That night Marquez walked with Katherine along Stinson Beach. Blue starlight reflected off the waves and surf foamed over their bare feet. He loved the salt smell, the long crescent of sand empty in front of them, walking with his hand on the smooth skin of her upper hip, feeling the rhythmic flow of her muscles, the warm heat. They caught up on things, talking about Maria first. More tales about Maria’s driving too fast, having close calls, inches from one accident, and Kath feeling that he needed to have a serious discussion with her. Then talking about the bedroom they were going to add onto the house and a deal Kath had found on the Internet for a week’s stay in a Kauai condo on a website called CondoBob.com. It was so cheap she wondered if they couldn’t go at Thanksgiving.
She was making pretty good money with her two coffee bars in San Francisco, not great money but better money than they’d seen, though they both knew it was going to take everything they had and then some to do the bedroom addition. A lot of the work he’d have to do himself, and they wouldn’t be able to afford to travel, but tonight it was nice to talk and dream.
They left Hawaii and talked about the house addition in more detail. Driving around Sausalito she’d seen the work of an architect named Barbara Brown and thought it was great. She wasn’t saying change architects but wanted to show their architect some of the details she was interested in.
Marquez had hired Josh, a young architect whose plans the county bureaucrats kept sending back for revisions. Though both he and Kath had been enthusiastic about Josh at the start, Katherine had started to talk like she wasn’t directly involved with him. But he knew Josh would get it done, and even if they had a permit now they couldn’t start building.
All this second-guessing Josh made Marquez think of his grandfather and the patience his grandfather had shown him when he’d been an unhappy kid with a lot of nervous habits, an unintentional loner uncomfortable at school and distrustful of adults. Alongside his grandfather he’d learned the little bit of construction he knew, principles he hoped would help him build this bedroom addition. With his grandfather he’d built a dry rock wall along a dip in the driveway, the deck off the dining room, and a number of other small projects. His grandfather had shown him how doing something well shaped your whole life. Marquez figured his ghost would look over his shoulder as he worked out how to do this addition. He knew also that the architect would eventually deliver an approved set of plans, and the timing would be fine.
As they left the beach and walked to the truck the conversation turned toward the bear operation. He’d already told her the FBI crime lab hadn’t pulled any fingerprints and had only trace DNA that came off the CD jewel box, probably a combination of the man who’d transported it and himself. Either way, the DNA would only serve to corroborate.
“Someone hacked into Fish and Game personnel files more than a year ago,” he said.
“That long ago?”
“Yeah.”
“What’s being done about it?”
“We’re getting emergency funding for new firewalls.”
“Things are that tight?”
“They are.”
She was quiet a moment, then said, “So they’re not going to catch him by tracing who hacked in.”
“The two things might not even connect. Could be some hacker was in and out for a while just because it was a fun challenge.
May have read something about the Special Operations Unit and hacked into that for cheap thrills.”
“The CD scares me.”
She was voicing her feelings but also asking him a question.
He was the one who did this for a living: how worried was he? He hadn’t told her about this last buy, this shakedown, stripping his shirt on the empty creek road, or the call this afternoon propelling it all forward again.
“The guy we’re dealing with is a little bit of a psycho, but he’s also very connected, which means he’s not too far out there. He can talk to people, and he’s built a network. One thing, though, it feels like his problem with law enforcement goes beyond business.
Still, I’m betting business comes first.”
“Could he have anything to do with the murder of that student? Has anything more come of that? What’s that detective’s name again?”
“Kendall.”
“Has he told you anything new?”
“Not really, and I’ll probably go see Vandemere’s father. I called him today and introduced myself, told him we were working a bear operation and that I was very sorry and wanted to do anything I could to help find who killed his son.”
“You’re kidding, you really called him?”
“He calls Kendall once a week. He wants to know where things are at.”
“But it must be very hard for him to talk about. What did you ask him?”
“I introduced myself, told him what my Fish and Game team does, and then asked if Jed had ever mentioned anything in conversation or emails about bear poachers.”
“Because you don’t trust Kendall?”
“How do you get there from what I said?”
“I know you.”
“In a way you’re right. I asked to read the emails his son sent him this summer.”
“Oh, my God—I could never ask someone to do that.”
“I think he was glad to get the call, Kath. His twelve-year-old daughter is taking it very hard, and I get the feeling his wife is hurting too much to talk. He said over the years he did a lot of backpacking and fishing with Jed. He blames himself in some ways for Jed being up there in the Crystal Basin alone.”
Marquez could understand feeling that way and thought briefly about Julie, his first wife. A terrible image came back to him as they returned to the sandy parking area and got in the truck. He and Julie had gone to Africa after the wedding, planning to travel and live on the cheap, camp wherever they could. She’d been abducted from their campsite, and for days he’d ridden around with a constable looking for her. They’d found her by watching the vultures, her body in brush not far from the campsite. A month later he’d thought he’d found the men who’d raped and killed her, and he’d felt something akin to elation at the prospect of killing them, been so ready to do it. But among their belongings he couldn’t find her ring or any of the other things he needed as proof before pulling the trigger.
Long ago, he’d told Katherine about searching for Julie’s kidnappers and what he’d felt when he found their camp, but you don’t tell your second wife about your continuing dreams of your first. And he didn’t have to tell Katherine about the empathy he felt with Jed Vandemere’s father. She knew.
He’d brought Julie’s body home to her parents and buried her where she’d grown up at the base of the Bitterroot Mountains. It had been a long time later, almost fifteen years, when he’d fallen for Katherine. Theirs was a soft, warm-rounded, gentle love, a comfortable easiness together. It wasn’t a lesser thing, but different.
When he’d gone to Africa with Julie he’d been so in love that the world felt completely open. That was youth and this was middle age and the two were different, even for those that liked to say they felt the same inside.
“Give me something I can call reassurance or tell me you can’t,” Katherine said.
“This guy seems to be carefully checking me out. He sent a couple of aggressive guys out on the last buy and called me today to apologize, to keep stringing it along. He wants to keep the money coming.”
“What’s his trip then?”
“I don’t know.”
“But not like Kline?”
“No.”
Kline had been a drug smuggler, a contract killer, a career black marketeer who’d branched into abalone because they brought fifty dollars each and he could gather thousands of them.
Breaking that ring had been violent.
“He’s using guys he hires to do these buys with you?” she asked.
“He insulates himself.”
“Someone must know him.”
“That’s what I’m betting, Kath.”
Marquez turned up the mountain road and they began to climb away from the ocean. They could see the moon over the water, a long line of reflected light.
“You’ll take him down,” she said and smiled at her own use of those words. She lived a totally different urban life, running her two San Francisco coffee bars. Her friends called her Cappuccino Kathy. She laughed and recovered the earlier mood of the night.
“And I’m going to take you down when we get home,” she said. “You’re going down tonight.”