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Fortin turned toward Suit, looking surprised, as if he’d just remembered he was still in the room.

“I don’t have to answer any of this,” Fortin said.

“Pretty sure slapping around one of your student athletes, as coaches like to call them, could get you fired,” Molly said.

“This is bullshit,” Fortin said.

“Which part?” Jesse said.

“First of all,” Fortin said, “what gives you the right to follow me.”

“Well, Hal, as chief of police, I can follow anybody I goddamn well please.”

“And Jesse technically wasn’t following anybody,” Molly said. “I was the one following Matt Loes to the lake, and then you showed up.”

“I wasn’t talking to you,” Fortin said.

“But we’re all talking to you, aren’t we, Coach?”

Jesse idly noted that for Fortin’s hair to be as dark as it was, his age, he had to be coloring it. Maybe to make himself more relatable to the kids.

Or maybe there wasn’t enough dye in the world for Hal Fortin to do that.

“I didn’t slap anybody,” he said.

Jesse reached forward and opened the manila folder on his desk and slid out the pictures Molly had taken at the lake. He had already told her she might be a better photographer than Nellie. Molly had said, “I’m better at a lot of things than she is.”

He pushed the pictures closer to Fortin. He picked up one, looked at it, tossed it back down on Jesse’s desk.

“Okay, you got me,” Fortin said. “I slapped him because of what he did to Scott. You’re telling me you never had a coach who gave you a little tough love from time to time?”

“If they did,” Jesse said, “it was always just the one time.”

“What were you really doing with those kids at the lake?” Molly asked.

“I don’t need to tell you anything,” Fortin said.

“You’re right, you don’t,” Suit said. “And we don’t need to take these photographs to your boss, even though we could.”

“Or to Nellie Shofner at the Crier,” Jesse said.

“That snoopy little bitch,” Hal Fortin said. “She’s the one who needs a good...”

He managed to stop himself.

Molly smiled.

“Down, boy,” she said.

“For the last time,” Jesse said, “tell us what you were doing with two of your players and the girlfriend of your dead star at Silver Lake last night.”

Fortin started to speak. Jesse held up a hand. “And if you did need to talk to them, why do it one town over? Why the secrecy, Coach?”

The chair underneath him looked as small as the one underneath Matt Loes had. It was fascinating to Jesse watching a guy, Fortin, to whom being in charge was probably like some powerful narcotic, deal with being on the wrong side of power. Jesse’s, in this case. But trying to figure out a way to somehow take back the room.

“Okay,” he said finally. “Okay. I just needed to get with the three kids I thought had been closest to Jack as anybody at that school and remind them that the whole town is watching them. Watching us. While everybody is talking about Jack and speculating about Jack, and what might have happened to him. I wanted to tell them not to become part of the noise themselves.”

“What noise?” Suit said.

“The noise about whether or not it might have been suicide, for chrissakes,” Fortin said. “Or drugs. Or booze.” Fortin reached over now and slapped Jesse’s desk hard and said, “Or if somebody might have thrown the kid into the water.”

His face was a clenched fist now. Jesse had seen it before when somebody on his team made a big out, or a big mistake.

Fortin lowered his voice.

“I told the guys who are supposed to be my team leaders that they can’t do stupid shit like getting into a fight,” he said. “More than anything, I told them that we need to take care of Jack dead as much as we did when he was alive.”

“Not your job,” Suit said.

“Says who?” Fortin said.

“Says his uncle,” Jesse said.

“So we’re clear,” Suit said to Fortin, his voice quiet, “he thought you were a raging asshole.”

“I don’t have to take this,” Fortin said, “whether you’re his uncle or not.”

Fortin stood.

“Sit the fuck down,” Jesse said, in the same tone he’d used on Matt Loes.

Fortin hesitated briefly, but then sat.

“What are you all hiding about Jack Carlisle?” Jesse asked.

“Nobody’s hiding anything.”

“I think you are,” Jesse said. “And when I find out what, because I will find out what, it will likely be just the two of us having a chat.”

“Are you threatening me?” Fortin said.

“Not even close,” Jesse said.

Fortin opened his mouth and closed it and finally said, “I got nothing to say to any of you.”

This time he got up and out of the chair too quickly and the chair tipped over behind him. He left it there and walked out, leaving the door open behind him, and then was gone.

“Good talk,” Jesse said.

Jesse was alone in his office about twenty minutes later when Jimmy came in without knocking, out of breath, to tell him about the 911 call that came in from Nicholas Farrell’s house.

“Shots fired,” Jimmy said.

Jesse closed his eyes, but could only see Charlie dead on the floor.

“By whom?” he said.

“Nicholas.”

“Is he okay?” Jesse said.

“He’s the one made the call.”

“Tell me exactly what he said.”

“He just said that we needed to get over there, because he shot the son of a bitch,” Jimmy said.

Twenty-Nine

Nicholas lived even closer to where Charlie Farrell had lived than Miss Emma did. Usually Jesse could make it there by car in five minutes. He used the siren now, made it in two.

Nicholas was in his wheelchair when Jesse came running up the walk and through the front door. Back in the chair, as he pointed out to Jesse. He held an icepack to the right side of his face. There was dried blood over his right eye.

His.38 was on the coffee table.

“I walked... I wheeled in on the guy,” Nicholas said.

“Then what?”

“He swung the tire iron in his hand and did his level best to separate my head from my shoulders,” Nicholas said. “Maybe it was the same thing he used on Gramps. The tire iron.”

“You get a look at him?”

Nicholas shook his head. “Some kind of ski mask.”

Jesse said, “We need to get you looked at.”

“Later.”

“What happened after he clobbered you?”

“I went with the blow and slowly rolled out of my chair, like the blow had knocked me out,” Nicholas said. “But I had time to grab my gun from the little pouch under the right armrest.”

“He didn’t notice you go for it?”

“He was leaning over to swing at me again. Maybe for the fences this time. That was when I rolled over and shot him.”

“Where?”

Nicholas grinned. “I was trying to aim for center mass, like Gramps taught me at the range. But I fired too quickly, and got him in the hand instead. He screamed, picked up the tire iron, and ran like a bitch.”

“Sounds like calling him that is insulting to all the other bitches in the world.”

Jesse took the icepack away, saw how bad the bruising was on that side of Nicholas Farrell’s head, took out his phone, called his own doctor: Jim Frazier. Told the nurse it was Chief Stone and he was bringing somebody over.

Jesse grinned and said to Jim’s nurse, “Tell him he needs to see this kid right away, or else.”