Brendan DuBois
Fatal Harbor
As with my first novel, this one is for my parents,
Arthur and Mary DuBois.
Thanks for believing in me from the very start.
CHAPTER ONE
In my home state of New Hampshire, death certificates are a formal-looking document, with a light watermark in the center outlining the shape of our fair state. There are seals in each corner, an elaborate light-blue border with lots of swirls and curls, and the official state seal in the center. The paper is thick and has a light pink background, to prevent counterfeiting, I’m sure.
Just below the words CERTIFICATE OF DEATH, in all capital letters, there are sections to be filled out.
FULL NAME OF DECEASED
Next to those four official words, a three-word name had been typed in:
Diane Elizabeth Woods
Below the name, there are other sections of the death certificate to be filled out.
DATE OF DEATH
DATE OF BIRTH
And the usual and customary information of one’s life, all filled out in clean, bureaucratic prose, from PLACE OF DEATH to RESIDENCE to PLACE OF DISPOSITION.
About halfway down the list is the phrase that sticks out: MANNER OF DEATH.
I looked at it again.
MANNER OF DEATH.
And typewritten simply is one word:
Homicide.
I woke up with a start, an elbow in my side. A familiar male voice to my left: “Lewis, if you were working for my crew back in the day, you’d hope that falling asleep on the job would be a firing offense. And nothing else.”
I yawned. “Felix, in your day, I wasn’t within five hundred miles of this place.”
Felix Tinios laughed. “Then you missed a lot of action.”
I wiped at my eyes, yawned again. We were in Felix’s black Cadillac Escalade SUV, parked on a residential street in Brookline, Massachusetts, just outside Boston. It was late October and two in the morning, according to the Cadillac’s dashboard clock. I stretched, felt something pop in my back and legs.
“How much longer?” I asked.
“Up to you. This is your little op, now, isn’t it? I’m just here for… assistance and technical advice.”
Along this fine street were houses whose monthly mortgages could support a family of four for about a year or so in some areas of the United States. Most of the homes were dark, save for a few that had that ghastly light-blue glow in the windows from televisions that were left on.
“So, what’s your advice?”
The wind came up, stirring leaves along the pavement. Our target house was just up the street, on the left, near a fire hydrant. It was dark. It had been dark since we had gotten here, nearly four hours ago.
Felix stretched as well. “Stakeouts sure do suck,” he said.
“That’s a statement, not advice.”
“Best I can do right now.”
I stared at the house, willing a light to go on, a car to pull into its short driveway, anything to indicate that its occupant had finally come home. But the Colonial-style home with its attached two-car garage and black shutters remained lifeless.
“Didn’t think college professors had such exciting lives,” Felix said.
“Always a first time.”
“What does this clown teach again?”
“The clown’s name is Heywood Knowlton, he’s in the history department at Boston University, and he teaches a course called ‘Marxism and the American Consumer.’”
“What else does he teach?”
“That’s it.”
Felix grunted. “Nice gig if you can get it. It’s going to be a joy to talk to him, when he shows up.”
“If he shows up.”
“I’m supposed to be the pessimist in this crew, Lewis. Remember your place.”
Felix turned in his seat and reached back among our gear, came back with a Thermos container. “Coffee?”
“Not right now, thanks.”
Felix poured himself a small cup, took his time sipping it. At first the coffee smell had been a pleasant one; but, having been cooped up in the Cadillac for so long, it was now turning my stomach.
I rubbed at my eyes, nervous and jumpy. It had been a long four hours and I felt guilty for dozing off. I felt like I hadn’t taken a bath or shaved in a week, and in the dim light from the nearby street lamp, Felix looked like he had just stepped out of the pages of GQ magazine, wearing charcoal-gray slacks and a black turtleneck. For the past couple of days, we had been tracking Professor Knowlton, not because we wanted to audit his class, but because we wanted to talk to him about someone he knew, this particular someone who had put my best friend into a hospital ICU with little chance of recovery.
Our work had begun at Boston University earlier in the day, where we had followed Professor Knowlton from his office, through the pleasant campus of BU, and into another campus building. Through a pretext call, Felix had found out that after a faculty meeting, the professor was going to a function on Newbury Street celebrating another history professor’s book publication. Felix and I had set up surveillance on either end of the street, keeping the restaurant entrance in view, cell phones in our coat pockets, as people walked about us on the cool October evening.
But he never showed up. After a while, after seeing other BU faculty members dribbling out, each carrying their co-worker’s book — and I had to smile when one woman with a pinched face and oversized glasses walked by, volume in hand, and said to her younger male companion “There is no God if a dolt like him can get anything more complicated than a cookbook published”—Felix slid into the restaurant and came out, shaking his head.
We had missed him.
Now Felix said: “What news from the hospital?”
“Still in a coma, still in ICU.”
“Nothing more than that?”
“It’s enough.”
Felix drummed his fingers on the steering wheel. “We’ve been at this two days now. You still on board for what you’ve got planned?”
“I am. Why do you ask?”
“Because time’s gone on, that’s why. I’ve found that over time, well, things cool down. Perspectives change. What was once clear is now a bit foggy.”
Up ahead on the road, something scurried across from one row of shrubbery to another. Too small for a dog, too big for a cat. A fox, maybe? Here, in the dense suburbia of Brookline?
“Nothing’s changed, Felix. Not a damn thing.”
“He might not have anything for us.”
“He just might, and that’ll be worth it.”
Between us on the seat was a small handheld radio. Every now and then there was a small burst of static. Felix swiveled in his seat, put the Thermos away. Back in the rear were two black duffel bags with our respective gear, and underneath our seats were our respective weapons. I had a 9mm Beretta, and Felix had a 9mm Glock. Two different styles of pistols, but the same caliber, helpful if we were to get into a firefight and needed to share ammunition.
Not that either of us was planning to be on the receiving end of a firefight. It was just good to be prepared.
Felix said, “Another half hour.”
“Why not.”
And among our other preparations back there were plastic Flex-Cufs, a black cloth hood, some short lengths of rubber hose, some half-gallon containers of water, and other assorted pieces of gear to commence mayhem.
Then the radio crackled.
“Dispatch, B-four.”
B-four was a patrol unit for the Brookline Police Department.
“B-four, go.”
“B-four, respond to Wellington Street. Caller reports suspicious vehicle parked for an extended period of time, apparently two men inside. Vehicle large black SUV.”
“Dispatch, B-four, responding.”