All Shook Up
Page 24
Through the screen door he saw Sophie, Ben, and Tate standing on the porch.
“Hey,” he said in surprise. “What’s up?” It was the middle of the morning and he was scheduled to be out with the gardening crew, which he assumed they knew. So what had brought Dru’s family here?
Dru’s family. His heart kicked hard against the wall of his chest and he snapped straight-backed. “Is it Dru?” He shoved the door wide and took a tense step out onto the porch. “Has she been hurt—”
“Dru’s fine, son,” Ben said.
Sophie looked stricken and said, “Oh, darling, no.”
She reached out to squeeze his forearm. “I’m so sorry,” she added contritely. “We certainly didn’t intend to scare you.”
“Yeah, we just came to getcha because they’re bringing in the canoe,” Tate said excitedly.
“What?” He’d heard the words perfectly clearly; he was just having a difficult time changing mental gears. Drawing several deep breaths to get his heart rate back down where it belonged, he said more calmly, “Someone found my canoe?”
“A couple of the lifeguards had today off and decided to amuse themselves diving for it,” Ben explained. “It didn’t present much of a challenge, apparently, since the bow had surfaced, but they called a minute ago to tell me they’re towing it to our dock. We thought you’d like to be there to check it out.”
The depth with which J.D. wanted exactly that took him by surprise, and he took an eager step forward, ready to go. Then he remembered his errand and halted. “Damn. I can’t. I’ve got to get back to work.”
“One of the perks of being an owner, son, is that you get to take an hour off here and there when something important comes up.”
“Yeah, and I’d do it in a minute, too. Except one of the riding lawn mowers quit cutting properly, and the supervisor assigned me to take the blade assembly in to be sharpened at a place called McCready’s.”
“I’ll take it,” Sophie volunteered. “You go with Ben and I’ll run the assembly into town.”
Yes! His first inclination was to make a headlong dash for the dock, but the pesky sense of fair play that Edwina had instilled in him dictated that he offer her an opportunity to change her mind. “You sure?”
“Yes. I think it’s more important that you check out your canoe than it is for me to see it.”
“Thanks, Sophie. Do you know how to drive a stick shift?”
“Sure. It’s been a while, but I cut my teeth driving my father’s pickup truck, and that’s not a skill one ever forgets.”
“If you don’t mind taking my car, then, I’ve already loaded the blades in the trunk. No, hell, what am I thinking?” Disappointment weighed heavily as he took a step back and shoved his hands in his jeans pockets. “You can’t carry it into the shop. The assembly’s not particularly heavy, but all those blades are darn awkward—not to mention greasy.”
“I’m not helpless, J.D.,” Sophie snapped. “And I respond to soap and water every bit as well as you do.” Then the short-tempered impatience left her expression. “Sorry.”
“Grandma, you having a menopause moment?” Tate asked, leaning against her side.
She gave him a one-arm hug. “No, darling. Much as it pains me to admit this, sometimes I just have plain old, garden-variety cranky moments.” She turned a gentle smile on J.D. “Mike McCready will give me a hand. You run along with Ben. Tate, would you like to ride into town with me?”
“Huh-uh. I wanna go with Grandpa and J.D.”
“All right, then.” She kissed his forehead, looking past him to J.D. “Where are your keys, dear?”
J.D. fetched them and walked her out to the car. “It has power brakes and steering, and the rest is pretty standard,” he said. “Actually, for an old car, it’s amazingly free of quirks. Ignore the gas gauge, though; it’ll read ‘Empty,’ but it’s not. The gauge has been broken for as long as I’ve had the car, so I always keep the tank filled.”
Sophie slid in and started the car, holding the accelerator down briefly and making the engine roar. She gave him a cheeky grin, buckled up, and familiarized herself with the Mustang’s controls. Then she put it in reverse and carefully backed out of his slot. With a wave at the three males, she slid the stick shift into first gear and drove down the road.
“Let’s go!” Tate said the moment the car disappeared from view, and he raced back around the cabin.
As they headed out after him, J.D. looked over at Ben. “Thanks,” he said. When Ben regarded him questioningly, he added, “For coming to get me. I appreciate it.”
“No problem. You deserve to know the reason your canoe sank like that. If it was my boat, I’d sure as hell want to know why.”
“Yeah, I do want to know. I didn’t realize how much until you told me someone had brought it up.” Hands thrust in his pockets, he rolled his shoulders uncomfortably. “I owe you.”
“Good.” Ben reached into his chest pocket and fished out a cigarette. “Then you won’t bitch if I light up before we catch up with Tate.”
“Hell, I don’t owe you that much.”
Ben laughed and lit up, moving downwind.
Tate and two young men in wet suits were on the dock when J.D. and Ben arrived. One of the divers was securing his rowboat to a piling while Tate peppered him with questions. The other hauled in the line they’d used to tow J.D.’s canoe. J.D. stepped up to help him lift the boat out of the water and they carefully set it, bottom up, on the dock.
He thanked the two young men and shook their hands, then turned his attention to the canoe while Ben talked with them. Squatting on his heels mid-thwart, he stroked his hand over the canoe’s curved side.
The boat was a little waterlogged, but in surprisingly good condition for having been underwater twenty-four hours. He rolled it over to examine its length.
The cedar was so swollen from having been immersed that he couldn’t visibly locate a problem area, and after several moments of searching, he blew out a frustrated breath and tipped the boat back over. Then, starting at the stern, he kneaded his fingers along the keel line.
“Found anything yet?” Dru’s voice caused J.D. to start in surprise, and he looked up to see her stepping onto the dock.
She walked over and gave his shoulder a squeeze. “Uncle Ben called to let me know Jake and Collin had brought your canoe up. Have you learned anything to help you figure out why it sank?”
“Not yet.” He went back to palpating the keel line inch by inch, aware of her moving off to greet Tate and her uncle. Aware, too, of a warmth that spread throughout his chest at the steadfast support shown by this confusing Lawrence family.
The wood beneath his two middle fingers suddenly depressed, and J.D. backed up and kneaded the area again. He felt definite sponginess, and a smear of candy-apple red paint rubbed off in a tacky curl beneath the press of his fingertips. “What the hell?” he murmured.
“Find something, son?” Ben squatted down across the canoe from him.
“Yeah, but I’m not sure what.” He felt a little farther along the keel line. “Damn, here’s another one.” He rubbed at the new spot with his fingers and paint scrubbed away there, too. “I wish I had my tool belt on me. I could use a knife or a chisel.”
Ben fished a pocketknife out of his khakis and handed it over. “Will this help?”
“Yes. Thanks.” He glanced up at Dru as she joined her uncle, then extracted a blade and began scraping the paint away from the first area.
“What is it, J.D.?” Tate demanded, pressing against his back to peer over his shoulder.
“I’m still trying to figure that out. Back up a little, will you, buddy? You’re casting a shadow.”
“But I wanna—”
“Tate, back up,” Dru said firmly. “Come around to our side. You can still see what’s going on, but you won’t block J.D.’s light from over here.”
J.D.’s gut churned uneasily as he cleared a patch of paint away from the first site. Hoping his suspicions were
wrong, he moved up to the other depression he’d located and scraped the paint away from there, too. Then, swearing under his breath, he sat back on his heels.
“What is it, son?”
J.D. met Ben’s gaze across the width of the boat. “It’s subtle, but it sure looks as if these leaks were deliberately carved between the ribs here and here”—he pointed out the spots with the tip of Ben’s knife—“and then painted over.”
“The hell you say. You think someone’s deliberately—?”
“Yeah, and there are probably more, because I remember the water coming up through the bottom in several places.”
“Why would anyone want to hurt your boat, son?”
J.D. shrugged, because it didn’t make sense. Yet he was still uneasy, and his gut urged him to go with his instincts.
“Okay, let me put it this way,” Ben said. “Why would anyone want to hurt you?”
J.D. stilled, thinking of the Lankovich trial and Robbie Lankovich’s threats. For some reason, his thoughts then segued to his car, and to—
“Shit!” He surged to his feet and stared at Ben in horror. “Sophie!”
23
Ben swore too, then said, “My car is closest.” The two men took off at a dead run for the switchback trail up to Ben and Sophie’s house.
Dru and Tate ran behind them, although she didn’t have the first idea what was going on. What about Sophie? she longed to demand, but she was conscious of her son well within earshot as he raced along the trail ahead of her.
Ben headed straight for his Buick when they reached the garage, but J.D. put out a hand to stop him. “If my car suffered a failure of any kind, we might need some basic equipment for a rescue. You’ve got a well-stocked garage and workshop—help me find what I need.”
It took only moments for them to do so and to throw the gathered items into the trunk. Then all four of them piled into the car and Ben cranked the engine over and rapidly reversed the car out of the garage. Slamming the gearshift into drive, he turned and roared off down the road.
When they took the first curve on what felt like two wheels, J.D. reached across and gripped Ben’s arm. “Slow down,” he ordered firmly. “You won’t do Sophie any good if you end up wrapping your car around a tree.”
From the backseat Dru heard her uncle take a deep breath and blow it out. The car slowed to a more reasonable speed as he let up on the gas.
Leaning forward between the men, she sank her fingernails into J.D.’s hard shoulder and demanded, “What’s going on?”
His face was carefully expressionless when he turned to face her, but she saw the uneasiness in his eyes, and her anxiety escalated tenfold. J.D. wasn’t the type to worry unnecessarily.
“It looks as if someone sabotaged my canoe,” he said flatly. “And if they did that, it stands to reason they might have messed with my car, too.”
“Why?” she demanded in outrage, but then immediately waved the question aside. “Never mind that for now. What does it have to do with Aunt Sophie?”
“Your aunt drove my car to town.” Succinctly, he explained why she’d done so.
When he’d finished, Ben took his gaze off the twisty road long enough to shoot a rapid glance at J.D. “Dru asked a valid question,” he said. “Who would want to sink your boat or sabotage your car?”
“I’ve been racking my brain over that very question, and the only person who comes to mind is Robbie Lankovich,” J.D. said.
“The guy you sent to jail? His kid, right? The one who considers himself a wise guy?”
“Yeah. When I blew the whistle on Lankovich senior, Robbie made a lot of threats. Idle threats, I thought at the time.”
Then he swore beneath his breath and hunched in on himself. “This doesn’t make sense. If Robbie had wanted to get me out of the way, it would have been a helluva lot smarter to attempt it before his old man came up for trial. But that’s pretty much Robbie all over: he’s such an ineffectual fu—screwup—you can discount three-quarters of what he says.” Arms folded across his chest and hands tucked into his armpits as if he were cold, he said, “Still, he’s a crazy son of a bitch—and the only person I can think of who might have a grudge against me.”
Dru glanced over at Tate, who had been unnaturally quiet, and saw him sitting tensely, straining against the shoulder harness that held him in his seat as he stared out the window.
Suddenly he grew alert. “Grandpa! There’s J.D.’s car!” Then he grew still. “Oh, man,” he whispered. “That’s not good.”
Dru’s stomach gave a lurch. Dear God. It looked as if Sophie had tried to turn onto a cutoff road, but had taken the last sharp curve too widely to make the turn. The car had overshot the cutoff and listed crookedly off the shoulder just beyond. The front tire on the driver’s side had gone clear over the verge, and the back tire had nearly done the same. Sophie sat stock-still clutching the steering wheel, seemingly frozen by the sight of the hillside that dropped steeply away just outside her window.
Ben swore softly beneath his breath, but J.D. said in a cool, commanding tone, “Pull up behind her, but stay off the shoulder so you don’t disturb anything that might shake loose.”
Then he turned and pinned his gaze on Dru and Tate. “I need both of you to remain very quiet and to stay away from the Mustang until we’ve pulled your aunt to safety. Can you do that?”
Dru said, “Yes, of course.” Eyes huge, Tate stared at J.D. and nodded.
“Good.”
Everyone climbed out of the car as soon as Ben shoved the gearshift into park and yanked up the emergency brake. Then he headed directly to the Mustang to assure Sophie they’d soon have her out of there. Dru wrapped her arm around her son and, stoically resisting the siren voice within that urged her to race over there to add her reassurances, started to lead him across the road. J.D.’s voice calling her name halted her.
“I know you want to help,” he said, striding up to them. He thrust out a handful of flares. “So maybe you could set these up for me around the bend. Hopefully they’ll slow down anyone speeding down the hill, which will prevent us from compounding our problems.”
Tate’s face lit up at the prospect of something constructive to do, and Dru suspected her own expression mirrored her son’s. She accepted the flares and Ben’s disposable lighter, then rose on her tiptoes to give J.D. a quick peck on the lips. “Thanks.”
It didn’t take her and Tate long to position and activate the flares above the sharp curve. They returned to see J.D., lying on his back with a metal hook gripped in one hand, wriggle his way beneath the Mustang’s back end. The hook was attached to a length of chain that disappeared beneath Ben’s Buick.
Dru’s breath caught in her throat as she watched. The car was in an extremely precarious position. She was almost afraid to expel the air in her lungs, for it seemed as if one strong exhalation might send the Mustang crushing down on top of J.D.’s chest or tumbling over the hillside, sweeping him and Aunt Sophie along with it.
J.D. was equally aware of the Mustang’s insecure grip on the mountainside. But if it took him out before he could hook the chain to the car’s axle, it was no more than he deserved for putting Sophie in danger. He sucked in a deep breath and focused on his task. It went without a hitch, and a moment later he crawled out from under the car and signaled to Ben, who returned to the driver’s seat of the Buick.
“Okay,” J.D. called, pushing to his feet. “Take it nice and slow.” Bending, he looked through the passenger window at Sophie. “When you feel the tires grab the road, turn the steering wheel to the left,” he instructed her. “We’ll have you out of there in two shakes.”
She stared at him with tension-widened eyes and tipped her chin infinitesimally to acknowledge that she’d heard.
Ben reversed the Buick at an angle across the road, and the chain between the two cars rose up off the ground and grew taut. Gravel crunched beneath the Mustang’s back tire as it inched away from the verge. The front tire spun uselessly in space for seve
ral stomach-dropping moments, but then caught on the shoulder and grabbed. Sophie followed J.D.’s instructions.
Ben didn’t stop the Buick until the Mustang was well away from the edge of the drop-off and back on the road. Then, with a shout, he jumped out of the car and raced to his wife as J.D. assisted her from his car.
Ben swung Sophie into his arms and held her fiercely. A moment later he pushed her back far enough to peer into her face. “Are you all right?” he demanded. Instead of waiting for an answer, however, he immediately jerked her back in his arms and pressed his cheek against the top of her head. “Jesus, I was scared,” he confessed. His grip on her tightened further. “It feels so good to hold you. Are you all right?”
“Yes. No. I’m not sure.” Near-hysterical laughter escaped her. “I still don’t know exactly what happened, Ben…but for a while there, I thought I was dead for sure.” Her teeth chattered and she pressed herself nearer, as if to absorb as much of her husband’s body heat as possible. “Everything was okay when I set out, but then the engine started to cough and cut out, and suddenly it just plain quit—there was no power at all. The steering and brakes barely functioned, and it was like trying to maneuver a hippo with sheer muscle power.” Her shivering increased and she burrowed closer, clutching Ben’s sides. “Ah, God, don’t let me go, okay? I was so scared.”
Dru and Tate threw themselves into the huddle, and J.D. watched the family hug and kiss and touch for a moment before he turned away to disengage the chain from the two cars. He tossed it in the trunk of the Buick, then moved Ben’s car out of the road in case a vehicle suddenly came whipping around the curve. Once it was safely to the side of the road, he walked over to his own car to see if he could determine what had caused it to lose power.
It didn’t take him long—Sophie’s description of the way it had coughed and cut out made him check the gas tank first thing. It was empty, with no discernible leak.
The group hug broke up, and with an arm slung around Sophie’s shoulder, Ben urged her toward their car. “Let’s get you home,” he said gruffly. He turned to J.D. “Did you get a handle on what happened?”