glass, that’s all.”
The two cops came into the house, careful to wipe their feet. “Chief,” one of them said, “we found where the shooter parked his car and stood, right over there about thirty yards away. But the ground is too dry from the drought for there to be any footprints or tire tracks.”
“Then how do you know you’ve found the spot?” Holly asked.
A cop held up a shell casing, hanging on a pencil. “Twenty-two long rifle, magnum load.”
Ham spoke for the first time. “With a silencer, that’s an assassin’s weapon,” he said. “Teenaged vandals don’t employ silencers. You can’t even buy the things, legally; you have to make them.”
Holly nodded. “Ed, I think you have to accept that this was an intentional act and behave accordingly. I’m going to leave a squad car here tonight, with one officer, but tomorrow morning I think you ought to consider moving to a hotel, at least for a while. And you really need to think about who might have been behind this. It seems likely that the shooter was hired, and you’re the best one to tell us who among the people you know might be capable of that.”
“I’ll certainly think about it very hard,” Shine said, “but I’m not leaving my home. I’m going to buy a gun.”
“You can do that in Florida,” Holly said, “but Iwouldn’t advise it. You’re more likely to hurt yourself than an intruder, and guns are a favorite target of burglars.”
“Thanks for your advice,” Shine said, but he seemed determined.
Holly stood up. “Well, I think we can wrap up this stage of our investigation,” she said. “Tomorrow morning I’ll assign a detective to the case, and he’ll want to interview you again.”
Shine took a card from his pocket and handed it to her. “I’ll be at his disposal.”
Holly shook his hand. “Thanks for a wonderful bottle of wine at dinner. Ham and I enjoyed your company.”
“I hope to see you both again soon,” Shine said. “Do you two play golf?”
“Yes, we do.”
“Want to play sometime?”
“Sure, give us a call,” Holly said. “You can always reach me at police headquarters.”
Holly and Ham walked out into the cool night and stood by their cars. “What do you think?” she asked.
“Mistaken identity?”
“I don’t think a pro would make that kind of mistake. Maybe Ed will come up with something when he’s had time to think about it.” She kissed her father on the cheek. “Good night, Ham; drive safely.”
“You too.”
Over breakfast the following morning, Holly leafed through the local paper and the New York Times, which were delivered to her door. Her Doberman pinscher, Daisy, lay at her feet, having already breakfasted and been for her run in the dunes. Holly and Daisy lived inthe beach house that had been left to Holly by her fiancé, Jackson Oxenhandler, who had been killed the year before while a bystander in a bank robbery, an hour before they were supposed to have been married.
There was nothing in the local papers about the previous night’s attempt on Ed Shine’s life, but the Times had something that interested her: The day before, in Miami, two property developers had been shot dead, in different locations, by apparent assassins—one in the garage of an office building, one on a golf course. The investigating detective was quoted in the news article.
It didn’t take long to get him on the phone.
“Jim Connor,” a man’s voice said.
“Detective Connor, my name is Holly Barker. I’m chief of police in Orchid Beach, a hundred and fifty miles north of you.”
“What can I do for you, Chief?”
“I read a news report of the two property developers who were homicides yesterday. Are you handling both cases?”
“I am. You got something to tell me about them?”
“No, but last night we had something similar up here. Somebody took a shot at a local man who is a retired developer from New York. The weapon was a twenty-two rifle, magnum