Casey prays at least three times a day — before getting out of bed, before his afternoon siesta, and after lights-out at night — but often prays for special requests, too.
He’s a man who has never really cussed, fought, or said uncool things about people even behind their backs.
So, living in Dodge makes him feel his part in the surf-outlaw tradition that started in Hawaii and spread to California and Australia, then the world. Part of something old and wild and dangerous. Something that makes you feel like nothing else makes you feeclass="underline" real, authentic surfing. Not commercialized surfing, though he does love the excitement of the contests. Here in his Dodge City living room he’s got a really cool picture of the old surf star David Nuuhiwa in Dodge in 1968 — just a couple of houses down from here — talking with BEL heavyweight Johnny Gale, surrounded by surfboards.
Grandpa Don had stories about Dodge in the late sixties when he was one of the Laguna cops chasing around the drug dealers and the “general no-good-niks,” as he called them.
But with affection. Casey always thought Grandpa Don was too nice to be a cop. Too permissive. Grandpa Don let him surf when Casey was five. Grandpa Don let him and Brock keep a baby alligator they’d bought from a reptile store in Huntington Beach. In their extra bathroom’s tub ’til Grandma said no. Let them have chocolate milk with their meals when they visited.
For sure, Grandpa Don saw some crazy things in Dodge back then, some funny and others not. Casey remembers hearing about the time that Grandpa was one of the officers raiding a South Laguna home back in ’67 and one of the cops — not Grandpa Don — shot, in the back, and to death, a suspected Brotherhood of Eternal Love drug dealer, Pete Amaranthus. That name stuck in Casey’s head because it seemed wondrous and beautiful. And tragic. Pete was twenty-two. He was well-liked, and Grandpa Don knew the family. Casey’s mom told him that Grandpa stayed up alone late the night they killed Pete, got himself drunk on bourbon. Grandpa Don was not a drinker.
Now Casey leans down and gets his cheek against the rail of the board, gauging the rocker it will require to handle Mavericks’ four-story waves moving as fast as freight trains. Too much upsweep in the rocker and the board will slow, trying to displace water; too little rocker and you dig a rail and it’s wipeout time.
Down you go.
Hard.
Escorted by fifty tons of fifty-degree water, which is quite a bit harder than warmer water. It’s like the difference between hitting the surface of a warm lake, or a frozen interstate. Then the tumble cycle and the hold-down that just might be your last.
Mae rises from her shady spot under a brightly blooming yellow hibiscus and lumbers through the open slider into the house. Probably hears the mail lady, who always has treats.
Casey straightens and takes a moment to appreciate his dog, and another to note with gratitude all the plants and shrubs and trees on his lot, from the fruit on the tangerine tree, to the pink trumpet vine, to the purple bougainvillea smothering the old grape stake fence in scintillant violet bracts. And the birds-of-paradise with all their orange-blue plumage, the white-flowered plumeria, and the red lantana alive with butterflies and moths.
Pretty awesome.
Now from the house here comes Mae, head up and tail wagging, trotting ahead of Bette Wu as if showing her to her table.
Casey’s heart bucks.
She strides midway into his little backyard, then stops and stands there, looking at him as if she’s just walked onstage in scene one. Mae licks her free hand. Bette’s dressed in a black knit suit with gold buttons. Black-and-gold pumps, plum lipstick and nails. Hair up, bangs down, and a brushed aluminum Halliburton briefcase in one hand.
She steps up and sets it on the blue-tiled, wave-patterned bistro table. Leans forward on both hands, right into Casey’s grill. Up this close her face is the size of a billboard.
“My family had nothing to do with the Barrel,” she whispers. “I swear it. And I have proof.”
“Jimmy made a threat that day on Empress II. I heard it with my own ears.”
“My father is a clown. Sometimes worse. I expect to be free from him soon.”
“But who else would set the fire? I got burned, you know.”
She softly touches the back of his free hand. “I do know. It hurts me.”
Then she straightens, looking down at him with a hard expression.
“I’ll tell you exactly who set the Barrel on fire. The same people who burned our boats. Monterey 9 — a criminal tong spin-off settled in Los Angeles County. They’ve been enemies of the Wus going back fifty years. They were ruthless then and ruthless now. We were just fishermen and — women. One of their businesses is Imperial Fresh Seafood. They knew of our offer to buy the Barrel. They want rich Orange County to themselves. So, destroying our fleet was the next logical step toward ruining us completely. Luckily, we have a paid informant in Monterey 9.”
Casey less than half believes this story, but wonders if it could be true. Remembers the black Sprinter with the logo speeding off from the Barrel. Why not Monterey 9, destroying Jimmy Wu’s future assets? And maybe — just maybe — Brock and Mahina and the Go Dogs declined to torch the Wu family fleet after all. Just as Brock had said he would.
“Excuse me,” he says to Bette, as he googles “Imperial Fresh Seafood” and finds pictures of their delivery fleet. Yep, he sees: Sprinters. The same as Laguna Detective Brian Pittman’s, gray, not black, and their logo is a smiling great white shark wearing a red robe, dancing on the ocean on its tail. Like Imperial Fresh is trying to out-logo King Jim, Casey thinks. What kooks.
But it’s not much like the logo he saw that night.
Which he tells Bette and shows her his screen. She shrugs and fixes him with a who-gives-a-shit look.
Casey remembers the pirates that first day, bloody knives and dying sharks, their rusty guns and eagerness to use them. Like, if they’d do that, why wouldn’t their enemies do likewise? Destroy assets? Like a chess game but the moves are sudden and violent, and there’s lots of money at stake.
“See?” Bette says. “Mae likes me. She’s forgiven my little prank. I hope you do.”
“Get lost, Ms. Wu.”
“Where are your manners?”
“They’ve left the building. So you leave, too. I get nothing but bad actions and bad karma from you.”
“Not so fast, Casey. I have gifts for you and Mae. Who I would never hurt in any way.”
“Yeah, well, what about throwing her overboard or smuggling her somewhere far away?”
“A joke. An ugly little joke. I apologize. And Casey?”
Again she leans into seated Casey, face to face. Up this close her eyes look like black lakes and within the scents of plumeria and tangerine he smells that smell from Sunset.
“Do not blame my family for the Barrel,” says Bette. “Do not blame me.”
Knowing Bette Wu as he thinks he does, everything she says sounds like a threat. Or an excuse.
But what if she’s telling the truth?
She sits across from him at the bistro table. Gives him a softened expression, then looks down.
“What are you doing here?” he asks. “What do you want?”
“An Arnold Palmer, thank you.”
“I’m asking you to go. Mae is asking you to go.”
“But why?”
“We don’t trust you.”
“Someday you will.”
Bette gets into her Halliburton, pulls out a colorful foil pouch, and hands a salmon-and-pumpkin treat to Mae. One of her favorites from a boutique pet store.