Breakwater. Carla Neggers
rose in Boone’s expression. Little, she suspected, escaped this man’s attention, a skill that had to be a plus in private security work.
But she brought her mind back to the subject at hand, adding, “Oliver Crawford and my former boss—Alicia’s current boss—are friends. They went to college together.”
“And your boss would be—”
“Gerard Lattimore.” She didn’t know how she’d ended up giving him this information about herself. “He’s a deputy assistant attorney general at the Justice Department.”
“What are you, a lawyer?”
“Historian.”
Boone took a second to digest that information but had no visible reaction. “You don’t work for this Lattimore anymore?”
“No. I left Justice in January.”
“He knows your friend’s missing?”
Quinn realized the tables had turned and now Huck Boone was interrogating her. He was a security type, she reminded herself, and such tactics probably came naturally to him. But she didn’t feel particularly reassured. “Alicia’s not missing. She’s just—I just haven’t accounted for her.”
Boone didn’t relent. “But Lattimore knows?”
“Yes.”
“And Mr. Crawford?”
“I have no idea. I haven’t talked with him.”
“You don’t socialize with him in Washington?”
“I told you, I don’t know him that well. And these days, Mr. Boone, any socializing I do is work related.”
He grinned unexpectedly and leaned toward her. “Then it’s not socializing, is it?” He straightened, his eyes softer now, not as intense. “Since we’re neighbors, you can just call me Huck.”
She felt a twitch of a smile. “Huck Boone. That’s quite a name, isn’t it? Makes me think of Huckleberry Finn and Daniel Boone—”
“My folks have a strange sense of humor. I should get rolling. You okay? Anything I can do for you?”
His concern took her aback, and she wondered just how tight and preoccupied she appeared. She glanced out at the osprey nest at the mouth of the cove and almost told him about Alicia’s pleas, but she’d told Boone, a man she didn’t know at all, more than she’d meant to as it was. “I’m okay. Thanks for asking,” she said. “Don’t let me keep you from your run.”
“Just getting loose. We’re getting put through our paces today at Breakwater.”
“Good luck.”
He winked at her. “Thanks.”
He jogged off toward the loop road at a moderate pace.
Quinn didn’t immediately return to her hot tea. The bay glistened in the morning sun, the water quiet and very blue under the clear sky. She wondered how many of Oliver Crawford’s guys would be jogging past her cottage now that he’d converted his estate into a private security outfit.
She started across the road, then remembered she was in her socks. But they were damp now, anyway, and she continued on her way, taking the narrow, sandy path through the tall marsh grass down to the water. The tide was out, leaving behind wet sand, slippery grass and swirling shallow pools. Using one hand to block the sun, she squinted out at the enormous osprey nest, but it was empty, the female, presumably, still out hunting.
As she turned to head back to the cottage for her cell phone, a fishing boat out in the water beyond her cove caught her eye. Something bright drew her gaze downward, out past her waterfront to the edge of the protected marsh.
Red.
What would be red on the shore?
“I have a red kayak,” she said aloud.
Had Alicia left it in the marsh?
Why? Dropping her hand from her eyes, Quinn ran back up to the road and down to the marsh, pushing her way through thick marsh grass onto a narrow path. Her socks were soaked through now, covered with sand. Barely breaking stride, she lifted one foot and pulled off her wet sock, then lifted the other, leaving the socks on the path and pressing forward barefoot, the cold sand a shock.
She kept running toward the water, noticing gulls up ahead.
Gulls…
Why so many? Quinn counted five near the shore.
The path curved, and she saw the red kayak lying parallel to the beach, partly submerged in the receding tide. The gulls seemed to be picking at something in the tall marsh grass.
Quinn felt a crawling sensation at the top of her spine. Her mouth went dry. She tucked her hands up into the sleeves of her sweater and slowed her pace, ignoring her frozen feet.
More gulls arrived.
“Shoo!” She waved her arms at the birds, but they stayed with their find, whatever it was.
She looked up toward the road, hoping to see someone—anyone—she could call to walk with her down to the kayak and the gulls and see what was there. But there was no one.
With a nauseating sense of dread, she forced herself to veer off the path through the knee-high grass, still cold with the morning dew, slapping at her as her feet sank into the wet, shifting sand.
Adolphin? A small whale? Was it possible something had beached itself here on the edge of a Chesapeake Bay marsh? She was a historian, not a naturalist. She’d fancied that in her spare time, on long, lazy weekends, she could study bay life, learn the names of the birds and fish and wildflowers and grasses.
She came to the kayak and forced herself to look where the sea gulls were feasting.
A leg.
“Oh no.”
Now Quinn could see blond hair.
She recognized the blue sweater and the jeans Alicia had worn yesterday morning.
“Alicia!”
Quinn’s scream didn’t faze the gulls. She turned around, facing the road, and yelled for help, her stomach knotting, bile rising in her throat. She didn’t know if her screams were louder than the cries of the gulls or the tide, if anyone was nearby to hear her.
She made herself turn back toward Alicia and flapped her arms and yelled at the gulls, kicked sand at them, but only two flew off. When the rest refused to leave, Quinn took a closer look.
Alicia was sprawled facedown in the shallow water, strands of underwater grass tangled on her lower legs. Her feet were bare. Her sport sandals must have come off.
Quinn dropped onto her knees, shivering, her teeth chattering from cold and fear.
Please don’t be dead.
But she quickly saw there was no point in checking for a pulse.
“Oh, Alicia,” she whispered, sobbing. “You can’t be dead. Oh, God, no.”
“Quinn—”
Startled, she leaped up, spinning around right into Huck Boone. She took a step back, tripping on the kayak, but he grabbed her by the upper arm, steadying her.
He looked past her and tightened his grip on her.
“It’s—it’s my friend.” Quinn’s voice was hoarse. “Alicia. Alicia Miller. She’s…” I can’t say it.
“We need to call the police. Do you have a cell phone?”
“What?”
“A phone.”
“Yes. It’s at my cottage.”
He released her arm and touched her shoulder. “Go. Call 911. I’ll