“ Your bun is masterful,” I said.
“ My bun? Just one of them?”
“ All of your buns are masterful,” I said. “But I’m referring to your hair bun.”
She looked slightly disappointed. She also looked slightly drunk, too, although she had only had one glass of wine. She reached up, touched the bun expertly, then shrugged. “Something you learn when you’re ten, I guess.”
Because I know she likes wine, I take great pleasure in looking for unique bottles for her, especially out in Temecula, southern California’s closest wine country. Granted, I wasn’t out that way often, but when I was, I always grabbed her a few bottles. And met with an ex-private investigator friend of mine who now writes novels. Good guy, but I’m not much into vampires.
As I poured her more chardonnay, I said, “Well, when I was ten, I was figuring out ways to get home from school without getting beat up. More often than not, I chose poorly. Turns out, there really weren’t that many different ways for me to get home.”
She tasted the wine and made a long “Mmm” sound. I loved her long “Mmm” sounds.
“ Delicious,” she said, and I couldn’t help but wonder what separated a delicious wine from a non-delicious wine, since all wines tended to taste like dry air. Anyway, when she was done smacking her lips, she looked at me from over her glass. “I can’t imagine anyone bullying you.”
“ It’s easy to be bullied when you’re ten. All it takes is a handful of teenagers.”
“ Could you have handled one teenager?”
“ Maybe even two,” I said.
“ At ten?”
“ I was a big boy at ten.”
She nodded. “That I believe.”
I was a slob at heart, but having Cindy around solved that. She was an elegant, sophisticated woman, a world-renowned professor, and an even better human being. Why she was with a thug like me, I may never know, but she deserved to come over to a clean apartment. And not just clean. Immaculate. With Cindy, I had long ago cleaned up my act and grew up. Like they say, she made an honest man of me. And a clean one, too.
“ Are we really having chips and salsa for dinner?” she asked.
“ Not just chips and salsa,” I said. I had just sliced three avocados and was currently in the process of scooping out the meaty fruit into a bowl. Next to me were onions and tomatoes and a chopping board. “Homemade guacamole with rice and beans.”
“ Actually that sounds kind of yummy. No meat?”
“ No meat,” I said. “That’s why I added rice and beans.”
She nodded. “A perfect protein.”
I grinned as I grabbed an onion. “Why, you must be a professor.”
She stuck her tongue out at me. “Common knowledge, I think. So you’re taking this vegetarian thing seriously?”
“ More so than ever.”
“ I can respect that,” she said. She reached for a chip in a nearby bowl and I slapped her hand away.
“ That’s dinner.”
“ It’s just a chip.”
“ Chips are dinner, too.”
She stuck out her lower lip and had some more wine. She made small noises that seemed to indicate she was still enjoying the wine.
“ I can respect it,” she said, “just as long as you don’t expect me to follow your lead.”
“ I don’t expect you to,” I said. I next scraped the finely chopped onions into a bowl. I started on the tomatoes.
She added, “That also means you won’t give me crap if I order fish or chicken or steak, or even lamb.”
“ Geez, lamb?”
“ I happen to like lamb.”
“ Fine.”
“ And no bad looks either.”
“ No bad looks,” I agreed. “Just as long as you know when you come over here, we eat meat-free.”
She drank more of her wine and looked at me, grinning. If she had another glass in her, she might have commented on the meat-free reference. Might have. Then again, she was a lady. Even when buzzed.
I next chopped up the chili and jalapeno pepper, then added the crushed garlic, freshly squeezed lime juice, salt, pepper and a hint of sugar. I didn’t add cilantro. Cilantro tastes like mummy wrappings. I mixed it all together with the avocado, and I think I might have drooled a little on my shirt.
We ate on my balcony. Me with a beer, and Cindy with her second glass of wine.
Below us was bustling Main Street in Huntington Beach, alive on a Friday night. Laughter and voices reached us from below, and with our knees touching, I told Cindy about my day and she told me about hers, and we scooped and ate and drank and laughed and talked the night away…
Chapter Seventeen
I’m not a sailor. Or a seaman. Or a boatsman.
I’m more comfortable on the football field than on the open water. My idea of a good time is bashing helmets. Not charging through choppy waves, or dropping from crests and plunging into deep troughs.
It was enough to make anyone’s stomach turn.
Anyone, that is, except me.
I was on a Department of Fish and Game police boat, a massive 65-foot monohull that cut over the water at a surprising clip. The boat had three levels and enough electronic equipment to make anyone dizzy.
And I was most certainly not dizzy due to any sort of sea sickness.
The afternoon was bright and cool, but I found myself sweating through my tee shirt and the life jacket they made me wear. The young game warden who had fitted me with the jacket had to adjust it to nearly twice its normal chest size.
And still it was tight.
Too damn tight.
Breathe, Jim.
The boat bounced and splashed and hurled seemingly recklessly deeper out to sea. A Knighthorse did not belong on the open ocean.
“ You okay there, partner?” asked Warden Joe Fossil, who appeared from the bridgedeck, or navigation room. The warden’s age was hard to nail down. Months and no doubt years out on the ocean had dried out his skin and sunburned it to a permanent reddish tan. He wore a narrow life vest and a shirt that said Game Warden in big letters and Department of Fish and Game in much smaller letters. He had on a typical cop utility belt, with a. 40 caliber Glock holstered at his hip.
“ Fine,” I said. “Except I might have, you know, eaten some bad eggs this morning.”
“ Bad eggs,” he asked, shaking his head, grinning easily. “That’s a new one. Look, if you upchuck, just do it over the railing. I hate cleaning up upchuck.”
“ I won’t upchuck,” I said. “It’ll pass.”
“ Sure it will,” he said.
“ I’m not seasick,” I said.
“ Of course not,” he said. “Anyway, we don’t normally allow ride-alongs.”
“ I feel special.”
“ You don’t look special. You look green. Anyway, the captain said to show you what we do. In particular, to keep an eye out for shark finners.”
“ I’ve got friends in high places,” I said. Actually, Hansen arranged for the ride-along, although he thought it was a big waste of time.
“ Sure you do. Anyway, we’ve got a few ships out there to inspect, and after that we head south.”
“ What’s south?”
“ The Mexican border…and shark hunters.”
Someone on the bridge was speaking seriously into a radio. He turned and called Warden Fossil over. They pointed at a navigation screen propped up on the helm, near the big wooden wheel that looked far too antiquated to guide such a fine, new ship. But then again, what the hell did I know?
When Joe Fossil came back, he said, “We’ve got a commercial trawler coming up. You can watch us in action. Should be exciting for you; that is, if you aren’t too busy puking up your guts.”
“ Tough words for someone whose name sounds like it belongs on my underwear.”
“ That’s Joe Boxer,” he said, much too quickly. He must have heard it before. Damn, I hate when I’m not original.