“So, how are you liking Willow Bay?” I eventually asked. I knew it was lame, I just couldn’t think of anything else to say at all.
“It’s pretty cool here. I like it. Totally different from the big city, but in a good way. I can see why people come here on holidays.”
“So you’re not going to just pack up and leave anytime soon?” I asked, and Jason looked at me funny.
“No, you’re not getting rid of me that easily.”
“That’s not what I meant,” I said, that blush creeping back up my face, and Jason laughed.
“Are you this incredibly awkward with everyone you meet, or is it just me?”
“It’s mostly just you,” I had to admit.
“That’s ok, with my stunning good looks, I get that a lot,” he joked, and I just knew my face had reached a shade that could kindly be described as “tomato”.
“That’s so not it,” I stammered, just as the waitress came by to take our orders. She barely even glanced at me as I ordered a black bean burger with sweet potato fries. All her energy was focused on Jason, so much so that it was actually kind of comical. She made sure to ‘accidentally’ brush his arm as she went to grab the menus, too.
“There’s like an eighty percent chance I’m not going to get my burger at all,” I told him when she left. “And I have no idea if it’ll be on purpose to spite me, or if it’ll be because she legitimately didn’t notice I was here.”
Jason laughed. “Yeah, well, that’s just one of the downfalls of being on a date with me. I promise you can share my fish and chips if you don’t get any food.”
“As much as I’d love to, I’d have to stick to the chips. I’m a vegetarian,” I told him.
“Oh really? If I’d known I wouldn’t have ordered something with meat in it. My bad,” he told me, and I had to admit, despite the fact that Jason Black was infuriating, it was really nice of him to say that. Most people, when they found out I was vegetarian, still ate meat around me. And while I absolutely didn’t mind them doing that at all, I still appreciated the few people that did do it.
“It’s ok,” I told him with a smile. “Thanks, though.”
“Any specific reason you’re vegetarian? Health? Don’t like factory farming?”
I can speak to animals and I can’t stand eating the flesh of a being I’ve had conversations with was the truth. But of course, I was absolutely not allowed to say that to Jason.
“I don’t like the idea of feeding on meat when there are so many other options,” I told him. “I’m a vet, I’m supposed to help animals, not contribute to their deaths by eating them.”
“Cool. I grew up in an Italian family, despite the name, so meat wasn’t necessarily a big part of the diet. Like eighty percent of what I eat is carbs.”
“I wish I could do that and keep a figure.”
“I dunno, I think your figure’s not half bad.”
There was that blush again. Our food arrived just then, thankfully my burger did in fact, show up.
I poured ketchup onto it and took a big bite while Jason watched on in amusement.
“What?” I asked with my mouth full.
“Nothing, nothing,” he replied.
Ok, maybe Sophie had a point about me not having a ton of practice with dating.
“So are you trying to figure out who committed this murder, too?” Jason asked with a small smile on his face.
“What makes you think I’m trying to solve a murder?”
“Well for one thing, you pretty much solved the last two we had here. Willow Bay’s very own Sherlock Holmes. Plus my guess is you’re actually a suspect in this one.”
“Yeah, that’s definitely true.”
“I’ve asked around about Hawthorne, the Wawnee chief, and let’s just say people pretty universally think he’s not the sharpest tool in the shed.”
“What I don’t understand is how people like that manage to get a job like his!”
“People always rise to a level they can’t do. You promote people over and over, but you never demote them. So eventually, everyone ends up in a job that they’re in over their head in, but they can’t get out of it. Unless they really screw up, and then they get fired. But that often doesn’t happen, so you end up with people like that in a position of power instead of sitting behind a desk taking reports of teenagers smoking pot behind the high school on weekends, which is really what a person of his calibre should be spending his time doing.”
I laughed. Jason’s theory actually made a lot of sense. And he was funny! Who knew someone so infuriating and annoying could actually be funny, too.
Uh oh. I realized with a start that I was actually enjoying myself.
“Anyway, even if I was trying to figure out who murdered Caroline Gibson, I’d be pretty bad at it. Our prime suspect, Corey, the stable manager, was murdered last night.”
“Yeah, I saw that. I didn’t know he was your main suspect.”
“He was dating Caroline Gibson’s daughter, Ellie, but really secretly because she didn’t approve.” I started to almost tell him about the letter I’d found, but then I’d have to admit that I’d broken into Gibson Farms somehow, and that was one thing I really didn’t want to have to explain.
“What about the others?”
“To be honest,” I replied, dipping a fry in some ketchup and popping it into my mouth, “no one else really stands out. The jockey openly hated her, but he’s almost so vocal about it that it makes him less of a suspect somehow.”
It was funny, I found it really easy to talk to Jason. Before I knew it, two hours had passed, the waitress was giving me the stink eye every time she walked past our table, and the sun outside had well and truly dipped below the horizon.
We finally got up to leave, and Jason grinned.
“See? Going out with me wasn’t that bad, was it?”
“I’ve definitely had worse first dates.”
“Well, that’s about all I can hope for, isn’t it? How about another one sometime? Maybe catch up for lunch and a coffee one day when you’re free?”
“Sure,” I found myself answering, and for the first time since I’d known Jason, my brain didn’t start screaming at me, wondering what kind of crazy folly I’d just signed up for. Maybe this guy wasn’t so bad as I’d thought.
I went home, knowing I was going to get a barrage of “I told you so” from both Charlotte and Sophie, and I smiled. Totally worth it.
Chapter 14
The next day at the vet’s office was fairly uneventful, luckily. Just the usual – a lab that had eaten a plastic toy who was now on poop-watch to see if he’d manage to get rid of it himself, a puppy needing vaccinations, a sick cat who needed fluids and antibiotics and an old dog who came in for his yearly blood screening.
Thankful for at least one drama-free day, as soon as my phone buzzed, a little bit after five, I closed my eyes and hoped it wasn’t going to be Hawthorne. The last thing I wanted was to drive back out to Wawnee just to hear about how he thought I’d committed probably two murders now. But to my surprise, it wasn’t Hawthorne who texted, it was Ellie Gibson.
Hey, Angela. I’m just wondering if you could come over please? I just… I need someone to talk to, and I don’t know who else to ask.
To be totally honest, I’d kind of been looking forward to a night in with a glass of wine, a bowl of popcorn and an old episode of Orange is the New Black. But at the same time, I felt bad for Ellie, and I’d told her to call me if she ever needed anything. Besides, who knew, maybe she’d tell me something that would help me prove Tony was the killer. Or give him an alibi. Either way, I had no idea what kind of valuable information she might be able to provide.
Sure, I texted. I hitched a ride back with Sophie and Bee, but instead of going into the house I went to my own car and made my way down the now-familiar road to the Gibson Farm.