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The Vision Page 10


  “Choose away.”

  “All right. Thanks.”

  She locked the back and started toward the front again, pausing only to sift through the mail on the Victorian occasional table by the door. “Nothing dire,” she murmured. “Let’s go.”

  She locked the door as they left, and started back down Duval Street.

  “Where are we going?” he asked her.

  She glanced at him with a trace of amusement. “The Hard Rock Cafe.”

  “I thought you preferred your Conch insider places.”

  “It’s a cool Hard Rock,” she told him.

  He wasn’t surprised when they arrived and she knew the young people acting as hosts at the door. He wasn’t surprised, either, when she opted to sit inside—Deep South natives of any kind usually preferred air-conditioning to the charming notion of dining in the sunshine and garden atmosphere of an outdoor café.

  The restaurant was located in a handsome historic home, late 1800s, with some of the old incorporated with the customary decor of the chain. After they walked up the stairs, she pointed out a guitar signed by Jimmy Buffett, and a number of pieces of Elvis Presley and Beatles memorabilia.

  After they had ordered drinks—she opted for alcohol that afternoon, choosing an island concoction with an umbrella—she told him the place was supposedly haunted.

  “Is anywhere not haunted here?” he asked her.

  She shrugged. “Ask our waitress,” she told him.

  He did. Their waitress was a pretty young college girl whose eyes widened when Genevieve encouraged her to tell Thor about the ghosts.

  “The place really is haunted,” she assured him.

  “Oh?”

  “One man committed suicide here, and suicides always return to haunt the place where they died.”

  “I see.”

  “Honestly. Another man died downstairs…but I personally think it’s only Mr. Curry doing the haunting. His father was a millionaire, but he managed to go broke in a year. And then his wife left him.”

  “That’s adding insult to injury,” Thor agreed pleasantly.

  “I’ve been up here alone when a black shadow kind of sweeps around…cleaning towels move. And Brett set up a table one time only to have all the forks and napkins moved to another table,” she said, eyes wide. “Trust me—I do not stay up here alone at night.”

  Thor thanked her for taking the time to tell her story. After she left, he looked at Genevieve, lifting his glass, arching a brow. “So you think that the place is haunted? You’ve seen shadows, things moving around?”

  She shook her head. “No, I’ve never seen a thing.”

  “So?”

  “They tell good stories here,” she said. “But lots of people believe in ghosts.”

  He reached across the table, frowning, barely aware he had set his hand over hers. “There are shadows at night. Shadows when the light changes. People might forget which table they’ve set up—or someone else might move the table settings.”

  She pulled her hand away, picking up her glass. “Absolutely true,” she told him.

  Once lunch was served, Genevieve determinedly changed the subject from ghosts, asking him when he first got into diving.

  “I had this great book when I was a kid,” he said. “Story about a sunken ferry discovered right in the St. Johns, near where I lived. I was hooked. How about you?”

  “Family vocation. My grandfather was a frogman in World War II. I think I was thrown in the ocean before I could walk.”

  “So that’s how it goes, growing up as a Conch, huh?”

  She shrugged. “For lots of people. I have friends who hate the water. Some of them still love Key West. They just love the streets and the atmosphere, the sunsets. A lot of people just kind of find Key West. And then stay here.” She tilted her head at an angle, smiling ruefully. “You know, we really are the Conch Republic. In 1982 there was a big stink about the number of illegal aliens and drugs that seemed to be flowing into Miami from the Keys. The Border Patrol set up a blockade on US1 in Florida City, trying to get a grip on the problem. Traffic was so backed up, people couldn’t get in or out. The mayor of Key West went to the Miami courthouse to seek an injunction, but nothing was done, so Key West seceded from the United States. After a few minutes of rebellion, the ‘prime minister’ surrendered to the admiral at the navy base and demanded a billion dollars in foreign aid and war relief.” She shrugged. “He made his point, and now it’s great for the local businesses. You can buy Conch Republic passports, T-shirts…you name it.” She smiled.

  Thor grinned, glad to see that her mood had lightened.

  The check came just then, and she reached for it. “Expense account,” he reminded her, taking it from her.

  She stood as he laid money on the bill. “Come on, then. I’m taking you for an after-lunch drink. And I am paying for it.”

  A few minutes later, he found himself in Captain Tony’s Saloon.

  “Are you taking me on a tour?” he asked her.

  “This is where Sloppy Joe’s was originally, although it wasn’t called that then. If I remember the story right, Joe Russell refused to pay the extra dollar a week when the rent went up in the thirties. All his patrons just picked up their drinks and the furniture and moved down the street to where Sloppy Joe’s is now.”

  “I see.”

  “What would you like?” she asked, indicating a table by a tree trunk. The tree grew next to the bar and disappeared at the ceiling.

  “I’m sticking with beer,” he said.

  He took a seat at the table by the tree while she waited at the bar for their drinks. Looking up, he saw that the rafters were covered with hundreds of bras, some signed.

  A table away, two women were sitting with two children, a boy of about six and a girl who was maybe five years old. The kids had drinks that looked like Shirley Temples, while the women were nursing more exotic concoctions. One of the women noted him and flushed—he guessed she was embarrassed to be in the bar with children. “We’re trying to cover the hot tourist spots,” she said.

  He smiled back and pointed to a table closer to the street. A man there had two boys with him who were about eleven or twelve. “It’s my guess it’s fine,” he said.

  She looked relieved. Her companion turned to him and smiled, as well. “I told her it would be okay.” The second woman stared at him for a minute. Her eyes widened in recognition, and she leaned forward and whispered to her friend. They both stared at him and flushed, then looked at each other again and started whispering.

  They both stared again and smiled. He heard the mom whisper, “…really handsome….” He had enough of an ego that he couldn’t help a moment’s bemusement—and deep appreciation.

  But where the hell did they know him from? They didn’t look the type who were into diving magazines.

  Then again….

  He wasn’t sure why, but he felt uneasiness settling in. There had been a number of news crews down by the beach that morning. Most of their group had politely refused to be interviewed—neither he nor Marshall particularly wanted their project associated with the tragedy of the young woman’s death. But he was pretty sure he had seen Alex and Lizzie answering a few questions before managing to escape the reporters.

  Genevieve joined him then. He waved a hand toward the bras.

  “Have you got one up there?” he asked.

  “No.”

  “Interesting,” he said.

  She grinned. “We’re here for the tree,” she explained.

  “We are?”

  “There’s a legend that a woman was hanged from that tree.”

  “Legend?”

  “She supposedly haunts this place.”

  “More hauntings?”

  “Ghosts are all over in Key West,” she said with a shrug. “They say.”

  “But you’ve never believed in them?” he asked.

  “No,” she told him.

  As she spoke, the little girl at the nearby table bega
n shrieking. “No! No, Mommy, no! There’s a lady in there.”

  “Ashley, shh. Honey, that’s just a story,” the mother said, distressed. “Ashley, please, let me take you in there. We’ll have an accident.”

  “Excuse me,” Genevieve told Thor, then walked over to the other table and hunkered down. She flashed a smile to the woman. “You need to go to the bathroom, huh?” she said to the little girl. “And you heard the story about the ghost lady who haunts the bathroom, right?”

  “She tried to hurt a little boy once,” the little girl told her, wide-eyed. “A man told us the story, and how the lady is still in the bathroom.”

  “Now, think about it,” Genevieve said. “If you were a ghost, would you really want to come back and hang around in the bathroom? Ugh! There are much better places to haunt. I’ve lived here my whole life, and my mom and dad came here with me lots when I was little. I’ve used the bathroom. Your mom will go with you. It will be fine, I promise.”

  The mother looked at Genevieve gratefully. “We really shouldn’t have let them hear quite so many stories,” she said apologetically.

  Genevieve laughed. “You’ll be fine, won’t you?” she asked the girl.

  Ashley laughed suddenly. “Ugh! Who would haunt a bathroom?”

  Genevieve rose. The woman stood, too, taking her daughter’s hand. “Thank you so much.” She paused. “You people are divers, aren’t you? And you’re the diver.”

  Genevieve frowned. “I’m a diver,” she murmured.

  “You were on television.” The woman lowered her voice. “We saw you.”

  “Oh?”

  “You saw that body they discovered this morning. In the water. You saw it days ago, but the police divers couldn’t find it—and then it washed up this morning,” the woman said softly.

  “Mommy!” Ashley tugged at her hand, apparently really ready to go to the bathroom now, ghost or not.

  “Um…have a lovely time in Key West,” Genevieve said. She spun around, her face pale. She hadn’t touched her drink, and she didn’t reach for it then. “Let’s go,” she said to Thor. “Please.”

  She was halfway down the block when he caught up with her, even though his strides were long and he moved fast.

  “Genevieve!”

  She stopped, turned around and looked at him.

  “Hey,” he said, taking her by the shoulders. “You knew there were news crews crawling all over the beach this morning!”

  “I didn’t give anyone an interview saying I’d seen that woman in the water,” she protested.

  “Then someone else did. Why are you so upset? I mean, you did see her down there. So what’s wrong?”

  She didn’t answer right away. She just stared with fixed interest at a middle-aged man walking his dog down the street.

  “I…it shouldn’t be so sensationalized,” she said.

  “A woman has been murdered,” he said quietly. “That’s serious news. Especially in a place where that isn’t—thankfully—a daily occurrence. People are going to talk.”

  “We shouldn’t be involved,” she murmured.

  Gen shook her head. He kept his hands firmly on her shoulders, forcing her to look at him.

  “Genevieve, it’s tragic, but it all makes sense, and you were right all along. There was a woman in the water.”

  She stared back at him, and her eyes suddenly held a veiled shield of bitterness. A dry sound, almost a rueful laugh, escaped her. “You don’t understand.”

  “Understand what?”

  “I saw a woman in the water.”

  “Right.”

  “No, wrong. I saw a woman in the water. But not the same woman!”

  He stared at her blankly. She wrenched away from him and, nearly running, disappeared into the crowd on Duval Street.

  7

  Jay had been a cop a long time.

  He’d seen pretty bad stuff. Not much could compare to some of the auto accidents he’d seen on US1.

  But that afternoon…

  He’d been the city officer on the scene, while Charlie Grissom had been the lucky one from the county. They’d stood in the cool, antiseptic morgue alongside the medical examiner, Dr. Freeland, while the M.E., brusque and businesslike on all occasions, had pointed out the most important features of the body.

  The ankles—what remained of them—were given a lot of attention. Despite the many things he had witnessed through the years, Jay felt ill. Maybe it was the smell in the morgue. It was clean, but it had a chemical odor that reeked of death. Maybe it was the fact that the bloated body had filled with gas that was now escaping, and there was no disinfectant on earth that could disguise that fact. Maybe it was the girl’s face, which was now almost a caricature of life. Nothing seemed real, and yet it was painfully real at the same time.

  “When she went into the water, she was alive,” Dr. Freeland told them. “She drowned. That was her cause of death. She fought the ropes that were holding her down. If you’ll look, you’ll see where the skin on her ankles is ripped. And then there are her fingers. She tried desperately to free herself. I set the rope aside. I’m sure the crime lab will be able to discover something useful about it. This here—” he indicated the torn flesh and white bone at the ankle “—is where she broke free at last.” He gave them a weary grimace. “We all know the sea is a pretty brutal place. The fish ate away at the flesh and the fiber and…that’s how she surfaced.” He stared up at the two men. “Gentlemen, I’d guess, based on the tides, she went into the water off the southwest side of Key West. She was probably in deep water when she went in. It was five to seven days ago.”

  Freeland had a few more comments for them. They’d scraped her nails, but would have to wait for the lab results. She’d had a sexual encounter shortly before death, whether consensual or not, he couldn’t say from the evidence, but he tended to believe not. However, their perp had protected himself, and they weren’t coming up with any DNA.

  Freeland looked up at them. “I’ll have more for you in the next few days. I’m sorry to say this, officers, but it looks like you’ve got a murderer on your doorstep.”

  Jack enjoyed watching the news report over and over again. He thought he looked pretty damned good.

  He stared up at the screen in the bar. Every imaginable channel had showed footage of the morning’s discovery of the corpse—well, not the corpse itself. They showed the beach, the sheriff’s men, the crime-scene units and the people milling around. They had recorded several tourists’ reactions, the very brief seconds that Marshall had grudgingly given them, and then they showed him. It was great. As he spoke about the fact that one of their divers had actually found the corpse, they had caught a good picture of Genevieve, auburn hair billowing out behind her in the breeze, eyes sad, haunted, as she stared out at the water. The editor who had cut the segment had made good use of the footage. As Jack explained that the sea was an unforgiving resting place, so the killer’s intent to keep her hidden might well have worked, Genevieve, leaning against one of the support beams at the tiki bar, looked as if she might have been a sea goddess herself—or the figurehead from an ancient ship, fearing such a fate herself. He looked good, too, and they’d done a hell of a job making it into something more than a simple murder. Not that a murder was ever really simple. The dive hadn’t actually had a thing to do with the murder. And, cold as it sounded, people died on a daily basis. Even so, murder generated excitement. And he couldn’t help it—he was a publicity hog. He loved it.

  He didn’t notice at first when Bethany slid into the seat beside him. He hadn’t realized any of the group were still around.

  “Hey, Jack,” she said lightly.

  He turned to look at her. She was staring at the television screen. “How sad. Her whole life ahead of her, and she ran into the wrong person. It was hard to tell, but she looked young.”

  He looked up and felt a little pang. The woman who stared back at him was lovely, with a wistful look in her eyes.

  “Twenty-five to thi
rty…I would imagine,” he said. She gave a little shiver, looking back at him. “Jack, do you think she was killed here? In Key West?”

  “Anything is possible,” he said. “But most likely she was killed up the coast. Probably one of the beautiful people hitting the clubs on Miami Beach. You don’t need to be afraid. You’ve got a pack of he-men around you all the time, right?”

  Bethany laughed. “Yeah, I guess.” She stared back at the television and shivered again. “I might be hanging pretty close to you guys in the near future.”

  He set an arm around her shoulders and hugged her. “You can hang with me any time you want, cutie.” She was cute. She and Genevieve had always made a nice complement to each other. One tall and sexy, one small and sweet. In appearance, anyway. He gazed at Bethany with affectionate amusement. She’d had her wild times in high school, just like a lot of kids. But she’d grown into one damned fine woman, and he enjoyed her.

  “So,” she murmured, nodding a thank-you to Bruce, the evening bartender, as he handed her a light beer, “what have you done all day?”

  Jack thought for a moment. “Hmm. Ate lunch, had a beer. Sat here, had a beer. Ate dinner, had a beer. How about you?”

  “Oh, I ran home. My place is on the northeast corner of the island, off Roosevelt. I’m not as close as Genevieve.” She shrugged, grinning. “Actually, most of us could go home at night, but it’s a lot easier and kind of cool staying at the resort. You still live on Stock Island, right? That’s not much farther than me.”

  “Yeah, I’m still on Stock Island,” Jack said. “I’d sure love one of those old Victorians like Genevieve’s, but who the hell can afford one now?”

  “Maybe we’ll all be able to afford one—if we find the ship,” Bethany said.

  “Yeah, maybe.”

  Jack was startled when a hand fell on his back. “Jack, old buddy. You going to buy me a brewsky?”

  He turned. Victor had arrived. One thing about their group and Key West, at some time during the evening, they were all going to show up at the bar.

  Victor had spoken lightly, but he looked strained. Like he needed a beer.