“after she ditched him, or however he experienced it.”
“I know.”
They stared out at the ocean together. It was calm as evening arrived. The water moved gently and the surface of it was almost slick.
Jesse said, “He and I agreed that he’d stay away from Jenn.”
“Does Jenn know?”
“Yes. But I’m not sure she’s trusting the agreement.”
“I’ll stay on him,” Sunny said, “for a while, see if he keeps his end of the bargain.”
“He will,” Jesse said.
“No harm making sure,” Sunny said.
“Thank you,” Jesse said.
“Did Jenn have anything else to say when you told her about the agreement?” Sunny said.
Jesse smiled at the blank ocean.
“She asked if we’d had a fight,” he said.
Sunny shook her head slowly.
“That’s so Jenn,” Sunny said.
Jesse didn’t say anything.
“What a thrill,” Sunny said, “to have two men fighting over her.”
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Jesse was quiet.
“I know what you’re like,” Sunny said. “He wouldn’t have had a chance for it to be a fight.”
“He’s an amateur,” Jesse said.
“Sure,” Sunny said. “And you’re not. What’s sad is that she doesn’t know that, and she doesn’t know what you’re like.”
“And you do,” Jesse said.
“Yes,” Sunny said. “I do.”
Jesse nodded. He was motionless where he sat. He didn’t look at Sunny. Nor she at him. They remained fixed on the slow ocean in front of them. A herring gull came in and landed in front of them, and snapped up a piece of empty crab shell. There was no sustenance in it, so the gull put it back and hopped down the beach looking for better. Jesse watched it.
“She knows,” Jesse said.
“And doesn’t care?” Sunny said.
“She cares,” Jesse said.
Sunny continued to look out at the horizon.
“And she also doesn’t know and doesn’t care,” Jesse said.
“We who are about to shrink salute you,” Sunny said.
“I know her,” Jesse said. “I don’t understand her, but I know her. A while back, I thought we’d move back in together and it would be over. We’d be together. She wants that. I want that. And it didn’t work.”
“I like her better than I expected to,” Sunny said.
“People do,” Jesse said.
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“She’s everything you could want a person to be,” Sunny said.
“Except when she isn’t,” Jesse said.
“Which is often,” Sunny said.
“But not always,” Jesse said.
A hundred yards down the beach, the herring gull gave up and flew away. The beach was empty now except for the two of them and the gentle, repetitive, heedless roll of the water.
“She have a shrink yet?” Sunny said. “I know she’s had several. But I have a good one. If she’d go.”
“She’ll do what she’ll do,” Jesse said.
“And you’ll do it with her,” Sunny said.
Jesse didn’t answer. The sun was down. It was still light, but the ocean had darkened. The wind had died entirely, as it often did at sunset.
“I think we need to say good-bye,” Sunny said.
Jesse nodded silently.
“It doesn’t mean I’ll never see you,” Sunny said. “It doesn’t mean I won’t help you. I don’t know what it does mean, exactly.”
She slipped off the seawall and stood in front of him.
“Except,” she said, “right now it’s time to say good-bye.”
“Yes,” Jesse said.
His voice was hoarse. He stood. They put their arms around each other. Neither spoke. Neither moved. They stayed where they were, hugging each other beside the nearly inanimate ocean as the twilight continued to fade.
2 7 0
61
Jesse stood in the back of the room in the Town Hall auditorium while Molly held her daily press briefing.
“There is a development in the Walton Weeks murder,”
Molly said. “We have identified two suspects, and are pursuing several leads, though at this time we do not have sufficient evidence to arrest anyone.”
A television reporter in front said, “Can you give us names, Moll?”
Molly smiled.
“Sure,” she said, “how about Cain and Abel?”
“I mean names of suspects.”
R O B E R T B . P A R K E R
“Oh,” Molly said. “No, I can’t give you those names.”
“Why not,” someone yelled.
“Don’t want to,” Molly said.
“When do you expect an arrest?”
“Or arrests,” Molly said. “As soon as we develop our leads more fully.”
“Do you have a timetable?”
“Oh, absolutely,” Molly said. “ASAP. Margie, you have a question?”
“I understand the governor has become actively involved in the case,” a woman said.
“He has?” Molly said. “I’ll be damned.”
“You didn’t know that?” Margie said.
“Nope,” Molly said. “Had no idea.”
“Is there a political overtone to this case,” a man said.
“Here,” Molly said, “in the Bay State? Hard to imagine.”
“Are you saying the governor is involved and you don’t know it?”
“I’m not saying what the governor’s involved in,” Molly answered. “I have no knowledge of any involvement by the governor in this case.”
“Are you implying that his involvement is useless?”
“No.”
“Useful?”
“What part of ‘no knowledge’ don’t you understand, Jim?”
Molly said.
“What’s the governor’s position on this case?”
“I don’t know,” Molly said.
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“He’s not made it clear?”
“I haven’t spoken with the governor,” Molly said.
“About this case?”
“About anything,” Molly said. “I’ve never met him in my life.”
“Has Chief Stone spoken with the governor?”
“Don’t know,” Molly said.
“Why doesn’t Chief Stone ever meet with the press?”
“Doesn’t seem to want to,” Molly said.
“What about the public’s right to know?”
“Chief Stone is mostly about protect and serve,” Molly said.
“He doesn’t care about the public’s right to know?”
“Deeply,” Molly said. “He cares about that every bit as deeply as you do, Murray. As we all do.”
“Then why doesn’t he talk with us?”
“He likes to have me do it,” Molly answered. “He says I’m more fun. One more question?”
“What kinds of clues are you pursuing?”
“The ones we’ve got,” Molly said. “Thank you all very much.”
By the time Molly shoved her way through the reporters and got back to the station house, Jesse was there already.
“I saw you up back,” Molly said. “Do I get a raise for not directing them to you?”
“Better than that,” Jesse said. “You keep your job.”
“I hope the two-suspects thing didn’t get buried by the governor bullshit.”
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“There are enough reporters out there. A couple of them will recognize actual information,” Jesse said.
“Think it will get anything moving?”
“I don’t know. The tighter things feel,” Jesse said, “the more likely something is to come squeezing out.”
“As far as I can see, their best bet is to sit tight and do nothing.”
“That’s because you’re not feeling squeezed,” Jesse said.
“Except by the fucking press,” Molly said.
“I thought Irish Catholic mothers of four didn’t say fucking. ”
Molly smiled.
“We generally don’t,” Molly said. “On the other hand, we’re not ignorant of the phrase. There’s the four kids.”