Изменить стиль страницы

The pleasant face he’s showing Tamara morphs into the angry face he wore the first moment he saw me. “I told you to leave me alone.”

“Believe me, I’d love to. Unfortunately, I can’t. Gloria needs you. Another thing I can’t believe I’m saying. You have to come back to San Diego now.”

It’s David’s turn to look incredulous. “What are you talking about? Why would you think I’d be interested in anything to do with Gloria? Are you nuts?”

“You get that question a lot, don’t you?” Tamara says to me with a smirk.

I ignore her and focus on David. “Gloria is in trouble.”

“No shit. She’s in jail for murder.”

I shake my head. “She’s out on bail, but she may not be for long. She’s at County General Hospital. The official story is she tried to commit suicide.”

Emotions play across David’s face like a fast-forward slide show—fury, hesitation, concern, distrust. “I don’t believe it. Gloria would never try to kill herself. Is this a trick?”

“Good question. Detective Harris is working on that now. The important thing is, if she doesn’t have anyone to stay with her, they may revoke her bail. I can’t do it. I’m working on something else. You could. Will you?”

David slams the ax into the log he was splitting when we arrived. “Let’s go.”

No questions, no indecision, no wavering.

David goes inside to grab a shirt.

Tamara watches as he walks away. I think she’s forgotten I’m here. She’s focused on the door David disappeared through like a puppy eagerly awaiting her master’s return.

David is back in two minutes. He secures the cabin and comes down the steps, pointing to the Harley. “That your bike, Tammy?”

She nods. He fishes keys out of the pocket of his jeans and tosses them to me. “I’ll ride back with her. You take the Hummer.”

Tamara beams, David takes her arm and steers her toward the bike, and I’m left standing alone on the porch.

Nice to see he’s over Gloria.

CHAPTER 43

I WATCH DAVID AND TAMARA PEEL AWAY DOWN THE driveway with a rooster tail of flying gravel. Have I fallen down the rabbit hole? It occurs to me that I didn’t tell her not to mention the fact that I’m a vampire to David. Or to warn her what will happen if she’s entertaining thoughts of delivering David to Sandra to use as leverage against me. But I remember the stupid way she looked; her brain was vapor locked by giddiness. What are the odds my name will even come up?

Any skepticism I had that Tamara and Sandra cooked up this visit today to trap me into another meeting vanished with the look of pure delight on Tamara’s face when David wrapped his arms around her waist. I wonder how she’s going to explain her distraction to Sandra? Or is Sandra a football fan, too?

Christ.

I walk around back to the carport and climb into David’s Hummer. After my Jag, driving it is like wrestling alligators. It does better on the open road, though, and I head right for the O’Sullivan house.

The O’Sullivans live in Fairbanks Ranch, a wealthy enclave in northern San Diego County. It’s two fifteen when I pull up a block away from the O’Sullivan compound. Fairbanks Ranch is not a gated community. It doesn’t have to be. Each residence has a gate and fence all its own.

I’m debating whether to walk from here or drive up to the house. I have a better chance of getting in and out without notice if I walk. On the other hand, the streets of Fairbanks Ranch are wide and tree lined and patrolled regularly by a security company. If I leave the Hummer here, will it attract notice?

The answer comes immediately. A sedan marked “Fisher Home Security” has passed by twice in the five minutes since I arrived. The second time, the car pulls to a stop behind the Hummer and the driver’s door opens.

I watch in the rearview mirror as the uniformed guard approaches. He’s middle-aged, gray, balding, with a slight paunch. His bearing suggests a military background, erect, stern. He has one hand on his belt, resting on the handle of a long flashlight, the mannerism of one who was used to carrying a gun. The military was most likely followed by a stint as a cop.

I roll down my window and wait.

The guy touches two fingers to his forehead in a greeting. “Afternoon, ma’am. Are you here to visit a resident?”

Behind his dark sunglasses, the eyes are cautious. I guess they have to be when you’re responsible for the security in a neighborhood where the median price of a house is three million dollars.

I put on a bright smile. “Yes, sir. I’m visiting my aunt. I’ve had a bit of car trouble. I called my boyfriend, and he’s sending a tow truck. It shouldn’t be too long.”

He casts an eye toward the hood of the Hummer. “Want me to take a look for you?”

“No, thanks. It’s not necessary. This has happened before. I’m going to walk on over to my aunt’s and wait there for the truck.”

“I’d be happy to drive you,” he says. “Want to give me the address?”

“Actually, it’s right around the corner and I don’t mind walking. It’s so beautiful here.”

He is studying me, no doubt wondering if I look like an ax murderer or a burglar or, even worse, a vagrant. Evidently, I pass inspection because I get the two-finger salute again and he leaves me with a curt “Have a nice day, miss.”

He returns to the car, and I notice he takes the time to write down the Hummer’s license plate. I notice because he wants me to. In fact, he makes an obvious show of it before getting into the car, a not-so-subtle message that I shouldn’t try anything because he has my number. The fact that I’m driving a seventy-thousand-dollar automobile does not make me above suspicion here at Fairbanks Ranch.

I half expect him to shadow me when I get out of the car, which would pose a problem. He watches me lock the Hummer, and I feel those eyes follow as I walk up the sidewalk. In a second, though, he starts the car and pulls around me, sending me another of those quasi-salutes.

I trot up to the O’Sullivan gate. There’s a camera, but it’s focused on the gate, not the keypad, and it doesn’t swing toward me when I punch in the code. Jason’s doing? If he thought to disable the camera, too, he’s one smart kid.

The gate swings open and I sprint inside, keeping to the bushes that line the drive. I don’t know how many security cameras they have on the property and I doubt Jason does, either. The one on the gate is obvious.

From the road, you can’t see the house, but I know what to expect and I’m not disappointed. The O’Sullivans live in a big, square Tudor set in the middle of an acre of manicured lawn. From the outside, the house appears to have a hundred rooms. The paving stone driveway circles the house. Jason said his dad’s study was in the back. I head in that direction.

The ground level of the house has about two dozen sets of French doors. I have to peek into each room before I find the one that matches the pictures of the crime scene. I wish I had gloves. Unfortunately, I didn’t expect to be driving the Hummer. I expected to be driving my Jag, which is where the gloves are. So I do the next best thing. I pull the hem of my T-shirt free and cover my fingers with the cloth to try the door.

It opens.

I step inside, close the door and wait to see if I’m greeted by the shriek of alarms.

Nothing. So far, so good.

The den looks exactly like it did in the pictures—except O’Sullivan’s body is no longer sprawled on the desk. The forensic team evidently released it as a crime scene because there is no yellow tape and the room has been cleaned. It appears the desk blotter has been removed, and there is a piece of carpet cut out from the area where O’Sullivan’s chair rested. The chair is gone as well. There’s a box of Kleenex on a sideboard. I pull one out. Since I doubt I’ll find anything of interest here, I move out of the room, using the tissue on the doorknob, and try to locate Mrs. O’Sullivan’s office.