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Dave Hansen sees the same thing, haloed by the pier lights. It’s a tough shot from a boat, even with a rifle, but he makes it, and puts a round between the guy’s shoulder blades.

Frank rolls, swings his gun to the fifth man, and shoots him in the heart.

Garth is running.

Frank gets up to chase him.

They’re neither of them young, but Donnie Garth hasn’t been through what Frank’s been through the past few days, so he starts to pull away.

Frank sees that his legs aren’t fast enough, but he knows a bullet will be. He raises his gun to shoot; then a searing pain burns in his chest and his left arm is numb. At first, he thinks it’s the bullet, but then he feels his heart crack like a breaking wave and he can’t breathe and the pain is awful; he gets off one last shot and has the satisfaction of seeing Donnie Garth drop.

Then Frank stops, grabs his chest, and topples into the sand.

“Daddy!”

Jill’s voice is the last thing he hears.

90

Dave Hansen waits until the senator’s press conference is almost over.

The senator stands behind the podium, flashing his trademark smile to the reporters, and asks, “Are there any more questions?”

Dave raises his hand.

The senator smiles down at him and nods.

“Do you know your rights?” Dave asks.

The senator looks at quizzically.

“You have the right to remain silent,” Dave says, stepping up toward the platform. Two Secret Service guys get in his way, but Dave holds up his FBI badge and pushes through them.

“Anything you say can and will be held against you in a court of law,” Dave says as he twists the senator’s hands behind his back and cuffs him.

Cameras are going off, and the bright video lights are striking Dave full in the face. He doesn’t care. “You have the right to an attorney-”

“This is ridiculous,” the senator says. “This is just a political-”

“-and if you cannot afford one,” Dave says, smirking, “one will be appointed for you.”

“What am I being arrested for?”

“The murder of Summer Lorensen,” Dave says.

He starts walking the senator through the crowd, heading toward the waiting car. The media are closing in around them like a crosscurrent in the impact zone. Dave opens the door, pushes the senator’s head down, nudges him into the seat, and closes the door again.

He gets into the front passenger seat and tells the intimidated young agent to step on the gas.

Dave’s in a hurry.

He’s already missed the Gentlemen’s Hour.

And he doesn’t want to be late for Frank Machianno’s funeral.

91

The crowd is immense.

Frank the Bait Guy was loved in the community.

There are fishermen here, and surfers, and the Little League kids with their families, and students from the drama club, and soccer kids and soccer moms, and the teenagers who played hoops underneath the baskets that Frank paid for, and the local Vietnamese are out in force.

And men are telling their sons how they caught their first fish on the pier at Frank’s annual fishing contest, and old surfers are telling their wives what Frank used to be like back in the days of the long, endless summers. And one Vietnamese guy is telling his kids how Frank stood up for him just a few days ago.

Who isn’t here, Dave thinks as he takes a seat in the front row beside Patty and Jill, is the Mickey Mouse Club. The ones that he hasn’t already arrested are in the wind, but he’s going to pick them up soon, because they aren’t that good or that smart.

And Donna isn’t here. She’s already in protective custody, but Donna is too classy to have come anyway-she wouldn’t have wanted to cause any more pain to the grieving daughter and widow.

The flag is draped over Frank’s coffin. It was in his will that he wanted a closed casket, so his friends would remember him the way he was in life, not like some wax dummy the morticians made up.

Dave stands as the Marines fire their rifles into the air and the bugler plays taps.

It’s long and slow, beautiful and sad under the warm sun of the false early spring day.

That’s okay, though, Dave thinks.

Spring was always Frank’s season.

The Marines fold up the flag and hand it to Patty, who shakes her head.

They hand it to Jill.

She takes it and smiles a tight smile.

Brave, Dave thinks. Like her old man.

There’s one last thing to be done.

It also came straight out of Frank’s will.

A second later, the recorded music comes out of the sound system:

“…ma quando vien lo sgelo il primo sole e mio, il primo bacio dell’aprile e mio! il primo sole e mio!…”

Epilogue

If Hanalei Pier isn’t the longest in Hawaii, it certainly is the prettiest, jutting out from a soft, palm-lined beach, with Bali Hai and the green mountains of the Na Pali coast rising in the background.

And early mornings are beautiful.

Soft and warm, year-round, even in the hour before the sun rises.

The hour when the bait guy arrives to get things set up in his little shack at the end of the pier, so that everything will be ready when even the earliest fishermen arrive to try their luck.

They know the bait shack is open, because they can smell it even before they see it-the smell of fresh roasting Kona coffee wafts down the pier and into their noses. If they’re regulars, or even if they’re nice and polite, Pete the Bait Guy will probably pour them a little cup, and make them listen to a little opera, and tell them a funny little story about how he had to fix the garbage disposal because hiswahini can’t remember not to shove mango peels downda kine.

“It’s a lot of work being me, bruddah, ” he’ll say.

What he won’t tell them is about how he had a heart attack on a different beach, and woke up in the ICU, and then in the Witness Protection Program. He won’t tell them that, and neither will his friend from the mainland who comes out about every year and surfs with him in the mornings during what is called, even in Kauai, the Gentlemen’s Hour.

No, Pete will just smile, share a joke and maybe an odd word from one of his crossword puzzles, and they’ll leave the bait shack with everything they need, and smiles on their faces, and a good feeling to start their day.

Everyone loves Pete the Bait Guy.