Decker trudged back to the shack and sat on the porch. Seconds later he heard a cracking noise overhead, and Skink dropped out of an old pine tree.
He got up off the ground and said, "I'm beginning not to despise you."
"Nice to hear," Decker said.
"You didn't go inside."
"It's not my house," Decker said.
"Precisely," Skink grumped, clomping onto the porch. "Some people would've gone in anyway."
Daylight added no nuances or definition to Skink's appearance. Today he wore camouflage fatigues, sunglasses, and a flowered shower cap from which sprouted the long braid of silver-gray hair.
He poured coffee for Decker, but none for himself.
"I got fresh rabbit for lunch," Skink said.
"No thanks."
"I said fresh."
"I just ate," Decker said unconvincingly.
"How was the funeral?"
Decker shrugged. "Did you know Robert Clinch?"
"I know them all," Skink said.
"Lanie Gault?"
"Her brother's the big tycoon who hired you."
"Right." Decker had been relieved when Ott had told him that Dennis Gault was Lanie's brother. A husband would have been disconcerting news indeed.
Decker said, "Miss Gault thinks there's something strange about the way Bobby Clinch died."
Skink was on his haunches, working on the fire. He didn't answer right away. Once the tinder was lit, he said, "Good rabbit is tough to come by. They tend to get all the way smushed and there's no damn meat left. The best ones are the ones that just barely get clipped and knocked back to the shoulder of the road. This one here, you'd hardly know it got hit. Meat's perfect. Might as well dropped dead of a bunny heart attack." Skink was arranging the pieces on a frypan.
"I'll try a bite or two," Decker said, surrendering.
Only then did Skink smile. It was one of the unlikeliest smiles Decker had ever seen, because Skink had perfect teeth. Straight, flawless, blindingly white ivories, the kind nobody is born with. TV-anchorman-type teethSkink's were that good.
Decker wasn't sure if he should be comforted or concerned. He was still thinking about those teeth when Skink said: "I was at the Coon Bog Saturday morning."
"When it happened?"
"Right before."
"They said he must've been doing sixty knots when the boat flipped."
Skink basted the sizzling rabbit with butter. He looked up and said, "When I saw the boat, it wasn't moving."
"Was Clinch alive?"
"Hell, yes."
Decker said, "Then the accident must have happened after you left."
Skink snorted.
"Did he see you?" Decker asked.
"Nope. I was kneeling in the trees, skinning out a rattler. Nobody saw me." He handed Decker a hunk of fried meat.
Decker blew on it until it cooled, then took a small bite. It was really very good. He asked, "What made you notice Clinch?"
"Because he wasn't fishing."
Decker swallowed the meat, and out came a quizzical noise.
"He wasn't fishing," Skink repeated, "and I thought that was damn strange. Get up at dawn, race like mad to a fishing hole, then just poke around the lily pads with a paddle. I was watching because I wanted to see if he'd find what he was looking for."
"Did he?"
"Don't know. I left, had to get the snake on ice."
"Christ," Decker said. He reached into the frypan and gingerly picked out another piece of rabbit. Skink nodded approvingly.
Decker asked, "What do you make of it?"
Skink said: "I'm working for you, is that right?"
"If you'll do it, I sure need the help."
"No shit." The pan was empty. Skink poured the gloppy grease into an old milk carton.
"Bass were slapping over that morning," he said, "and not once did that fucker pick up a rod and cast. Do you find that strange?"
"I suppose," Decker said.
"God, you need a lesson or two," Skink muttered. "Guys like Clinch love to catch bass more than they love to screw. That's the truth, Miami. You put 'em on a good bass lake at dawn and they get hard.So the question is, why wasn't Bobby Clinch fishing on the Coon Bog last Saturday?"
Decker had nothing to offer.
"You want to hear something even stranger?" Skink said. "There was another boat out there too, and not far away. Two guys."
Decker said, "And they weren't fishing either, were they, captain?"
"Ha-ha!" Skink cawed. "See therethose rabbit glands went straight to your brain!"
Decker's coffee had cooled, but it didn't matter. He gulped the rest of it.
Skink had become more animated and intense; the cords in his neck were tight. Decker couldn't tell if he was angry or ecstatic. Using a pocket knife to pick strings of rabbit meat from his perfect teeth, Skink said: "Well, Miami, aren't you going to ask me what this means?"
"It was on my list of questions, yeah."
"You'll hear my theory tonight, on the lake."
"On the lake?"
"Your first communion," Skink said, and scrambled noisily back up into the big pine.
Ott Pickney had left Miami in gentle retreat from big-city journalism. He knew he could have stayed at the Sunfor the rest of his life, but felt he had more or less made his point. Having written virtually nothing substantial in at least a decade, he had nonetheless departed the newspaper in a triumphant state of mind. He had survived the conversion to cold type, the advent of unions, the onslaught of the preppy cubs, the rise of the hotshot managers. Ott had watched the stars and starfuckers arrive and, with a minimum of ambition, outlasted most of them. He felt he was living proof that a successful journalist need not be innately cunning or aggressive, even in South Florida.
In Ott's own mind, Harney was the same game, just a slower track.
Which is why he half-resented R. J. Decker's infernal skepticism about the death of Bobby Clinch. A foolhardy fisherman wrecks his boat and drownsso what? In Miami it's one crummy paragraph on page 12-D; no one would look twice. Ott Pickney was peeved at Decker's coy insinuation that something sinister was brewing right under Ott's nose. This wasn't Dade County, he thought, and these weren't Dade County people. The idea of an organized cheating ring at the fish tournaments struck Ott as merely farfetched, but the suggestion of foul play in Robert Clinch's death was a gross insult to the community. Ott resolved to show R. J. Decker how wrong he was.
After the funeral, Ott went back to the newsroom and stewed awhile. The Sentinel'sdeadlines being what they were, he had two days to play with the Clinch piece. As he flipped through his notebook, Ott figured he had enough to bang out fifteen or twenty inches. Barely.
In an uncharacteristic burst of tenacity, he decided to give Clarisse Clinch another shot.
He found the house in chaos. A yellow moving van was parked out front; a crew of burly men was emptying the place. Clarisse had set up a command post in the kitchen, and under her scathing direction the movers were working very swiftly.
"Sorry to intrude," Ott said to her, "but I remembered a couple more questions."
"I got no answers," Clarisse snapped. "We're on our way to Valdosta."
Ott tried to picture Clarisse in a slinky, wet-looking dress, sliding long-legged into a tangerine sports car. He couldn't visualize it. This woman was a different species from Lanie Gault.
"I just need a little more about Bobby's hobby," Ott said. "A few anecdotes."
"Anecdotes!" Clarisse said sharply. "You writing a book?"