Authors: Carla Neggers
“Nefarious?” He grinned. “I’ve been in law enforcement for ten years, and I don’t think I’ve ever used that word.”
She all but sputtered again. “You listen to me. I do not need and will not tolerate a reclusive, lunatic FBI agent with post-traumatic stress disorder in my hip pocket.”
He got to his feet, crumpled up his Big Mac wrapper and walked through the dining room into the kitchen. Riley followed him. She wondered if she’d said something wrong. If she’d said a lot wrong. She reminded herself that everything she’d said was true and thus it might have been wiser on her part not to say it out loud. What if he snapped?
He glanced back at her. “Trash can?”
“Under the sink.”
He pulled open the cupboard and tossed in the crumpled wrapper. He turned back to her. His eyes were narrowed; his body was rigid. She wasn’t nervous, but she was on high alert. He said, “Two things.”
“Okay.”
“One, I don’t have PTSD. I’d have PTSD if the guy’d shot his hostages. He didn’t. He shot me. So, no PTSD.”
She nodded. “No PTSD.”
“Two, you need a drink.”
“I don’t need a drink. I don’t need anything—”
He sighed. “Now I remember why we threw rocks at each other when we were kids. Do you have whiskey or is wine it?”
“Wine’s it.”
He plucked a half-full bottle of chardonnay from her refrigerator. He didn’t bother tracking down her wineglasses, just filled two juice glasses. He handed her one. “Toast?”
She was past arguing. “Sure.”
He clinked his glass against hers. “To the first thing Riley St. Joe needs.”
“I don’t know the first thing I need.”
He winked. “That’s why we’re toasting it.”
“Huh?”
“One night on your futon. Tomorrow I’ll figure out whether I need to jump into your hip pocket or not.”
“I won’t let you.”
“Sweetheart, I’m a pro. You won’t even know I’m there.”
Straker had never slept on a futon. As sofa beds went, it wasn’t bad, and he had to admit it was better than that thing in his cottage Emile called a mattress. It was the clutter and the city noises that got him. And perhaps the presence of Riley St. Joe under the same roof. At least she didn’t have a cat. If he’d had to put up with a cat, too, he might not have endured.
She was up at the crack of dawn, putting coffee on, humming to herself, digging through piles for odd items she tossed into her leather tote bag. Straker had
a pretty good idea she’d forgotten she’d let him sleep on her futon.
Suddenly she gasped and went still. She had her back to him. He figured she was trying to make herself disappear. She had on oversize, black-watch-plaid flannel boxers and a T-shirt with a guy snowboarding down a mountainside on the back. She had slender, shapely legs. The boxers were too big for him to make out the shape of her bottom. Forget the T-shirt; he could fit in it. He could also get it off her in one fell swoop. She was small, sexy and not as easy to figure out as he remembered. From what he could see, she didn’t have much of a life. He guessed she’d gone underground since the
Encounter
disaster. Instead of a deserted island, she’d picked think-tank clutter.
He sat up and rubbed his overnight stubble. “You wear boxers to bed, huh? Not me. I sleep in the buff.”
She didn’t turn around. “I’ll put more coffee on,” she mumbled, and quickly retreated to the kitchen.
He pulled on his pants and shirt and for once didn’t bother checking the scars on his lower right side and thigh. His wounds had healed. He could climb tall mountains if he wanted to.
He went to join Riley in the kitchen, but she’d already dashed off, presumably to her bedroom for more clothes. He poured himself a cup of coffee, made a spot at the table and sat down to mull over his options. Yesterday his mission had seemed clear. Find Emile. Start with Riley.
Boom.
Here he was.
This morning, things were muddier. Riley had a job and didn’t want him around. Emile could be anywhere.
Neither necessarily had any connection to the body found on Labreque Island.
The telephone rang. Who’d be calling at seven in the morning? He waited a half beat after the final ring before picking up the portable.
Riley was talking. “Sig—slow down. What’s wrong?”
“Mom just talked to the police.” Sig spoke rapidly, obviously not getting enough air. “Riley, they’ve identified the man you found. Oh,
Jesus.
”
Straker stiffened. This wasn’t good news. He could hear Riley gulp in a breath. “Tell me.”
“It’s Sam Cassain,” Sig said, sobbing.
Riley was silent. Then, in a strangled whisper, “Oh, my God.”
Straker frowned. “Who the hell’s Sam Cassain?”
Sig almost screamed. “Riley? Who’s that? Who’s there?”
“Straker, get off my damned phone!”
He didn’t move. “Who’s Sam Cassain?”
“John Straker?” Sig said, more calmly now. “Riley, what’s he doing in your apartment? Are you
crazy?
”
This wasn’t getting him anywhere. Straker hung up and went into the bedroom. Riley was sitting on the edge of her unmade bed in her work clothes, no shoes. Her eyes were huge. Her skin was pale. She stared up at him. “I’ll call you later, Sig,” she told her sister, and hung up.
“Who’s Sam Cassain?” Straker repeated.
She placed a shaky hand on her forehead. “He—he was the captain of the
Encounter.
”
The pieces fell together. “He’s the one who laid the blame for the explosion and fire at Emile’s feet.”
She nodded dully.
“He turns up dead on Labreque Island, and Emile disappears. Police’ll be calling you next.” He thought a moment, ignoring her increasing paleness. “Strike that. They’ll come see you in person. You didn’t recognize him?”
“No. I didn’t get that close a look, and the gulls…”
He remembered. “Emile must have figured it out.”
“How could he? He never saw the body.”
“Instincts,” Straker said.
She slid to her feet. Her room was as cluttered as the rest of her apartment, but with feminine touches—a pair of earrings on the nightstand, a botanical print of beach plums above the bed, little jars of creams and perfumes on the bureau. She stood in front of him, smart, professional and quite pretty. And annoyed. “I don’t want you listening in on my phone conversations.”
“Would you have told me about Cassain if I hadn’t?”
“Probably.”
“Probably” wasn’t good enough, but she was too unsteady and shaken for him to press the point. He made her drink a cup of coffee and eat a piece of toast, and when she protested about him driving her to work, he ignored her and coaxed her into his car. The rush-hour traffic into Boston reminded him why he’d retreated to an uninhabited island to recuperate. Lots of stimuli out here on the city streets. Cars, lights, horns, traffic helicopters, blaring radios, construction.
Riley sat beside him, hugging her overstuffed leather tote on her lap so hard her knuckles turned white.
“Remember to breathe,” he said.
“I am breathing.”
“Not from here.” He poked her breastbone. “From here.” He poked her low on her diaphragm. He could feel smooth, cool skin under her creamy blouse. More stimuli. “Slow, deep breaths. How well did you know Sam Cassain?”
“He was the
Encounter
’s captain for seven years. He was tough, no-nonsense and not one to suffer fools gladly.”
“Who hired him?”
“Emile did. His last captain had died of cancer. He was a scientist, too, and when he died, Emile wanted someone new who’d tend the ship and leave the science to him. The
Encounter
was old.” She swallowed, her gaze locked straight ahead, as if she couldn’t turn her head. “The center had already commissioned a new research ship. It’s costing a fortune, but it’ll have all the latest ecological and technological advances. We’re calling it the
Encounter II.
”
“Who’s in charge of it now that Emile’s out of the picture?”
“My father.”
Straker took Storrow Drive along the Charles River, then cut over to the waterfront. More construction. No room for the five million other cars on the road. The center was located in a renovated nineteenth-century warehouse on its own wharf. A huge, whimsical stone fountain out front featured various marine mammals.
“You can just drop me off on the curb,” Riley said.
He hated the idea of dumping her and retreating. Cassain’s body had been found in Maine, and Emile
had exiled himself to Maine. But the two men’s relationship had begun here, in Boston.
“I think you should hire me to feed the penguins or something,” he told her.
She blanched. “No.”
“Why not?”
“I’m not in a position to hire you, and I don’t want you underfoot.” Now that he’d seen her in her boxers, underfoot probably sounded less threatening to her than in her hip pocket. “And you wouldn’t fit in.”
“I’d fit in. I grew up on the ocean. I probably have more practical knowledge about the ocean than most people who work here.”
She managed to peel one hand off her tote and place it on the door handle. “For God’s sake, Straker, you haven’t been around people in
six months.
Even on a good day you’re not volunteer material. Please. Just let me go to work and put this all into perspective.”
While she talked, he formed a plan. She didn’t need to know it. It would just upset her, and she was upset enough. He said, “Okay. See you around.”
Her brows drew together. She’d put on a little bit of makeup, but not enough to hide how pale she was. Her lips were plum. They were also well shaped. He had a feeling she didn’t have a man in her life. She made a face, obviously having no idea what he was thinking. “I don’t know if I like the idea of you running around out here by yourself.”
He grinned. “I’m a big boy.”
“I’m not worried about you. I’m worried about
me.
”
“Think I’d do something to embarrass you?”
She didn’t answer. “You aren’t on this thing officially, are you?”
“Nope. Sleeping on a futon in your apartment isn’t part of my job description.”
“What if I promise to call you if I hear from Emile?”
“Okay.”
“Do you have a cell phone in this car?”
He gave her the number.
“Thank you.” He assumed she meant for not pressing his case about the penguins, which was a misreading of the situation on her part. “This’ll work out. I know it will. Emile’s probably just checking out puffin nests.”
Straker gave her an hour to get settled. He parked in her spot in the garage, bought a cup of coffee from a sidewalk vendor and sat by the stone fountain. The coffee was hot and strong, and he sipped it slowly as he avoided pigeons and tried not to let his thoughts run full speed ahead of him. One thought came to him crystal clear, impossible to ignore.
Riley St. Joe was trouble. She always had been. He had the scar on his forehead to prove it.
R
iley holed up in her small, cluttered office and worked all morning. After her long weekend, she had plenty to do. She tried not to think about Emile or Straker. Emile worried her. Straker simply annoyed her. He always had. He took pleasure in it. The shock of having him roll off her couch that morning had nearly done her in. The dark stubble on his jaw, the unbuttoned shirt. He was earthy, masculine and relentless.
Forewarned, she told herself, is forearmed. She needed to remember that nothing ever penetrated John Straker’s hard shell enough to reach his soul, not two bullets, not a dead body on the rocks.
It was Sam Cassain’s body she’d found.
She shut her eyes, the faint beginnings of a headache pressing against her temples. Sam was dead, Emile was missing—and Straker? She didn’t know what Straker was up to. It might have made more sense
to keep him where she could see him, but she had nowhere to tuck an FBI agent.
Her father poked his head into her office. “Busy?”
She smiled. “Just pretending.”
If anyone fit the stereotype of the hyperfocused scientist, Riley thought, it was Richard St. Joe. He was tall and thin like Sig, but with none of her sense of style. He was oblivious to his typically ragged appearance. Today he had on jeans, a navy thermal shirt and water sandals with thick socks. His scruffy beard was grayer than she remembered. He hadn’t been aboard the
Encounter
when it caught fire and sank last year. Instead he’d been aboard a university research ship, conducting a seminar on right whales, when the first distress calls came in. He’d had to wait hours before he learned that his daughter and father-in-law had survived.
“Your mother called—she told me about Sam.” He looked as if he’d been fighting off panic, irritation, trying to figure out how to confront an adult daughter and colleague. “Why didn’t you tell me you were going to see Emile?”
“I didn’t think of it.”
“You didn’t have to sneak off. I know he’s your grandfather. It’s not as if I’d forbid you to see him.”
“But you can caution me against it,” she said, knowing that was exactly what he’d have done.
Richard pushed his bony hands through his salt-and-pepper hair as if he’d like to pull out every strand. “Only because I think he’s become insanely reckless and selfish. Sam—you can’t think there’s no connec
tion between his death and Emile. There
must
be.” He almost trembled with exasperation. “My God!”
“I’m trying not to jump to any conclusions.”
“I’m not talking about conclusions, I’m talking about
logic.
” But he checked his raging emotions and softened, giving her a quick hug. “Thank God you’re all right. Let’s hope the worst is over for you. At this point I don’t give a damn anymore about Emile, but you…” He tousled her hair as if she were seven. “I care about you, kid. I’m sorry you had to go through what you did.”
“At least I didn’t know it was Sam. If I had…” She shuddered, leaving it at that.
“I know. Let’s hope the police make quick work of this. Riley, you know I have no desire to see anything more happen to Emile—”
“It’s okay, Dad. I understand. He shouldn’t have taken off the way he did.”
“Yeah. Keep me posted, will you?”
She promised she would. Her father, her mother, Sig. Emile. In their own way, they were a family, and they cared about each other. As tough as her parents were on Emile, Riley knew it pained them to see what they believed had become of him. And it frustrated them that she disagreed with their assessment. She was the only one who still refused to believe Emile Labreque had become a dangerous disgrace to his work, his reputation and himself.
Not two minutes after her father left, her extension rang.
“Don’t you have your own secretary?”
Straker. “Where are you?”
“I’m on break.”
“From what?”
“I’m learning how to feed sharks.”
“What?”
“I signed up for the volunteer-training program for people with PTSD. Abigail Granger happened to be in the volunteer office when I stopped by. I understand this program was her idea. Get them to connect with nature, toss a few fish to the sharks and they feel better about what they’ve been through. She walked me through the paperwork.”
“You’re shameless. There’s a hot poker in hell with your name on it, I swear. That program is for people with a serious psychological disorder.”
“I went to an island for six months. I connected with nature. I feel better.”
Riley gripped the receiver so hard her hand hurt. “You went to an island for six months because you can’t get along with anyone.”
“I’ve made friends with a couple of Vietnam vets this morning. Now, they’ve got real demons to fight. I didn’t want to lie to them, so I told them the score. They liked it when I told them you had a Beanie Baby sitting on your computer. You have quite the tiger-lady reputation.”
“You’re the most obnoxious man on the planet. You conned Abigail.”
“Nope. I told her I’m shadowing you because I don’t trust you to mind your own business and I needed a cover story, and she showed me to the sharks.”
“You did not.”
He laughed.
“I hate you, Straker.”
“You hold that thought. You staying in for lunch?”
“I’m not telling you.”
“Okay, I’ll find out on my own—”
“Yes! Yes, I’m staying in for lunch.” She hated him, hated him, hated him. But his laugh still resonated, low and deep. He was a very dangerous man. “You?”
“Abigail’s bringing us clam chowder.”
He hung up, and Riley had to pry her fingers off the receiver.
She raced down to the volunteer office, where, indeed, Abigail Granger had ordered clam chowder lunches for her volunteers.
“Would you like some?” she asked. “We always order extra.”
Riley smiled stiffly. “No, thanks. I was just checking out a rumor.”
Straker was there. He hadn’t lied. Abigail wasn’t the sort who’d see through him. She was thirty-nine, fair-haired and fine boned, with striking blue eyes and a well-honed sense of style and grace. She never griped about anyone or anything, although she was divorced and the mother of two teenage boys away at school.
Like Bennett Granger, her deceased father, she wasn’t a scientist, but her dedication to the Boston Center for Oceanographic Studies was total. She’d taken his place on the board of directors. If she wanted to fall for John Straker’s phony sob story, she could.
“I heard about your terrible ordeal this weekend,” Abigail said. “I’m so sorry. How are you doing?”
From her tone Riley guessed she hadn’t heard that the body had been identified as Sam Cassain. Abigail had never said what she believed happened to the
Encounter.
Matthew Granger—her brother and Riley’s brother-in-law—was the one who knew. Emile was responsible, period, never mind that he’d been like a second father to Bennett’s two children, showing them how to tie knots and sing to the periwinkles. His downfall had left a void in their lives, too, even if Abigail repressed it and Matt raged against it.
Riley decided she didn’t really want to tell Abigail it was Sam’s body she’d found. “I’m okay.”
Abigail frowned. Her expensive navy suit, although simple, looked out of place amid the stripped-down furnishings of the volunteer office. The center had a policy of putting its funds into research, public displays and facilities that benefited its marine and aquatic population—not into plush furnishings for staff and volunteers. “I understand you were visiting Emile.”
“I spent Monday night at his place on Schoodic.”
“Riley? Are you all right?”
She attempted a shaky smile. “It’s just been a tough few days.” There was no way around it. She had to tell her. “Abigail, I heard this morning—the body I found. It was Sam Cassain.”
Abigail clutched a stack of papers with her long, thin, manicured fingers. “That’s
awful.
Does Henry know?”
Henry Armistead was the center’s executive director, handpicked by Bennett Granger. He’d won the board’s gratitude for his impeccable handling of the public relations nightmare the
Encounter
tragedy had
presented. Sam’s death would give the gossip and the center’s critics fresh life—reason enough for Riley to have gone straight to him first thing that morning.
“I don’t know,” Riley admitted. “I haven’t told him.”
“I think you should,” Abigail said with certainty. “I imagine the police will want to talk to him about Sam. And reporters…” She took a breath, regaining her poise. She would think of the center first. She always did. “We need to put a strategy in place for handling the inevitable questions. Oh, Riley, this is horrendous. You know Sam was in Maine over the weekend, don’t you?”
Her head spun. “He was?”
“Yes, I thought you saw him. He stopped at the house on Friday before the cocktail party. He said he just wanted to see how we were doing.” She faltered, suddenly awkward. “Oh, dear. What if we were the last people to see him alive? How on earth did he end up on Labreque Island, of all places? It
must
have been an accident.”
Riley half wished she’d taken her grandfather’s cue and cleared out for a few days. Then people could have jumped to the wrong conclusions about her, too. “I have no idea, and I’m trying not to get ahead of myself with questions I can’t answer. I should have talked to Henry sooner. I’ll go see him now.” She hesitated, debating. “Will you be talking to Matt? Sig knows about Sam, but I doubt she—”
“I’ll get in touch with him,” Abigail said, briskly polite. Whatever her opinion of her brother’s marital problems, she would never say.
Riley ducked out without bringing up the topic of
oddballs who might have shown up that morning for the PTSD volunteer program. She went out to the exhibits. No sign of Straker. The low lighting gave the sense of being underwater as tourists, school groups and businesspeople on their lunch hour intermingled, checking out exhibits that ran from small aquariums to the huge, multistory saltwater tank.
The PTSD volunteers, she knew, stayed in the bowels of the center, away from any hint of crowds. But she didn’t see Straker there, either. Maybe his clam chowder had arrived. Riley had no desire to disturb the rest of the group’s lunch. With a huff of exasperation, she stormed outside to collect her wits before she ventured up to see Henry.
A stiff breeze gusted off Boston Harbor, bringing with it the feel of autumn. She wanted to be out on the water now, in her kayak, paddling with the wind. Just imagining it helped calm her.
Straker materialized at her side, his impact like a hot gust. “Nice fountain. Dolphins, whales, otters, seals. I like the walrus, myself. A fountain with a sense of humor, which is more than I can say about most of the people who work here. You’re an intense group.”
“What did I do to deserve you on my case?”
His gaze cooled. “You found a dead body on my island.”
“I thought you were having lunch with your PTSD friends.”
“It was yuppie clam chowder. Now, a good haddock chowder with a pat of butter and a sprinkle of black pepper—that would have had me.” He laid on his
downeast accent, but Riley could see the tightness in his jaw, the hint of tension in his eyes. They were good eyes. Alert, expressive, as cool and impenetrable a gray as a Maine fog. She shook off the image, wondering what had got hold of her. He went on, “I expect I owe Abigail Granger an apology.”
“For what?”
“I was pretty much a jerk to her. I lied, and I put her on the spot.”
“You’ve never apologized before for being a jerk.”
He scowled. “You’re smart, Riley. But you’re not sweet.” He started off without a word.
“You aren’t really going to apologize to Abigail, are you?”
“I might.” He glanced back at her, a spark of humor lighting his face. “You know, she’s a hell of a lot nicer than you are.”
“Sam Cassain stopped in to see the Grangers on Friday,” Riley blurted.
He stopped. She could see his FBI-trained mind clicking into gear. This wasn’t the mind she knew. She knew the mind that wanted to drown her. She had to remember this wasn’t the boy she’d known on Schoodic Peninsula.
“On Mount Desert?” he asked.
He said it,
dessert,
the way the locals did, as in the French
Mont Desert,
or barren mountain, for its hills of pink granite. She nodded. “Abigail told me.”
“Where did Cassain live? What’s he been doing the past year?”
“Last I heard he was working on the docks in
Portland, but he still had his place down here—out in Arlington, I think. He hadn’t settled into a new job, so far as I know.”
Straker continued on his way without comment. Riley sighed. The man could drive her to the brink if she let him. She turned back to the fountain. More people had drifted over for a bit of fresh air during their lunch hour. Suddenly the idea of going back to work, trying to concentrate, didn’t appeal to her. She was restless, frustrated, still absorbing the potential ramifications of Sam Cassain turning up dead on Labreque Island. She wanted to find Emile—and she wanted to know what Straker was up to next.
“Riley? I thought that was you.”
Hell, she thought. Henry Armistead. He’d got to her before she could get to him. From his grim expression, she guessed he’d heard the news. Bennett had lured him east from California three years before to serve as the center’s executive director. He was fifty-one, handsome and polished, and Riley, oblivious to such things herself, had heard rumors of a budding relationship between him and Abigail Granger.
“I was just coming to see you,” she said lamely.
“A little late, I’d say. Maine State Police investigators are on their way. They want to talk to Abigail, Caroline Granger, your father and me about Sam’s death. They said they might want to ask you a few more questions, too.”
She nodded. “I understand.”
“I wish I’d known about this before the police called.”
“You’re right. I’m sorry. I’ve been preoccupied.”
She stopped, picturing the body lying facedown in low tide. “I didn’t recognize him. It never occurred to me…”