Kitabı oku: «Bulletproof Bodyguard», sayfa 3
Chapter Three
“Nooo…No! Help me!”
Marcus sat bolt upright in the bed.
“Bears go away, bears go away!” The child’s voice was shrill.
Marcus looked around as he tried to figure out where the sound was coming from. It felt like the kid was crying next to his ear. As he fumbled to turn on the bedside lamp, he spied the red lines dancing up and down on what he assumed was a baby monitor.
“Momma, help! Momma, help me!”
He flipped on the lamp and shook himself awake, puzzling over what the monitor was doing in his room until he vaguely recalled Cally saying something about finishing up the room today.
She must have left it then. He glanced at the clock. He’d been asleep for less than half an hour.
“Momma, plea…se help me.” The little voice was sobbing softly, pitifully.
Marcus wasn’t sure what to do. He could always just turn the damn thing off and go back to sleep. He was dead tired. But without the baby monitor, he wasn’t sure if Harris’s mom could hear the crying or not.
“Bears go away, please go away.” The boy’s cries were low and pleading.
Marcus had heard that tone of desperation in other people’s voices before. He’d had to turn those voices off without helping more times than he could count. It had been a requirement for the job.
He’d never mastered the art of being able to do it and not care. God, he was tired. His life felt so…empty.
“Momma…please…help me.”
Swinging his legs out of the bed, Marcus sighed heavily and reached for his jeans. He couldn’t turn off the monitor and go back to sleep. That voice would haunt him in his dreams.
CALLY SHOVED THE casserole for tomorrow’s breakfast into the refrigerator and turned to survey the mess in her kitchen. It wasn’t too bad. Only a few dishes needed to be washed before she went to bed.
The large combination kitchen and family room with its stone floors, brightly colored hooked rug and rag-rolled yellow walls was her favorite place in the house. Chambray-blue tile matched a loveseat and large upholstered rocker, both arranged by a generous fireplace.
She spent most of her day here—either cooking for her guests and sideline catering business or playing with Harris. She liked getting as much of the inn’s breakfast prepared beforehand as possible. That way she could eat with her son before she served the inn’s clientele.
She’d been stepping out of the shower when she remembered that she hadn’t made tomorrow’s ham-and-cheese casserole for breakfast. Her hair dried on its own in a riot of curls while she cooked. Maroon 5 was turned up on her earbuds. She shimmied and danced in place, singing along about a wake-up call as she washed dishes.
The guest buzzer rang insistently along with a blinking light, startling her into silence. The doorway from the kitchen to the rest of the house was locked at night so the chime rang here and in her bedroom for guests to call her after hours. She turned off the iPod, tightened the belt on her robe and opened the door.
Marcus North, all six feet three inches of him stood there in half-zipped jeans and bare feet. His denim shirt was unbuttoned—dark hair and a washboard abdomen registered. She looked up from this impressive view with some regret and raised a skeptical eyebrow.
Unfortunately in the past, she’d dealt with single male guests who thought a young widow innkeeper was fair game—part of the bed-and-breakfast’s à la carte menu. She hoped her new boarder wasn’t suffering under the same misconception.
“Yes, Mr. North?”
“I…ah…heard the baby crying over the monitor in my room and wasn’t sure if…”
“Oh my gosh, I left that thing in your room this afternoon. I’m so sorry. Did he wake you—”
She took in his tousled dark hair, her eyes dipping down to the unbuttoned shirt again, and interrupted her own question. “Of course he did. Let me go check on him. He has nightmares.”
She dashed across the kitchen to the hallway leading back to her private rooms.
“I’ll be right back!” she called over her shoulder.
MARCUS FOLLOWED her toward the hallway and stood at the entrance debating what to do. He turned to the large picture window at the far end of the family room. In the moonlight, he spied a boat dock.
River Trace backed up to one of the many half-moon lakes left when the Mississippi River had changed its course over the years. However, this lake was unusual in that it connected to the Mississippi when the water was up. During the flood season, as it was now, a boat could freely travel from the lake to the river and back again.
He looked out over the water and heard a door open down the hall.
Harris’s voice echoed around the corner. “Momma, Momma…the bears.”
“I know, sweetie, I know. The bears are all gone now. Momma’s chased them all away.”
“Momma, they…they…” Harris started to hiccup. “They so big.”
“They’re all gone now, honey. Shhh.”
“I called and called but you didn’t come.” Harris continued to weep and hiccup. Marcus’s heart clenched. No matter what, he’d made the right decision coming downstairs.
“I’m so sorry, baby. I didn’t hear you. I’m here now. Let’s get you a drink.”
“Want a—a—…ple jui—ce.”
“Then that’s what we’ll get.”
Marcus heard them start down the hallway and realized he’d been blatantly eavesdropping again. He headed to the refrigerator and was pulling out the apple juice when Cally came through the doorway carrying Harris.
She stopped.
“Your hands are full,” he said in explanation to her raised eyebrows. “Where’s a cup?”
She nodded toward the dish-drainer. “He likes the one with the purple leopard spots.”
“All right.” He felt Cally’s eyes on him as he filled the brightly colored cup and handed it to Harris.
“Thh—ank you.” He hiccupped.
“You’re welcome. Are you okay, big guy?”
Harris nodded, sniffed and stared at Marcus as he drank his juice. Cally swayed back and forth in the timeless manner of women with babies in their arms. Her oversize terrycloth robe fell to her ankles and her hair was a mass of curls around her shoulders. She shouldn’t have been attractive to him with her blue-eyed girl-next-door looks. He’d always gone for slightly exotic-looking women in his past, but he couldn’t tear his eyes away from her standing there in the kitchen.
“I don’t know how to apologize for all this. We don’t usually treat guests quite so shabbily.”
“It’s no problem. I’m just glad we saved Harris from those bears.” He smiled at the kid, glad to have something else to focus on.
“Well, you’re certainly being a good sport. Harris and I appreciate it.”
At the mention of his name, the boy raised his head. “Rock Harris sleep.”
Cally smiled. “All right, baby, we’ll rock.” She and the boy settled into the upholstered rocker by the fireplace. “Want some coffee? I just made some decaf.” She nodded toward the counter.
He started to refuse, then looked at the woman rocking her child in the darkened room. Light from the full moon shone on her curly hair and Harris’s face. They looked so clean and…normal was the word that popped into his mind.
Marcus hadn’t experienced anything related to normal or clean in what seemed like forever. Even the people he guarded at the casino generally needed his services because they weren’t the most upstanding of characters. There was usually a reason someone would want to harm them.
His undercover work placed him with the underbelly of society. He didn’t want to think about how that was changing him. He’d been under too long—losing touch with the things that reminded him who he really was.
He nodded. “Sure, why not?” He didn’t want to leave Cally, her son or their small slice of normalcy just yet, and he felt a ridiculous spurt of pleasure that he had an excuse to stay longer.
“Cups are in the cabinet by the stove. Shortbread cookies are in the blue canister.”
“You want anything?” he asked.
“Refill my cup, if you don’t mind, and I’ll be fine. It’s there by the sink.”
Cally rocked and hummed tunelessly while he located the cookies and put some on a plate. Her voice was soothing and he found himself sinking into it like the boy draped across her chest.
He leaned over to set the cup of coffee by her rocker and caught the lush scent of her hair—exotic and spicy. It was a punch to his gut and another kick to his long-dormant libido that had his head spinning.
She looked awfully angelic to smell so erotic. Not at all what he’d expected from watching her rock the boy.
Harris was almost asleep. Feeling like an awkward teenager who has suddenly found an empty seat next to the head cheerleader, Marcus sat on the loveseat.
“I am so sor….”
He interrupted. “Please don’t apologize again. It’s all right.”
“He’s been having these nightmares for over a month. I can’t figure out where they came from. Goldilocks is the closest we’ve come to a scary bear story.”
“It’s amazing how their minds work.”
“Do you have children?”
“Nope, never been married.”
“Oh, they’re quite an adventure. As you can tell from the evening you’ve had.” He could tell she was smiling in the darkness.
“It must be a challenge, raising one by yourself?”
She didn’t answer right away.
“Yes…It’s been difficult…and wonderful at the same time.”
“How old was Harris when his father died?”
As soon as the words were out, Marcus wished them back. This wasn’t what he wanted to be talking about. It was only going to make things more difficult.
“He hadn’t been born. We didn’t even know I was pregnant.”
Marcus listened intently, still marveling at the direction of their conversation. She stopped speaking for a moment, caught up in the memories, he supposed.
“I think the hardest part has been realizing all the things that his father will never see. Harris’s first steps, his first haircut, his first little-league game, high school…”
The sadness in her voice didn’t reflect self-pity. Unexpectedly, Marcus felt a longing well up inside for something besides the sexual attraction that was coming to life here. He couldn’t name it—contentment, maybe. Whatever it was, the absence was worrisome.
“We’d been trying for a year to have a baby. I think that’s why it bothers me so much…that he never knew.”
Her voice wavered and she inhaled sharply. “Jamie and I had a lot of dreams. The most important one came true when Harris was born. It amazes me sometimes that after all that’s happened—life can still be good.”
Marcus listened to the creaking of the chair as she rocked on in silence. He heard Harris’s breathing change as the child drifted off to sleep and found himself identifying with Jamie Burnett. A man who had missed out on his dreams.
Sometimes—when he allowed himself to think about it—Marcus felt that he was missing out on life because he was dead inside.
Could I change? Sitting with this woman in the moonlight, he wanted to believe that it wasn’t too late for him.
Cally interrupted his thoughts, “Mr. North, I can’t believe I just told you all that. It’s got to be more than you ever wanted to know. You are very easy to talk to.”
He smiled grimly. Listening. It’s what he was good at.
“So…what about you? Have you always been a bodyguard?
He hesitated. Now the deception would have to start. “No, not always.” He knew he was being evasive, but found himself not wanting to lie to her.
“I’ve done a little of everything. But I like security work the best.”
She nodded and didn’t push. “So do you like working at the casino?”
“Oh, I’m enjoying it. The people are interesting. It’s good pay. I like the hours.”
“What time will you be going to work in the mornings?”
“It’ll vary. All depends on what time my big clients, the whales, are coming in. This week I’m working the night shift, so I don’t have to go in until the afternoons. I’ll be monitoring security when I don’t have a specific client to do one-on-one work for.”
“Tomorrow we’re serving breakfast in the dining room at nine. If you’d prefer to eat in your room, I can have Luella bring you a tray.”
“No, I’ll come down for breakfast. That casserole I saw in the fridge looked good.”
She smiled. “Specialty of the house.”
Marcus sat a moment longer even though he knew it was time to leave. He wanted something that he had no right to ask for. Maybe if they’d met in a different place, under different…normal circumstances.
His timing was disastrous as always. Hell, she’d put him out on his ass and call the police if she knew why he was really here.
“Well, I’d better get this guy to bed. Thanks again for your help. Aren’t you glad you got the room with so much privacy?” she teased.
“Nothing like it,” he laughed. “Goodnight, Mrs. Burnett.”
“Please, after all this, call me Cally.”
“All right, Cally. I’m Marcus.” He reached out and shook her hand again.
He wasn’t expecting it, but when he touched her, a jolt of awareness shimmied up his fingertips and settled in the vicinity of his chest. He barely stopped himself from stepping back. He was surprised at the struggle he had making eye contact.
When he finally forced himself to look at her—wanting to see if she was affected in any way—she was glancing down at her son. He took a deep sip of air. The slice of normalcy was over. It was past time for him to leave.
Harris opened sleepy eyes. “Momma, rock more.”
“Okay, baby, but in your room.” She stood in the doorway with the child cradled in her arms. Once more, Marcus felt that unnamed longing well up inside his chest.
“See you in the morning, Marcus. Thanks again.”
“Goodnight, Cally.”
He cruised up the attic stairs to his room to hear the rocking chair creaking over the forgotten baby monitor. He stared at it a moment debating over whether to tote it back downstairs. Cally was singing to Harris.
“Hush, little baby, don’t say a word. Momma’s gonna buy you a mockingbird.” He remembered how she looked with Harris draped across her shoulder, moonlight shining on her hair and the boy’s face.
Nope, he needed to stay far away from Cally Burnett tonight, or he might do something he’d regret. He was doing this job by the book, no matter what.
I’m saving my career. What else is there? Too keyed up to sleep but knowing he had to at least try, he slid into bed and turned off the light.
He was reaching to turn off the monitor when her voice stopped him. “If that mockingbird don’t sing, Momma’s gonna buy you a diamond ring.”
It was more than the wanting her physically; at least he was pretty sure it was. Hell, he was too tired to puzzle out the mess at this point.
Her voice rolled over him like an ocean wave and he exhaled as the muscles in his jaw began to unclench. He left the monitor on and stacked his hands behind his head. He’d turn it off when she finished the song. He closed his eyes, drifting off to sleep with Cally’s lullaby in his head.
Chapter Four
“And then, to top it all off, I left the monitor on in the attic room and Harris had another one of his nightmares.”
“Lord, Cally. How did that happen?” Luella was laughing along with her.
“Oh, I forgot to get it when Bay and I were working in there yesterday. Harris’s crying woke up Marcus and he came down to tell me.”
“Marcus, huh?”
Cally rolled her eyes. She knew as soon as the words left her lips that Luella would notice that first-name usage.
“Don’t get excited…”
Luella snorted. “Well apparently I’m the only one around here who does, and that’s just a sad thing.”
Cally ignored her pointed remark. She’d been throwing quite a few of those out there lately.
“Then what happened?” asked Luella.
“I got Harris up and rocked him in the kitchen.”
“Where was, um…Marcus?”
“He stayed down here to drink a cup of coffee and we talked.”
“Um-huh,” Luella smacked her gum.
“I couldn’t just send him away after he’d gotten out of bed to come tell me about Harris.”
“Um-huh.” Luella smacked her gum faster.
“So we drank some coffee while Harris calmed down.”
“Um-huh.”
“Luella, quit ‘um-huhing’ me.”
“Um, um, um.”
Cally laughed. “You’re impossible. Nothing happened.”
“More’s the pity. Honey, you need a man.”
“Luella, we just talked. Actually, I talked. And while I might need a man, I don’t think he should be one of my paying guests. Believe me, Mr. North got way more information than he wanted. He is an incredible listener.”
“Why, do tell? Exactly what did you two discuss?”
“Jamie mostly, and Harris.”
Luella stopped slicing the strawberries and stared at Cally.
“I know. It was kind of weird, I don’t think I’ve talked to anyone like that since Jamie died.” She checked the casserole and spoke over her shoulder. She didn’t want to meet Luella’s eyes. “Guess I’ve been too busy.”
Luella sighed and sliced fruit in silence. Cally wanted to bite her tongue. They’d discussed this before. She was surviving widowhood, thank you very much. She’d sold the farm. She was running the bed-and-breakfast. She was raising her son. She was fine.
She never again wanted to feel the powerlessness she had after Jamie’s death. And she didn’t need a man to complicate her life. No matter what Luella said.
Cally’d made the decision to raise Harris alone when she’d found out she was pregnant. The wall she’d built around her heart the day she got that stunning news had become her fortress. Six weeks after she’d buried her husband she’d needed armor to survive that wonderful, life-changing…crushing phone call from the doctor’s office.
Pregnant and alone, she would never have survived the mind-numbingly painful days that followed without her bulletproof shield intact. When Harris was born, the wall was a way to keep well-meaning busybodies out.
Taking that wall down would be like removing part of herself. She had let Bay and Luella in. They were family and part of her. And Kevin. Her darling, wonderful, gay best friend. Kevin was family, too.
But she’d kept her distance from everyone else since Jamie died—especially attractive, straight single men. She’d stayed behind the wall. It was safe there. Southern manners made it easy.
All you had to say was, “I’m doing fine.” No one delved too deeply if you put up the No Trespassing sign on your emotional lawn. No chance of being hurt that way.
Last night she had been astonished to find herself peering over the wall for the first time since those dark days after Jamie’s death.
Mentally she scoffed. This was so not happening. The thought of it scared her, and that was beyond ridiculous. She needed to get a grip on herself…or buy a vibrator.
Marcus North had been kind, but he obviously had heard more than he cared to know about her personal life.
“He must think I’m an eccentric Southern inn owner,” she mused aloud. “Widow with a small child. All I need are five cats and I would fit the bill.”
Luella glanced at Cally and snorted again. “Not in that outfit, honey.”
Cally looked down at her capri pants and sleeveless wraparound top. There was nothing the least bit suggestive or sexy about the clothes to her way of thinking.
“Lu, have you lost your mind?”
“No honey, you’re just blind in a very good way.”
Cally stared at her friend for a moment. She had no idea what to do with her sometimes.
“Harris sure is having a time with Bay. Look at those flowers they’re planting.” Cally gestured out the window.
“You changing the subject?” asked Luella.
“Yes, I am,” Cally answered firmly, but softened it with a smile. “Bay’s awfully good to him.” She waved a hand toward the dining room. “I couldn’t have done this without you two.”
“Aw, Cally. You’d have found a way.”
“Maybe so, but Harris and I wouldn’t be nearly as happy.” She stopped slicing the fruit and turned to face Luella.
Luella shook her head. “You’d be fine.” Her eyes got a little misty. “I can’t imagine my life without that little boy in it.”
Cally grinned. “You don’t have to. Hey, you said earlier Mr. Williams mentioned your fried okra and collard greens. Why don’t you cook supper and I’ll clean the rooms today?”
Luella nodded.
“I’ve got to remember to refill those brandy decanters. I forgot to put one in Mr. North’s room yesterday.” And I was so distracted by the man I forgot to take it up to his room last night with the sandwich.
Okay, so she was interested in Marcus North. Not really her type, but a great listener. A rare quality that Cally discovered she found rather sexy.
Maybe that explained why she’d talked so much last night. Clearly, she needed a confidante. Maybe she should get a dog.
“GOOD MORNING, Mrs. Burnett,” said Gregor.
“Good morning. Did you all sleep well?” Cally directed her question to the table of four as she set down the casserole and started serving coffee and juice.
Luella came in behind her and began serving the fruit.
“Yes, we did.” Gregor spoke for the group as heads nodded all around. “Just like babies.”
Cally smiled. “I’m glad to hear it.”
“We thought we might water-ski or fish today.”
“The lake’s up, so the skiing should be great. Although the water might be a bit chilly.” She finished pouring the coffee and began serving the casserole.
Peter Sams laughed, “Oh, we can handle it, Mrs. Burnett.” The other men chuckled.
Cally blushed slightly but her eyes flashed a deep blue. “Oh, I’m sure you can,” she said with a cool smile. “It’s just that the water has been unusually high because of the spring thaw upstream. I’m amazed to see everything that comes down river from up north. You wonder how some of it got in the water. Harris and I drove out to the levee last week and saw a huge telephone pole drifting right along. It looked downright peaceful until we realized how fast the pole was moving.”
Gregor dismissed her concerns with a wave of his hand. “We’ll only be on the lake, so we won’t be in any kind of danger like that, I assure you.” He smiled patronizingly. If she only knew the kind of danger these men had faced in their careers. “We’ll leave right after breakfast.”
“I’ll clean your rooms while you’re out.” She finished serving and set the rest of the casserole on the sideboard alongside the fruit Luella had left a moment before.
“You mentioned fried okra and collard greens yesterday to Luella. If you’d like, I can have her fix that along with some cornbread for dinner tonight, instead of the menu we’d talked about when you made reservations.”
“That sounds fine. Sams here has never had true Southern ‘soul food.’”
“Well, we can take care of that. Dinner at six o’clock?”
“We’ll be here.”
Gregor watched her leave the room, waiting to be sure she was out of earshot. “That’ll give us plenty of time to check out Palmers and go pick up the boat in town.”
The men nodded as they ate.
“Damn, this is good,” said Sams. “I see why River Trace made such an impression on you, Gregor.”
“Told you I’d picked the perfect location.” Gregor stared hard at the door Cally had just walked through, his eyes taking on a feral gleam. “Besides, there’s no reason we can’t mix business with pleasure.”
MARCUS’S CALVES burned and his chest ached as he ran up the graveled driveway. He needed to run more regularly. He told himself that every time he jogged.
A shame it wasn’t going to happen anytime soon. Time was in much too short supply these days. This case was about to reach critical mass, not taking into account the trouble brewing in Jackson.
Hodges and his captain couldn’t believe what Marcus and Asa had turned over in the two-horse town of Murphy’s Point. The lieutenant would never have given them McCay County if he suspected it was going to be a hotbed of activity.
This governor’s special casino task force was meant to be a punishment from Hodges—a you-may-be-on-the-team-but-you-won’t-see-any-real-action kind of assignment.
As counties along the Mississippi River passed their own gaming amendments, the potential for petty and violent crime increased. Twenty years ago and two hundred and fifty miles north on Highway 61, Tunica County was a prime example. When the gaming amendments were initially passed, Tunica had only five deputies and no set infrastructure to handle the huge influx of cash suddenly coming into the county.
Today, Tunica was a mini-Vegas. The county itself had definitely had some growing pains along the way. Robbery, as well as fraud and tax evasion, were potentially huge problems.
The best way to get a handle on those problems was to send in undercover employees in areas of responsibility within the casinos themselves. It was effective, but extraordinarily slow undercover work. Because they were on Internal Affairs’ hit list, Marcus and Asa had been given what was thought to be the least-desirable location in the state.
Initially, Internal Affairs had no solid proof to stop Marcus or his partner from going on the governor’s special task force. But now it seemed that they did have evidence of misconduct in the Donny Simmons case—enough evidence to pull Asa from active duty. The investigation could end Asa’s career and seriously damage Marcus’s by association. Everything was being examined with a fine-tooth comb.
Marcus had gone back to Jackson last weekend thinking he might take some time to decompress before this assignment got intense. He hadn’t even planned on going into the office.
What a joke.
Hodges had found out he was in town, and Marcus had spent the better part of Friday and Saturday being grilled by Internal Affairs and his boss. He could still smell the stale cigars in Hodges’s airless office.
The lieutenant had ranted and raved for hours with one of those same cheap, unlit cigars hanging out of the corner of his mouth, his bald head shiny from perpetual perspiration.
“I understand your hesitation to testify against your partner. But hear me now. You are on a very short leash. You even sneeze funny, IA will be all over you like white on rice. Do this assignment by the book or there won’t be a job to come back to. You got it?”
Yeah, he got it all right. What was he going to do? Internal Affairs was breathing down his neck.
He’d tried to tell them he had no testimony to give. Hell, he’d gotten shot during the raid and taken away in an ambulance. How could he know anything about what had happened afterward? And regardless, there was no way he was testifying against his partner. He’d quit before throwing Asa under the bus. Besides, Marcus had his own demons to deal with on the Simmons case.
After the “quality time” with his lieutenant, he’d gone back to his apartment and stared at a glass of Scotch for ten minutes before pouring it down the drain. Oblivion had never seemed more appealing, but he’d promised himself never to go there again.
Marcus rounded the corner of River Trace and almost ran over Harris and a rather large black man digging in a flowerbed by the driveway.
“Howdy, Harris. Those bears didn’t come back last night did they?” Since he’d left the monitor on all night, Marcus knew the answer to that question. He’d felt foolish when he woke and realized he’d been sung to sleep just like the boy.
Harris’s companion stood. He was taller than Marcus, but thinner and appeared a bit frail.
“Hi, I’m Marcus North.” He reached out to shake the older man’s hand. His grip had Marcus reassessing the frail part of his evaluation.
“Bay Wiggins. I work for Cally.”
“It’s good to meet you, Bay. You and Harris are doing a great job on those flowers.”
“Worms,” said Harris.
“Excuse me?” Marcus asked.
“We’re digging up worms to go fishing down off the dock,” Bay explained.
Harris held up a bucket. Marcus saw several wigglers writhing in the soil. He leaned over to inspect the bucket.
“Those are awfully big ones, Harris.”
He looked up at Bay. “What are you fishing for?”
“Crappie mainly, maybe some brim. T’ain’t sure if the water’s warm enough or not. We’ll see.”
“Mr. Nowth, come, too?” asked Harris with expectant eyes.
Bay nodded, “You’re welcome to join us. We’ll just be down to the dock.”
“That’s a fine invitation and I thank you both. Unfortunately, I’ve got to go to work.”
Harris’s shoulders drooped as he looked down at the tops of his dinosaur tennis shoes.
Marcus hesitated and found he couldn’t stop the words, “How about I come watch for a minute? I think I can manage a little time for fishing.”
They walked down to the dock together, Marcus puzzling over why he didn’t want to disappoint this child. Harris reached up unselfconsciously and took his hand as they stepped onto the wooden planks.
Marcus almost stumbled.
“Cally won’t let him on the dock without holding an adult’s hand or wearing a life jacket,” Bay explained.
Marcus nodded his understanding and they continued to the end of the pier. Harris tugged on his hand indicating he wanted to sit by him. It was an unfamiliar but not unwelcome circumstance.
Bay baited a hook while Harris jumped up, clapping and giggling—effectively scaring off every fish within a hundredyard radius. But Bay never said a word. He just sat and helped Harris get a grip on the pole.
“Can you really catch anything off this dock?” asked Marcus.
“Sometimes. Early in the morning before the boats get out on the lake.” Bay smiled down at Harris. The child was happily clutching the pole, bobbing it back and forth in the water like a maestro conducting a symphony. “It’s quiet then.”
Marcus sat in companionable silence with the old man and the boy. He was surprised to find himself in another normal situation. Well, maybe he should rephrase that.
An undercover cop fishing with an elderly black man and a little white boy wasn’t exactly normal, but it was peaceful. He could get used to this.
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