I turned the key. The 308 GTS coughed once, then remembered it was Italian and purred like a satisfied cat. Through the gates of Robin’s Nest, past the tidepools where the crabs don’t pay rent, onto the Pali Highway with the wind peeling back the years.
I hung up. Smiled. Drove toward the sunset with one hand on the wheel and one problem less.
I squatted down. Eye level. The way you talk to kids and cornered men. “Boyd, she doesn’t want you back. She wants the deed to the catamaran. The one you signed over to a shell company named after your girlfriend’s middle name.” His face went the color of old tuna. “How did you—”
The address took me to a boatyard by Kewalo Basin. Old fishing boats dreaming of retirement. A warehouse with corrugated skin and no windows on the street side. I parked the Ferrari where I could see it. Love means never having to say you’re sorry—or explaining a stolen set of Campagnolo wheels to the estate. Magnum P.I.
Inside: diesel, shadow, and Boyd. He was sitting on a crate of frozen mahi-mahi, holding a glass of something that wasn’t juice. “You Magnum?” “Depends. Are you worth finding?” He laughed. It was the laugh of a man who’d spent his last good idea three drinks ago. “Tell Celeste I’m dead.” “You don’t look dead.” “That’s the con, isn’t it?”
“I’m a detective, Boyd. I detect things. Also, your girlfriend works at the bank. She uses her work email for restaurant reservations. Lobster Thermidor. Three times this month. You’re not subtle.”
He set the glass down. His hand shook. Mine would too, if I’d run that far into a lie. I turned the key
The case was simple. They always sound simple at two in the afternoon when the light slants through the jalousies and the ceiling fan chops the heat into usable pieces. “Find my husband,” she’d said. Diamond earrings. Diamond voice. Trouble in a sundress.
I don’t do missing persons. I do missing reasons. Boyd wasn’t lost. He was hiding. And hiding people leave a smell: stale alibis, fresh lies, and just enough cologne to make you think they still care.
And in the morning, there’s always another orchid, another key, another woman in a sundress who knows exactly what she’s doing. I hung up
Her name was Celeste. The husband’s name was Boyd. The real problem’s name was a .45 semiauto I hadn’t seen yet, but could feel—like a barracuda in murky water.
Back in the car, I radioed Higgins from the glovebox phone. Not because I needed to. Because I knew he’d been counting the minutes. “Robin’s Nest, this is Magnum. Case closed. Break out the gin.” A pause. Then: “There is no gin. There is only a very passable London dry, which I will not dignify by mixing with your tropical fruit abominations.” “So that’s a yes.” “That’s a ‘try not to bleed on the driveway.’”
The Ferrari didn’t like the rain. Neither did my hair, but one of us had a choice about it. I slid across the hood—red as a Honolulu sunset, wet as a drowned mongoose—and dropped into the driver’s seat. The leather sighed. So did I.
I left him there. Some men don’t need arresting. They need the quiet realization that the floor they’re standing on is actually a trapdoor.
Higgins would be watching from the main house. Binoculars. Probably a cup of Earl Grey, judging the angle of my exit like I was docking a battleship. Let him.