“That would be all right, I guess,” I said.
“The people at your birthday party, did you know them all?”
“My next door neighbour, Maggie Urquhart, brought a friend I hadn’t met before. His name was George, I think. My dentist brought his new wife. Her name is Stella. And a couple of friends brought dates I didn’t know. But otherwise I knew everyone else. Of course, there could have been some party crashers. I was pretty wasted by eleven o’clock.”
“How about you, Miss Brooks?”
“Was I wasted by eleven?” she asked with a dimpled smile.
Matthias smiled back. “Did you know everyone at the party?”
“For the most part, but there were a few I didn’t. Mostly Tom’s friends from his days at the Sun, before I knew him. I did see the dead guy, though.”
“Where?”
“On the roof deck.” The skin around her mouth grew pale.
“What time was that?”
“About one, just before I left.” She swallowed. “I thought he was asleep.”
“For all you know,” Matthias said gently, “he may well have been. The coroner put the time of death at around two in the morning.”
“My sister told me she might have seen him in the kitchen,” I said.
“Was he with anyone?”
I shook my head. “He was getting ice out of the fridge.”
“Does she know what time it was?”
“She didn’t say.”
Matthias scratched in his notebook, closed it, and stood up. “That’s all for now. I’ll probably see you in the morning.” He shook hands with me, then offered his hand to Bobbi. She grasped it and hauled herself to her feet. Either that or she was trying to haul him down onto the sofa with her.
“Brooks,” Matthias said to her. “Any relation to Sergeant Norman Brooks of the Richmond RCMP? He mentioned to me once he had a daughter who was a photographer.”
“He’s my father,” Bobbi said. “Do you know him?”
“We worked together a couple of times, before he retired,” Matthias said. “Next time you see him, please give him my regards.”
“I will,” Bobbi said.
After Sergeant Matthias left I said to Bobbi, “Should we call Quayle?”
“If he was really in such a goddamned hurry for us to get started on this, he’d’ve called by now. T’ hell with him.”
Easy for her to say.
chapter five
“She’s right,” Reeny said. “I’m beginning to regret getting you involved in this.”
“What do you mean?” I said with a sniffle. We were in Pendragon’s tiny galley. I had volunteered to chop onions, which had been a mistake in such a confined space. My eyes were watering and my nose was running. Very romantic.
“I thought you knew,” she said. “I recommended you for the job. Didn’t Will tell you?”
“Uh-uh,” I said, scraping the onions into a bowl.
“Thanks,” she said, as I handed her the bowl. She added the onions to a concoction of low-fat sour cream, melted butter, and chopped fresh dill, stirred briefly, then poured the mixture over a salmon filet in a Pyrex dish. She covered the dish with a tent of aluminum foil, then slid it into the tiny oven.
Living on a boat had its appeal, but even one as large as Pendragon also had its drawbacks, such as the cramped galley, with its tiny stove and half-sized fridge. I preferred the more traditional kitchen of my house. At least Reeny had jettisoned the huge collection of books, newspapers, magazines, and journals Hastings had accumulated. Not only did it make Pendragon a good deal more liveable, she probably floated a few inches higher as well. I thought about commenting on it, if only to make conversation, but decided it would be better to leave the subject of Chris Hastings alone for now. The evening was shaping up nicely, and I didn’t want his ghost ruining things, as it had the evening before.
We ate on deck again. She talked about her work, which she made sound considerably less romantic and exciting than the general public, among which I included myself, believed. I talked about my work, which I tried without success to make sound more romantic and exciting than it was. We laughed a lot. When dinner was over, we cleared the dishes to the galley, folded away the table, and sat side by side in deck chairs, polishing off the bottle of wine and listening to the dance music drifting across the water from the boating club clubhouse, perched on stilts on the other side of Coal Harbour. Reeny’s pale, long-fingered left hand rested on the arm of her chair, just an inch or two from my right hand. It was all I could do to restrain myself from reaching over and taking it.
Not to put too fine a point on it, but my hormones were raging. I wanted to clamber up the rigging and howl at the moon. I wanted to swing down from the yardarm, sweep Reeny up in my hairy, piratical arms, and have my lusty way with her. I wanted to make frenzied, passionate love with her until dawn.
“This is nice,” I said.
“Yes, it is,” she replied.
Her deck chair complained softly as she shifted sideways, folding her legs under her and half facing me. She had used some of the bright blooms from Willson Quayle’s flowers to make a smaller arrangement for the table. It now stood on the engine compartment hatch cover with the empty wine bottle up-ended in the cooler. The soft rattle and creak of rigging and the gentle lap of water against Pendragon’s hull underscored the silence between us. I became conscious of Reeny’s steady scrutiny.
“What?”
“How would you feel about taking a little trip?”
“I guess it would depend on the destination,” I said. “And the company. Why?”
“I was thinking that when we wrap up the season I’d take Pendragon south for a month or so. Or maybe into the Queen Charlotte Islands. I can’t handle her myself, but two can handle her no problem. What do you think? How’d you like to be my crew?”
“When do we leave?” I said.
“I’m serious,” she said. “I talked to Bobbi. She says you need a vacation. You’re not seeing anyone at the moment, are you? Someone who’d get upset if you spent a month alone on a sailboat with another woman?”
“No,” I said. “I’m not seeing anyone at all. And I know you’re serious. But what I know about sailing wouldn’t fill a wineglass.” That was a slight exaggeration. I’d helped Reeny move Pendragon to her winter mooring on the Fraser River, but that had taken less than a day and had been mostly under power. However, I’d never personally sailed anything larger than a twenty-five-foot day-sailer, and only in perfect weather; taking something as big as Pendragon into the open ocean scared me more than a little. Still, it was a very tempting offer. So why was I hesitating? I wasn’t sure.
“I’d like nothing better than to sail away with you,” I said.
“But?”
“Well, for one thing, my daughter may be coming to live with me for a year.”
“Bring her along. We can get a copy of the curriculum and whatever books she’d need to keep up her schooling. I taught elementary school for a couple of years before getting into acting full time. It’ll be fun. And if you’re worried about paying your way, don’t. My idea, my shout.”
“No, that’s not what’s worrying me,” I said.
“What