“Which one of you shot him?” Sinclair asked. He already knew the answer but was curious to find out if Ferris would tell the truth.
“He shot himself,” Ferris said. “And that’s the honest truth. He grabbed my gun and shot himself while I was trying to get it out of his hands. I knew Jacoby wanted his gun back. I’d have to pay him if...”
“You were saying there was a struggle,” Sinclair stated, once again trying to bring him back on track.
“Yes, that’s right. There was a struggle, which he started. I didn’t want him to shoot me, but he got hold of my gun, and he wouldn’t give it back.”
“What would you have done if he had given it back to you?” Sinclair wanted to know.
“I would have run away. It all happened so fast. The guy—I mean the detective I was fighting with—hit me hard and knocked me down. I don’t know if he knocked me out or not. It was a pretty hard hit for someone who had just shot himself. I could feel him pulling on me, but I couldn’t do anything about it because my head was spinning, and my eyes wouldn’t open. I think the detective was looking for another gun. My flash drive must have fallen out of my pocket and he picked it up.” Shaking his head, he looked down at the floor and exhaled a long slow breath as though telling his story was physically draining.
“When I got my wits about me and looked around, I was all alone. I thought Jacoby had taken off and left me, but then I heard gunshots. I knew it couldn’t be the detective who took my gun. There was so much blood on the ground, I figured he was on his way to dying. I got up and went to the corner, and I saw Jacoby on the ground, and that girl was still alive. He didn’t get it done.”
“ ‘It’?” Sinclair asked. He wanted Ferris to spell it out.
Ferris began to squirm in his chair. “Look. I didn’t have anything against her. Handing over information about her was just a job, and I needed the money.”
Michael could feel his control slipping. Losing his temper in an interrogation had never happened before. When he worked, his focus and discipline were absolute. This was different, though, and he wasn’t even running it. He wanted to destroy the man sitting across the table. Ferris was talking about Isabel as though she had as much value as a speck of dust.
Sinclair glanced at Michael, saw his expression, and rushed to finish the questioning.
Ferris also noticed Michael’s expression. Tilting his head toward Michael, he lowered his voice and said, “The way he’s watching me... it’s...”
“It’s what?” Sinclair asked.
“Scary,” he blurted. “He looks like he wants to kill me.”
Michael’s smile didn’t quite reach his eyes. “I’m a law-abiding man,” he said.
“In other words, he can’t kill you,” Sinclair said. “Isn’t that right?”
Michael nodded. “Do I think the world would be a better place without you taking up space, Ferris? Yes, I do. Inspector Sinclair is correct,” he added. “I can’t and I won’t kill you because murder is against the law. I can make your life damned miserable, though, and I plan to do exactly that.”
“Why?” Ferris asked, genuinely perplexed. “I didn’t do anything to you.”
“Oh, dear God,” Sinclair murmured. Turning to Michael, he said, “I’ll help you bury the body.”
That comment took the edge off Michael’s anger. “Thanks.”
“Scaring me won’t get you anywhere,” Ferris said defiantly. “I’ve been cooperating, and I’ve been honest with you.”
“Yes, you have been cooperating,” Sinclair admitted. “Just a couple more questions. How did MacCarthy know Jacoby?”
Ferris shrugged. “I don’t know. Maybe he got the name from one of his clients. Some of them are criminals. Not me, but some.”
“The evening after Jacoby was killed you went to the Hamilton Hotel. Miss MacKenna saw you in the lobby.”
“I know she saw me. It really put me in a panic. I just thought I could find out how long she was booked at the hotel and then call MacCarthy and tell him. Maybe I could still get paid.”
Michael didn’t show any reaction, but he wondered if Ferris had any idea how close he was to flying through the wall.
“Looks like you won’t be getting that sweet job now. What was it?” Sinclair wasn’t really interested, but he wanted to keep Ferris talking while he went through the folder to make sure he had covered everything.
“I was going to be on the crew building a lot of houses. Big, fancy houses,” he stressed. “With a hunting club and a golf course. It’s going to be real exclusive. That’s what MacCarthy told me anyway. He was always in a chatty mood when he drank.”
“Where are those houses going to be built?” Michael asked.
“I’m not sure. It’s somewhere up around Dunross. MacCarthy told me one of his clients is selling the land to some big development company out of London.”