Ultra Violet - Part 1
Library

Part 1

ULTRA VIOLET.

NANCY BUSH.

CHAPTER ONE.

I had mere seconds to get out of the bedroom. There was no bolt for the door and escape back the way I'd entered. I stood frozen, my hands useless appendages in front of me, my frantic heartbeats a roaring surf in my ears.

Three strong strides and I was at the sliding gla.s.s door that led to the bedroom balcony. The door opened soundlessly to an itsy-bitsy, terra-cotta-tiled area wrapped by a wrought-iron rail. I looked down two floors. For a dizzying moment I considered jumping, but the patio below was cold, unforgiving stone.

I whirled back to stare across the room. Twelve feet of carpet led toward the bedroom door, the only other exit. My pursuer was not far behind. From my peripheral vision I caught sight of the maple tree. I glanced over. Too far from the balcony, but just outside the bathroom window.

I could hear his approaching footsteps from the exterior hall. Quickly, I scurried into the bathroom and threw open the window. One branch was close enough to reach. For an instant I considered climbing down as I was: gowned, bejeweled, wearing the most expensive sandals I ever planned to purchase.

Kicking off the shoes, I threw them out the window. I ripped the zipper of the dress downward, yanked the slinky lavender dress over my head, sent it flying after the sandals. As I pulled myself through the window, cursing the s.p.a.ce that was scarcely large enough for me to wriggle my shoulders through, I heard the door open. A mewling sound entered my throat but I held it back. I reached for the branch, missed, reached again, arms shaking, fingers splayed.

I heard his breathing.

My fingers connected and I hauled myself out with adrenaline-laced strength. I swung my legs upward to catch the limb with my ankles and hung like a lemur. Then I s.h.i.+mmied toward the tree trunk and carefully eased myself down the bole. I lost swatches of skin. My pulse hammered in my ears. My face was wet with tears.

When my toe hit the ground I drew a breath and glanced upward. He was on the balcony looking down at me. In that strange, heightened moment between quarry and prey, I was very, very glad I stood where I was.

"Ms. Kellogg?"

The voice came from somewhere to my right, near the front of the house. I stooped to pick up the gown Violet Purcell had given me, s.h.i.+vering, glad Violet had talked me into the padded lacy bra, equally glad I'd held out for bikini underwear rather than a thong.

The newcomer was my other admirer, Martin.

I smiled at him as he approached, hoping my lips didn't quiver. I could feel the gaze from the man on the balcony boring into the back of my head. I shook out the gown. Stepping into it, I said with forced nonchalance, "Would you mind helping me zip up?"

I thanked the Fates Martin liked me enough to obey without question.

Earlier.

There's a weirdo in every neighborhood.

The old lady with forty-nine cats. The man who's formed art pieces out of painted car parts and littered them across his front yard. The couple who've carved mysterious symbols in the bark of a tree and hung a plaque on the limbs declaring themselves lovers of evergreens, while fir needles blanket their dilapidated roof and hang in a shroud of spider-webs from the sagging eaves.

I fear that Dwayne Durbin is becoming the latest neighborhood weirdo.

Ever since the accident that broke his leg and temporarily incapacitated him, he's taken to spying on the properties across Lakewood Bay, his leg wrapped in a cast from ankle to thigh, his eyes glued to a pair of binoculars. A strange chortling sound issues from his throat. He can tell you more about the Pilarmos' dog and the Wilsons' new alarm system than you should ever want to know.

I've sort of avoided him these last few weeks. He's drawn me into watching the s.e.xcapades of a nameless couple whose energetic and inventive forms of copulation both impress and shock me, which is saying a lot. Dwayne has named all the houses/families he spies on; these two he calls Tab A and Slot B. Their stamina and vitality while inserting said Tab A into Slot B makes me wonder about my own tepid s.e.x life. Lately, a few random kisses are all I can measure in the plus column.

Which is the main reason I've been avoiding Dwayne: my newly refined awareness of him. Yes, he's an attractive member of the male gender, but so what? Dwayne is still my boss/business partner and that is it. Thinking about him in any romantic context is just plain trouble.

I reminded myself of this as I parked my Volvo wagon next to his truck, which sat on the concrete pad outside his cabana. I'd told him I would bring lunch and so I had. The white bag containing a stack of plastic containers lay on the pa.s.senger seat.

Before I climbed out of the car I took a deep breath. I'd been using the excuse that, as temporary lead investigator for Dwayne Durbin Investigations (of which only Dwayne and I count as company employees), I was too busy digging into the death of one Roland Hatchmere, the third and most beloved ex-husband of our client, Violet Purcell, to hang around much. I'd gone so far as to call from my cell phone near heavy freeway interchanges and scream over the roar of the traffic that I would report in when I was closer to Lake Chinook, the town in which we both reside. It's a testament to Dwayne's interest in his friends across the bay that he hasn't been calling me on my bulls.h.i.+t. He knows me too well to seriously believe me. Honestly, I don't think he notices that I'm having such a hard time with the current form of our relations.h.i.+p, which should p.i.s.s me off but worries me more than anything else.

When Dwayne asked me to bring him a burger from Standish's I finally broke down and agreed. What can I say? I want to see him. Still, I couldn't make myself be Little Miss Fetch-all so, in a moment of pure orneriness, I drove to a nearby deli neither of us had tried before and bought an array of items in little clear boxes that looked great but might be more healthy than either of us can stand. Why did I do this? I don't want to even speculate.

As I let myself inside his cabana I put my feelings for Dwayne aside as best I could and instead scolded myself for not being further along on the Violet Purcell matter. The problem for me is Violet herself. Before Dwayne's accident, she'd made a strong play for him and they looked to be heading into that "you woman, me man" thing with the speed of a locomotive.

I hadn't liked it one bit. And so I was having trouble treating Violet as a paying client who needed rescuing. To be fair, Violet is currently so distracted by her own problems that she appears to have no interest in Dwayne whatsoever. I'm not going to be fooled, however, because these things have a habit of resurfacing just when you're sure it's safe to go back in the water.

Not that Dwayne's for me. I'm just saying...

I was juggling my laptop in its smart, gray wool case, a cup of black coffee from the Coffee Nook, the white bag containing our lunch and a copy of the Lake Chinook Review, and I dropped everything in a heap on Dwayne's kitchen counter. Dwayne, as ever, was on his back dock. He heard me arrive and from where he was stretched out on his lounge, he half turned his head in greeting. I could see his profile in front of the green waters of Lakewood Bay. It arrested me for a moment, as the sky had darkened in that eerie way that foretells of a thunderstorm, something that rarely happens in Oregon. I looked through the window at that gray-green backdrop just as a shot of lightning sizzled across it, leaving a bright afterimage against my retina. Dwayne picked up his binoculars and scanned the heavens. It was nearly November and unseasonably warm. As I off-loaded my items, thunder rumbled and then a horrendous blast of rain poured down. Loud rain. I looked up sharply. Hail, actually.

I squeezed through the twelve-inch opening that leads to Dwayne's dock-which is all the sliding gla.s.s door allows as Dwayne's desk is shoved up against it-and rushed outside. Dwayne was struggling up from his chair. I grabbed his arm and together we managed to knock over his small side table as we b.u.mbled around, then squeezed back through the door to safety. In those few seconds we both got soaked to the skin. After that we stood just inside and stared at the blackening sky and silvery, bouncing hail.

I felt the warmth of Dwayne's skin through the damp. I could smell him. Something faintly citrusy today that spoke of last summer. I've never been one of those women who wants to "drink in a man" but I felt that desire now so strongly I could scarcely think. It took serious willpower to move away from him.

Abruptly the hail stopped.

"Cool," Dwayne said thoughtfully, brus.h.i.+ng at his shoulders. Bright drops of water melted into the light blue denim before my eyes.

I said, "Lunch is on the counter."

"Standish's?"

"This is from that new gourmet catering shop on B Street."

Hope died in his face. "Tell me there's nothing with raisins."

"There's nothing with raisins."

Beets, though. I knew better than to mention them as I opened the white bags and pulled out clear, plastic containers of dishes that had made my mouth water as I stood in front of the counter. Dwayne eyed the Szechuan noodles suspiciously and actually sniffed the container of chicken, arugula, corn and rice. The purple red beets swimming in their own juice he studiously avoided. I didn't blame him. I'd thrown them in mainly for the shock value. I don't mind a beet, but their tendency to dye clothing with one ill-placed drop kind of puts me off.

"I suffered a moment of worry about my health."

Dwayne grunted as he swept some plates and silverware from his drawers. He moved with surprising grace on his crutches, dis.h.i.+ng up heaping helpings onto two plates. He stuck a serving spoon in the beets but didn't partake. I felt duty-bound to have some and left a spray of magenta juice in a semicircle on Dwayne's counter. I found a paper towel and swiped it up. I didn't tell him about the drops that landed on his dish towel. I was pretty sure no amount of was.h.i.+ng was going to get those suckers out. He gestured at me to ask if I wanted something to drink, but I lifted my Coffee Nook cup in response.

I sank onto his couch, which doubles as my workstation, and Dwayne perched on one of his kitchen stools. He's transformed his jeans to accommodate his cast, in effect making one pant leg only about twelve inches long. His cast takes over from there and it has various writings on it. I wondered about the sweet little red heart with initials.

"Anything new?" he asked, scooping up the Szechuan noodles and eyeing me.

"Roland Hatchmere's family doesn't think much of Violet. They'd like to see her go down for this."

"She didn't kill him."

"So you say. And so says Violet. But somebody hit him with the tray she gave as a wedding gift." I forked in some rice and pea mixture that had a hint of saffron.

Dwayne swept an arm toward my laptop case. "You got a report for me?"

"There's nothing to report."

"Give me a list of the players. Hatchmere's family members, the wedding guests, people from work. There's a reason somebody killed him."

I fought back a natural obstinance, finished my salads, then switched on my laptop. Dwayne loves hard copy. He's always yammering about how I should spend more time logging data and generating pages and pages of information to impress the client, and he likes to look at information on paper himself. It helps him think. Unfortunately I wasn't kidding: I had nothing to report. Since Violet had announced to me and Dwayne that she was suspected in Roland Hatchmere's death, I'd barely learned anything of note. Certainly nothing worth writing up and printing off.

Most of what I had pertaining to this case was from Dwayne's own hard copy on the Wedding Bandits, a group of robbers who'd been systematically ripping off the families of brides and grooms, stealing both personal belongings and wedding gifts while the ceremonies were taking place. Dwayne had meticulously chronicled the bandits' activities, from their basic modus operandi to the homes they'd targeted. It appeared the Wedding Bandits. .h.i.t Roland Hatchmere's home the day of his daughter's wedding, but whether that was before, during, or after his death was undetermined. At least for Dwayne and me. Dwayne had been sidelined by his accident and his client, a onetime father-of-a-bride Wedding Bandit victim, had let the police take over rather than have the case turned over to me. Which was just fine. I was glad I didn't have a second client breathing down my neck. Violet Purcell was enough.

Dwayne picked cautiously through the salad with his fork. Apparently he didn't believe we were raisin-free. "You got that e-mail I sent you about Hatchmere's business partner?"

"I put in a call to Dr. Wu. He's out of the country for a few weeks, working with a medical relief team."

"Who's in charge of the clinics while he's gone?"

"No one person, apparently. They're owned by a consortium," I reminded him, though Dwayne was the one who'd secured that information in the first place. "I've been waiting for Wu to return."

Dr. Daniel Wu was the head plastic surgeon of a group of four clinics previously owned by Roland Hatchmere, who had once been a very well known plastic surgeon himself until his personal cocaine use got in the way. With his license revoked Roland turned his talents to business, capitalizing on his still valuable reputation and garnering patients to his clinics in droves. Dr. Wu had become his business partner, though Roland held on to the lion's share of the business until it was sold earlier this year to the consortium.

"Wu's the one to talk to," Dwayne agreed.

"It just means I'm stalled," I said.

"Things'll break."

Like that advice was going to help me. I wanted to shout, "When? How? Would you stop looking through those d.a.m.n binoculars?" Instead I just finished my meal. Dwayne was nice enough to thank me and even pay for the food. I tried to demur, but he smiled faintly and ignored me, so I pocketed the bills. I'm pretty sure I should be embarra.s.sed by my cheapness, but I can't stop considering it an attribute. Thriftiness is a good thing, right?

I watched him pick up the Review and start reading.

Feeling frustrated, I complained, "Wu's not the only issue. I'm having trouble getting the Hatchmere clan to talk to me. I've left messages. I even dropped by Roland's house once, but I got the door slammed in my face."

"Who slammed it on you?"

"The daughter. Gigi Hatchmere. Or, wait...Popparockskill..."

"It's still Hatchmere. Ceremony never came off when Roland didn't show." He shook the paper and opened to another page as he headed back outside.

"Have you got any bright ideas on what I should do next?" I called, but Dwayne was outside and either he couldn't hear me or he didn't care.

Annoyed, I pulled up my file on Violet and wirelessly sent its meager contents to the printer as I slid another look Dwayne's way.

He'd put down the paper and was standing in the strange darkness created by the storm, staring up at the sky. I followed his gaze and saw a crack between clouds where sunlight spilled through, looking like a sheer, glowing curtain of white and yellow, the kind of odd illumination that, as Dwayne moved in front of it, surrounded him with a brilliant aura.

"Saint Dwayne," I muttered.

"What?" he hollered.

Oh yeah, sure. Now he hears me? "Nothing."

I headed to the printer, which is currently set up in Dwayne's spare bedroom, and looked at the pages. It was disheartening how little progress I'd made. n.o.body, but n.o.body, wanted to talk to anyone a.s.sociated with Violet. I'd placed a few calls and gotten a few polite no's and a few more "you've got to be kiddings." One guy, some Hatchmere family friend known as Big Jim, just laughed like a hyena and hung up on me.

Gathering up the two pages of potential interviewees, I sensed a nub of anxiety tightening in the pit of my stomach. For all his inattention, Dwayne wasn't going to wait forever. He would expect some hard answers. But Violet was anathema. And no one wanted to talk to a friend of Violet's-friend being a stretch of the truth of our relations.h.i.+p-but I suspected Dwayne wasn't going to see it that way.

"Come on out here, Jane," Dwayne called, apparently sensing I'd returned to the living room as his eyes were once again glued to his binoculars.

He was back on the lounge, though I suspected there might be some moisture soaking into the seat of his jeans. The outdoor furniture and dock were still wet from the hail blast.

Squeezing back outside, I felt a frigid huff of wind whip beneath my black suede vest, press my s.h.i.+rt to my skin and generally bring me to goose b.u.mps. Dwayne's cowboy hat, never far from his side, was now scrunched on his head. His long, light blue denim-clad left leg, and casted right one, stretched toward the small, slatted-wood table we'd knocked over on our scramble to get back inside. I righted the table and put it beside his chair. Apart from his s.h.i.+rt, there was no protection against the elements, but it didn't look like he cared much.

My eyes followed the line of his legs and I felt a twist of s.e.xual interest. I gritted my teeth. And him being a semi-invalid. What did that say about me?

"Take a look here," he said, handing me the binoculars. "Straight over there is Rebel Yell...." He pointed at a white two-story house across the bay and a little to our left. I looked through the lenses. "Parents, two teenage girls, lots of drama."

"You've named another one?"

"Named 'em all. It's next to Tab A and Slot B, just to the west side."

I gazed at Tab A and Slot B, where all fall the man and woman had been cavorting into every s.e.xual position known to humankind, and tried to keep my mind off Dwayne. He and I had done a bit of that mating dance not so long ago, nothing too serious, and then Violet had entered our world. Sometimes, late at night, when my mind whirls on a repet.i.tive track, I remember those moments with uncomfortable inner jolts that seem to hit my heart and parts down south as well. "We've watched them before," I said neutrally.

"Mm," he agreed. "Tab A'll be home in a couple hours. Lately they've been turning on their outdoor fire pit and then heading just inside the slider door and getting to work. Lovemaking by the fire. Guess it's what you do when you don't have an indoor fireplace."

"Can't wait for that."

"Next to Rebel Yell is Plastic Pet Cemetery, where old lawn ornaments go to die."

"The Pilarmos. With the dog."

Dwayne nodded. "Thing howls and looks like a wolf."

I centered my binoculars on the Pilarmos' tired, dark blue bungalow. Kinda looked like my cottage, only worse, if that was possible. Probably worth a small fortune. I could make out gnomes and plastic pink flamingos and faux cement birdbaths decorating a large portion of the backyard. A grayish wolf-dog cruised around the corner and disappeared from view.

"Then there's Do Not Enter."

I moved my gla.s.ses to aim toward a sh.e.l.l of a house where the beams and a skin of plywood const.i.tuted the walls. The roof was covered with plywood, and half the composition s.h.i.+ngles had been nailed on. "Why is it Do Not Enter?"

"It's where the high school kids party. They try to keep their flashlights dimmed, but every Friday night, some Sat.u.r.days, there's something going on. And that last house before the road curves toward North Sh.o.r.e is Social Security. He's deaf and she's bedridden and neither of 'em is too worried about Do Not Enter."

Hearing he'd named more houses worried me anew. I had to remind myself that this, too, would pa.s.s. It was a harmless pursuit on Dwayne's part. Something to entertain him while he recovered. If it smacked a little too much of Jimmy Stewart's character in Rear Window, well, it wasn't like he was going to ask me to solve a murder over there.

I handed him back the binoculars, murmured something about getting back to my job, then squeezed inside the cabana and headed to my laptop. My job-the job I was getting paid for-was to prove Violet Purcell's innocence. Besides the fact that no one will talk to me, the bigger problem is I kinda think Violet might be guilty. She's sensed this and has yelled, "Things aren't always what they seem, Jane!" more times than I like to recall. And actually, I think that's a crock anyway. Most of the time things are exactly what they seem. We just can't accept them as they are. We want to make them better, or different, or meaningful.

But...I must remember, innocent until proven guilty. It's difficult with Violet. She's late forties, appears and acts over a decade younger, possesses more good looks than good sense, and has a family who took the "health" out of "mental health" in a big way. I would like to forget that she made a play for Dwayne, but I can't. It's only been a few weeks since I met Violet-basically a little over a month-but it feels like the proverbial eternity. First I thought she was a breath of fresh air. Then I decided she was a femme fatale. Now I'm thinking she might be a murderer.

I mean, couldn't she have killed ex-husband number three? Couldn't she? Why does Dwayne find that so impossible?

I shook my head and stared up at the fir beams that line Dwayne's cabana's ceiling and thought back. Upon first meeting I'd been intrigued with Violet's tell-it-like-it-is, take-no-prisoners att.i.tude. But she was a Purcell and I had learned, by then, that they were a secretive, squirrelly bunch, so I wasn't sure what to think of her. It had been refres.h.i.+ng to be faced with a family member who initially exhibited none of their odd family traits. Key word here being initially. Violet's definitely got her own issues.

Luckily, since Dwayne's accident, things seem to have cooled off a bit between him and Violet, but that doesn't mean it's over. And okay, they haven't progressed to much more than friends, but I know she hauled off and kissed him once. I got to witness that. Dwayne is my mentor, boss, partner and friend. I cannot have him mean anything more to me and stay sane. I know this, but I have to keep reminding myself anyway because there's a part of me that just can't quite leave the whole possible romance thing alone. I would like to be disgusted with myself for being so nauseatingly hopeless. I mean, why can't I just get over it? It's interfering with my job and my life and I don't even think I really like Dwayne.