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“Someone beat the shit out of him,” I said. “He’s in the hospital, unconscious. He’s a mess.”

She stopped. “You’re serious?”

“Unfortunately, yeah. So I haven’t gotten to talk to him yet.”

She shook her head, clearly shaken. “Jesus.”

“She have a boyfriend?” I asked as we started walking again. “Meredith?”

Kelly nodded. “Yeah. A kid I don’t care for all that much. Remember I said how Chuck looked me in the eye? This kid never looks me in the eye.” She grimaced. “I hate when kids are like that.”

“Know his name?”

She pulled her keys from her bag and opened her car door. “Sure. Derek Weathers.”

NINETEEN

It wasn’t a coincidence that Meredith’s boyfriend shared the same name with the kid that had been tailing me in Seaport Village. I was sure of that. Not when I’d already spotted Meg, her teammate, with Matt, who’d been Derek’s sidekick in following me.

The next morning, I stopped by the hospital. Chuck’s eyes were still closed, he wasn’t moving and the doctor told me there’d been no change. I pulled a chair up next to the bed and sat, holding his hand, feeling awkward and unsure of what else I was supposed to do.

Doubts were creeping into my head, like feathers brushing my skin. Why had he been spending so much time with Meredith Jordan? It was one thing to work with her on her game, but both Stricker and Kelly Rundles indicated they had at least considered the thought that something else was going on between them. I didn’t want to believe that Chuck put himself in that kind of situation. I felt guilty for considering it, but it was getting harder to ignore the possibility.

I squeezed his hand, willing him to wake up and tell me the truth, tell me what he’d gotten himself into.

But he didn’t, and after awhile, I left.

***

I left a message for Jane Wiley, letting her know that I was still plugging away and asking her to call me if she knew anything more about either Chuck’s assault or the charges the Jordans had made. I didn’t tell her that the plugging hadn’t gotten me anywhere yet.

I decided to head back to Jon Jordan’s home. I wanted to know how Gina Coleman knew Chuck and why she’d recommended him for the coaching job.

The huge gates were in place and I pressed the button on the intercom.

“I promise not to hurt you this time,” Gina Coleman said over the speaker. I could tell she was smiling.

“Thanks.”

I waited at the gates for a couple of minutes until she arrived in her BMW. The gates opened like a bird’s wings and she got out of the car. She was in workout clothes and covered in sweat. I might’ve found her attractive if she hadn’t dropped me to the pavement the first time we met.

“Wanna shake my hand?” she asked, smiling.

“Not really.”

“Then why are you back?”

“You gonna call Jordan and tell him I’m here?” I asked. “He threatened me with much bodily harm.”

“He does that. A lot.” She shook her head, disapproving. “But he’s not here right now, so you’re alright.”

“But if he drove up here in the next ten seconds…”

“I’d do what he told me,” she said. “I work for him. Bottom line.”

“Great guy.”

“No. Great salary.”

Figured I couldn’t argue with that.

“Why didn’t you tell me you knew Chuck?” I asked.

She leaned against the hood of her car, the sweat on her forehead and arms sparkling in the sun. “Didn’t know I was supposed to.”

I didn’t say anything, letting my silence tell her that answer was worthless.

She stared at me for a moment, then looked down at her shoes, pretending to inspect the laces. Finally, she caved. “I work for Jon. It wasn’t my place to start telling you things.”

“You do know Chuck, though?” I asked.

She thought about it, then nodded.

“How?”

She looked away from me, then looked back and said, “Park your car on the street.”

When I hesitated, she said, “Don’t worry. He’s out of town today. It’ll be fine.”

I did as she said. She swung up next to me in the BMW and I got in the passenger side. The car smelled like brand new leather and clean carpeting, as if it had just arrived from Germany. Gina smelled like a mixture of salt and soap.

She hadn’t answered my question, though.

“How?” I repeated.

She made a U-turn and we headed thru the gates and onto the Jordan property. “We went to elementary school together,” she said. “Then junior high.”

I never thought of Chuck having had a life before I’d met him and it was odd to hear someone say they knew him when I hadn’t.

“His dad was at the air station at El Toro. Then he was moved to Coronado.”

“El Toro? In Orange County?”

She drove us down a winding, hilly road lined with thick shrubbery. “Yeah. We lived in San Clemente. He lived across the street from me.”

“I didn’t know he lived up there,” I said, as much to myself as to Gina. “He never mentioned it. I knew his dad was transferred to Coronado, but I just assumed they’d always been in San Diego.”

The road forked amidst a grove of massive eucalyptus trees and she veered to the left. “We used to play together at the park across the street from our houses. Every afternoon, we’d come home from school and head over. I’d go down the slide and he’d jump off of it.”

Now that sounded like Chuck.

We pulled up to a single-story ranch house with a terracotta roof and walls of expansive windows. She shut off the engine and we got out.

Chuck took me to our seventh grade dance,” she said, smiling, walking toward the front door. “It was a big deal. First junior high dance and all.” She paused, put her hand on the door. “And he was my first kiss.”

I was trying to picture Chuck as a gawky seventh grader, figuring out how to put the moves on the girl he liked. If the situation had been different, I would’ve burst out laughing.

Gina pushed opened the door and we stepped inside. It wasn’t Jon Jordan's house. It was a gym and the only thing it was missing was a membership desk. Lots of gleaming dumbbells and high-end machines, mirrors on the walls. Cool air-conditioning washed over me as I shut the door.

“I was in the middle of lifting when you showed up,” she said. “You mind if I finish?”

I shook my head.

She slid onto a bench and lowered herself beneath a bar that held a large plate and a small plate on each end. A hundred-and-ten pounds by my count. She wrapped her fingers carefully around the bar. “When he told me they were moving, it was like the end of the world. You know, everything is bigger and exaggerated at that point in your life and it was awful. He was my best friend, my first boyfriend and it broke my heart.”

She lifted the bar out of the rack and went up and down with it eight times, the muscles in her arms and shoulders expanding and contracting with each movement, quiet grunts of exertion echoing in the room. She wasn’t doing it for show, but I was impressed.

“So you stayed in touch over the years?” I asked.

She set the bar back in the rack, but kept her hands on it and exhaled several times, staring upward. “Not really. When he first moved, we called each other and stuff the first couple of weeks. But then it was just…different. High school and everything. There was no email or IMs back then. Neither of us could drive and it felt like he was a million miles away.” Her hands tightened around the bar. “Then about three months ago, he called me. Don’t know how he found me, how he got the number and I didn’t care. It was like we picked up right where we’d left off.” She lifted the bar out of the rack and held it high. “And that’s silly, because it was junior freaking high. But still, I heard his voice and he didn’t even have to say his name. I knew it was him.”

It was strange to hear about Chuck’s life from someone else. We’d been best friends for twenty years, but hearing her story made me feel like I’d only known a fraction of him.