“And you haven’t seen her since?”
“No, that’s why I called you two.” Marina’s temper was starting to flare and Braydon didn’t have the patience to deal with it today. Not with the dock looming in the distance with its invisible stain of agony. Tom, one of the only constant friends Braydon had kept since the incident eleven years ago, knew his partner was distracted by the closeness of it. He took down Marina’s contact information and assured her they’d look into it.
“We’ll give you a call when we find her,” he called, already following Braydon to the truck. “I bet you thought after your promotion to detective you’d have a lot more interesting cases than dealing with a little Alcaster dispute, huh?”
Tom was trying to lighten the mood Braydon had fallen into—he smiled big, exposing teeth slightly stained by too much coffee. Braydon appreciated the gesture and shook himself as they pulled out of the driveway and took the winding dirt path back to the main road.
Tom was right, though. Braydon expected—and hoped—for more exciting work than looking for Amanda, who was twenty-six years old and probably at a friend’s house waiting for her own anger to sizzle out. Not to mention, her being gone wasn’t an actual case until she had been missing for forty-eight hours. The only reason they had driven out was due to a lull in between cases. Also, it wasn’t wise to anger the elder Alcaster, which is exactly what would happen if they had told her to wait her daughter out. So out they had come, ready to help a member of the community. Though, again, trying to patch up a fight between mother and daughter hadn’t been on Braydon’s mind when he signed up for law enforcement. For the better part of his career, he had worked hard for the promotion to one of the two detectives in Culpepper. The town wasn’t big by any means, and mostly sleepy, but there were still investigations that needed working and cases that needed solving.
Plus, it wasn’t the promise of excitement that had pushed him into the profession—it was the pursuit of justice.
“Have you ever met Amanda?” Tom asked, facing ahead so the sun lit up his blond hair.
Braydon nodded. “I’ve been to a few parties with her but that was when we were in school,” he answered. “I had to be about seventeen...maybe eighteen.” That had been almost eleven years ago, Braydon calculated. Back when he was going through the wild and rebellious stages of being a teenager—drinking, partying and feeding hormonal impulses at every turn. He had been one of the undesirables then, on the wrong side of the law that he now tried to uphold. His mother had sent him to church every Sunday as if it would absolve whatever demon had possessed him, but there was nothing Pastor Smith could preach that would end Braydon’s lust for the wicked.
That is, until one rainy night changed everything.
Tom seemed to realize the bad mood was relapsing. He shifted in his seat and turned up the radio. The cool sounds of 103.1’s program of all things ’80s pumped through the truck’s speakers. Normalcy returned in the small cab.
The end of September had crept up on the town, though the Culpepper heat still radiated like it was August. Sweat pooled beneath Braydon’s white polo shirt, adhering it against his suntanned skin. One of the perks of his promotion—shedding the uniform. Despite his reformed sensibilities, wearing the cop getup pricked against his inner rebel.
It was a twenty-minute trek from the Alcasters’ back to the station at the heart of town. Braydon spent the rest of the drive watching the rural part of Culpepper transform into neighborhood turnoffs, industrial buildings, shopping boutiques and the few dilapidated structures littered in between.
This part of town had once been run-down—a meeting place for drug dealers, prostitutes and people who liked and used both. It wasn’t until six years ago that Richard Vega had pumped life, and money, back into the four-block stretch. The New York City native had a business acumen to be reckoned with and enough funds to open Vega Consulting—a company of marketing strategists created to serve not only Culpepper, but all of North America.
Braydon didn’t know the extent of how Vega Consulting operated, but he had to believe they were doing well. Richard Vega lived at the end of Loop Road with an electronic gate surrounding the five acres of land he had purchased without batting an eye.
The partners had fallen back into a comfortable silence the last few minutes of the drive. It was as though the growing distance from the dock was lifting a sour weight from Braydon’s shoulders. When the police station came into view, the ill feelings had all but disappeared, though Braydon knew he wouldn’t get any sleep tonight.
“Langdon,” Tom answered after his phone did a vibrating dance.
Braydon pulled into the parking lot that butted up against the side of the station. The building dated back to the ’50s and had been renovated at least three times. It was all brick, cracked tile and offices that were small enough to pull double duty as closets. When most officers, Tom included, complained about the state of the building, Braydon found he didn’t share their sentiments. He never felt more at home than when he set his eyes on the place.
He turned off the truck and met the humidity with a deep breath. It was midmorning, and the heat was at its worst. The rain that had bathed the town hours earlier had done little to reduce the temperature. He smiled to himself. There wasn’t a cloud in the sky. Despite all of the opportunities he’d had to leave his hometown, it was beautiful days when the sun was shining that reaffirmed his decision to stay. A person just couldn’t beat a beautiful day in Florida.
“Okay, we’re right outside now.” Tom hung up the phone and followed Braydon around the building to the front double doors with Culpepper Police Department hung in rusting letters above them.
“There’s a woman waiting in your office,” he said, holding the door open. “And apparently she’s not too happy.”
Braydon quickly ran through the list of women he had been with in the past few years, trying to find a name that stuck to someone who might be pissed. Well, recently pissed. Angela had been the last woman he had been with but that had been two months ago. Surely, she wasn’t the one in his office pitching a fit.
“She’s from out of town,” Tom offered, cutting off Braydon’s line of thought. “Probably got a ticket from John and wants to complain to someone.” John was a policeman who loved giving tickets to tourists passing through. Some people loved golf, John loved giving tickets. Braydon sighed.
“I’ll deal with her,” he said, feeling his nerves switch to annoyed. He’d never had much of a stomach for outsiders.
“Sounds good to me. I’m going to call around and see if I can’t find Miss Alcaster.”
They parted ways after walking through the lobby and into the largest room in the station. Rows of desks, computers, chairs and coffee cups filled the room. Some were occupied with Uniforms—a few colleagues Braydon didn’t like and a few who didn’t like him. John the Ticketer’s chair was empty. He was probably writing someone up right now, Braydon mused. Along the far side of the room stood four doors that led to a break room, Tom’s office, Braydon’s office and the conference room. To the left, with the blinds always shut over the window in the door, was Captain Westin’s domain.
A man was smart to avoid that office when the captain’s temper was high.
Braydon walked across the room and let out a sigh as he saw his door was closed. Why they had left a stranger unsupervised was an issue he would bring up as soon as he ushered her out. Not only was it an invasion of privacy but also breaking regulation.
He reached out to grab the doorknob when the old oak slab flung open.
“It’s about damn time!”
Braydon stepped back, caught off guard. He furrowed his brow at the woman standing before him. No one in Culpepper