OBSIDIAN
TEAGAN OLIVER
Copyright Ó 2012 by Teagan Oliver
Published by Teagan Oliver of Maine. This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the author. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase and additional copy for each person. Thank you.
Cover Photo: B.G. Oliver, all rights reserved.
PREVIOUS EDITIONS:
Original First Printing: January 2007, Five Star Expressions
Large Print Edition: October 2008 Thorndike Press
This book is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents and dialogues in this book are of the author's imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is completely coincidental.
For my Dad, for being my hero.
Acknowledgements:Writing is a mostly solitary profession, but becoming published is something that cannot be done alone. Thank you to all who answered my endless questions along the way and to my friends who offered creative suggestions for plotting all along this strange trip.
I’d be remiss if I didn’t acknowledge my children who love me whether I succeed or fail, and my husband who never hesitates to tell people that his wife is a writer.
My deepest thanks go to my Maine RWA family for their support, combined knowledge, and belief in me. Thank you all.
PROLOGUE
Maybe it was the gentle rise of the wind that lifted the hairs at the back of his neck and set the chimes on his porch to swaying. Maybe it was the absence of all other sounds except the buzzing in his ears that sent his senses into overtime. Whatever it was, something made him stop and turn back for one last look.
Jamie Rivard stood on the dock as David throttled up the engine of his new, twenty-six foot, Grady-White Offshore Pro and pulled away. Sunlight glistened off the hull, sending slivers of cascading light rippling into the water around it. The boat was a beauty and he was envious.
They’d spent the afternoon basking in the sun off Minet Island with nothing but the traveling sun to remind them of the time. They hadn’t caught much, but it didn’t matter. Fishing, like their good-natured rivalry, held no effects on their long time friendship. Whether it was cars, boats, women or fish, David had always prided himself on bettering him. Now, as he watched his friend head out with the setting sun gleaming across his bow, he had to concede that today he’d won.
Jamie set the tackle box at his feet and balanced the pole against his shoulder. The sky was turning orange with the last dying light and he waved as David’s boat moved out and away from the line of boats anchored just offshore.
Something had been bothering his friend all day. He’d been quick to anger and fast to laugh. Normally this wouldn’t have bothered him, but there was something else about his friend that he hadn’t been able to pinpoint. And maybe he’d been working too many long hours and seeing suspicion in everything, a hazard of a job he knew all too well.
Red Sky at night, sailor’s delight . . . he thought, giving one last look at the sunset as he turned back, reaching for his tackle box.
Suddenly, the gentle wind became a buzzing noise that steadily increased to a blare of warning. Above the din, he listened as David throttled up the engine once again as he moved toward open water.
Jamie’s muscles tightened, his stomach clenching as panic washed over him. He reached out his hand to signal David, but it was too late.
A blinding flash fired before him, shaking everything with a resounding boom that lifted the boat from the water. It exploded wildly, fire ripping through the deck as a cloud of black spiraled upward, filling the sky. The force of the explosion rushed over him, throwing him to the deck as fractured fiberglass rained down fragments and hot ash upon him, searing his skin.
Pain and darkness washed over Jamie, swirling around him in a black pool until he could do nothing but give in, muttering a silent prayer and letting it all sink away.
CHAPTER ONE
The Beachside Bar wasn’t even close to a beach. Nor, was it in any way, the cultural experience the exotic name implied. Instead, it was a local hovel on a narrow Key West back street, whose only claim to a beachside atmosphere were the fake fishing nets hanging from the ceilings and the fish they served on chipped plates.
He knew the place well.
Jamie Rivard set his sunglasses on his forehead, letting his eyes adjust to the darkness before sliding up to the bamboo bar. Nothing had changed since he’d been here last. It had the same worn carpeting and the same faded beer signs hanging on the walls.
He motioned to the bartender for a beer and pulled a few dollars out of his wallet, pushing them across the bar as the man slid the bottle toward him.
Jamie chose the table at the opposite corner, placing his back to the wall. Why in hell had McAlvey chosen this dump to meet? He could think of countless other places better suited to a discreet conversation. Certainly, there were other places with adequate lighting and passable food.
He sighed. Inside his nerves were raw and on edge, but on the outside he remained calm. A skill he’d honed after years of service. Never let them see you sweat. No matter who the other guy was.
He checked his watch. McAlvey was late.
On the jukebox, an Eagle’s song ended and another slower one started. A lone couple sat in the corner with eyes only for each other, their hands moving toward each other across the top of the table. With her honey blond hair and tanned complexion there was something familiar about her. And yet, he couldn’t put a name to the face. Her companion was a heavy-set bruiser of a guy with arms like tree trunks and indistinguishable tattoos.
The soulful lyrics were an aphrodisiac to the couple as they rose from the table. The blond draped herself against the hulk of a guy, tucking an arm about his waist as they wound their way through the empty tables.
“Jamie Rivard?”
When he heard the husky pouting voice, vague memories filtered back to him of a weekend spent drowning in tequila and mourning the loss of his best friend.
“How are you?”
The blond smiled wickedly, a gesture that didn’t go unnoticed by her male companion who responded by tucking her closer.
“I’m just fine, honey. And you’re definitely looking a whole lot better than the last time I saw you.” Beside her, her male counterpart puffed his chest at the familiarity.
“Being sober will do it. You look good, as always.” He took a drink, letting the beer cool his nerves.
“Have a good evening,” he offered; tipping his beer in salute as the over-pecked male escorted her out. Thankfully, they’d gotten the message and moved along. It wouldn’t do for them to be hanging about should McAlvey decide to finally show.
The door swung shut behind them, leaving just him and the bartender and still no McAlvey. From the back room the sound of a pool break clattered through the open doorway. Monday evening happy hour was definitely not a high time for the Beachside.
The door swung open and a man walked in. His short blond hair showed gray at the edges as he raised his sunglasses up, settling them on his head. Deep lines of age surrounded his piercing blue eyes. Well tanned, and in his late 50s, McAlvey looked like any other guy on the Keys with his flashy shirt, white cut off shorts and deck shoes. The only thing separating this man from a tourist was the large signet ring with a crest on his left hand. To the casual bystander he looked like just another Jimmy Buffett-wannabe, out for a good time. Few would believe that this man was a Commanding Officer in the Coast Guard.
His CO.
Jamie rose from his seat a
s much as from instilled formality than anything else. McAlvey didn’t offer greetings. Instead, he nodded his confirmation of Jamie’s presence and ordered his own beer.
“We aren’t on ceremony here, Rivard.” McAlvey said, pulling out the chair opposite him and motioned for Jamie to sit once again. They weren’t at the base and the last thing either of them wanted was to call undue attention.
“I was expecting you a half hour ago.” Jamie leaned back in his chair and apprised his CO. In the three years he’d been under McAlvey’s command they’d never been much for making small talk.
“I was unavoidably detained,” McAlvey muttered, taking a pull from the beer the bartender set in front of him.
“Things happen.” But things like this rarely happened to him. Jamie took another swig of beer and leaned back in his chair, bringing the front legs up off the floor.
“The scars are healing well. How about the leg?”
McAlvey wasn’t here for small talk and Jamie knew it. But he’d play along and see what it was he wanted. He could be patient when needed. At least for a while.
“The leg is good. The scars,” he shrugged. “ I’ll have to live with those.”
By all rights, they were charting some sort of uneasy territory here, setting rules for engagement for a battle about which Jamie had no clue.
“You need a haircut,” McAlvey said. “It’s not regulation.”
“I’ll get one. Before I come back.” Jamie took another sip of his beer to calm his nerves. It was warm. “For now, I don’t need one.”
McAlvey fidgeted with the bottle between his fingers. Moisture dripped down the side of the bottle and left rings on the plastic tablecloth. “You seem better than the last time I saw you.”
Jamie snorted. “The last time you saw me I was stinking drunk.”
It was just another reminder of the blur of days after David’s death. He cringed as he thought of how he’d acted the day he’d gone on base. Anger had driven him to drink. Suspicion had made him demand answers over David’s death. And regret made him understand what a bad decision it had been.
Despite what he let others think of him, it wasn’t in his nature to act out. Hell, it wasn’t in his nature to chase away things with alcohol, but for a while it had helped get rid of the pain.
“You know, you had no place being on the base inebriated.”
“Is that why you asked me here to meet you? To discuss my behavior?” The legs of his chair hit the floor with a thud. They both knew that wasn’t the reason, but they’d been dancing around the subject like a ghost that refused to go away.
McAlvey shook his head. “You’re a loose cannon, Rivard. You’ve just been lucky and gotten away with it up until now. I could’ve had you detained for your behavior.”
“But you didn’t.” Instead, he’d been sent home with an escort and warned not to set foot on the base until he was sober again.
“No, I didn’t. But the only reason I didn’t was because you were hurting.” McAlvey eyes narrowed as he scrutinized him across the table.
“Yes, well I guess putting me on enforced leave will at least make me more rested.” He may have been drunk, but he’d had a damned good reason. And the reason hadn’t changed during the time he’d been away.
“It was either enforced medical leave or find some other way of making you deal. Besides, you needed the time to heal your leg and you were due some leave. You’ve haven’t had any down time for two years.”
“I’ve been busy.” He couldn’t help but let the sarcasm he was feeling come out in voice. Yes, he’d been too busy to take leave. For the last two years he’d been chasing drug runners and smugglers and the effort had taken a toll on more than his body. His last smuggling case had lasted six months and had netted a ton of cocaine and three major players. It’d also been the last case he’d worked on with David.
“You deserve the time. You needed to get your head on straight.”
Head on straight. He wanted to laugh. Doing his job was the only thing that had mattered for years. David had understood that it was more than just a job. It was a mission. David had gotten that.
They’d been like brothers. Rivaling brothers, but brothers all the same. It was David who had pushed him into the Special Investigation unit. It was David that had loved the excitement and the adrenaline. He’d just loved the commitment.
“I want to know what happened to David. I want the truth.”
McAlvey looked over the top of his beer at him. “Those records are classified.”
“And I’ve got the clearance. You can open them up for me.”
“I can. But I won’t.” There was a tight edge to McAlvey’s voice and Jamie had known him long enough to know that when pushed, his CO would push back.
“I was really hoping your time off would’ve calmed you down some.”
Hell. “Are you saying that the death of a friend wouldn't make anyone edgy?” There was that anger again, and it came out in the tightness of his voice.
McAlvey shook his head. “I’m still your CO, Rivard. You’d do well to remember that.” But they weren’t on the base and there was no place for decorum in this dingy little bar.
“I’m not giving up. I’ll find out what happened. Boats don’t just explode without good reason.” Jamie set the bottle on the table a little too hard, rocking the table with the force. He knew damned well there was more to David’s death than what McAlvey was telling him.
“Even if you could see the report, it isn’t going to tell you anything more than what I’ve already told you.” He shrugged. “You should be thankful you weren’t on board when it happened.”
“I guess that’s something, isn’t it. I guess David wasn’t so lucky.”
McAlvey raised an eyebrow at him. “I didn’t come here to debate.”
Jamie doubted that very much. “You said in your message that you have information for me?”
“I can’t tell you anything officially.” McAlvey’s eyes narrowed as he looked for a reaction, but Jamie didn’t give anything away.
“Of course,” he said, his nerves cranking up a notch. “But off the record . . .?”
“But off the record, we know that when David died he was close to making a break in the trafficking case he was working on.”
“And something went wrong,” Jamie said.
McAlvey nodded. “He was working a lead about some activity by a Maine lobsterman, named Case. David suspected Case is the connection between the supplier and shipper. He believed that he was working as a go-between.”
“So, if he had something, how come you’re backing off the investigation?” Jamie leaned forward, bracing the beer bottle between his fingers as he tried to assimilate the information.
“Because we’ve been ordered to refocus our manpower on Homeland Security. We’ve had reports of a credible threat. Everything else is on the back burner.”
“And you’re telling me this why?”
McAlvey shrugged. His beer was empty. “Because I know that while officially this investigation is over, you’d want to know why we aren’t going forward with it.”
There was more to it. McAlvey was giving him the information for a reason.
“Where’d the tip come from?”
“A small, Maine fishing community called Chandler. You have connections to Maine?” McAlvey leaned back, shrugging and settling his shoulders against the back of the chair.
Jamie did. “I did. My family has a summer cottage near there.” But he hadn’t been back there in fifteen years.
“The Maine coast is ripe for this kind of activity. With that much coastline there are any number of places they can hide.”
“And you think David was killed because he found out about this Case person?” Jamie twisted the bottle between his fingers, peeling the label off the bottle.
“Perhaps.” McAlvey’s shoulders straightened as he leaned forward, pushing his weight against the edge of the table and motioning Jamie closer.
�
�Look, I don’t need to tell you that this is a delicate matter. I’m taking a risk telling you anything.”
“But you told me anyway.”
McAlvey leaned back in his chair again, assessing him. “I came here today to help you.”
“And I appreciate your effort, but somehow I get the feeling there’s more to this than what you’re telling me.”
McAlvey was silent for a moment. “I could be court-martial for this.”
They were going round and round. McAlvey wouldn’t be here if there were a chance this would affect his career. Which only left him wondering what McAlvey was really after.
“How close was David to making a bust?” Jamie let the question slide between them.
“David intercepted a small-time hustler making a gun exchange out of a pawn shop here in town. The guns were military issue, the same as were lifted from the base two months ago.”
“So, why not shut down the pawn shop and follow the leads from there?”
“We tried, but before we could get there the shop was cleared out with no trace of them. Our information indicates they are shipping the guns to a paramilitary faction in Northern Ireland.”
“And this guy in Maine? How does he figure into it?”
“When the locals investigated they found a washed-up box containing guns. The same as the guns lifted from our base.”
“So why didn’t they investigate it instead of having it fall to the Special Investigative Unit?”
“Because of the nature of the case. This would look particularly bad if it were to get out that these were Coast Guard guns.”
“So, we’re being given a chance to redeem ourselves.” By catching those responsible and keeping it from the press.
“Exactly. But there is one other thing. There’s a local woman who runs the wharf there. She’s got ties to Case. From what we can tell she also has major access to the traffic going to and from the harbor.”
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