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"So we going to sit here," Hawk said, "until h.e.l.l freeze over or one of Sonny's cars comes off the Neck."
"Exactly," I said.
"And then we follow the car until we find Bonnie."
"Right," I said.
"You think that'll work?" Hawk said.
"I have no idea," I said.
"So why we doing it?"
"Because I don't know what else to do," I said.
Hawk was wearing black Oakley sungla.s.ses and a white silk T-s.h.i.+rt. He watched a tanned young woman in a small black bathing suit walk toward the beach.
"That be your version of Occam's razor," Hawk said. "I'll do it because I don't know what else to do."
"Occam's razor?" I said.
Hawk shrugged, his eyes still following the woman in the meager bathing suit.
"I read a lot," Hawk said.
I nodded. The young woman sat down on a blanket near another woman in an equally insufficient bathing suit.
"You got a better suggestion?" I said.
"No."
"Then you agree we might as well do this."
"Yes."
An overweight woman wearing flip-flops and one of those two-piece suits with a little skirt walked by. She was pale-skinned. Her stomach sagged. Her hair was very blond and very teased. We watched her pa.s.s.
"The lord giveth," Hawk said, "and the lord taketh away."
"Have you ever thought we might be guilty of s.e.xism here," I said.
"Yes," Hawk said.
A silver Mercedes sedan cruised past us, coining from the Neck. We checked the plates. It didn't belong to Sonny.
"For all you know," Hawk said, "Bonnie moved to Scottsdale twenty years ago to work on her tan."
"Sonny's going to all this trouble to cover her up," I said. "He might want her close."
"Or he might want her far," Hawk said.
"Well, yes," I said. "That too is a possibility."
"So we could be wasting a lot of time."
"Remember Occam," I said.
To watch the causeway, we had to sit with our backs to the ocean. But we could hear it and smell it and feel the breeze coming off it. Across the causeway, we could see the harbor, where the masts of the pleasure boats stood like marsh reeds. Herring gulls wheeled and squawked and got into a loud scrum over a remnant of hot dog roll on the edge of the street in front of us. A red Porsche Boxster went by with the top down. A slate gray Lexus SUV came by in the other direction. Then nothing. Then, after awhile, a blue Subaru Forester.
"Probably a servant," Hawk said.
"Can't be sure," I said. "The Yankees are a thrifty lot."
A black BMW came by, and a dark brown Mercedes sedan. Wrong license number. We could smell hot dogs cooking in the snack bar in back of the beach house. At 2:30, Hawk took action. "Want a hot dog?" he said.
"Two," I said. "Mustard and relish."
"Want to pay for it?" Hawk said.
"No."
Hawk nodded. "Irish are a thrifty lot," he said, and moved off toward the stand.
We had eaten our hot dogs and drunk our coffee and taken turns at the men's room in the beach house. An Explorer and a couple Volvo wagons had gone by. An unmarked police car with a whip antenna pulled into the parking lot and stopped behind us. The driver got out and walked toward the car. He was a young guy, medium-sized, built like a middleweight boxer, moved like an athlete. He wore a short revolver on his belt and handcuffs and a badge. He came to the car on my side.
"How you doing," he said.
I nodded to indicate we were doing fine.
"My name's Jesse Stone," he said. "I'm the chief here in Paradise."
He didn't look like a small-town cop. Something about the eyes and the way he walked.
"Nice to meet you," I said.
Behind his Oakleys, Hawk did not appear to be looking at Stone.
"You been sitting here since seven-thirty this morning," Stone said.
"Pretty good," I said. "You picked us up fast."
"We got a nice little department here," Stone said. "I don't wish to intrude, but what are you doing?"
"My name's Spenser," I said.
"I know. We already ran your plates."
"I'm trying to locate Sonny Karnofsky's daughter, Bonnie," I said. "There's a state cop named Healy can probably vouch for me."
"I know Healy," Stone said. "He still doing vice?"
"He never did vice," I said. "He's at One Thousand Ten Commonwealth. Homicide Commander."
Stone smiled slightly. "Why do you want Bonnie Karnofsky?"
"Long story," I said. "The short version is we think she's a witness in a murder investigation."
Stone nodded. "You want coffee?" he said.
"Sure," I said.
Without speaking, Hawk held up two fingers. Stone smiled again.
"Cream and sugar?"
"Both," I said.
"I'll be back in a couple minutes," Stone said.
He walked back to his car.
"He ain't no small-town s.h.i.+t-kicker," Hawk said.
"I know."
Stone reached into his car through the open side window, took out the radio mike, talked for a couple minutes, and put it back. Then he strolled toward the snack bar. While he was gone, five cars crossed the causeway, none of them registered to Sonny. In a few more minutes, he came back from the snack bar carrying three cups of coffee in a cardboard carrying tray. Balancing the coffee comfortably, Stone got in the backseat, sat, and distributed the coffee.
"Healy tell you I was everything a crime fighter should be?" I said.
"No. He said you'd probably do more good than harm."
"Ringing endors.e.m.e.nt," Hawk said.
Stone nodded at Hawk. "He said you should be in jail."
"Nice of you to check," Hawk said.
With a pocket knife, Stone cut a little hole in the plastic lid of his coffee cup. He drank some coffee.
"Tell me the long story," Stone said.
I told him the story, editing out the shooting at Taft. He listened soundlessly. Three more cars pa.s.sed us on the causeway. None of them Sonny's. When I was through, Stone stayed quiet for awhile, drinking his coffee.
"Sonny hasn't got her," he said finally.
"You know that," I said.
"Yeah."
"You know where she is?"
"No."
"How do you know she doesn't live with Sonny?" I said.
"Sonny's lived here awhile; we like to keep tabs on him."
"You've had him under surveillance?" I said.
"Yep."
"Has he spotted you?"
"Nope."
"How are you doing it?"
"One of his neighbors is a good sport," Stone said.
"You're in a house."
"Yep."
"You do camera surveillance?" I said.
"Yep."
"You have any pictures of Bonnie?"
Stone drank some more of his coffee. He seemed to like it. Another car went fruitlessly by on the causeway. Then he said, "Yep."
46.
I was in Stone's office at the Paradise Police Station. Hawk was still at the causeway. On Stone's desk were four somewhat grainy black-and-white head-shot blowups of a middle-aged woman. They weren't great pictures, but Bonnie was fully recognizable in them.
"So how come you never found out where she lived?" I said.
"No reason."
"Did you get her license number when she visited?"
"Sonny always sent a car for her."