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“Well,” I said heartily when we reached my car, “it’s certainly been nice talking to you and—”

He leaned closer. “Kidd said if I saw you to ask if you like black olives or green peppers on your pizza.”

“I beg your pardon?”

“Kidd said—”

“No,” I interrupted. “I heard that part. You tell Officer Chapin that I said No way, José.”

Smith rubbed his chin dubiously. “Well, I’ll tell him, but you know what’s going to happen, don’t you?”

“What?”

“You’re probably going to get olives and peppers.”

“You tell Kidd Chapin that if he shows up at my place, I’m going to turn on every light and blow a horn so that everybody in the neighborhood knows he’s there.”

“Generally they ring a church bell,” Smith chuckled. “You hear a church bell ringing on a weekday in the spring, you can bet there’s a game warden on the island.”

•      •      •

Back at the cottage, I waved to Mahlon and Guthrie, who were still out working on the boat. Considering that Mahlon hoped to hold the Bynum boys to Andy’s promise of that truck engine, I was surprised he’d skipped the funeral. I slipped off my dress and got into jeans and a slouchy sweatshirt, thinking I’d go over and watch, but a car pulled up outside and I heard the door slam.

It was Jay Hadley, still dressed for the funeral in a soft navy suit and red-and-white spectator pumps with a red purse. A far cry from the shirt and shorts she’d worn on Sunday. She carried a bulging manila folder.

When I went to the door, she said, “Sorry to bother you, Judge, but I need a little advice, if you don’t mind.”

I invited her in and offered her something to drink, but all she would take was a glass of ice water.

“You see, Judge—”

“Please. Call me Deborah.”

Until then, she’d been business-like. Now she looked downright shy. “And I’m Jay.”

That out of the way, I asked how I could help and she laid the manila folder on the couch between us.

“These are some of Andy’s papers. See, the Alliance wants me to act as interim president and I said I would. Andy’s boy, Maxton, brought me over a big stack of stuff last night and when I was going through it—” She hesitated. “I don’t know if Barbara Jean Winberry’s told you how much Andy hated Linville Pope?”

“I gather they didn’t get along very well, but I don’t know any details.”

“Andy’s had it in for her ever since she wrecked his honey pot over on North River about a year ago.”

I couldn’t help smiling as I remembered Andy talking about his honey pot.

She gave a sad smile back and pushed away a lock of sun-bleached hair that had fallen into her eyes. “When there were no other oysters around, when nobody could find a half-box of crabs, Andy’d go progging around a place on North River and always bring home a nice mess for supper. Linville Pope helped develop a stretch right slam on his honey pot and that was the end of that. He was iller than a channel crab over it, and after that, seems like he was always out to get back at her.”

I could understand. From what I’ve heard most watermen are secretive and protective of their special good luck places.

“Anyhow, ‘bout a week ago, or maybe two weeks, Andy said he’d finally got the goods on her. ‘She’s built her house on sand,’ he said, and he was going to blow it down.”

“He was that vindictive?”

“Andy Bynum was one of the decentest men on the island and he did everything by the rules, but if you ever got on his bad side, he’d use the rules to get you back.” “He didn’t tell you what the goods were?”

“No, but I know he spent a lot of time at the courthouse, messing in the public records. That’s what this is,” she said, patting the file folder. “His notes, the copies he made of her permits, newspaper stories and a bunch of other stuff. The thing is, I’ve been through it and if there’s something there, I can’t see it. You’re a lawyer. Maybe you could spot it.”

“For what purpose?” I asked.

“Linville Pope’s getting to be very strong in the area,” Jay said frankly. “She doesn’t mind cutting corners to get what she wants. And what she wants is all commercial fishing out of the sound. I think it’d be good if we could clip her wings just enough to even things out.”

Much as I was starting to come down on the side of the watermen, I wasn’t easy about blackmail and coercion. On the other hand, if Linville really had done something illegal, why should she profit by it at their expense?

“Okay,” I said, taking the folder. “We’ll see if she broke any of the rules.”

“Thanks,” she said. “Deborah.”

“You’re welcome, Jay.”

•      •      •

The rain finally set in for real around dark and it rained so hard for a couple of hours that I had to go around closing windows.

I only meant to just leaf through the folder and then go find something to eat, once the rain slacked. But I got absorbed in all the land deals Pope Properties had been involved in, and the next time I looked up, it was nearly ten P.M.

Every eating place on the island would be closed by now.

I’d left a side window cracked for ventilation and realized that somewhere, someone was cooking something that smelled luscious. Something with olive oil and garlic and—

A low voice outside the window said, “Your pizza’s here.”

9

Ever present, truest Friend,

Ever near Thine aid to lend,

Leave us not to doubt and fear,

Groping on in darkness drear,

When the storms are raging sore,

Hearts grow faint, and hopes give o’er,

Whisper softly, “Wanderer, come!

Follow Me, I’ll guide thee home.”

—Marcus M. Wells

“This is absolutely, positively the last time,” I told Kidd Chapin as I reached for a second slice of the best pizza I’d eaten in six months. Not only did it have olives and peppers and sausage, two slices even had anchovies, an irresistible combination. “If you don’t catch somebody shooting loons tomorrow morning, you’ll have to go back under the porch or go lie out in the bushes.”

“And get my tailfeathers shot off?” he grinned. “Not!”

“Well, it won’t be here,” I warned, “because I’ll finish up tomorrow evening and drive on back to Dobbs.”

We were seated at the Formica kitchen table, shades drawn, splitting the last three beers in the refrigerator, and telling war stories.

At least Kidd Chapin was. He reminded me of Terry Wilson, my SBI buddy. I’d already heard his oystering story about the poachers he’d caught only that day—two old-timers who swore on their mothers’ graves that they’d harvested that bushel of succulent bivalves before the thirty-first of March, the day oyster season officially closed. “They said they were just bringing those two-week-old sackfuls out in their boat to wet ‘em down again.”

Next had come his bear story, two loon stories, and now we were onto spotlighting deer.

“—so we’re trying to sneak up on this abandoned house out at the edge of a soybean field where we’ve heard there’s been lights flashing around at night and the sound of gunshots. Well, just about the time we get in range, the door flings open and this powerful flashlight beam sweeps across the field and then pow-pow-pow! We dive for cover and land in a briar-covered ditch with about six inches of water. A minute later, we hear the little skinny one yell, ‘I b’lieve I got him, Cletus!’