“Shorter than me.”
“You’re six foot one, two?”
“Two. I’d say, maybe, five eleven.”
“Build?”
“Slight. A jogger, or maybe more like a long-distance runner.”
“Do you think the tagging and incident in Houston are related?”
Sheppard hesitated. Then he said, “It had the same kind of feeling.”
“What feeling?”
“Like the joke was on me.”
Tess asked about the tag.
“I threw it away. I thought it was just some stupid punk playing a prank.”
“It had the number five on it?”
“Yeah, but they could have gotten that anywhere. I saw it kind of like tagging, like graffiti. Only I was the surface instead of a wall.”
“You were assaulted.”
“Yes.”
“You said it was like tagging. But you know what it makes me think of? Wilding.”
He thought about it. “But those are bands of kids, right? And they don’t just stop at assaulting somebody. They’ve killed people. So you think it was random. Some kid showing off for his friends? That I was just in the wrong place at the wrong time?”
“Could be. Anything else you can remember?”
Sheppard looked inward. She could see him trying to come up with something. When you tried, it usually didn’t work. But then he shifted his gaze to her, and if he’d been a slot machine he would have rolled three sevens.
“The shoes,” he said. “They were expensive. Athletic shoes.”
Tess thought: So the kid had money.
If it was a kid.
CHAPTER 19
Michael DeKoven had fallen asleep with the light on. He awoke at midnight beside his lover. Martin had crawled in under the sheets and was kissing his neck.
They made love. First urgently. Then slowly.
Martin was a model for those underwear ads they had in GQ and Esquire. He had the sleek but muscled tanned body that shimmered under the lights, perfect against the tight white underwear he wore while posing by swimming pools or against the sand, often with an equally disinterested female model.
Michael called Martin his “Tighty-Whitey,” in reference to the underwear—and other things.
Martin cradled Michael in his arms and said, “How’d your day go?”
“A man was murdered today.”
“Anyone we know?”
“An acquaintance. But I wouldn’t be surprised if they’re going to question me.”
“You? Why?”
Michael shrugged. “It’s a high-profile case, and I’ve had dealings with the guy.”
“Well. I’m sure you’ll pass with flying colors.” Michael said nothing.
“Are you worried about this? If the detective is rude, I’ll—I’ll slit his throat. How about that?”
“That’s a little extreme.” Martin was always threatening violence against anyone who might hurt Michael. Which was ridiculous. Michael doubted Martin had a violent bone in his body. It was all swagger. But it was cute.
Michael was the one who pushed the limits. Now he said, “Look, I’ve got everything under control. You can be a little too protective—and we only have until this afternoon.”
Martin would be winging his way back to New York for another shoot. They saw each other less and less, and to be honest, Michael preferred it that way. The few times a year they were together, it consumed them both. It left Michael sated but also drained. His thinking was less sharp. And he couldn’t afford to make a mistake, not even on a micro level.
Sometimes, too, Michael’s dark side took over, and things got…out of hand.
He always felt bad afterward. But while Martin would act hurt and betrayed for a while, he always came back for more.
It was as if he hated himself for some reason, and felt he deserved punishment. He’d once said to Michael that he had always wanted to be someone’s slave.
They made love and then shared a breakfast out by the pool. Michael’s wife was, as usual, nowhere in evidence. She didn’t mind his dalliance with Martin, because they weren’t really a couple anymore anyway.
She said he kept too many secrets.
Martin bit into a strawberry and stretched his long, tanned legs out on the flags. Instead of the tighty-whities that made him famous as a model, he wore a long black pair of trunks with white laces at the fly. Delicious white laces, if you wanted to know the truth.
“What are you thinking?” Martin asked.
“You don’t want to know.”
“I know you have a dark side,” Martin said. “I know you have secrets. I wish you wouldn’t keep secrets from me.”
Did he actually pout?
Suddenly, Michael couldn’t take it anymore. He had too much on his mind. “I’m calling a car for you,” he said. He happened to look up at the shiny windows of Zinderneuf and saw his wife staring down at them. He smiled and waved, and she flipped him the bird.
CHAPTER 20
DAWN PATROL
Laguna Beach, California
Chad DeKoven’s mornings started the same way every day. His board clamped under his left arm, he opened the low gate to his pocket yard and took the narrow sidewalk to the steps leading down to the beach.
This morning he’d awakened early—four a.m. Couldn’t wait to get out there. Even the slight wine hangover couldn’t take away the excitement he felt. His hands tingled and so did his legs, and his stomach pricked with excitement. Every morning, he was always impatient, the only time during the day that he wasn’t easygoing. For anything else, he wasn’t goal-oriented. He didn’t care about jobs or politics or even getting the girl. But pulling on his wetsuit, even after all these years, he couldn’t wait to get out there.
He’d passed on his favorite Stewart board for his new fave, Sacrilege—Rolf Baer’s latest work of art, shaped for him to perfection and ideal for the day. This would be his first time out with the Sacrilege board, and he could not wait.
The fog was dark blue gray and clung to everything. The smell of seaweed tumbled up by the waves permeated his nostrils. He loved the smell of seaweed in the morning! He loved it all. His life was very simple. Surf. Hang with his friends. Find a lady who wanted to sleep with him—no strings.
He might have been born for another decade—the sixties, maybe the seventies. In fact, he even had an original Volkswagen Microbus, which he had painted the color of the sunrise, with the rocks black in the distance and a wave like glass.
At twenty-nine years old, Chad had an associate’s degree in business (didn’t do jack shit for him, either), a marriage that had lasted seven months, no kids (incredibly fortunate, because he didn’t think he’d be much of a father), and the beach house in Laguna. He had enough money for his needs.
And he had his boards—he’d built himself quite a collection, enough so he had to add on a little room off the shed and got into a ton of hot water with the zoning people.
The moisture clung like pearls to the iron railing edging the steps. The neighbor’s place was dark—his neighbor was a hippie lady who came from money like he did and just wanted to be left alone to enjoy life and occasional weed. He peered into the darkness and saw the white of the churning surf and the dark shine of the sodium arc lights, way up on poles, shimmering off the hardpacked sand over by the park. The forecast was good but not spectacular—waist high to chest high.
A light rain started up, dimpling the sand.
Chad was debating which beach to hit when he heard something he didn’t expect. The scrape of a shoe on the concrete behind him.
Maybe it was Bobbert, a surf bum who lived across the street. He turned halfway, said, “Hey bro, what you—”
Something heavy thudded into his back and pressed into him hard, and a meaty arm shot out of nowhere, pulling him backward and off his feet. An elbow crunched his neck like a vise, closing his air passage. He tried to tuck his chin down, tried to reach up and pull at the elbow, but he couldn’t get a grip. His board hit the walk with an ugly crack! and maybe it was broken but it didn’t matter because all that mattered was trying to breathe, and his vision was swimming—