The Bone House - Brian Freeman [107]
'There's nothing sexier than a woman in the wind,' the pilot said. 'Especially that one.'
Below them, Hilary turned and disappeared inside the passenger compartment. The deck was empty. They could barely see the land of the NorDoor five miles away.
'I see that woman going back and forth every day,' the pilot said, 'and I never get tired of the view.'
'Whatever.' Keith rubbed his nose and tugged at the crotch of his jeans. 'Gotta piss.'
'Sure, go.'
Keith left the shelter of the bridge and took the steps down one deck. The boat rolled, but he didn't notice it anymore, even in the worst weather. He ducked through the door to the passenger space, where half a dozen drivers read magazines and gabbed into their phones while they still had signal. Hilary Bradley stood off by herself, staring out the window. Their eyes didn't meet. With her glasses, she looked stuck-up and brainy. Keith didn't like women who pretended they were smarter than he was.
He slipped inside the phone-booth-sized toilet and locked the door. He grabbed his cell phone and punched in a number.
'It's Keith,' he said. 'You wanted a heads up, right? She's on the four o'clock heading to the mainland. No way she's going to turn around and go back on the five. I'm telling you, she's sleeping somewhere else tonight. He'll be alone in the house. If you want him, this is your chance.'
* * *
Chapter Thirty-Eight
'I'm sorry, Sheriff,' Cab told Felix Reich. 'It's hard to lose a friend this way.'
Reich sat in the driver's seat of his Chevy Tahoe in the turnaround at the end of Port des Morts Drive. His hands were on the wheel, and he stared into space down the tree-lined road. His chest rose and fell with fierce precision. After a long silence, Reich's head swiveled on his neck, and Cab saw a fury so deep and bitter that blood vessels pulsed in the man's eye.
'Let me tell you something, Detective Bolton,' the sheriff growled. 'I hate to say anything bad about a brother behind the shield, but you know what? I don't like you. You race your Corvette into my county with your expensive suits and your spiky hair and your earring, and the next thing I know, a friend of mine is dead. I blame you.'
'I understand you're hurting, Sheriff, and I respect that, but let's lose the guilt trip, OK? I don't need it.'
Reich clenched his fists so tightly that his knuckles turned white. 'Here's the way we're going to do this, Detective. You're going to tell me everything you know like a witness at a crime scene, which is what you are. When we're done, you're going to drive down to your luxury apartment in Fish Creek and pack your bags. Tomorrow I want you to get the hell out of Door County.'
'Threats just make me more stubborn,' Cab replied.
'I gave you free rein in my jurisdiction because you were investigating a murder. Now so am I, and you're in my way. Go home.'
'If our cases are connected, we should work together.'
'If our cases are connected, it's because you didn't listen to me about
Mark Bradley. He's mine now. You're going to have to wait your turn, and that'll be a long time coming.'
'You're convinced Bradley did this?' Cab asked.
'I've assembled more evidence in an hour on this case than you've gathered since you arrived. When you live in a place your whole life, people trust you. They become your eyes and ears. They tell you things. You didn't know that Pete had a fight with Bradley near Sister Bay today, did you'
Cab raised an eyebrow. 'No.'
'I got four calls about it. Pete swore in front of a dozen witnesses that he was going to make sure Bradley paid for his crimes, and Bradley threatened to kill Pete. Bradley was also spotted in the ferry line at Northport at two forty-five. He borrowed a phone and made a call, and then he took off at high speed and came back fifteen minutes later. Guess who he called? His own phone. The one you found in Pete's pocket. This is the end of the line for that man.'
Cab wasn't convinced, but he didn't say so. 'I wish you luck, Sheriff.'
'Remember what I said.