water, pretty much just an excuse to be out there on a day when the fish arenât biting. Below the pier a few lunchtime surfers are out, more from habit than hope that any decent wave is going to come along. Still, itâs better than sitting in the office cubicle waiting for the bell to sound again and summon them back to whatever shit is waiting on their desks.
Peteâs right about the lynching thing, Boone reluctantly concedes. The papers have been full of editorials and letters demanding strong reaction to the Kuhio murder, and the radio talk shows have been hammering the deterioration of Pacific Beach, the callers and hosts screaming for a âcrackdown.â
So dumb-ass Corey takes some of that weight. Is that so unfair? He killed someone.
Case closed.
Or is it? Was it the punch that killed Kelly, or the sidewalk? Youâve been in a few scuffles yourself, thrown a couple of punches. What if the addressee of one of those had fallen backward, hit his head on something unforgiving that canceled his reservation? Would that have made you guilty of murder, justifiably put you in a box the rest of your life?
It depends.
On what?
On the very shit that Alan Burke wants you to look into. You know the gameâa top-notch trial lawyer such as Alan is too smart to try for an acquittal, heâll try to get the jury to go for a lesser charge, and heâll angle his case toward the sentencing hearing. Thatâs if he takes it to trial at allâheâll probably try to find some facts that might persuade the DA to cut the kid a deal instead.
Boone looks back out at the ocean, where a flock of pelicans skim over the surface. A weak breeze wafts a scent of salt air and suntan lotion.
Is Pete right? Boone wonders. Is that what has you so jacked up? That this murder confirmed something youâve known for a long time but didnât want to admitâthat surfing isnât the Utopia you always wanted it to be? Needed it to be?
He decides to see his priest.
14
Dave the Love God sits atop the lifeguard tower.
Boone walks to the base of the tower and asks, âPermission to come aboard?â
âGranted.â
Boone climbs up the ladder and sits down next to Dave, who doesnât so much as turn his head to acknowledge his presence. Dave stares steadily out at the water, the shallows of which are packed with tourists, and doesnât take his eyes off it. Sure, the ocean is placid, but Dave knows from experience how quickly tedium can turn to terror. While the running joke among the Dawn Patrol is that Dave uses the tower as a vantage point toscope turista womenâwhich he doesâthe actual truth is that when Dave is on duty and people are in the water, he is deadly serious about his job.
Itâs the rule that Booneâs dad drilled into him, the rule that they all grew up with:
Never turn your back on a wave.
Never turn your back on the absence of a wave, either, because the second you do, a real thundercrusher will rise out of nowhere and smack you down. The ocean may look like one thing on the surface, but thereâs always something different happening underneath. That something could start a thousand miles away and then be headed toward you and youâll never know about it until it happens.
Daveâs been on duty on a totally placid day when a freak rip comes in and takes a few swimmers out and then itâs on, and the few seconds it might have taken him to get over his surprise would have cost those people their lives. As it was, he wasnât surprised, never surprised by the ocean, because, as much as we love her, sheâs a treacherous bitch. Moody, mercurial, seductive, powerful, and deadly.
So Daveâs head never turns toward Boone as they talk. Both men look straight out at the water.
âYour take on something?â Boone asks.
âYou come seeking wisdom, Grasshopper?â
âDo you think,â Boone says, âthat weâre a