise dress, was reclining on a chaise. Mr. Plum, wearing a white shirt and white linen slacks, sat erect in his chair near her head. Both were drinking Manhattans. Jesse stared at the father. You son of a bitch.
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O rtiz’s only duty was to add jurisdictional presence where Jesse and Kelly Cruz had
none. They declined to eat. Ortiz accepted a large plateful of assorted tea sandwiches and ate them quietly, leaning his hips against the railing of the terrace, and sipping mango iced tea from a glass he balanced on the top rail. Kelly Cruz sat opposite the Plums in a white satin chair with no arms. Jesse remained standing.
“Chief of police,” Willis Plum said. “That’s quite an achievement.”
Jesse ignored him.
“Mrs. Plum,” he said. “A while ago you told Detective R O B E R T B . P A R K E R
Cruz your husband had taken a trip at the beginning of June, and it appeared that you were mistaken.”
“I often am,” Mrs. Plum said, in a tone that didn’t mean it.
“Good news,” Jesse said. “You were right. He didn’t go to Tallahassee. But he was in the Boston area the first week in June.”
She looked quickly at her husband.
“I knew I was right,” she said.
Mr. Plum shook his head.
“He’s wrong, Mommy,” Plum said gently, “just like you were.”
“He has an E-ZPass transponder on his car,” Jesse said.
“It’s compatible with the Fast Lane system in Massachusetts.
He was driving on the Massachusetts Turnpike the first week in June.”
“Transponder,” she said.
“The car goes through the no-toll lane and is electroni-cally recorded. Toll is charged to your credit card.”
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