Backfire
Page 50He ate the last donut since it was chocolate.
She came back into the kitchen in a minute, handed him a white tube. It was brand-new.
“It’s supposed to be good stuff, not only for muscle soreness but for bruising as well. I bought it yesterday before I realized I couldn’t reach anything.”
She again dropped the robe to her waist. She grinned over her shoulder. “Am I really that pitiful?”
“Not quite; you combed your hair.”
“Well, I looked in the mirror and nearly fainted. I had to do something.”
Harry covered his fingers with the cream, stared at her long stretch of back, closed his eyes for a moment to get a grip on himself, and touched his fingers to her skin. I’m a solid, consummate professional, doing my job. He wished she did look pathetic, but the fact was, she didn’t, not at all. He reminded himself he was looking at a deputy marshal’s back splotched blue and green, but, unfortunately, that didn’t help.
“Am I rubbing too hard?”
She said over her shoulder, “No, it feels grand.”
She laughed, then groaned. “Not a good idea, even speaking as a professional. You’ve got really good hands, Harry.”
Really good professional hands. He started whistling as he continued rubbing the cream on her back in steady smooth strokes, deepening when he realized he wasn’t hurting her, and if his hands went a bit lower than the bruises, surely there were sore muscles at her waist, and the massage couldn’t but help.
“You can’t see the bruises now,” he said. “You’re all white since I’ve used half the tube on you.”
“Feels like it, nice and hot.”
He didn’t want to stop, but he did. He stepped back. Slowly, she shrugged back into her robe. She turned. “Thank you. Look at me, I think I can straighten without groaning.”
He went to the sink to wash his hands. He could feel the heat deep and knew it must feel good on her back.
“Tell me more about your meeting this morning with Cheney, Savich, and Sherlock.”
So he told her, answering her questions until she had no more. His cell phone chimed.
“Cheney here, Harry. They found Mickey O’Rourke. Two kids in Nicasio saw a man bury him. Thank God they had the sense to keep quiet so he never saw them. The Marin County sheriff, Bud Hibbert, had a photo of Mickey on his desk, recognized him, and called me. I called Savich and Sherlock. They’ve finished interviewing Boozer Gordon. I don’t want to call Barbieri; she’s probably still flat on her stomach, high on codeine.”
“Actually,” Harry said, “I’m with her now, and she’s doing okay. She’s got to get dressed, but we’ll be there as soon as we can.”
“Good. Ask Eve to requisition a Chevy Suburban out of the marshals’ pool, that way the five of us can ride up together.”
Harry punched off his cell. He looked up to see Eve standing in the doorway to the kitchen, unmoving, her face set.
“You heard what Cheney said?”
She nodded. “I didn’t want to believe Mickey could be dead, it hurt too much, so I tried not to think about it.” She swallowed. “But I knew he had to be. Harry, he’s dead, just—dead. That monster murdered him.”
Harry said, “Yes, the monster murdered him. But we’ve got two kids who saw him. We’ve got witnesses, Eve. Cheney wants us to go up there. We’ll catch him; you know we will.”
She turned to go into her bedroom, saying over her shoulder, “I can’t stand this, Harry, just can’t stand it.”
When Eve came out, she was dressed in her black and red, her hair in a ponytail, no makeup on her face. Her eyes were puffy from crying.
He walked to her and lightly rubbed his fingertip over her cheeks. “I’m sorry, Eve. Believe me, I know how you feel.”
Near Nicasio, California
Forty-five minutes northwest of San Francisco
Sunday afternoon
Harry turned the U.S. Marshals’ Chevy Suburban west off Highway 101 on Lucas Valley Road, drove about ten miles, then turned right on Nicasio.
Sherlock looked out over the rolling hills of cattle and horse country. “The hills are still all gold and brown, even with the rain.”