“Your brother has assured me the two of you will cooperate under his supervision if anything else is needed now or at any time in the future.”
What the captain didn’t know was Lucio answered to Giovanni.
“And?” I said.
The captain gritted his teeth. “I want to know your whereabouts for the remainder of time you’re on my boat, and I can assure you both, I will be watching. But for now, you’re free to go.”
I smiled. Maybe I’d get the chance to climb the river after all.
CHAPTER 6
Trista lay on the bed in her cabin curled up in the fetal position. When I walked in to check on her, she shot up and wrapped a blanket around herself. Her eyes were puffy, and her makeup, smeared. “So you saw him…go overboard?”
I nodded. “I’m so sorry. I wish I could have told you something else.”
She closed her eyes. “I can’t believe anyone could do such a thing. Doug was the kindest person. He wouldn’t hurt anyone. Why would someone want to kill him? It doesn’t make sense.”
I leaned back on the desk behind me that was more suited for a child than an adult. This was the part of being a PI that I tried to shy away from, when a case I worked on became personal. It wasn’t always easy to separate my feelings so I could focus on what I needed to: Finding out who killed Doug and why. And although this wasn’t one of my cases, I couldn’t sit back and do nothing. Doug and Trista were my classmates, and it didn’t matter how many years had passed since high school or the fact that I’d barely kept in touch with anyone since I moved after my senior year; when something like this happened, it was like someone had attacked a member of my own family. And I wouldn’t stand for anyone making a mess in my own backyard.
I boosted myself forward, sat next to Trista and patted her on the leg. Her body shook like it was undergoing some form of shock therapy treatment. I waited to speak until she seemed a little more relaxed which took some time and several minutes of sobbing and then drying her eyes and sobbing again.
“When you’re ready, I’d like to ask you some questions. But if now isn’t a good time…”
She shook her head back and forth. “What can you do…what can anyone do? Doug’s dead. I don’t even have a body to bury, and I probably never will. By now I bet he’s not even in one piece. Did you know sharks can smell blood a quarter mile away? And once they catch a whiff, it’s only a matter of minutes before…”
Tears gathered in the corner of her eyes and spilled onto the blanket she clutched in her hands. The only thing I could offer was to allow her to get it all out of her system. I felt powerless. I wanted to say something—anything, but it was times like these when I always felt I said the wrong thing. I couldn’t bring Doug back, but I could be there for her, and in that moment, my support was all that mattered to me.
When the tears had dried and gone, Trista glanced at me. “I’m ready. Ask your questions.”
“Are you sure? Because we can do this later. I don’t want to push you.”
She pulled herself up to a seated position, threw the blanket to the side and wrapped her hands around her knees. “Tomorrow this will all be over. Let’s do it now.”
I nodded. “Can you think of anyone who wanted to harm Doug in any way?”
She shook her head. “Doug was the type of person who made friends, not enemies.”
“What about his job? How were things there?” I said.
“I don’t know. He didn’t talk about it much. It’s not like being the manager at TFB was hard. Granted the town has changed a lot since you were there last, but it’s still small and friendly, just like it’s always been.”
“What about his demeanor? Have you noticed a change—anything out of the ordinary?”
Trista sat back and didn’t say anything for a moment.
I leaned forward and looked her in the eye. “It’s okay, you can talk to me. What you tell me stays in this room, between us. I’m not here to judge you, and if you want my help, I need to know everything.”
“You remember what Doug was like in high school, right?”
“Who doesn’t?” I said. “Every girl wanted to date him, and every guy wanted to be him. I was surprised when he turned down that football scholarship to Stanford and you two got married. The last time we talked, you guys had your bags packed and planned on attending together, but then you never left.”
She nodded. “I was chosen to be on their cheer team, and we were all set, but right before we were supposed to leave, things got complicated.”
“He threw it all away to become a bank manager for the rest of his life?”
She shrugged. “Once his mind was made up, he said he only cared about one thing—getting married.”
“You two have been together a long time.”
“Twenty years.”
“What was married life like?”
She smiled. “Doug has always been sweet to me….”
“But?” I said.
“He had a drinking problem. It started right after we married.”
“How bad was it?”
“It was tolerable at first, and I didn’t think much of it. He’d come home from work and have a few beers. He seemed fine, and I figured he was a typical guy.”
“What changed?”
Trista rubbed her arms with the palms of her hands like the air conditioning in the room had just been turned on and glanced out her balcony window. “I’m not sure I can talk about this.”
In my experience as a PI I’d learned sometimes in order to get a person to a comfortable place where they were willing to talk, the best way to go about it was to share a personal experience of my own. It created a type of bond with the person and made them feel like not only did I sympathize, I empathized as well. But since I was a big fan of keeping my personal life private, I reserved this for special occasions only when I felt the risk would payoff in the end.
“Do you remember Colin Ross?” I said.
She squinted and stared at the television which wasn’t on. “Vaguely. Wasn’t he in our class?”
I shook my head. “He was one grade above us.”
“Didn’t he have a sister—Missy?”
“Mindy,” I said. “I married Colin, right out of high school, just like you and Doug. Most people didn’t know because I’d moved away that summer and we eloped.”
“What does that have to do with anything?”
“Colin wasn’t nice like Doug, and when he drank, he was even meaner.” I stood up. “I want to show you something.”
She bit down on the inside of her lip. “Okay.”
I pulled my shirt up until it was level with the bottom edge of my bra.
Trista gasped and clasped her hand over her mouth. “What happened? Did someone—were you stabbed?”
I nodded. “My ex-husband had a drinking problem too. The only difference between him and Doug was Colin was a mean drunk.”
“Mean enough to stab you?”
“A couple times,” I said.
“Oh my gosh. Why?”
“I wanted a divorce, and he didn’t.”
“So…what did you do?”
Now it was my turn to pause and take a moment to think about how much more information I wanted to share. But I knew I needed to gain her trust. “I shot him,” I said.
Her eyes widened like she’d been spit on by a gorilla at the zoo. “Are you serious?”
I nodded. “And then he lunged at me again with the knife so I shot him in his other kneecap. Let’s just say he couldn’t get around very well for a while. It was worth it. A week later he granted me the divorce I wanted.”
“I’m sorry.”
“I’m not. It was a long time ago, and I’m in a much better place in my life now. Look…my point in telling you all this is because I want you to know I understand what it’s like to live with an alcoholic.”
She fidgeted with her wedding ring, sliding it up and down her threadlike finger. “I tried to help him, I really did.”
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“Alcoholism can do a lot of things to a person,” I said. “It was his responsibility to overcome it—not yours. It’s a disease. You can’t implicate yourself because of the choices he made.”
“I guess somehow I always felt it was my fault, like he didn’t stop because I didn’t do enough to help him. I thought if I was a better wife, he wouldn’t need to drink. If I was a better mother, he wouldn’t need to drink.”
I shook my head. “Alcoholism doesn’t work that way,” I said. “I’m sure you were an amazing wife.”
Trista reached her trembling hand over to the nightstand and cupped it around a glass of water. She drew it close to her lips and took a sip. “Tomorrow this trip will be all over, and I have to go home and tell my kids what happened to their father. How am I supposed to look them in the eye and tell them?”
“Do Doug’s parents still live in town?” I said.
She nodded.
“Talk to them first. Let them help you. You don’t have to do this alone.”
Her eyes glimmered with determination. “I know you do some kind of PI work now, at least that’s the rumor going around. I read it on the Where Are They Now paper displayed in the dining room. That’s what you do, right?”
I nodded.
“Then I want to hire you.”
I decided to spare her the details about not being licensed in the state of California. Besides, crossing state lines had never stopped me from snooping around before.
“Let me go home and get a few things squared away and then I’ll fly down in a couple days. In the meantime, I’m going to leave you my number.” I grabbed a pen off the counter, scribbled my number down on a pad of paper and handed it to her. “You can call me anytime; it doesn’t matter when, I’ll answer.”
She stood up and grabbed her purse off the chair. “Do you want me to give you some money now, or can I pay you when you get in town?”
“Neither,” I said.
She squinted, wallet in hand. “I don’t understand.”
“I don’t want any money from you. Doug was a good friend to me once. I want to do this for both of you.”
If I’d come from a family of huggers, I would have pulled her in close right then and told her what she needed to hear—I’d find the person who ended Doug’s life, and everything was going to be all right. But the lack of affection I’d been raised with left me with an inability to bond fully without feeling like I was being forced to sit through a long sermon in a sticky church with no air conditioning. So instead I reached out, patted her shoulder and let her know I’d call her the moment I arrived in town. It wasn’t much, but it was something.
When I left the room I had the overwhelming sensation Trista was still keeping things from me. Maybe with time, she’d open up and lead me to Doug’s killer without even knowing it. I wondered why Tehachapi’s golden boy threw the chance of a great career away for little pay in a dead-end job. I wondered why he chose to spend his nights in a bar getting trashed when he had a family at home that loved him and parents who were the toast of town. Something drove him to the bottle, and I couldn’t help but feel the key to the present lied in the past.
CHAPTER 7
“Earth to Sloane, come in,” Maddie said. “Over.”
I shifted positions on the sofa and sat up. “Sorry. I drifted again. I can’t stop thinking about what happened on the boat and Trista and how she’s doing.”
“Have you heard from her?”
I shook my head. “Not a word. I called her last night, but she didn’t pick up.”
“How are you doing with all of it?”
“I’m anxious to fly down there and see what I can do to help,” I said.
My eyes shifted to Lord Berkeley, a.k.a. Boo, who was fast asleep on the arm of my sofa.
“Why wait? Go. I’ll take Boo to my house. It will be fine. Take all the time you need.”
Upon hearing his name, Boo rose from the dead, hopped off the couch and trotted to the door. When I didn’t get up fast enough, he scratched it with his paw a few times and then gave me a look that said: Any day now.
Maddie walked over and let him out and then back in about fifteen seconds later. Boo did several spins in a row and then hightailed it to the pantry and waited. Maddie bobbed her shoulders up and down and looked at me. “He didn’t do anything. I don’t get it?”
“It’s the treats.”
“What?”
“The new Beggin’ Strips I got him,” I said. “He thinks he can fake me out by going outside and doing nothing and still get a treat out of it. He goes to the door about twenty times a day now.”
She laughed. “Time to get some new treats.”
“No kidding.”
Maddie bent down to give Boo a reward for the impeccable skill of going out the front door and coming back in. Her long blond pigtails with a splash of hot pink ink on the tips swooped down in front of Boo’s face. He lifted his front paws and swatted her hair like he was trying to catch a fly with a single chopstick.
“Hey, stop that!” Maddie said. She looked my way. “Your dog is mental.”
“He thinks you want to play.”
She threw down another treat, sat back down on the couch and looked at me. “What happened on that reunion cruise of yours amazes me.”
“I know, I still can’t believe one of my old friends was murdered.”
She shook her head and smacked me on the shoulder. “That’s not what I meant. You tried to seduce a kid half your age. I didn’t know you had it in you!”
I smiled. “There’s plenty you still don’t know about me.”
She jabbed me in the ribs with her elbow. “Seems that way.”
My phone rang.
“Who is it?” Maddie said.
I glanced down at the screen. “Trista.” I pushed the button and a frantic Trista was already shouting before I could get any words out. “Trista, slow down,” I said. “I can’t understand you.”
Her words ran together like a run-on sentence. The only thing I could make out was something about Rusty Jenkins being attacked outside Flex It, the town gym.
“How badly was he hurt?”
When she replied the phone slipped from my hand and plummeted to the carpet. I bent down and picked it up in time to hear her say, “Sloane, are you still there?”
The only thing I could mutter was, “I’ll be there in the morning. Everything’s going to be okay…I’m coming.”
Maddie’s face filled with concern. “I know that look.”
“Another one of my classmates was just found outside the local gym.”
“Found what? Passed out because his workout was too intense?”
I shook my head. “Stabbed. He’s dead.”
CHAPTER 8
The last time I stepped foot in my hometown of Tehachapi, California had been for my aunt’s funeral several years earlier. At that time, it surprised me how much the town had changed in the years since my move to Park City, Utah. To return and see all the differences was like running into an old boyfriend who’d been voted Best Hair in school, beating out all the guys and the girls, and then finding time had left him not just with a bald spot, but bald all together. This type of thing might have been acceptable had the old boyfriend entered the UFC or was blessed with a name like Bruce Willis, but if he was skinny and had a square-shaped head, well, it just wasn’t the same thing. And that’s what Tehachapi had become to me—different, almost to the point of indistinguishable. Whether it was different bad or different good had yet to be determined.
I entered town on Highway 58 and was amazed to find my aunt’s old billboard still hoisted up twenty-something feet in the air on the right-hand side of the road. The town had commissioned the painting when I was in high school. She’d divided it into four sections, one for every season of the year. Each section reflected something different: The mountains, a sprawling orchard with rows and rows of fruit trees, the windmills, and of course, the snow. Back then the sign had read:
&nb
sp; WELCOME TO TEHACHAPI
LAND OF FOUR SEASONS
What the sign said back then was true, and the locals joked that not only was the town capable of four seasons, but all four could be experienced in the same day. Twenty years of weather like that tarnished the sign which no one had bothered to maintain. It bent inward, the wood had split and chipped away sections of paint, and the sun had produced a magic fading act. Now all that remained was:
TO TEHACHAPI
LAND OF FOUR
Time for a new sign.
I veered off the exit onto Tehachapi Boulevard and drove several blocks until I reached Peach Street.
Trista was outside on the porch when I drove up sporting a ball cap and dark sunglasses and leaning on her mailbox for support. “I’m glad you came,” she said when I exited the car. “I didn’t think you’d get here so fast.”
Thanks to Giovanni’s private plane, nothing was out of my reach. “I just wish it wouldn’t have taken something like this to get me here.”
She motioned for me to follow her with her hand. “The kids are still at school. Come inside and we can talk.”
I followed her through the door and removed my shoes. She turned and said, “Do you need anything? Water? Soda? I think I have some Diet Pepsi in the fridge.”
Before I could respond I felt something hard brush beneath one of my feet. I flew forward and grabbed the corner of the wall to brace myself so I wouldn’t go down.
Trista scrunched up her nose like she’d just found something old in the fridge. “You don’t have any kids, do you?”
“What makes you say that?”
“The way you tiptoed your way around the room when you walked in here like you thought a grenade would go off.”
I looked at the reddened area beneath my foot and tried to push through the pain like it was nothing. “How many do you have?”
“Kids?”
I nodded.
“Three.”
She pointed to a collage of photos on the wall. There were two boys who appeared to be twins and one girl who was much older. “My two boys, Joshua and Jack, are six, and my daughter, Alexa, just turned twenty. She’s at Stanford. Top of her class. She wants to be a doctor. In a lot of ways she’s living the life I never had.”
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