The Poacher's Son (Mike Bowditch 1)

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Book: Read The Poacher's Son (Mike Bowditch 1) for Free Online
Authors: Paul Doiron
him, he dropped the spinning rods at my feet and turned and stormed off toward the Suburban.
    “Mr. DeSalle?” I called after him.
    “It’s in the car!”
    I watched him throw open the door and begin rummaging around inside the vehicle.
    I glanced over at the boy, who was now standing ankle-deep in the water, tightly clutching the boat line. His whole body seemed as taut as the rope.
    A moment later DeSalle came walking back. He waved a piece of paper at me. “Here it is, OK? My goddamned registration.”
    He thrust the paper with the attached validation stickers into my face.
    “Sir,” I said, “your son is watching us. You might think about the example you’re setting for him here.”
    “How I raise my son is my own fucking business, buddy.”
    “You need to cool down, Mr. DeSalle.”
    A sheen of sweat glistened along his forehead. “I’m renting a house on this lake, you know. Fifteen hundred bucks a week!”
    I glanced down at the registration. Then I handed him his papers back. “I hope you have an enjoyable vacation.”
    He jammed both documents into the front pocket of his shorts. “Yeah, I bet you do.” He brushed past me and waded out toward the floating boat, grabbing the rope away from the boy. “Pick up those fishing poles.”
    The boy approached me cautiously, with one eye on the gun at my side. I bent down and picked up the rods and handed them one by one to him. “Here you go. I hope you catch a big one.”
    “Come on, let’s go!” DeSalle stuck the new registration stickers onto the bow of the boat.
    The boy hurried out into the water. His father grabbed the rods away and threw them into the powerboat. The boy tried to scramble over the gunwale, but he lost his footing and fell back with a splash into the water. DeSalle glowered. The boy stood up quickly, his rear end soaking wet. He grabbed the gunwale and pulled himself into the boat. I could see him blinking back tears.
    “Don’t you cry,” said his father.
    I took a step toward them. “May I see your flotation devices, please?”
    DeSalle spun around. “My what?”
    “Your flotation devices.”
    “This is harassment!” He glared at me fiercely, and then, when I didn’t budge, he reached over the gunnel and held up an orange life jacket. “Here it is, OK?”
    “You’re required to have two personal flotation devices, Mr. DeSalle. Do you have another one?”
    He searched the boat with his eyes. The boy followed his gaze, as if wanting to help him find what he was looking for, but his father paid no attention to him.
    Finally, DeSalle turned back to me. “No. That’s it. So write your fucking ticket and get it over with.”
    “I need to see your driver’s license, Mr. DeSalle.”
    For a second, I think he expected me to wade out to get it, but when I didn’t budge, he splashed back to the boat ramp. I summonsed him for having insufficient personal flotation devices, wrote down the date he would need to appear at the District Court in Rockland if he wanted to contest the fine, and handed him the ticket to sign. Throughout it all, he managed to keep his mouth shut, and I began to think he had smartened up, but as he thrust my pen back at me, he said, “So what happened? Did you wash out of real cop school or something?”
    “Mr. DeSalle, you better think carefully before you say another word.”
    I tore off the summons and handed it to him, and he crumpled it into his fist. For an instant I thought he might toss the paper into the pond, but instead he shoved it deep into his pocket.
    “You’re going to have to find another PFD before I can let you onto the water,” I said.
    “You’re fucking kidding.”
    “No, sir. And I asked you to watch your language.”
    We stared at each other a long moment, his eyes looking redder and redder, and then he snapped his head around to face the boy. “Get out of the boat.”
    “Dad?” the boy said.
    “Get out of the boat! Ranger Rick says we can’t go fishing.” De-Salle swung

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