Bone Music (Burning Girl #1)(28)
“Calls?” As soon as she stretches out, the sofa envelops her in its cushions. It’s hardly the most comfortable sofa she’s ever experienced. But it feels delicious. As delicious as a mediocre meal might feel after you’ve starved yourself all day. “Who are you going to call?”
“I’m going to try to find out who this guy is, for one. And then—”
“You aren’t going to believe me until something about those bikers hits the news, are you?”
“There you go. Eyes already drifting shut. See? Told ya you were tired.”
Kayla’s right. But Charlotte still has enough energy to reach out and grab her hand before she can withdraw. “Kayla. Be careful.”
“I’m not going anywhere.”
“No. When you check out Dylan. He said whatever this is, it’s bigger than us. Whatever the hell that means.”
“Charley, my firm takes on some of the most powerful corporations in the world. You can trust our research department. I promise you.”
Kayla pats her forehead gently, and Charlotte feels it as if she’s wrapped in gauze. Before Kayla’s footsteps enter the kitchen, sleep rises to consume her in a great, dark tide. Then she shifts to one side, and something painful jabs her leg.
She sits up and pulls the packet of pills from her pocket.
From the kitchen door, Kayla watches her with frightened intensity.
Charlotte studies them. “You know,” she says, “there is one way to prove that I wasn’t hallucinating.”
Before she can elaborate, Kayla’s plucked the packet out of her hand. “Sleep. Now. These are staying in the kitchen with me.”
13
As Luke Prescott drives west on State Mountain Road 293, he thinks of all the times he traveled this route with his younger brother after their mom got sick.
Before their mother’s diagnosis—glioblastoma, stage four, inoperable, a year at best—he and Bailey had perfected the fine art of pretending the other didn’t exist, which wasn’t hard. Luke was aggressive and athletic back then; Bailey was computer addicted and completely uninterested in girls.
After the doctor’s visit that changed their lives, the differences between the two of them seemed to fall away, and most afternoons before sunset, if one of their mother’s friends was able to drive her to chemo, Luke would find Bailey sneaking a smoke in the field behind their house and ask him if he wanted to go for a ride. Bailey would grunt in the affirmative, and a few minutes later they’d be winding their way through the mountains in the family truck.
After a while the Pacific would open before them, roiling and vast. Sometimes blue and sun streaked, sometimes slate gray and belching fog. But the mountains always looked the same, their formidable, lightly forested slopes plunging toward the surf with a determination and strength both boys were trying to muster inside themselves.
The mountains look the same as Luke reaches them now—the sea, sparkling and riven by angry waves fueled by the cold autumn winds.
While his grief for his mother is like a fine layer of silt over his heart, evenly spread, no part of it thick enough to stop the flow of blood, with Bailey, the anger’s still laced all through his system.
Maybe because Bailey’s still alive. Out there somewhere, possibly on the other side of this very ocean, hiding from the consequences of a crime Luke still doesn’t fully understand.
But it’s rumors of a far less significant crime that have brought Luke to the Pacific Coast Highway today.
A right turn sends him in the direction of the vertigo-inducing staircase that leads to Altamira’s only real beach. The lumpy obelisk of stone just offshore, Bayard Rock, is listed in a lot of guidebooks, but most folks drive right past it without realizing it. That, or their stomachs revolt when they get a good look at the stairs you have to take to get there. The beach is where he and Bailey would usually end up on those long-ago afternoon drives. Once there, he’d let the guy stroll away from him because he knew his brother wanted to be alone while he cried into the wind. Luke did, too, for that matter. They only time they cried side by side was when they scattered their mother’s ashes there after she died.
Coming home wasn’t going to be easy; he knew this. But he didn’t expect the ghosts to be quite this vivid. Foolish of him to think a new badge and uniform would keep them at bay.
When he sees Martin Cahill’s pickup parked at the picnic area up ahead, Luke’s almost relieved. He knows it means there’s a possible conflict in his immediate future, but he’d welcome anything to relieve him of the memories that besieged him on the drive here.
He pulls the Altamira Sheriff’s Jeep into the turnout slowly, so as not to indicate any aggression that might set Marty and his crew on edge. Then, with a bowed head and his best attempt at a sheepish smile, he walks toward the spread of picnic benches tucked against the rocky slope.
The men study his approach without slowing their chewing.
Martin Cahill’s a lot older than when Luke last saw him, but he doesn’t look it. His hair’s white now, but it’s tied back in a lustrous ponytail. His complexion’s good, especially the parts of it that aren’t covered in tattoos. So he’s still not drinking, Luke thinks. That’s a good sign. Some of the guys with him are former alkies, Luke’s sure. Maybe lost souls he’s hired from the meetinghouse on the east side of town.