Lifeguard - James Patterson [51]
“No,” I laughed, “it’s become part of my regular routine.”
I went to the porch door and slid it open. I looked back at Ellie. I didn’t know if it was a mistake, what we’d done. Or if it would happen again. I understood the risk she was taking with me. Our eyes met.
I smiled from the door. “Why are you doing this, Ellie?”
“I don’t know.” She shrugged. “Let’s just say I’m boxing, Ned.”
“Boxing?”
“I can’t explain right now. You gonna be okay?”
I nodded. “Well, whatever it is, thank you, Ellie.”
“I told you, it was just a handshake,” she said with a wink.
I shook my head. “I meant for believing in me. Nobody has in a long while.”
Chapter 59
THE TALL MAN was hunched down in the front seat of the tan Ford, resting the Nikon on his lap, about fifty feet from Ellie Shurtleff’s house. He was getting too old for this. And these cars were too cramped. He was thinking about the old days, when you could really stretch out your legs in a Cougar or a Grand Am.
He saw someone leaving Ellie Shurtleff’s house from the back. Okay, he thought, angling the Nikon, time to shift into gear.
Holy Shit! He jumped up, did a double take. That was Ned Kelly walking into the street.
It was definitely Kelly. He clicked off a few frantic shots. Click, click, click. He felt as if he were having a heart attack.
All he was supposed to do was keep a tab on sweet little Ellie. He never expected anything this good. He followed Kelly down the street and zoomed in with the lens.
Click, click.
Of course, he knew the schmuck was innocent. Obviously the FBI gal felt that way, too. Or she was in cahoots with him.
He started thinking about what he should do. He could run up and arrest Kelly. Build a whole career on this. Get his face on the front page of USA Today. Course, then he’d have to explain what he was doing keeping tabs on Ellie.
He zoomed in and took a last shot of Ned Kelly climbing into some old clunker. Close-up of the North Carolina plates. Another shot on Kelly’s face. Guy didn’t look too bad for the wear and tear.
Oh, you got balls, honey, the tall man had to admit. The whole world was out looking for him, and look where he was—at your house.
The tall man put down the camera and, flicking a matchbook deftly through the fingers of his right hand, watched Kelly drive away.
Diminutive, he thought, nodding to himself, but ballsy.
Chapter 60
BY THE TIME I got back to Champ’s cycle shop it was close to midnight. To my surprise, I spotted a light on inside. Then I saw Champ’s Ducati parked by the Dumpster.
“Late night?” I heard him say as I slipped in through the door connected to the garage bay. Champ was sitting down with his feet up on the counter, his chair angled back, and the omnipresent bottle of beer. The TV was on. Jay Leno interviewing Nicole Kidman.
“National Pride Night?” I said, taking a seat in a chair next to him.
“She’s an Aussie, mate. I’m Kiwi,” Geoff replied, a little peeved. He offered me a beer. “I don’t assume you know last night’s curling results just ’cause you were born up near Canada, do I?”
“Guilty,” I said, and clinked my bottle to his. I leaned back next to him with my feet up, too.
“So, how was the party, mate? Any good women?”
“One,” I said.
“These tall bitches . . .” Geoff ignored me, nodding toward Nicole on the TV screen. “Always found them a little difficult to handle myself. Legs get in the way. I know this one gal —”
“Champ,” I interrupted, “do you want to hear about what happened tonight?”
“Actually,” he said, lowering his chair and facing me, “if you must know, I want to tell you what a well-formed decision you made when you signed me up. This gal I was mentioning is a real night owl. She’s a clerk twice a week. At the Brazilian Court.”
I brought down my feet and stared. “Okay.”
“First, you may have to accept, mate, that that pretty Aussie girlfriend