“This is Molly Crane,” Jesse said, nodding at Molly, who sat in a straight chair to the right of his desk. Molly had a notebook in her lap.
“We are here representing a group of neighbors,” Carr said, “in order to call your attention to a problem.”
Jesse nodded.
“You are interested, Mr. Stone,” Miriam said, “I assume.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“As you may know,” Walter Carr said, “there is a plan being implemented to transform the former Crowne estate on Paradise Neck into an alternative school for disadvantaged students.”
“Mostly Latino,” Jesse said. “From Marshport.”
“Paradise Neck is very elite. The streets are very narrow. The ocean impinges on either side.”
Jesse nodded.
“There is no opportunity for expansion of the present roadways,” Carr said.
“True,” Jesse said.
Blake the lawyer had a deep tan and snow-white hair worn longish and combed straight back. He was sitting quietly with his legs crossed, observing. It was an approach Jesse admired. Ms. Fiedler was impatient.
“For God’s sake, Walter, the point is simple. The neighborhood cannot support busloads of unruly children coming and going in so narrow a compass.”
“How about ruly children?” Jesse said.
Blake smiled faintly.
“Excuse me?” Ms. Fiedler said.
“Is it the number of buses?” Jesse said. “Or who’s in them.”
“Those buses will represent a huge traffic problem,” Ms. Fiedler said.
She looked at Molly, who was writing in her notebook.
“What is she doing?” Ms. Fiedler said.
“Her name is Officer Crane,” Jesse said.
“Whatever it is, what is she doing.”
Jesse smiled.
“I don’t know,” Jesse said. “Molly, what are you doing?”
“I’m a female,” she said. “I have a compulsion to sit near the boss and take notes.”
“Notes?” Ms. Fiedler said. “This is an informal discussion. There’s nothing here for the record.”
“What record is that?” Jesse said.
“Don’t be smart,” she said. “I do not want any notes taken.”
“Okay. But I’ll probably forget a bunch of stuff,” Jesse said, “without notes.”
“I want to hear what she has written,” Ms. Fiedler said.
“Miriam,” Blake said softly.
“No, I insist,” Ms. Fiedler said. “What have you written, young woman?”
Molly riffled back though the leaves of her steno pad for a moment, studied a page, and said, “No spicks on Paradise Neck.”
Blake looked down. Jesse’s face didn’t change expression. Ms. Fiedler was horrified.
“How…my God in heaven…how dare you.”
Walter Carr rose to his feet.
“We have said no such thing,” he said.
His pinkish face had gotten much pinker. He looked at the lawyer.
“Is this actionable, Austin?”
Blake’s face was serious, but Jesse could see the amusement in his eyes.
“Most things are actionable, Walter,” he said. “This is not something in which I would expect the action to go your way.”
“She has insulted us,” Ms. Fiedler said.
“I think she’s just kidding you a little, Miriam,” Blake said.
“Well, I think she’s insulting,” Ms. Fiedler said.
She turned on Jesse.
“I want her reprimanded,” she said.
“You bet,” Jesse said. “How many kids are going to attend this school?”
“Twelve,” Carr said.
“So,” Jesse said. “A bus will deliver them in the morning and pick them up in the afternoon.”
No one answered.
“Twelve of them,” Jesse said. “Age?”
“Preschool,” Carr said.
Jesse nodded.
“The worst kind,” he said.
Carr didn’t say anything.
“It is,” Ms. Fielder said, “the tip of the camel’s nose. It needs to be stopped at the beginning before the value of the Neck simply vanishes.”
“Real-estate value?” Jesse said.
“All value,” Ms. Fiedler said.
Jesse didn’t say anything. The room was silent.
Finally Ms. Fiedler said, “Well?”
“Twelve preschoolers and one bus do not seem to me a public safety issue,” Jesse said.
“That’s not your decision,” Ms. Fiedler said.
“Actually, it is,” Jesse said.
“In a democracy,” Ms. Fiedler said, “the people rule. You work for us.”
“What a terrible thought,” Jesse said.
“So you are not going to act?”
“Not at the moment,” Jesse said.
Ms. Fiedler stood.
“You have not heard the last of this,” she said.
“I was guessing that,” Jesse said.
Ms. Fiedler stalked out without speaking again. The men followed her. Carr stared straight ahead. Blake winked at Molly on the way out.
Jesse and Molly sat silently for a time. Then Jesse said, “‘No spicks on Paradise Neck’?”
“She was driving me crazy,” Molly said.
“I sort of guessed that, too,” Jesse said.
“Are you going to reprimand me?” Molly said.
“Worse, I’m going to punish you.”
“You are?”
“Yes,” Jesse said. “You may not talk dirty to me for the rest of the day.”
“Oh, God,” Molly said, “not that.”
9.
Jesse sat with Suitcase Simpson in the front seat of Simpson’s cruiser parked at Paradise Beach. Simpson was eating a submarine sandwich for lunch, taking pains not to dribble on his uniform shirt. Jesse was drinking coffee.
“Funny,” Simpson said. “Whenever you’re near the ocean, you have to look at it.”
Jesse nodded.
“Always makes me feel religious,” Simpson said.
Jesse nodded.
“I wonder why that is?” Simpson said.
“Got me,” Jesse said.
“Make you feel religious?” Simpson said.
“Yes.”
They looked at the ocean for a time. It was high tide and the water covered most of the beach. A few people in bathing suits occupied the narrow strip of sand above high water.
“Crow knows we’re watching him,” Simpson said.
“No reason he shouldn’t,” Jesse said. “Who’s with him now.”
“Eddie.”
“Crow doing anything interesting?” Jesse said.
“Nope.”
Simpson finished his sandwich and wiped his mouth with a paper napkin. He put the napkin and the sandwich wrappings back in the paper bag that the sandwich had come in.
“Mostly,” Simpson said, “he hangs around. He has lunch at Daisy Dyke’s a lot. He has a drink at the Gray Gull in the evening. Goes to Paradise Health & Fitness every day in the morning. Rest of the time he cruises around town.”
“Walking or driving?” Jesse said.
“Both. Drives all over town. Parks sometimes and walks around. Why?”
“Might help us figure out who or what he’s looking for,” Jesse said. “Where’s he walk around?”
“Shopping center, goes in the stores. Comes to the beach sometimes. Browses all the shops on Paradise Row sometimes. Watches tennis down by the high school.”
“He check out the commuter trains?” Jesse said.
Simpson shrugged. He took a small notebook from his shirt pocket and read through it.
“Nope,” Simpson said. “Haven’t seen him do that. I check with the other guys, too, and try to incorporate their notes in mine.”
Jesse smiled.
“Lead investigator,” he said.
“Might as well keep things together,” Simpson said. “Do it right, you know?”
“Suit,” Jesse said. “If it were in the budget, I’d give you a raise.”
“But it’s not,” Simpson said.
“No. He ever go down to the wharf?” Jesse said.
“Nope.”
“Softball?”
“Nope.”
“Maybe he’s looking for a woman,” Jesse said.
“Because of where he looks?”
“Yeah. I know it’s a big generalization, but he seems more interested in places where you’d find women.”
“I don’t think you’re allowed to think things like that in Paradise,” Simpson said.