by Toby Neal
She was going to Lahaina to find a bar.
And she wasn’t planning to come back to the condo alone.
Chapter Eight
Sophie had adopted the identity of Mary Watson months ago when she went off the grid the first time. Mary Watson knew how to handle men, wasn’t afraid of being attractive, and didn’t have issues in the bedroom. The feminine, fun-loving identity was a way that Sophie could leave her past behind. And, sitting at the bar looking over the glitter of light on the water of Lahaina Bay, Sophie decided that putting on Mary Watson was like donning a party dress—just what she needed.
She stirred a pale blue drink shaded by a small paper umbrella, and smiled at the man who had taken the seat beside her.
“I would offer to buy you a drink, but I can see that you already have one,” he gestured to his own pale green concoction in a martini glass. “Do you think less of me for liking appletinis?”
Mary Watson laughed, and smoothed her short skirt. “I like someone who’s secure enough to buy whatever kind of drink he likes. My name’s Mary.”
“I’m Chad.” A shirt in faded chambray draped the man’s muscular shoulders, and the hands holding the martini glass were rough with calluses. One of his thumbnails was dark with a blood blister—he’d probably hit it with a hammer.
She pointed. “I see you are in the construction trade.”
Chad’s brown eyes widened, and he grinned. “You a detective?” His smile was not unattractive, a pleasing composition of simple enjoyment and anticipation.
“Sometimes. In another life.” She lifted her drink and tipped it toward him. “To new identities.” He would do for what she had in mind.
“Is this seat taken?”
Sophie turned her head to see the new arrival. Brett Taggart took off that Indiana Jones hat and set it on the bar. “Never know when a bad day will start looking up.”
Sophie leaned forward and drew a deep draft of the sweet, foamy drink through her straw as her stomach plummeted. She might not be getting laid after all. “They say it’s a small island. I guess it’s true. Hello, Dr. Taggart. Brett.” Sophie said his first name as he raised a brow at her. She stirred the dregs of her drink and lifted a finger for the bartender. “Give me a cosmopolitan this time.”
The man with the appletini got up and left with a little headshake.
“I’d like it if this was the Old West and they just parked a bottle of whiskey next to my elbow,” Taggart said. “It’s been that kind of day.”
“I take it you heard about the body.” Sophie watched the bartender shake her drink.
“Just got done being interviewed by MPD. Not fun.” Taggart threw back the whiskey shot he’d ordered, and tapped the bar for another.
“Guess we are both out of a job for a while.” Sophie accepted her new drink and sipped it. She hardly ever imbibed, and the first one was already having an effect.
“Yeah. Won’t be doing much at the site with it being a crime scene.” Taggart threw back his second shot and tapped for a third.
“You appear to take your drinking seriously. No frills.”
“I’m a purist. When I do something, I do it one hundred percent and with total focus.” Taggart was wearing a tight black tee and worn jeans that made her want to touch them. He narrowed piercing dark eyes at her. “And I’m good with my hands.”
Sophie felt a tingle.
The guy with the appletini had not given her a tingle.
Sophie lifted her glass. “To drowning our sorrows, as they say in America—with total focus.” They touched rims, and the chime of the glasses reverberated through her. “What did you tell the investigators?”
“Can we not talk about that?”
“Don’t know what else we have in common.” The second drink went off like a bomb in her empty stomach, and heat flowed out from that empty place inside her, running along her nerve endings and relaxing her stiff spine into a supple curve.
“We have this. Being alone in a bar, getting drunk.” Taggart picked up his third drink.
Sophie turned her head to him, and smiled. “Not alone anymore.”
Taggart’s grin was much better than the man’s with the appletini—it framed straight white teeth and lifted his cheeks into well-worn creases that bracketed his eyes with intelligence and humor. “You are so right.”
He leaned over, sliding a hand around the back of her neck, and drew Sophie toward him.
His kiss was assertive, confident, and thorough. Sophie liked the taste of whiskey on his tongue, the smell of tobacco, with all its associations, in the warm place beside his ear.
He let her go eventually. They both sat back. Sophie finished her drink and lifted a finger for another. “That was nice.”
“I knew it would be.” Taggart sipped his whiskey this time. “I wanted to do that from the minute I met you.”
“Oh.” Sophie kept her eyes forward, trying to figure out what she was feeling.
Meeting him here was ideal in some ways. She was sure Taggart knew what he was doing in the bedroom, and she felt safe with him, which was no small thing. Plus, he lived here, and there was little likelihood of a messy entanglement with her home on another island.
But they were working together, and there had just been a murder on their mutual job site, and she was pretty sure that tomorrow, in the cold hard light of day, it wouldn’t seem like a good idea after all.
It sure seemed like one now.
Taggart picked up her hand. He stroked her fingers, and it sent ripples of sensation through her arms, tightening her nipples. “You have beautiful hands.”
Connor had done the same thing to her hand, and Connor loved her. Connor was waiting for her to be ready. He was wooing her, respecting her, and trying, in his way, to be honest. She didn’t really believe he would spy on her—he had his own code of ethics. Yes, the timing was surprising, but not really. They were both alone in the evening. That’s usually when they texted.
He had never told her he had stopped being the Ghost, just because she wished he had.
Sophie gently removed her hand. “I don’t think this is going to happen.”
“It’s such a bad idea that it’s good.” Taggart leaned over and kissed her again, but this time it felt invasive, taking too much.
She pulled back. “I think you should leave. We’ve both had a lot to drink.”
“You’re probably right. Good thing I live nearby and don’t have to drive.” He lifted his brows. “Sure you won’t change your mind, come see the back alleys of Lahaina?”
“No. Thanks.”
“Well, too bad.” Taggart showed no effect from the shots he’d consumed. He pushed a hand through his hair and clapped the hat back on. “Thanks for making a terrible day just a little bit better.” Taggart threw a couple of twenties on the bar. “Another time, perhaps.”
Sophie waited until he was gone before she finished her drink and slid off the stool. Her wobbly legs eventually took her outside of the bar, and she breathed drafts of fresh air, hoping the nausea and whirlies would go away. She probably should have eaten something during her drinking binge. There was no way she could drive back to Ma’alea.
But there was someone she could call. Someone who would drop everything and come rescue her, no questions asked, whenever she needed it.
Even with her eyes crossing, Sophie knew the number to press on the favorites list of her phone. “I’m sorry, but I think I need a ride.”
Sophie had resumed her spot at the bar and had consumed two more drinks, along with a plate of nachos, by the time Jake Dunn arrived, striding through the crowded bar. He elbowed the man next to her aside with a glare.
“What brought this on?” Jake slid her off the stool and hooked her arm around his neck as her knees buckled.
She fumbled for her purse. “I have to pay.”
“Hey. The lady and I were having a conversation…” The man beside her was foolish enough to object, but shut his mouth at one glance from Jake’s steely
gray eyes.
Sophie giggled. “You’re scary, Jake. But not to me.” She put a handful of bills on the counter and Jake supported her out.
“You’re giggling. How weird,” he said, and she giggled some more. He was big as a house and warm as a stove. Leaning on him felt as natural as if she’d been doing it her whole life.
Once in his rental car, a shiny black Ford Escape, Sophie leaned her head back against the seat. “I found a body at the site. I’m in big trouble for letting a murder happen there.”
“I heard. Bix called me.” Jake reached across her and pulled her seatbelt down and buckled it. His big shoulder was nearby, and she leaned her head on it. Her breast brushed his arm, and it felt good.
“You’re drunk.” He pushed her upright and reached over to recline her seat, so abruptly that she fell back and away.
“I know.”
Jake turned on the SUV with a roar and pulled out.
Sophie turned her head to look at him. It was clear that Jake wanted her, and had since they first met. Why had she resisted the obvious until now? “Take me to bed. I want to have sex.”
A long silence.
“Was that rude? I am sometimes socially awkward, I know. But I am just saying what we’re both thinking about.”
Jake had his eyes on the road and both hands on the wheel, and he was way too far away with his warm, hard muscles. Sophie burped delicately. “Did you hear me? I just propositioned you.” She put her hand on his leg. “You’re really very attractive, Jake. I’m sorry I never told you that before, but I didn’t want to make your big head bigger. So, let’s do it.”
“This isn’t how I want this to go.” Jake tightened his big hands on the steering wheel. “No. It’s not going to happen this way.”
“Don’t be so mean. I know you want to.” The whirlies got worse, and Sophie swallowed some nausea. Maybe the nachos hadn’t been a good thing after all.
“I’m not going to be your drunken hookup. It’s going to be a hell of a lot more, or nothing.”
“Didn’t know you were so…” Sophie couldn’t think of the word, but suddenly knew she was in trouble. “Pull over! I’m going to be sick.”
And she was. She puked into the grass on the side of the Pali Highway, lit up by the headlights of passing cars, with Jake Dunn keeping her from falling over.
Chapter Nine
“Spawn of a worm-riddled water buffalo,” Sophie cursed, holding her head in both hands as she put her feet on the floor for the first time the next day. “Oh. My. Oh. This hurts.”
Piercing sunlight struck her aching eyes like a blow. She’d blocked it out by hanging extra blankets over the windows on previous nights, but hadn’t been in any shape to do so last night. Cramps knotted her abused belly. Her head was a huge, throbbing drum. “So this is a hangover.”
Her first hangover ever reminded her of Dante’s Inferno. The sheer physical misery wasn’t something she wanted to repeat, but it included memories that made her groan afresh: propositioning Jake; throwing up on the side of the road; Jake carrying her in and putting her to bed…
Sophie was still wearing her dress, but her shoes were set neatly side-by-side near the closet. She spotted a bottle of water and pile of analgesics on her nightstand, along with a note written on the back of a receipt.
She crawled up the bed to the nightstand, unscrewed the water bottle, swallowed four of the pills and drained the bottle.
Hangovers were caused by dehydration. Who knew that could lead to so many terrible symptoms? Or that drunkenness caused such embarrassing behavior? Certainly she’d heard stories from Marcella, even seen a few examples…but the reality was way worse than she’d ever imagined.
She groaned aloud again, remembering how Jake had rejected her, and had held her up while she vomited. “Oh, son of a three-headed toad…”
Sophie picked up the receipt and made her eyes focus. Jake’s handwriting was a mass of blocky hieroglyphics, slashes and dots that almost broke the paper’s surface. “Drink lots of water. Get some rest. Someday we will laugh about this.”
Not likely.
She’d never laugh about Jake saying, “I’m not going to be your drunken hookup. It’s going to be a hell of a lot more, or nothing.”
Memory was fuzzy after that, but that sentence was glaringly clear, and made her squirm.
Self-hatred rolled over her in a greasy black wave, along with nausea, and she barely made it to the bathroom in time to lose the bottle of water and painkillers into the toilet.
She staggered back into the bedroom and hung the blankets over the brightly glaring windows to shut out the light.
Hours later, she was finally upright and had a shower, but the depression had replaced the hangover. She went back to bed with a handful of rice crackers and another bottle of water and more aspirin, and fell asleep.
Late in the afternoon, she felt strong enough to retrieve her phone and check her messages. Connor’s number showed several calls but he had not left messages. Typical. He would not want to leave any sort of recording, especially about That Subject, but finally, there was a short one in his fake Aussie accent. “Miss you. Call me. We need to talk.”
“Talking won’t change anything,” Sophie said aloud, and deleted the message. She didn’t see him giving up being a vigilante unless he was locked up, or dead. Neither of those options appealed, and her belly cramped at the thought. She plugged her phone back in and lay down, letting the depression suck her down and under like quicksand. She flashed to her mother, lying in bed—her wide, dark eyes fixed on the ceiling, her skin sallow and glossy black hair lank, her lips moving but forming no sound.
Sophie’s depression wasn’t that bad. She would never let it get that bad. She had her father Frank Smithson’s big, strong, powerful energy to combat the psychological weakness she’d inherited from her mother, Pim Wat.
She nibbled another cracker as the next message came on.
“Sophie, it’s Lei. We are making some progress on the case and wanted to give you an update and get your help on a few things. Call me.”
And finally, Jake.
“Hey, partner.” An uneasy throat-clearing. “Hope you don’t remember too much of what went on last night. But if you do—don’t stress about it. Drunk talk is crazy; you wouldn’t want to hear some of the things I’ve done in my time. So just put it behind you, drink your water, and we’ll both forget it ever happened, okay? Okay. See you soon. We should discuss the situation at Kakela when you’re feeling better.”
“Thank you, Jake.” Sophie breathed. Thank God he had left that message, or her best solution would be to avoid and try not to see him. Ever again.
Sophie drank the rest of the remaining bottle of water, and called Lei.
“Hi, Sophie.” Lei’s voice sounded annoyingly loud, and Sophie lowered the volume on her phone, wincing.
“Hello, Lei. What’s new on the case?” Sophie tried to sound sharp and on top of things.
“You sick? You sound like you’ve been licking a bad stretch of road,” Lei said. So much for on top of things.
“I went out and got drunk. Not an experience I care to repeat,” Sophie rubbed the tingly-numb skin graft on her face.
“Oh no. I hope it wasn’t because of the case! Because I need you, it turns out.”
“Well, it was a little bit. I still have to talk to Magnuson, but I expect to be fired.”
“No, no. I already took care of it.” Lei cut her off. “I spoke to Pomai this morning and told her I thought you’d done a fine job considering no one expected more than someone to come into the site and dig a few more holes. I asked if you could help me with the artifacts burglary aspect of the case for the remaining time on your contract, and she agreed.”
“Thanks, Lei.” Sophie swallowed a lump in her throat. “That’s very kind. You and I both know I screwed up, and it won’t be the last time.”
“I’ve done way worse and still ended solving the cases. So, don’t beat yourself up. Get in the
shower, drag on some clothes, and meet with me and Pono at the Kahului station. We’re setting up a murder board, and would like your thoughts.”
“On my way.” Sophie ended the call, swung her legs off the bed, sat up, and stopped abruptly to keep her brain from sloshing.
She was going to have to move a little more slowly, to begin with.
Sophie entered the square, putty-colored, urban-ugly Kahului Police Department headquarters an hour later, her head relatively high and step cautiously stable. The headache still pounded at the backs of her eyes, but felt manageable, and she was glad of this distraction to lift her self-esteem. Lei met Sophie in the lobby once she’d texted her arrival.
“Hey.” Lei grinned. “The walking dead arrives.” Lei’s curly hair was escaping its ponytail, and a pair of black jeans and a red tank top with a buff-colored cotton jacket hiding her shoulder holster completed her friend’s usual detective outfit. “How’s the hangover?”
“Not something I want to repeat.”
Lei laughed. “Follow me. I promise Pono and I will keep the lights low to accommodate your handicapped state.”
Sophie followed her friend down a hallway past the intake desk and through a beehive of modular units and down another hall. “I behaved badly when I was drunk.”
Lei paused in the hallway. “We’re alone here. How badly?” Her brows rose and a dimple appeared in her cheek. “Badly…like, involving men? Because it’s about time.”
“Yes.” Sophie shook her head. “The best thing about it is that nothing actually happened.”
“Nothing seems to have been happening with you for a very long time, my friend,” Lei said. “You and Remarkian should just hop in bed it and get it over with.”
“Maybe.” Sophie followed her friend’s abrupt push into a nearby conference room, unable to speak of the problems that had come up with Connor. “I’m not sure he’s the man for me.”
“What?” Lei exclaimed. “He’s the perfect guy for you!”