McCane toppled, stiff-legged, to the floor, his finger frozen on the trigger of the.38. I stared at the window and could see Richards's gun, extended into the smoke and smell of cordite. She was still sighting down the barrel.
"You don't let anyone point a gun at a fellow cop," she said, her lips beginning to tremble. "That's one of the first things you learn when you're a real officer on the street."
35
Red and blue lights swirled through the trees and headlights crosshatched the open field, and all the sudden attention on the place seemed to make it shrink. A few residents had gathered at a distance in the street.
I sat on the rear bumper of an open ambulance. One paramedic was trying to cradle my arm into a sling while another was using an antiseptic soaked towel to wipe the blood off the knuckles of my right fist.
Richards was next to me. Her weapon had been taken and placed into a plastic evidence bag for the shooting review board.
We both watched as Eddie Baines was taken from the blockhouse to a waiting ambulance. It took four men to lift him onto a wheeled stretcher and push him through the high grass. Sergeant Carannante said Baines was unconscious when they arrived. A paramedic had guessed the man had lost several pints of blood from the gunshot wound. He doubted he would survive.
Almost apologetically the sergeant explained that the call to the river had been a false alarm, that the man seen pushing a cart had been a late-night janitor wheeling a bin of trash through the alley to a dumpster.
"There was so much radio traffic, no one recognized your call," he said to Richards. "The dispatcher thought you were with us, and so did I.
"Then it took us a while to get here and we couldn't figure out why Mr. Freeman's truck was parked in the road with a girl handcuffed to the steering wheel."
I looked at Richards and she shook her head.
"Witness," she said. "Oh, by the way. There's a hundred-dollar bill in the locked glove box that needs to be bagged for evidence."
The sergeant nodded, as if nothing this night would be an unusual request.
"And we've got to get you over to administration, Detective," he said to Richards. "Chief Hammonds is waiting. And you don't want to see this."
Across the field the coroner's team was removing McCane's body, hefting the black bag across the dried grass. Richards got up, touched my shoulder and when I looked into her eyes her fingers drifted to the scar on my neck and a single tear stained her cheek. I couldn't lie and tell her it would be alright.
"I'll follow you," I said.
Carannante followed me to my truck, still parked in the middle of the street where Richards had pulled up and come to back me up. The steering wheel was scraped and gouged where the girl had tried to pull herself free from the handcuffs.
"They took her to the lockup on a vagrancy charge," Carannante said. "That's all we can hold her on for now."
"And Carlyle?"
"Couldn't find him. But he'll surface."
I unlocked the glove box and the sergeant handed me an evidence bag into which I slipped the hundred.
"If they match the sequence number to the ones they found in Dr. Marshack's car, you've got a physical link between him and Eddie," I said, handing him the bag.
"I'll take care of it," Carannante said.
I U-turned the truck and had started down the street when I saw them gathered at the next corner. The three-man crew was standing back away from the glare of the squad cars. When my headlights caught them they turned and started the other way. When I pulled up even to them they stopped and the leader looked into my window.
"Y'all a violent people," he said.
I could say nothing in response. He held out his fist and I tapped his knuckles with mine and he shook his head and turned to continue back north to the off-limits.
36
I was sitting balanced in the stern seat of my canoe, my fly-fishing line lay dormant on the brown green surface of the river. The May sun was on my shoulders and thighs. The sky was a cloudless blue bowl so deep in color it hurt your eyes to stare into it. I pulled the bill of my cap down farther and tried to will a tarpon out of the nearby tangle of red mangrove.
It had been five months since the emergency room doctors had gone to work on Eddie Baines's exploded kidney, transfusing him with several pints of blood and saving his life. He had recuperated enough to be arraigned on a prosecutor's charge of five counts of murder in the deaths of Billy's women.
His public defender had him tested by an independent psychiatrist who reported the man had an IQ of 57 and that his understanding of the charges was such that he could not possibly aid his attorneys in his defense. Eddie was remanded to the forensics unit of the Florida State Prison system in Chattahoochee. Under the law he will stay incarcerated there until he is deemed competent to stand trial.
It had been two months since we gathered-Richards, Billy and myself-at Billy's apartment to watch an eleven o'clock news report on the issuing of subpoenas to the Delaware-based investor group that had bought the viaticals on Billy's five dead policyholders.
The cameras caught Billy's profile in the background as federal marshals carted out boxes of records from the firm's twentieth floor offices. Billy had been retained as an advising counsel to the government probe. The investment company's lawyers had already issued a statement that they had no knowledge of the deaths of the five women, denied having ever employed Frank McCane or having ever heard of Dr. Harold Marshack.
"This is a legal and reputable investment business that carries out thousands of viatical transactions in the southeastern United States that benefit the policyholders in a time of financial need. We categorically deny any knowledge of the abhorrent claims contained in the indictment," a lawyer for the group read from a prepared text into a bouquet of news microphones.
"We do not know," I'd said, standing at Billy's kitchen counter, sipping a beer.
"They'll know w-when the auditors get done m-matching up the names and dates and amounts that that Miami hacker burned on a CD before McCane had him destroy Marshack's hard drive," Billy said. "It's the a-advantage of b-busting an intrastate scheme-you get the G to follow the money."
And it had been a month since Billy had given me a half-joking ultimatum: He would continue his legal fight against the state's attempt to take over my river shack, if I would get a P.I.'s license and officially work for him. I'd told him I would think about it.
I was still thinking, my line now snaked out on the water like a curved thread of flotsam. I was staring up at the big osprey perched high in the sabal palm above me, his white chest puffed out, his yellow eye seeing everything. Suddenly, the canoe thumped.
"So, can the fish hear when you're talking?" Richards said from her seat at the other end of the canoe. She was wearing a wide- brimmed straw hat, huge sunglasses and a long-sleeved shirt, but her legs were bare and crossed at the ankle.
"No, I don't believe so," I answered the question.
"Then talk to me," she said.
So we talked about movies I hadn't seen, and books she hadn't read, and places neither of us had been, and we sat back and watched the movement of water and soaked in the warm spring sun and let a Florida breeze softly rock us.