Kevin had huge hand scoops that normally were used for flour and other commodities. We used them to get the gold out the truck and fill up two and a half barrels. Kevin capped them and hammered the solid wood tops in place. Then he used the big, red hand truck to move them into the freezer. My hands were freezing and I smelled like old whiskey, but at least the job was over. The sun was coming up at the orange horizon when we were finished. I pulled the delivery door shut again as Kevin closed and locked the freezer door.
“Coffee?” he asked with a yawn. “I have a delivery at seven this morning for that party tonight, and I still need brandy for the peaches. I don’t think sleep is an option.”
“Sounds good, thanks.” I forced my tired, painful body into the kitchen. After a few minutes, coffee was perfuming the air with its rich fragrance. Kevin brought in a blueberry coffee cake, and I got two cups, cream and sugar.
We’d only been sitting down for a few minutes when Gramps came bursting into the warm kitchen, demanding to know what I was doing. “Where have you been all night, Dae? Your bed wasn’t slept in—you’re wearing his clothes. You smell like old whiskey. Ah, honey, this isn’t the way to handle this thing with your father. And Kevin, you aren’t the man I thought you were to take advantage of her pain this way.”
I took out another coffee cup, too tired to get excited about his tirade. “I’m in pain all right, but not the way you’re thinking.” I explained about Agnes and the gold.
He sat down next to me to hear the rest of the story, managing to grab a piece of coffee cake at the same time. “That’s incredible! You know, I heard something about that on the police scanner last night, but I ignored it. Sounded like your typical road-rage situation.”
“Have they found the car?” Kevin asked him.
“Yeah. About like you’d expect—abandoned, stolen, owner in New York or some such. No idea who was driving it, and it was wrecked. Where’s the gold?”
“In the back.” Kevin nodded in that general direction.
“Want to see it?” I offered.
“No thanks. I’d rather have another slice of that coffee cake. Did you make it yourself?”
Kevin gave him a cursory recipe for the cake. Gramps nodded and continued eating. After swallowing his last mouthful, he asked, “You think someone was gunning for Agnes again, like the fire? Or were they trying to get at the gold?”
“How would anyone else know about the gold?” I asked him.
“How indeed?” Gramps chuckled. “These things have a way of making the rounds. Your friend Bunk knew about it. I’m assuming that Roger fella you’ve been going on about knows. Since Vicky and Celia found out, I’m surprised most of Duck wasn’t out there helping you dig.”
I hadn’t thought of that. Kevin and I found out accidentally they were getting the gold last night, but dozens of other people could have known.
“Everyone also knows Agnes and her daughters are staying here with me,” Kevin added. “If they really wanted them—or the gold now for that matter—there wouldn’t be much we could do.”
Gramps laughed out loud at that one. “I bet there’s plenty you could do! Don’t be modest with me, young man!”
Kevin offered me more coffee, but I declined. I was ready to float away as it was. “I’m tough,” I told him. “If you have some secret FBI counterterrorism thing you can do to end all of this, feel free to use it.”
“I’m afraid there’s no surefire way to prevent someone from getting at you if they really want to,” Kevin explained. “You saw what happened out at the island.”
“That had to be a well-trained group,” Gramps concluded. “The people who went through those security men out there wouldn’t have given up with a few smacks to Agnes’s bumper.”
“Unless whoever did it came from within Bunk’s organization,” I said. “I’d say Bunk was prepared for what happened since he got away so quickly. He knew what to expect from Roger.”
“Agnes is sitting on a lot of gold,” Kevin observed. “Enough to make anyone think about taking it from her. Even Dae and I were making plans to fly down to the Caribbean with it before Agnes’s incident.”
We all laughed at the idea, but realizing all that gold was now at the Blue Whale made me nervous and I didn’t even live there. “Be careful,” I cautioned Kevin as Gramps and I were leaving in the golf cart a little later. “I think I know what you mean about people going crazy over gold.”
He kissed me and frowned. “You be careful too. Whoever was out there this morning might have seen you there.”
“I will. I’m only going to the shop anyway. Do you need any help with your dinner tonight?”
“Not once I get that brandy. See you later.”
After showering again (would I ever get the soot out of my hair?) and changing into some of my own clothes, I bundled up warmly and headed down to Missing Pieces. The cold walk woke me up a little, but I was still exhausted. I headed to the Coffee House and Bookstore for a large mocha that I hoped would get me through the morning.
There was light ice on the water’s edge along the Duck Shoppes boardwalk. The brown water plants were crusted in it where the gray water from the sound lapped at the land.
Shayla and Trudy were both closed this morning—they were lucky they could plan for their customers with appointments.
A few stray walkers came into the shop around eleven. They were tourists from Nashville down here for a week. I’ve never seen anyone more surprised that the Outer Banks has cold weather. Apparently, they thought going toward the coast meant warmer temperatures.
They looked around but didn’t buy anything. I sat behind the counter and watched them reject my treasures. Sometimes it could be pretty sad.
Around lunchtime, Mrs. Euly Stanley called to tell me she’d found her ancestor’s diary. She was very excited because there were some things in the text that made her believe the woman from the locket I’d located for her was Theodosia Burr.
“I’m going to bring it and the pendant in around five, if that’s okay, so we can compare your miniature to what I have. It’s so fascinating, Dae, thinking we might be related to Theodosia. You know, I never believed Alexander Hamilton didn’t provoke her father, Aaron, into killing him anyway. See you at five!”
I hung up the phone with a sigh. I couldn’t think about Theo Burr’s missing heritage without thinking about Max and his favorite dream. I was frustrated that we might be closing in on that dream faster than we were on Max’s killer. Despite the chiefs and the SBI looking for evidence to link Bunk to the recent deaths, I didn’t believe he was responsible. Someone was still out there, possibly looking for another person to kill.
Given what had happened to Agnes in the last few days, it was looking more and more like Bunk was right about Max being accidentally killed in place of his wife. Or maybe the killer had wanted to get rid of them both.
Roger knew his way around Duck. Bunk said he had his spies. The attack on Agnes was proof of that. He was watching her. No doubt it was the gold that motivated him—Bunk’s and Agnes’s.
How long would he wait, and how far would he be willing to go? The thought made me shiver. No one would be safe at the Blue Whale while Agnes and the gold were there. I hoped Gramps was right and Kevin could take care of himself in this kind of situation. But I knew I wouldn’t feel better about it until the gold was in a bank somewhere and Agnes and the girls had their own place again.