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Authors: Meg Gardiner

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BOOK: Jericho Point
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She jerked her head, nodding me in.
She wore fatigue pants and a ribbed white undershirt. She was eating Ben & Jerry’s straight from the carton, licking a mound of chocolate ice cream from the spoon, and she was chilly. Her nipples protruded like rivets through the clingy undershirt. She was, I surmised, the Jimsons’ daughter. Without a word she turned and walked off.
After a few seconds, realizing that she wasn’t coming back, I followed.
Ricky’s gold records formed a receiving line along the walls of the entry hall. To the left, a cavernous living room sported leather furniture and six-foot cacti. Above the mantel hung an original Georgia O’Keeffe. A white flower filled the canvas like the bell of a trumpet, green leaves spiraling behind it. Jimsonweed.
The rap music hammered the floor. The young woman kept walking.
‘‘Excuse me,’’ I called.
She was passing the kitchen, which led to another wing of the house. Spinning around, she pointed with her ice-cream spoon. ‘‘Ricky’s in the sauna.’’
‘‘I’m looking for P.J.’’
She kept spinning and walked away.
Though she dressed like a welder, her carriage was pure princess. It was the sway of her hips, the thrust of her chin, the cut of her hair—like Pharaoh’s daughter, with black bangs cut straight across her forehead. World at her feet, her walk seemed to say, and it had been there for aeons. Top of the karmic heap.
She disappeared into a back room. I followed. It was an entertainment room, and P.J. was slouched on a sofa, his back to me, watching TV. Beyond him, outside the windows, the mountains shone green in the patchy sunlight. Clouds shredded on the peaks.
‘‘Peej.’’ The girl sat down on the arm of the sofa, swinging her feet onto the cushions. ‘‘That was the doorbell. You should have answered it.’’
He straightened. ‘‘Didn’t hear it, sorry. Who was it?’’
‘‘Pizza girl.’’ She licked the spoon. ‘‘Give her a tip.’’ He stood up, looked around at me, and did a double take. ‘‘Hey.’’ He lifted his chin in greeting.
‘‘Let’s talk,’’ I said.
He looked rough. His skin was pasty, his eyes grimy blue. His khakis sagged low on his hips, showing off four inches of his frayed plaid boxers. Nothing looked clean.
The girl gazed at him with sleepy eyes. ‘‘Stepping out on me?’’
She might have poked him with a cattle prod. ‘‘No, this is Jesse’s girlfriend.’’
‘‘Hi, Jesse’s girlfriend.’’ She slid down onto the sofa, arching her back so that her frosty rivets protruded.
‘‘I’m Sin.’’
Right. ‘‘I’m deadly, myself. Evan Delaney.’’
Her eyes slid my way, and her mouth ticked up into a smile. ‘‘Sinsemilla. Or Sinsa.’’
‘‘Jimson?’’ I said.
‘‘Check my driver’s license.’’
‘‘That’s okay. I saw the plates on your X5 this morning, outside Sanchez Marks. In a disabled spot.’’
She turned her bottomless black gaze on me. ‘‘Really?’’
‘‘You were playing the same rap album. Enjoying the lyrics—that line about spanking the bitch’s ass with both hands. You were laughing.’’
‘‘We’d just picked up a friend of mine at the airport.’’ She shrugged. ‘‘Nobody was parked there.’’
‘‘There never is, when you pull in.’’
‘‘Bad me.’’ She slapped herself on the wrist. ‘‘Boy-friend. Long time no see. We were in a hurry.’’ She dug a new spoonful of ice cream from the carton and glanced at P.J. He was watching her as though hypnotized. ‘‘Nah, I’m kidding. And P.J. and I aren’t together. We’re fuck buddies, is all.’’
Okay, now I knew exactly what it took to make me feel like a starched shirt. P.J.’s color flooded back. His foot began jittering.
‘‘Excuse us, would you?’’ I nodded toward the door. ‘‘P.J. Outside.’’
He winced at the sight of trees swaying in the wind, and wiped his nose on his sleeve. He was monstrously hungover.
‘‘In my car,’’ I said.
He followed me along the hall to the front door, through the thud of the music, gesturing to the living room. ‘‘Can’t we talk in there?’’
‘‘I’d rather not bump into Karen,’’ I said.
‘‘She ran to the store.’’
I shook my head, opening the door. I didn’t want to be overheard. He bent to avoid the wind and hurried to the Explorer, huddling into the passenger seat and tucking his hands into his armpits to warm them.
He blinked as though his eyes felt gritty. ‘‘You okay? You look kind of zapped.’’
I turned to face him. ‘‘They found her. She washed up at Jericho Point.’’
‘‘Who?’’
I gaped at him. ‘‘P.J., don’t. I saw her body at the morgue two hours ago.’’
‘‘The morgue.’’
‘‘She didn’t fall off the balcony. She was murdered.’’
He shook his head as though trying to clear it. ‘‘What are you talking about?’’
‘‘The party last night. She was garroted and dumped off the cliff into the surf.’’
‘‘Party.’’ He shrank back toward the door. ‘‘Stop. You’re scaring me.’’
I stared at him, hard. ‘‘Christ.’’
He was used to fibbing his way out of tight corners. But right now he wasn’t giving me sweet talk or a smile. He was gasping, as though he couldn’t get oxygen.
‘‘Don’t you remember?’’ I said.
He shook his head. Was he lying?
‘‘She’s blond with a blue streak in her hair. Wearing your mother’s charm bracelet.’’
He went stone still, not even blinking. Until he grabbed the door handle. I slammed the power lock button.
‘‘Tell me her name,’’ I said.
His fingers dug for the handle. ‘‘Let me out. I’m going to be sick.’’
‘‘Then be sick. Tell me her name.’’
He glanced at me in panic, and away. ‘‘Brittany Gaines. Open the door; I’m gonna heave.’’
I unlocked it. He hurtled from the car and fell to all fours on the wet brickwork. He spewed with an awful horking sound. I counted to ten, got out, and walked around to him. His head was hanging low.
At the front door, Sinsa leaned against the jamb, pursing her lips. ‘‘Wow, Deadly. You have a helluva way with men.’’
8
Ignoring Sinsa, I crouched down to face him. ‘‘They thought it was me. She had credit cards with my name on them.’’
He moaned. ‘‘This is unreal.’’
‘‘You mean fake? Counterfeit? Like the ID you helped her steal from me?’’
‘‘This has to be a mistake,’’ he said.
‘‘Whose idea was it, yours or Brittany’s?’’
‘‘You can’t be serious.’’ He climbed to his feet.
‘‘Do you need the money to support your habit?’’
‘‘I don’t have a habit.’’
‘‘What do you spend per day?’’ I nudged him against the car. ‘‘A hundred bucks? Two hundred?’’
He put his hands up to ward me off. ‘‘Stop it.’’
I cupped his cheeks and forced him to look at me. ‘‘It was brutal, P.J.’’
He pressed his lips together, looking like an obstinate toddler, and squirmed. I braced to stop him from bolting.
He started to cry.
His chest gulped in and out. He slid down the side of the car and buried his head against his knees. If I ever thought he’d had a hand in the young woman’s death, I didn’t now. I waited it out. Looking at the house, I saw no sign of Sinsa. After a minute P.J.’s tears subsided.
‘‘Who was she?’’ I said.
‘‘My neighbor. The apartment next door.’’
I pictured the Don Quixote Arms, and the curtains twitching on the window next door to P.J.’s place.
‘‘Did you take her to the party?’’
‘‘No. No way.’’
‘‘You sound sure of that,’’ I said.
‘‘I was trying to cool things with her. That’s the last thing I would have done.’’
‘‘So, you were buddies? The same kind as you and Sinsa?’’
‘‘Now and then. It was nothing heavy.’’
I clenched and unclenched my fists. This had just turned ten times worse.
‘‘Get real. You gave her your mom’s bracelet. It was more than that.’’
He flushed. ‘‘It’s not like Mom ever wore it anymore. I gave her that dolphin charm, but she wouldn’t wear it. Not after Jesse . . .’’
He didn’t say the rest. Red spots mottled his face.
‘‘Jesse’s ballistic, isn’t he?’’
‘‘We all are,’’ I said. ‘‘What do you remember about last night?’’
‘‘Jamming with some guys at the party. Then . . .’’ His gaze lengthened. ‘‘This morning. Dad woke me up.’’
‘‘What was Brittany doing at the party?’’
‘‘I don’t remember her there.’’ His eyes were red. He wiped his nose on his sleeve. ‘‘How come you came out there last night?’’
I told him. With each detail he seemed to shrink.
He pressed the heels of his palms against his eyes. ‘‘I tried to stop you from calling search and rescue? What the fuck is wrong with me?’’
With a shard of wind, the rain came again. Sinsa appeared in the front doorway. P.J. furtively wiped his eyes.
‘‘You’re melting,’’ she said. ‘‘Come in.’’
I shook my head, but P.J. clambered to his feet, holding his stomach, and trotted inside. I found him at the fridge, drinking milk from the carton. The kitchen was an echo chamber of chrome and hanging copper kettles.
‘‘You know, that was scary,’’ he said.
‘‘What?’’
‘‘In your car, you locking the doors. I’ve never seen you mad before.’’
‘‘You still haven’t.’’
He gave me a guarded look. I took the milk carton and set it on the counter.
‘‘You have serious problems to contend with,’’ I said.
He hung his head. ‘‘You don’t have to tell me. I’m a shithead.’’
‘‘That’s a long-term issue. I’m talking about this afternoon. You should talk to a lawyer.’’
‘‘I’m talking to you.’’
‘‘I mean you should retain legal counsel, officially.’’
‘‘What for?’’
‘‘You said you were jamming at the party. Where’s your guitar?’’
‘‘The Stratocaster? It’s . . .’’ His lips stayed open. ‘‘Crap, I must have left it there. Why?’’
From the far wing of the house Ricky came padding toward us, whistling. He was dressed in psychedelic green swim trunks and glistening with sweat. His blond locks were pulled off his forehead into a samurai ponytail. A white gym towel was draped around his neck.
He waved at P.J. ‘‘Calistoga.’’
P.J. got a two-liter water bottle from the fridge and handed it to him. Ricky glugged half of it down, splashed a swig on his face, and stood there letting water drip onto the stone floor. He burped and broke out a Cheshire cat grin.
‘‘Saunas, man, they revive you.’’ He pointed the bottle at me. ‘‘You weren’t here before.’’
‘‘No.’’
‘‘You work for Vonnie Marks.’’
‘‘On and off.’’
‘‘Check this out.’’ He slid his hand up and down his stomach. ‘‘I’m down twenty pounds since October.’’ He slapped a hand against the belly. ‘‘Listen to that. Solid.’’
Sinsa walked in. ‘‘Twenty more to go, Slink.’’
‘‘Spandex is forgiving.’’ He scowled. ‘‘Crap, Sin, put a sweater on. I’ve seen smaller teats on a dairy farm.’’
He should talk. He had the biggest tits in the room. No way could I have gotten a nipple ring that size through mine.
He squinted at P.J. ‘‘You look strung out.’’
Sinsa hopped up to sit on the counter. ‘‘He came from the animal shelter. Putting puppies down.’’
‘‘I don’t do that,’’ P.J. said.
She mimed a dog being held by the scruff of the neck, with a syringe aimed at it. ‘‘Here, Spot. Head toward the light.’’
He blushed a deeper shade of red. ‘‘That’s not funny.’’
‘‘I’m teasing.’’ She hopped off the counter. ‘‘Don’t be a sourpuss.’’
She jammed her hands in the back pockets of her fatigues, so that her nipples stretched the undershirt like explosive bolts. Her silver jewelry sang in the light. She passed P.J., managing to brush his arm with her breast.
His heel stopped bouncing. He leaned against the counter and crossed his legs.
Ricky swigged from the water bottle. ‘‘We laid down vocals for the new track. Come up and listen after I shower.’’
P.J. squeezed his knees together. ‘‘Great.’’
Ricky cocked his head. ‘‘That’s the garage door. Go help Mom carry the groceries.’’
Sinsa pouted. ‘‘It’s all stuff she buys for your Mick Jagger diet.’’
Ricky put a hand on her back and walked her out of the kitchen. ‘‘And change this shit music. Pick a rapper who samples my tunes, not Steven Tyler’s.’’
P.J. waited, trying to calm down enough to follow. I glanced toward the garage, wanting to leave.
‘‘You need to understand how serious the situation is,’’ I said. ‘‘You may have witnessed a murder last night, and the authorities know it. You need to talk to the sheriffs, asap.’’
‘‘But I don’t remember anything.’’
‘‘Listen to me. Your ex-girlfriend was strangled.’’
‘‘She wasn’t my ex—’’
‘‘Shut up. She’s dead, and you were at the scene. The cops will suspect you.’’
His face went blank. ‘‘You mean . . .’’
‘‘They’ll look at you and see motive and opportunity. And possibly means. You said you left your electric guitar at the party.’’
‘‘It’s probably gone now.’’
‘‘Brittany Gaines was garroted. Jesse thinks it may have been with a guitar string.’’
‘‘Shit.’’ He pressed his palm against an eye, and stopped. His head jerked up. ‘‘Wait, Jesse thinks it’s a string from my Strat?’’
‘‘P.J., last night you gave me a story that was a bunch of bullshit. You need to remember the truth. And you need to tell me what Brittany was doing with my ID.’’
The color had leached from his face again. ‘‘Shit. Jesse thinks it was me.’’
Abruptly the stereo shut down. Boots knocked along the hallway. Grocery bags rustled.
I heard Karen’s sharp voice. ‘‘There’s barf outside on the driveway.’’ She walked in, arms full, and saw me. ‘‘And guess what, it’s in here too. Talk about balls.’’
BOOK: Jericho Point
6.94Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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