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43

I managed not to squeal the tires of the Blazer as I left Emily’s condo, but when I turned out onto Camino Del Mar, I floored it.

It wasn’t that I felt that Emily and I had established some sort of relationship. We hadn’t. I had avoided any discussion of a relationship on purpose, and our guilt had prevented us from doing anything else.

Seeing her, flustered and embarrassed, had rattled me, but not in the way that I would’ve predicted. I wasn’t upset or jealous, which is what I would’ve expected. Instead, I was relieved. Emily and I didn’t belong together, and our awkward meeting had confirmed that. Maybe I’d been trying to replace Kate with her, which was screwed up on so many levels that I didn’t even want to think about it. She didn’t deserve that.

And as I sped through the dark curves on Torrey Pines Road and down into La Jolla Shores, something that had been riding around in my head started to get a whole lot clearer.

I stopped at a bar in PB, already packed with an early-evening crowd, and downed a beer and a shot of tequila in about fifteen minutes. I stood at the bar, listening to Tristan Prettyman’s soft voice coming from the speakers in the wall, contemplating doing something that I couldn’t believe I was even giving serious thought to. I didn’t want to go home and be alone. I felt like I’d been on my own all day. Before I could talk myself out of it, I left the bar and drove south.

Coronado is a small island west of the downtown area, dominated by the Naval Station and the expensive beachfront hotels, most notably the red-roofed Hotel del Coronado. Most of the families that live on Coronado have been there for years, and just about everyone seems to know each other, giving the island a feeling of having never left the fifties. The streets are narrow, the lawns are immaculate, and the view from any location—house, hotel, or restaurant—is phenomenal.

When I turned off the big blue Coronado Bridge, I dropped the windows in the SUV and let the cool evening breeze sweep across the bay into the car. My mood lightened as the island’s tree-lined streets enveloped me. The hurried pace and congestion of the downtown area felt miles away, even though I could see the lights sparkling on the skyscrapers across the water.

The street I was looking for curved back with the body of the bay, and I pulled up at the curb across from the last house on the block, the bay waters lapping quietly at the retaining wall just a few feet away from me. I shut the engine off.

Many of the homes reminded me of brownstones on the East Coast, just not as tall. Straight up and down, rectangular, with flat roofs that served as decks. This particular home was whitewashed brick. A tiny walk split the emerald green lawn, with precisely trimmed rosebushes running along the front of the house. Four windows, two up and two down, dotted the face of the house, flower boxes underlining the two lower windows with bright pinks and yellows.

I got out of the car and tried to remember the last time I’d been here. It didn’t come to me as I walked across the street and up the front walk into the glare of the porch light.

The front door was shut behind a slim screen door, and before I could think about it, I knocked.

No answer.

I knocked again, but I heard only silence in return.

I walked backward down the stone walk, looking up at the roof.

“You up there?” I yelled. “It’s me, Noah.”

I heard the scraping of an aluminum chair and hollow footsteps.

Liz looked over the edge at me. “I’m here. What’s going on?”

I could see her only from the waist up, the edge of the brick rising a few feet higher than the roof. She was wearing a navy jogging tank.

“Nothing,” I said.

She pulled the dark hair away from her face. “I take it you wanna come up.”

I shoved my hands in my pockets. “I guess. But if you’re busy…”

She stared at me for a minute, clearly wondering what I was doing on her front lawn.

“I’m not talking business,” she said, holding a beer up in her hand. “I’ve had enough for today.”

“Fine with me,” I said.

“Door’s unlocked,” she said, disappearing from the edge.

So I went in.

44

She was stretched out on an old chaise lounge. White shorts with a Nike swoosh matched the jogging tank. Her dark hair was flying in several different directions. Her feet were bare, running shoes and socks in a pile next to her. Two empty beer bottles stood below the armrest of the chair.

She pointed to the tiny fridge on the corner of the deck. “Beer’s in there.”

Four chairs dotted the deck, and a small office refrigerator sat in the corner, next to a tiny wooden table. The barbecue sat in the other corner. With no other houses to get in the way, the view of the bay and the downtown landscape was striking.

I grabbed a Dos Equis out of the fridge. “Thanks.”

“I don’t want to be rude,” she said, looking at me. “But what the hell are you doing here?”

I sat down on the upraised brick wall that jutted above the deck, my back to the bridge and the South Bay. “I honestly don’t know.”

Liz studied me for a moment, then shrugged. “Okay.”

We sat there in silence, drinking our beers. I felt awkward and out of place. When we had dated, we’d spent a lot of nights on the roof, drinking, eating, and talking. Arguing a lot, too. Our relationship had moved back and forth between easy affection and irritation.

“You go see Carter again?” she asked, sitting up in the chair.

I nodded. “Yeah. He’s better.”

“Take a lot more than a couple of bullets to kill that elephant,” she said.

“I think of him as more of a giraffe.”

“Rhino fits, too.”

“Yeah, it does.”

We both laughed. She set her bottle down and pointed at the fridge. I reached in, grabbed a full one, opened it, and handed it to her. She took a long drink.

“Still running, I see,” I said, the silence digging into me.

“About five miles every night,” she said. “If I’m not worn out.”

“Which you probably are more often than not.”

She pursed her lips and tried to look indifferent.

“Wellton said some nice things about you today,” I told her.

Her lips curled into a small smile. “John’s a good guy.”

“Said you take a lot of shit for partnering with him.”

“I do. But screw them, you know? He’s a good guy and a good cop. He probably takes shit for having a woman as a partner.”

“Yeah, I guess.”

We drank our beers and watched the lights shimmer on the harbor.

“Being around you again is weird,” she said.

“How’s that?”

She tilted her head. “Well, when things ended, it was kind of bad between us.”

Our breakup had occurred outside a restaurant with each of us screaming at the other. I couldn’t recall what that specific argument had been about, but the force of our words left no doubt about the finality of it all.