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“Homicide during the commission of a felony,” Jesse said.

“I doubt you could prove that,” Crow said. “All you know is I was with some people, and then I drove away in a speedboat to escape a shoot-out.”

“With a guy who turned up dead, in a boat that turned up empty.”

“Can’t tell you about that,” Crow said. “I got off the boat five miles up the coast.”

“So you didn’t come here to turn yourself in,” Jesse said.

“I got some business in Paradise,” Crow said. “I come here to see that you and I wouldn’t be scraping up against each other while I was here.”

“Two of my cops died when the bridge to Stiles Island got blown,” Jesse said. “Some people on the island.”

“Yeah,” Crow said. “Macklin was a bad guy.”

“And you?” Jesse said.

“Pussycat,” Crow said.

“You gonna be in town long?” Jesse said.

“Awhile,” Crow said.

“Why?” Jesse said.

“I’m looking for someone,” Crow said.

“Why?”

“Guy hired me,” Crow said.

“Why you?”

“I’m good at stuff like that,” Crow said. “The guy trusts me.”

He grinned at Jesse.

“And,” he said, “I know the territory.”

“Me, too,” Jesse said.

“I know,” Crow said. “And if we can’t coexist it’ll make my job a lot harder. That’s why I stopped by.”

“Who you looking for?” Jesse said.

“Don’t have a name,” Crow said.

“Ever seen him?”

Crow shook his head.

“Got a picture?”

“Not a good one,” Crow said.

“Want to show it to me?” Jesse said.

“No.”

“So how you going to find him?’

“I’ll work something out,” Crow said.

“What happens when you find him?”

“I report to my employer,” Crow said.

Jesse nodded slowly. “As long as I have you in town,” he said, “I’m going to do everything I can to put together a case against you.”

“I figured that,” Crow said. “I say you won’t be able to.”

“Limitation is sort of complicated,” Jesse said. “There was bank robbery involved, kidnapping, these fall under federal statutes. I’ll talk to an ADA tomorrow, see what they can tell me.”

“Ten years covers most things,” Crow said.

“We’re going to watch you all the time you’re in town,” Jesse said.

“But you’re not going to harass me.”

“If we can put a case together on you, we’ll arrest you,” Jesse said.

“Until then?” Crow said.

“We’ll wait and watch,” Jesse said.

Crow nodded. The two men sat silently until Crow spoke.

“You know about me,” he said.

“I checked you out,” Jesse said. “When you were here before.”

“What they tell you,” Crow said.

“Be very careful,” Jesse said.

Crow smiled.

“Macklin was good,” Crow said.

Jesse nodded.

“I wasn’t sure anybody could take him,” Crow said.

“Except you?” Jesse said.

“Except me.”

“Now you know,” Jesse said.

Crow nodded. They were quiet again. Both men motionless, looking at each other.

“You let the hostages go,” Jesse said.

Crow nodded.

“They were all women,” he said.

“Yes,” Jesse said.

They looked at each other some more. The room felt charged, Jesse thought, as if a thunderstorm were near. Then Crow rose gracefully to his feet.

“I guess we know where we stand,” Crow said.

“Stop by anytime,” Jesse said.

Crow smiled and went out the door, past Suitcase Simpson, who was leaning on the wall just to the right of Jesse’s door, and past Molly Crane, who was on the other side.

Crow nodded at them both.

“Officers,” he said.

And went on out of the station.

2.

Molly and Suit came into the office.

“I remember him,” Simpson said.

“I called Suit in from patrol,” Molly said. “I thought extra backup would be good.”

“What’d he want?” Suit said.

Jesse told them.

“Brazen bastard,” Simpson said.

Molly and Jesse both looked at him.

“Brazen?” Molly said.

Suit grinned.

“I been taking some night courses,” he said.

“You have no idea who he’s looking for?” Molly said to Jesse.

Jesse shook his head. “I’m not sure Crow does, either,” he said.

“He say what he’d do when he found him?” Molly said.

“Said he’d check with his employer.”

“Guy like that looking for somebody,” Simpson said, “not good for the somebody.”

“No, it’s not,” Jesse said.

“Think he’ll find him?” Molly said.

“Yes.”

“Hard to make a ten-year-old case,” Molly said.

Jesse nodded.

“Isn’t he some kind of Indian?” Simpson said.

“Claims he’s Apache,” Jesse said.

“You believe him?”

“He’s something,” Jesse said.

“He’s a hunk,” Molly said.

“A hunk?” Simpson said.

“He’s absolutely gorgeous,” Molly said.

“Isn’t he a contract killer, Jesse?” Simpson said.

“That’s what they tell me,” Jesse said. “Probably part of his charm.”

“Probably is,” Molly said. “It makes him sort of exciting.”

“Not if the contract’s on you,” Jesse said.

“No, but there’s something about how complete he is, how, what, interior, independent.”

“Power,” Jesse said.

“Yes,” Molly said. “He reeks of power.”

“I guess I better take more night courses,” Simpson said. “I don’t know what you people are talking about.”

“He’s a little like you, Jesse,” Molly said.

“Except that I just reek.”

“No. You have that same silent center. Nothing will make you turn aside. Nothing will make you back up. It’s…what do the shrinks call it…?”

“Autonomy,” Jesse said.

“Yes. Both of you are, like, autonomous,” Molly said. “Except maybe you have scruples.”

“Maybe he does, too,” Jesse said.

“For fantasy purposes,” Molly said, “I hope not.”

“Fantasy?” Simpson said. “Molly, how long you been married?”

“Fifteen years.”

“And you got how many kids?”

“Four.”

“And you are going to have sex fantasies about some Apache hit man?”

Molly smiled at Simpson.

“You better believe it,” Molly said.

3.

“I wish to have nothing to do with this,” Mrs. Snowdon said when Molly showed her a picture of Crow.

“Have you ever seen him before?” Molly said.

“No.”

They were in the vast Snowdon living room in the huge Snowdon house on Stiles Island. Mrs. Snowdon sat on her couch with her feet on the floor and her knees pressed together and her hands clasped tightly in her lap. Suit stood across the room by the French doors to the patio. Molly sat on a hassock across from Mrs. Snowdon.

She looks too small for the gun belt, Suit thought. But she’s not.

“Was he here with other men when they looted the island,” Molly said, “and locked you and your husband up in the lavatory?”

“Late husband,” Mrs. Snowdon said.

Her blue steel hair was rigidly waved. She wore a black-and-red flowered dress and a red scarf, and a very large diamond-crusted wedding ring.

“Was this man in the picture one of the men?” Molly said.

“I don’t wish to discuss it,” Mrs. Snowdon said.

“Are you afraid?”

“My husband is deceased,” Ms. Snowdon said. “I am a woman alone.”

“The best way to ensure your safety is to give us reason to arrest him.”

“I will not even consider it,” Mrs. Snowdon said. “It was a moment in my life I decline to relive.”

“Has he threatened you?”