The Narrows

The Narrows by Michael Connelly Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: The Narrows by Michael Connelly Read Free Book Online
Authors: Michael Connelly
Tags: thriller
together and you get asshole. I've been meaning to go over there and pay him a little visit."
    I was having trouble following the line of his story. I asked him to explain it to me in English, as if I didn't know a fish charter from a fish chowder.
    "This is the deal," he said. "That little black box had all our best spots on it. Our fishing holes, man. Not only that, it had the points marked by the guy I won it from. I won it in a poker game from another fish guide. The value assigned was not for the box but what was on it. The guy was putting his best twelve spots on the table and I won 'em with a full fucking house." "All right," I said. "I get it now. Its value was in the coordinates of the fishing spots recorded on it, not the device itself."
    "Exactly. Those things cost a couple hundred bucks. But the fishing spots, those come from years of work and skill, fishing experience."
    I pointed at the photo on the computer screen.
    "And this guy comes along and takes it and then he starts out his charter business ahead of the game. Using your experience as well as the guide's you won it from."
    "Way ahead. Like I said, I'm going to go pay him a visit one of these days."
    "Where is the isthmus?"
    "On the other side, where the island pinches together like a figure eight."
    "Did you tell the sheriff's department you thought he stole it?"
    "Not at first because we didn't know, you know? The thing turned up missing and we thought maybe some kids came onto the boat or something at night and grabbed whatever they saw. It gets pretty fucking boring growing up on the island, from what I hear. Just ask Graciela about Raymond-the kid's going stir crazy. So anyway we made a report and that was that. Then a couple weeks later I see this ad in Fish Tales and it's announcing this new charter out of the isthmus and there's a picture of the guy and I say, 'Hey, I know that guy' and I put it together. He stole my fish box."
    "Did you call the sheriff then?"
    "Yeah, I called and told them he was the guy. They didn't act too excited. I called back the next week and they said they talked to the guy-by phone. They didn't even bother to go out there for a face-to-face. He denied it like of course he would and that was that as far as they were concerned."
    "What's this guy's name?'
    "Robert Finder. His operation is called Isthmus Charters. In the ad he calls himself Robert 'Fish' Finder. My ass. More like 'Fish Stealer.'"
    I looked down at the photo on the screen and wondered if this meant anything at all to my investigation. Could the missing GPS box be at the center of Terry McCaleb's death? It seemed unlikely. The idea that someone would steal a competitor's fishing spots was understandable. But then to engage in a complicated plot to also kill the competitor seemed on the far limit of belief. It would require a hell of a plan and execution on Finder's part, that was for sure. It would require a hell of a plan on anyone's part.
    Lockridge seemed to read my thoughts.
    "Hey, you think this bastard could've had something to do with Terror going down?"
    I looked up at him for a long moment, realizing that the idea of Lockridge being involved in McCaleb's death as a means of gaining control and location of the charter business and The Following Sea was a more believable theory.
    "I don't know," I said. "But I'll probably be checking it out."
    "Let me know if you want somebody to go with you."
    "Sure. But listen, I noticed on the stiff's report that the GPS was the only thing reported stolen. Did that hold up? Nothing else ever turned up missing?"
    "That was it. That's why me and Terry thought it was so strange at first. Until we figured out it was Finder." 'Terry thought that, too, that it was him?"
    "He was coining around to it. I mean, come on, who else could it have been?"
    It was a worthy question, but not one I thought I needed to put front and center at the moment. I pointed at the laptop screen and told Lockridge to keep moving back through the

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