A Grave Search (Bodies of Evidence)

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A Grave Search (Bodies of Evidence) Page 14

by Wendy Roberts


  His next text was: Where are you?

  He also seemed to be keeping tabs on me. No big surprise. I wanted to ask him about Ted and why he’d met him at the diner and not told me who he’d talked to about my mother. I knew he struggled with keeping things confidential, and if Ted was part of his current investigation that would be the reason he hadn’t mentioned his name. Still, it annoyed the hell out of me so my reply to him was a selfie with me sticking my tongue out.

  See you in a few hours, he texted.

  My psychiatrist appointment was later this afternoon. I needed to gather Wookie, pack an overnight bag and make my way to Seattle.

  After I returned to the vet’s office and paid the bill they gave me a coupon for the doggie daycare next door.

  “If you’re a new client at the doggie daycare you also get a coupon for buy-one-get-one massage,” the receptionist said, thrusting a pale blue slip of paper into my hands.

  “I don’t need one.”

  I wasn’t big on the idea of someone rubbing my body unless that someone was Garrett. A massage would mean having to explain the keloid scarring on my back from years of abuse at the hands of my grandmother.

  I tried handing the coupon back to her and she laughed.

  “It’s not for you.” She pointed to Wookie, who was tugging so hard on the leash my shoulder was about to dislocate. “The doggie daycare does them. So many dogs really love it and it’s good for them too.”

  I thanked her and folded the blue paper and tucked it in my back pocket as we headed out the door.

  Wookie was thrilled to get home and he did a breakneck run around the rooms in a fit of energy that made me laugh, particularly when he came skidding along the tile in the kitchen.

  “We gotta get going.” I rubbed the dog’s head. “Can’t be late for the shrink ’cuz she’ll charge me for the time even if I’m not there.”

  My phone chirped a text from Garrett just as I was locking up the door behind us.

  You better get going. You’re going to be late.

  I looked up at the security camera and lifted my shirt to give him an impromptu peep show.

  Ni-i-ice, was his reply followed by some heart emojis.

  Sure, I was making it all seem like fun and games but I was getting a little ticked off about the whole thing.

  “We’re going to have to talk about you spying on me,” I grumbled under my breath as I loaded my bag and Wookie back into the Jeep.

  After I fought through the slugfest that was Seattle traffic I gave Wookie a quick run around the block and then took him up to Garrett’s condo. He had his own dog bed, toys and dishes already there and he immediately made himself comfortable. Before heading to my appointment I left him a note: Can’t wait to see you, Mr. Sexy! Xoxo

  My therapist’s office was only a couple blocks away and by the time I was done my session, Garrett would be home with a pizza.

  Dr. Abbey Chen specialized in Post-Traumatic Stress and Trauma. After a lengthy hospital stay where I was more medicated than treated, it was recommended that I see Dr. Chen. Her website boasted that she treated clients in a professional and confidential setting that felt safe, comfortable and nonjudgmental. I might feel safe there but after all these months the air of judgment was thick even if it was all of my own making.

  She asked about events since my last session. When I’d first started therapy I’d just sit there and not talk at all but it pained me to pay her fee and not get anything out of it. Even though I knew I wasn’t nearly as open with her as I should be, I’d come a long way over the course of the past year. I started today’s meeting by giving her the abbreviated version of my life over the few weeks since I’d last seen her. When I mentioned running into Katie, her eyebrows went up in surprise. Then I added the news about my mother, and Dr. Chen sat forward in her chair and looked as shocked as I’d felt. Then we did the question-answer tango.

  “How did you feel when Garrett told you that your mom might be alive?”

  “Confused.”

  “Did seeing Katie bring back memories of happier childhood times?”

  “No.”

  “Do you feel the skills you’ve learned here helped you to walk over that forest bridge when at Ava Johansson’s crime scene?”

  “Sure.”

  “Do you still hear your grandmother’s voice saying negative things?”

  “Sometimes.”

  “Do you think you’ll pursue a friendship with this new girl, Tracey?”

  “Not sure.”

  “How long has it been since you thought about taking a drink?”

  “Five minutes. No...two.”

  “Are we ever going to get beyond your short monosyllable answers?”

  “Probably not.”

  Dr. Chen was patient, encouraging and full of helpful tricks and exercises to deal with triggers that caused my mind to get sucked into quicksand thoughts and made me spiral into hell. Triggers were when something innocent like going on a hike and having to walk over a bridge made me want to curl into the fetal position and suckle on a chardonnay nipple. I guess things like mindfulness exercises and deep breathing helped at those times but, honestly, part of me wondered if all this naval-gazing in therapy was really helping or if I was just too scared to stop going.

  “Do you feel like coming here is a waste of your time?” the doctor asked, reading my mind.

  “Maybe,” I admitted. “I’m coming ’cause I’m scared not to.”

  “What do you think would happen if you stopped coming?”

  I shrugged but I did know that without someone holding me accountable the temptation to drink might get stronger. The monster in my belly that screamed “Feed me wine!” was a whole lot louder if I went a long time without seeing her, and the medications I’d been on in the beginning felt a bit too good to have lurking in my medicine cabinet.

  “Do you want to start coming less?”

  “No.” I didn’t want to start drinking again. Or worse. Maybe get pulled into dark thoughts and not be able to claw my way out.

  “Julie? What do you think would happen if you didn’t see me?” she repeated.

  “Can we make our next appointment a little later in the evening?” I asked, avoiding her question.

  We booked another time and day a few weeks later and then, as she walked me out, Doc suggested I contact Tracey to go for a coffee as a way of getting beyond my comfort zone and making the community feel more like home. She also commended me for continuing to go on small hikes as a way to clear my head and find peace but said they didn’t count toward that if those hikes turned into body-finding missions.

  Apparently there was no such thing as a twofer here.

  While I was walking back to Garrett’s apartment I tried to enjoy the moment. The sun was warm on my body. The city was bustling around me and everyone seemed Friday-afternoon happy. Except for me. I felt uneasy in my own skin as I thought about having a mother out there somewhere and she might actually care that I wasn’t given up for adoption like she’d been told.

  She might care and I might matter.

  Or not.

  Immediately following that thought came a temptation, not for the first time or the tenth, to relieve the ball of tension in my gut with a drink. Just one glass...even one sip.

  Up ahead a woman flipped her waist-length hair and leaned in to hug the man walking beside her. I picked up my pace until I closed the gap between us with my heart pounding until she glanced over her shoulder and I realized she wasn’t my mother. Besides the long hair, there wasn’t even a glimmer of resemblance but, for some reason, my hopes had soared. The regret and aching hit me in the chest like a blow that took my breath away.

  By the time I was opening the door to Garrett’s apartment I was miserable. Then Wookie bounded over and climbed my torso to lick my chin, and Garrett pulled me into a welcoming hug.

  “My two guys.” I smiled as I kissed one and petted the other. “And pizza.” I kicked off my shoes and headed to the living r
oom. “What more could a girl want?”

  And I meant it. Even in the darkest places inside my head, I knew I was damn lucky.

  While we ate pizza and drank cola Garrett regaled me with humorous stories about the drama in the lives of the goofy unnamed people he worked with, which he spun in a purposeful way to tweak a laugh out of me in spite of myself. I knew what he was doing. Every time I had a therapy session and returned brooding and angry with the world and my sucky past, Garrett put in a huge effort to turn my mood around. He was one of the good ones. Despite his own personal demons of losing a wife and son, he’d been able to get his shit together and still be a good person. I wanted that for myself.

  We finished the pizza and turned the television on to watch an action flick. I cozied up to him and nestled my head into the crook of his arm. About an hour into it, my mind grew restless. Try as I might, thoughts of my mother giving me up kept slinking back to the front of my mind. Garrett was intent on watching the movie but I didn’t care. I reached for his belt, unhooked the buckle and slid the zipper of his pants down. He covered my hand with his own and lifted my face so that he could kiss me but I pulled away and lowered my head to his lap. I encouraged his pants and boxers down off his hips and pulled his erection into my mouth. I lost my horrid thoughts of past trauma in pleasuring him.

  Near dawn, as we lay spooned in his bed, I dreamed of the back of my mother’s head going down the road after she’d said goodbye to me on my grandparent’s farm. In my dream, my mother turned around but then her face had become my grandmother’s and the sweet goodbye moment turned violent. I woke up shaking and in a cold sweat.

  Garrett placed a comforting hand on my thigh and then fell back to sleep. There’d be no sleeping for me now so I dressed in sweatpants and a T-shirt and took Wookie for a brisk morning walk around the block. The city was already alive with throngs of people hurrying to their destinations. I kept Wookie on a short leash so he wouldn’t get trampled or snarl at other dogs. It was not the relaxing run in my backyard either of us enjoyed.

  When we got back, I made coffee. While I listened to the gurgle and spit of the coffee maker coming to life I went to the dining table where we never ate and shuffled through Garrett’s paperwork looking for anything to do with my mother or her ex-boyfriend. Nothing jumped out at me. The only files around were about another case that was meaningless. I hated myself for going through his stuff and hated more the burning to know about my mom that made me itch with need.

  Garrett woke and showered an hour later and he found me still sitting at the table, all files pushed aside and my hands wrapped around my third coffee.

  “At the table, are we?” he joked.

  “Yes, we’re high-class now. You’ll have to drink your coffee with your pinky out.”

  As he bent to kiss me I noticed him scan the table and see the obvious way I’d pushed the papers and stacked them.

  “Looking for stuff about your mom?” He walked over to pour himself some coffee.

  “Ted,” I replied. “Tell me about you meeting Ted at Big Al’s in Blaine. Katie was working there. She saw you. She described Ted so I know it was him.” The words came out biting and the tone was accusing even though I hadn’t meant it to be so I softened it a bit, adding, “Please.”

  He pulled a chair up next to mine and reached for my hand. “When did you see Katie?”

  “I ran into her at a burger joint where she works.”

  “Can’t imagine her flipping burgers.”

  “Yeah, well, apparently she wants to flip burgers but only gets to take out the trash.” I reached over and tugged on his baby finger. “Remember we’re fancy now so you have to drink with your pinky out.”

  He laughed and elaborately brought his mug to his lips in a pseudo-posh way that made us both chuckle.

  “To answer your question, I’m not hiding anything from you that would keep you from finding your mother. I’m not the bad guy here.” He put his coffee mug down. “Yes, I met with Ted. It was to do with this case but, yes, since I knew he once was together with your mother I did ask about her. He chose to meet at that diner. Said he was meeting a friend up that way. How was it seeing Katie?”

  I filled him in on seeing her the first time after finding Ron Low and about seeking her out a second time at the burger place to get more information about Ron.

  “It must be hard seeing her,” he said softly.

  I thought about that.

  “Sad.” I sighed. “It just makes me feel sad. For both of us.”

  He nodded in understanding and we both sat there quietly until our phones chimed in unison. We looked at each other and snatched up our phones, realizing the notification was the alarm system at the house.

  A spider had built an elaborate web across the camera lens at the back patio door and was scurrying back and forth across the camera. We burst out laughing.

  “First an attack rabbit and now I’m under spider siege.”

  We had a good giggle about it. It would be a perfect moment to bring up how much I hated him keeping such close tabs on me but laughing was a great way to end my overnight stay and so I just left it. I figured that once I was done with this Ava case, things would settle down and I’d look at having him either take down the cameras or remove the app from his phone. Garrett headed off to work to do federal agent things and Wookie and I climbed into my Jeep to go and do my kind of finding the dead things.

  Traffic was bad because it was always bad on I-5. Wookie bounded back and forth in the rear seat, antsy to be done with the ride, and I felt the same way. I tuned the radio to a news report that stated there’d been an accident but it had been cleared so traffic should begin to lighten. That meant it would lighten up by tomorrow long after I was done with this stretch of road. Next up was an update on the case of a teenage boy who’d taken his boat out fishing at Blackmans Lake. The boat had been discovered capsized yesterday but there was no sign of the boy. The sheriff’s office had been out since daylight and was using six divers but the lack of visibility in the murky water was a huge obstacle. They could only see less than two feet beneath its inky depths at most.

  I did not make a specific plan to drive to Blackmans Lake. That part of the state was nearly an hour past my place so not exactly on the way. However, before I knew it I was on my way there.

  I pulled up next to the sheriff’s vehicle on the stretch of the parking lot next to the boat ramp. I unloaded the bag that contained my rods and snapped a leash on Wookie.

  “Sorry ma’am,” an officer said as I approached the boat launch. “We’re not allowing anyone near the lake today because—”

  “I know why.” I handed him a creased business card that I’d dug out of my bag. “Can you give this to whoever’s heading up the search? Chances are they know me.”

  He looked at the gray business card with www.DivineReunions.com in raised purple lettering and frowned. “Wait here.”

  Wookie pulled me off to the edge of the bushes that banked the lot. He was anxious to repeatedly leave his mark on this new-to-him forested area. He was just peeing on his second or third bush when one of the divers approached and called me by name.

  “Julie!” He waved and slowly walked over, his shoulders slumped with fatigue. “I didn’t know you’d been asked to help.”

  “I haven’t been asked but I was kind of in the neighborhood.”

  “Well, that’s great. Need all the help we can get.” He nodded toward the lake behind him. “Boat was found with all the life jackets still in or around it so, you know, this is definitely a recovery job and we could use you. You want to try by boat or walk around?”

  The water looked calm so I suggested he take me out by boat and asked if someone was available to keep an eye on Wookie.

  We climbed in the boat and pushed away from the launch area and I prepared my dowsing rods. As soon as I pulled them from the bag I was fully aware of the eyes of law enforcement watching me from the bank as well as hard stares of the red-eyed and weary c
lutch of people nearby who were no doubt family. The boat skimmed ever so slowly across the water and I only half listened to the voices of the two other divers on board as they showed me the areas they already checked and complained about the murky waters of the lake. I was focused only on the rods in my hands.

  The hot sun baked my head but a cool pine breeze breathed release on my neck. It was a beautiful, peaceful spot but all water was murderous if given a chance and a fool without a life jacket. It took less than ten minutes for my dowsing rods to cross over and make a distinct X at a reedy bend in the lake.

  “Here!” I shouted.

  The others in the boat donned their gear. Minutes later the divers dragged the lifeless body of a teenage boy from the gray water of the lake, and the anguished, heartrending cries from a woman on the shore shattered the morning quiet.

  Chapter Nine

  I didn’t want to stick around as officials dealt with the distressed family and the body. My job was done and as soon as we returned to the boat launch I climbed out and headed over to the officer who had Wookie.

  “Thanks.” I took the leash from his hand and he walked with me toward my Jeep.

  “Are you kidding? Thank you. We could’ve been looking for that boy forever in that lake.”

  “Well, until he floated to the surface anyway,” I pointed out. “I just sped things up a bit.”

  The woman’s loud, racking sobs echoed across the lake and hurt my heart.

  I loaded up Wookie then climbed into the driver seat but the officer was still talking so I rolled down the window.

  “How do you do that thing you do with those metal sticks?”

  “If you have the knack they’ll help you find water.”

  Gramps said that the first time he gave me rods to use. He’d taken me out of the house to keep me away from Grandma, who was on a particularly vicious rage that morning, and my body already bore the welts of her wrath.

  “I don’t know how they work,” I told the officer, which was the absolute truth. I reached for a water bottle in my cup holder and took a long drink. It was warm but it was wet and my dry throat was grateful.

 

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