by Hanson, Lee
Table of Contents
Also Available by Lee Hanson
About The Author
M O N D A Y
~
CHAPTER 1
The questioner stood, a broad-brimmed straw hat casting a shadow across her face. She was very thin and tan, a stylish woman in her forties wearing a slim, white linen sun-dress, perfect for a cruise. “Julie, as a body language expert, do you sometimes find out things you really don’t want to know? Like secrets about friends or relatives?”
Everyone in the packed seminar looked expectantly at Julie O’Hara, who was seated on a stool in front of a large screen depicting a series of classic facial expressions. She glanced at her boyfriend, Joe Garrett, a private detective, who was accompanying her on this business/pleasure trip to the Caribbean. He was sipping on a Coke at a table a few rows back in the large Odyssey cocktail lounge, a venue Julie had chosen over the ship’s gigantic theatre. A smile played over his face as he watched her squirm, knowing that she wished he wasn’t there.
“That’s a very interesting question. Unfortunately the answer is yes. But, fortunately, most of them aren’t holding out on me.”
A ripple of laughter ran through her audience, including Joe.
“Seriously, though, most of you are probably quite good at spotting deception in people you know. Let’s say a man is lying to his wife about something. Very often he’ll give himself away verbally. It’s hard to miss it when he hesitates before he answers the question, “Where were you last night?”
More laughter…
“And then, of course, when he starts giving you a whole lot of irrelevant information, he’s a dead duck.”
Every woman in the room was laughing out loud now.
“Okay, so a savvy philanderer might know better than to do any of those things,” Julie said, laughing. “But he’d still have a hard time fooling his wife. On a subconscious level, we’re all wired to notice signals in each other’s body language. Especially faces,” she said, indicating the screen behind her.
She rose and walked a couple steps closer to her audience, her hands open.
“Truly, it’s a skill anyone can improve if they know what to look for. In the case of our hypothetical straying husband, his wife might pay particular attention to his eyes. A liar tends to blink more often and his pupils may be dilated, too. And those are just a few of the ‘tells’ our men can’t control, Ladies. I hope you’ll buy my book and learn the rest. We need to stay one step ahead of these guys.”
Everyone was laughing again; it was a good time to wind things up.
“I had a great time today. I hope you did, too. Thanks for coming!”
Julie made her way through the applause to the book-signing table set up just outside of the lounge, stopping to shake a hand here and there. One old gentleman took her hand in both of his and said, “Did anyone ever tell you that you look like Julia Roberts?” The man’s wife shot him a look you didn’t need to be an expert to interpret.
“Yes, thank you,” she said for the umpteenth time. She smiled at both of them and quickly moved along out of the lounge. Joe was already out there unpacking some additional books. He smiled at her and winked his approval.
I may not be Julia Roberts, but I’m a hell of an actress. Who ever thought I’d be doing this?
Writing Clues, A Body Language Guide had seemed like a logical next-step in her career, but Julie had never thought past the writing part, never thought of all the publicity and marketing involved in publishing. She had underestimated both the demands on her time and the loss of privacy.
Did I want the book to be a success? Yes, of course.
Did I want a guest spot on The View? NO.
She and Joe were aboard Holiday Cruise Lines’ Mystral on a seven-day trip to St. Thomas, St. Maarten and back again, courtesy of her publisher. They had departed three days ago from Port Canaveral in Central Florida, just an hour from Orlando where the two of them lived and worked. The experience was exciting, she had to admit.
At the dock, the immense white ship had looked like a sixteen-story building several blocks long, truly an awesome sight. Since both of them were first-time cruisers, there was no denying the thrill they’d felt upon boarding. They had joked about being short-changed on what HCL considered “Day 1”, since the Mystral had set sail at exactly four-thirty in the afternoon on Saturday, when most of the day was gone. They would return to the same port the following Saturday, at six in the morning.
Yesterday, Sunday, the ship had stopped at Parrot Cay, a small island owned by HCL. It was a pure vacation day for Julie and Joe, who had gone ashore, enjoyed the ship’s Caribbean Barbeque and spent the afternoon sunning and swimming.
But now, on Day 3, Julie felt like her vacation was over. She had just completed the Clues seminar, which was her first scheduled event. Later in the week, she had an open interview with Conde Nast Traveler magazine. Book signings were de rigueur, and Julie had to step out of her comfort zone each time to deal with her new, larger audience.
Corporate consultant, trainer, author…none of those hats seemed to fit well.
In the last few years, Julie’s focus had changed dramatically. Using her skills in a more meaningful way had become paramount. For example, if not for this cruise, she’d be in Orlando helping select a jury. The defendant had shot a stranger coming through her window in the dark…a stranger who turned out to be her abusive ex-boyfriend. In Julie’s opinion, the woman’s body language confirmed that she was telling the truth, that she had no idea it was him when she pulled the trigger.
The guy’s family, a rough bunch, didn’t agree and were calling it murder.
Long story short, Joe was happy to have her safely signing books.
Julie sighed in frustration.
What’s so safe about a floating skyscraper?
* * * * *
CHAPTER 2
Cathy Byrne stepped into the Penthouse Suite and took off her broad-brimmed straw hat, setting it on the top shelf of an entry-way closet full of empty luggage. She could see that her husband, Gill, was on his way out. He was dressed for the warm summer weather in khaki shorts, a golf shirt and topsiders. No doubt hoping to leave before I got back, she thought.
What was it about men that they looked better as they got older? Of course, at six-four and broad-shouldered, Gill had always looked good. But now, at fifty-five with that thick silver hair and a perpetual tan, he was striking. He never gained weight, never had to diet. Lines only gave his face more character. It’s not fair, Cathy thought.
“Where are you headed?”
“Oh, out and about,” Gill said. “Captain Collier invited me up to the bridge. How was the seminar?”
“It was very interesting. You should’ve gone.”
“Last night wiped me out; I never expected that game to go so long. I just got up an hour ago,” he said, rummaging around on the granite bar looking for his card key.
“It’s on the coffee table.”
“Oh, thanks,” he said grabbing it, heading for the door. He stopped and gave her a peck on the cheek. “See you later. I’ll be back in time to get dressed for the Captain’s Table.”
Just like him to forget about me and do whatever he feels like.
Gill Byrne was a charmer who was used to doing whatever he wanted to do, whenever he wanted to do it. Five years ago, he sold his highly successful national beer distributorship to a global beverage wholesaler for millions. A smart investor, he had doubled his net worth since then and was currently buying every available building in Downtown Orlando.
Gill had acquired wives along with wealth. He married the first one at the tender age of t
wenty-five; she was only eighteen. Childless, they parted company five years later. The second time around was a shotgun wedding that ended when his daughter, Deidre, was eight. Gill never missed wife number two, but he’d spent the last several years trying to buy his daughter’s affection. Not so much because he loved her, but mostly because he had a compulsion to charm everybody. As a result, Dede Byrne was spoiled rotten.
Cathy Byrne was wife number three.
At forty-eight, she took pride in looking several years younger. Turning, she caught her slim image in the mirror on the door. She turned sideways to look even slimmer. The white linen dress looked good with her tan, she thought, sucking in her stomach. I could stand to lose a few more pounds, though. She smiled and turned away, looking out the open glass door to the sea.
The large Penthouse Suite where she and Gill were staying was on Deck 10. It was tastefully decorated in soft gray and pale blue, and had a wall of glass with triple sliding-glass doors. The view was simply unparalleled. Adrienne Paradis, Cathy’s friend and travel agent, knew that they wouldn’t settle for less. And why should they? This was their fifteenth cruise with Holiday Cruise Lines; they were members of the privileged Captain’s Club.
Cathy grabbed a Diet Coke out of the refrigerator under the bar and headed for the double balcony. She stood out at the railing, enjoying the warm breeze and the salty air. She really didn’t have a care in the world. Except for one thing…
Cathy Byrne was wife number three.
* * * * *
CHAPTER 3
Julie and Joe considered themselves lucky to be on Deck 10, although their ocean-view mini-suite was the smallest of the lot. It had navy blue wall-to-wall and a wide-open sliding glass balcony door. Snow white drapes, drawn back on either side, puffed lightly in the breeze. Bleached oak blended with a nautical blue and white striped fabric on the sofa and the bedspread…the large and rumpled bedspread.
“Joe, come in and help me,” Julie snapped, smoothing it out. The hard edge in her voice wasn’t because Joe was relaxing out on the balcony. And it wasn’t about Joe’s earlier “slam-bam-thank-you-ma’am” performance, either.
It was about the glass of champagne in his hand.
Julie glanced over at the built-in bar, where the complimentary bottle had sat untouched for two days. He must have opened it when I was in the shower, she thought. I wonder if the coke he was nursing today had booze in it.
Joe joined AA as a young man, right after graduating from Florida State. She had never seen him with a drink and he had never mentioned any “slip”. Julie did a quick calculation: That’s twenty years of sobriety! Shit. We’ve got to talk about this. But not now, not with the Captain’s Table tonight. Don’t get confrontational with him now…
***
Joe had a hard time tearing himself away from the hypnotic view ten decks below. As the Mystral cut her way across the Caribbean, the sea folded and rolled continuously away from the ship’s hull in an aqua-blue and white swirl. Having served in the navy and as a recreational diver, Joe was certainly no stranger to boats. But this giant ship was something else. Joe had never been on a cruise ship before, never been on this kind of vacation.
His everyday stresses were gone; he couldn’t remember the last time he felt this relaxed. Of course, he knew the feeling was partly due to his having had a “couple” of drinks. So what was wrong with that? He was just a kid when he used to “overdo it”. Surely, all these years of abstinence proved that he could stop any time he felt like it. And that was exactly what he planned to do…as soon as the cruise was over.
***
Joe stepped back inside the stateroom and Julie felt the same old tug at her heart. He was so damn handsome in his tux! Tall and tan, with sun-streaked hair and a light beard, the sight of him was almost enough to make her jump back in bed and ask for a redo.
Shaking his head and laughing, he went to help her. “I can’t believe you care what the cabin steward thinks. You need to relax, babe.”
Like you? Julie thought, her concern front and center again. Instead she just smiled and took a long look at him. He’s not drunk, at least not so anyone else would notice.
He came around the bed and caught her up in his arms. “C’mon, four thousand people on this ship and we’re dining with the Captain! And you look gorgeous…” He spun her around so that they were reflected in the mirror over the dresser.
Julie stood in front of him, dressed in a strapless black velvet sheath, her hair in a ponytail tied with a black ribbon. “Four inch heels and I’m still shorter than you,” she said, smiling in spite of herself.
“A lot prettier, too,” Joe said. “Just one thing, though…for me,” and he pulled the ribbon from her hair, allowing the red-brown waves to cascade over her shoulders. “Now, Ms. O’Hara, you’re ready for the Captain’s Table.”
Right. Are you, Joe?
* * * * *
CHAPTER 4
The Mystral’s Medical Center had closed for the day and not a moment too soon, as far as the medical staff was concerned. With four thousand passengers and crew, some days in the severely limited facility were hell. But today, with a virus scare going around, at least a hundred passengers had either called or dropped in looking for antibiotics. And they weren’t happy to be told that antibiotics were only effective against bacterial infections and not viruses.
An independently run operation, the Medical Center was woefully small and understaffed, primarily designed to handle ordinary illness and small scale accidents. Beyond initial diagnosis, the ship’s doctors and staff were capable of stabilizing patients and providing therapeutic intervention for most things. But when a patient was seriously ill or injured, it fell to the chief shipboard physician to make the call whether or not to evacuate that person to the nearest port hospital. One such patient had been taken off the ship today and raised bloody hell about it. “You haven’t heard the end of this, Dr. Sinclair! Do you know how much I paid for this cruise?”
Now, with her workday done and another doctor on call, Dr. Michelle Sinclair, the ship’s Principal Medical Officer, determined to put that angry man out of her mind.
Breathing deeply, she stood under her shower letting the stress of the day swirl away down the drain. This was her indulgence. Here, in the privacy of her cabin, she ignored the ship’s instructions to “limit water usage”. Because she didn’t need makeup, Michelle’s shower usually took up half of the twenty or thirty minutes she spent getting dressed.
She toweled off and used the blow-dryer on her dark, shoulder-length hair. Then she deftly twisted it, still damp, into a smooth knot at the nape of her neck. Choosing clothes took no time at all since officers were required to wear uniforms at all times in public areas. She went to her closet where starched and fitted white shirts were lined up, one after another, with several just-above-the-knee, white straight skirts. Three of the shirts had extra gold braid on the epaulets, for formal occasions like tonight. She pulled out a set and dressed quickly, slipping on a pair of medium-height, white sling-back heels.
She had calmed down and was feeling like herself again when the phone rang. She picked it up with a sigh and, as usual, didn’t even get a chance to say hello.
“I know. I’m sorry. Yes, I know that his wife is upset, too. If she was so sure that he’s ‘going to be fine’, she didn’t have to get off with him. They aren’t traveling alone, after all.”
Michelle held the phone away from her ear. When the rant abated she said, “Please don’t threaten me. I don’t like it,” and she hung up. She took a deep breath and calmed herself.
Tonight, once again, she would sit next to Andrew at the Captain’s Table.
* * * * *
CHAPTER 5
Julie and Joe stood outside their stateroom, invitation in hand, looking left and right. When it came to getting around, the elite folks up on the tenth deck still had to navigate the same narrow, labyrinthine corridors as all the other passengers. Thus far, having eaten at the buffet on th
e Lido Deck, they had never been to the Main Dining Room and they were trying to remember where it was.
Miguel, their cabin steward, spotted them.
“Your stateroom is starboard, right front of the ship. The closest elevator is the one on your right, and your best bet for most areas is to get off at Deck 4. The Main Dining Room is aft, all the way to the rear.”
“Of course,” Julie said, “thank you, Miguel.”
“My pleasure, Ms. O’Hara, Mr. Garrett. Have a nice evening,” he said, bowing.
“How to look like a couple of dorks in one easy lesson,” Joe said, as they descended in the elevator. Laughing at themselves, they got off on Deck 4.
They barely noticed the movement of the ship as they strolled through the long Photo Gallery and past the Odyssey Lounge, the site of Julie’s seminar. Through the windows on their left, the sinking sun splashed pink across the sky and turned the sea to gold. Joe led Julie outside where they simply held hands and admired the glorious sunset for a while.
When they reached the center of the ship, the space opened-up on an area several stories high, with floors of inlaid travertine marble, tall contemporary glass sculptures and palms. Twin winding staircases, their railings agleam with polished brass, led skyward to Deck 5.
Near them on Deck 4, some passengers lined up at the purser’s office, while others sipped coffee just beyond them in the Internet Café. On the right, a pianist in a white dinner jacket played Cole Porter on a baby grand piano to the delight of several couples in formal wear who sipped cocktails, smiling and humming.
They stopped to look at a cutaway diagram of the ship’s decks.
“Do you want to go through the Casino or the Promenade?” Joe asked. A popular meeting place, the Promenade was up the staircase on Deck 5. It was a giant atrium with boutique shops, casual restaurants and bars.
And that’s when Julie made her first mistake of the night with Joe.