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He held the gate open, waited until I’d walked to the cable car and boarded, then produced a remote-control unit of his own. Big smile and a thumb flick and I was descending.
He waved bye-bye. I waved back, but I was staring over his shoulder, a hundred feet beyond, by one of the rock ponds, where a man in te
Thick torso, bulky shoulders, a cap of cropped black hair.
Black Suit, now in te
Kent Irving kept his eye on me as I sank out of view.
CHAPTER 29
WHEN I GOT back to the broken pier, Norris was sitting in the sand, legs yogi-crossed, smoking a joint. As I dragged the kayak to shore, he got up reluctantly and looked at his bare wrist. “Hey, right on time. Any wildlife?” He offered me the j.
“No thanks. Just birds. The feathered kind.”
“Oh well,” he said, toking deeply. “Listen, any time you wa
“I’ll bear that in mind.”
“Yeah… good idea.”
“What is?”
“Bearing shit in your mind and not somewhere else.” Rocking on his knees, he settled, sucked hungrily on the ca
I drove up from the cove to the coast highway, turned right, and parked on the beach-side shoulder, with a hundred-yard view of the entrance to the Duke estate. One more hour – what could it hurt?
I ran the tape deck as I slumped in the front seat. Old recording of Oscar Aleman riffing on a shiny silver National guitar in some thirties Buenos Aires nightclub. Aleman and the band peeling off a ha-ha rendition of “Bésame Mucho” that would have done Spike Jones proud, but no mistaking the artistry.
Seven songs later the copper tentacles spread and a gardener’s truck emerged, hooked a left, and sped by. Then nothing, as the rest of the album played out. I inserted another cassette – the L.A. Guitar Quartet – listened to one complete side, and was about to pack it in when the gates swung back again and a black Expedition shot out and barreled south on PCH.
Silver-gray trim along the bottom of the door panels, oversized tires, chrome ru
The former Mrs. Duke in her usual hurry? She hadn’t displayed any signs of impatience down on the beach, or up at the estate. Why was she still living at the estate a year after the divorce? Maybe not of her own free will. The appearance of Anita Duke and Kent Irving had thrown her. The two of them letting themselves into the guesthouse without apology. Anita calling the shots. Cheryl had capitulated easily to Anita’s will.
Under the thumb of the Duke family? Some sort of custody issue? Kent Irving had alluded to her poor maternal skills, and Baxter’s near drowning backed that up. Perhaps the Duke clan was pressuring her to give up the kids, had negotiated her staying close.
Were the kids with her right now? The Expedition’s black windows made it impossible to know.
I stayed with her past Pepperdine University, maintained the tail as the SUV turned off on Cross Creek, bypassed the fast-food joints and the newer businesses fronting the shopping center, and entered the Malibu Country Mart. The vintage stores were a series of low-rise wooden buildings arranged around U-shaped parking lots and topped by hunter green ba
Not too many vehicles at this time of day, and I waited until the Expedition found its spot – hogging two spaces opposite Dream Babies Fragrance and Candle Boutique. I parked the Seville as far away as I could. Near the Dumpsters – a pattern seemed to be forming.
Cheryl Duke climbed out of the SUV, slammed the door, and headed for the candle shop. Alone, no kids. She’d changed into a red silk tank top that exposed a band of flat, ivory belly, pipe-stem white jeans, and white sandals with high heels. Her hair was pi
She threw back the Dream Babies screen door and entered, and I sat there checking out the neighboring establishments. More “shoppes” than shops, bikinis and gym wear, nostrums to sooth the skin and the ego, souvenirs and tourist art, a couple of cafés on opposite ends of the U.
The eatery farthest from the candle shop advertised coffee and sandwiches and provided two flimsy outdoor tables. I took the long way over to avoid being spotted, bought a bagel and a cup of Kenyan roast from a sickly-looking kid with a blue goatee and a Popeye tattoo on the side of his neck. Someone had left a folded Times on the condiments counter, and I expropriated the paper and brought it outside. Both tables were dirty, and I cleaned one off and sat down and busied myself with the daily crossword puzzle, keeping my head bent except for brief glances at the fragrance boutique.
Ten minutes later Cheryl Duke exited toting a pair of shopping bags. She hooked immediately into Bry
Heading my way.
I lowered my head, filled in a few more blanks, came up with “rebec” for the fiddle, because it was the only thing that made sense. Just as I’d wrinkled my brow over a three-letter clue for “Catullus composition” I heard her say, “Alex?”
I looked up, feigned surprise, saw my twin reflections in her sunshades.
Smiling. Surprised. Mr. I
“Hey,” I said. “Know a six-letter word for ‘Indian pony’? Starts with c and ends with se?”
She laughed. “No, I don’t think so – I can’t do that stuff. This is weird, seeing you again. Do you come here a lot?”
“When I’m in Malibu. How about you?”
“Sometimes.”
“We probably passed each other without knowing it.”
“Probably,” she said.
“Doing some heavy shopping?”
She placed the bags on the ground. “No, just… It’s just something to do – maybe it’s like karma or something. Seeing you. Or like when you think about someone and then they keep turning up – you know?”
I gri
“No, thanks-” The dark lenses moved from side to side, taking in the parking lot. Her bare arms were smooth and lightly freckled. No bra under the tank top. Those nipples again. “Sure, why not. I’ll go get some.”
“Let me.” I stood and handed her the puzzle. “See what you can do with this in the meantime. Cream and sugar?”
“A little milk and some artificial sweetener.”
As I turned she took hold of my arm. Leaning forward and giving me a view of fat, white breast tops.
Her finger made a tiny circle on my elbow.
“Also decaf,” she said.
When I returned she was hunched over the paper, white-knuckling the pen, tongue tip protruding between her lips. Her hair was down, and it looked freshly combed.
“I think I got a couple of them,” she said. “‘Lynx’ for ‘wild cat,’ right? And ‘Burnett’ for ‘comedie