The Last Breath
Page 1
THE
LAST
BREATH
Also by Danny Lopez
The Last Girl
THE
LAST
BREATH
A DEXTER VEGA MYSTERY
DANNY LOPEZ
Copyright © 2018 by Danny Lopez
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, places, and incidents either are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, businesses, locales, or persons living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
ISBN 978-1-60809-297-0
Published in the United States of America by Oceanview Publishing Sarasota, Florida
www.oceanviewpub.com
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
To all who enjoy the beach
CONTENTS
CHAPTER 1
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 3
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 5
CHAPTER 6
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 8
CHAPTER 9
CHAPTER 10
CHAPTER 11
CHAPTER 12
CHAPTER 13
CHAPTER 14
CHAPTER 15
CHAPTER 16
CHAPTER 17
CHAPTER 18
CHAPTER 19
CHAPTER 20
CHAPTER 21
CHAPTER 22
CHAPTER 23
CHAPTER 24
CHAPTER 25
CHAPTER 26
CHAPTER 27
CHAPTER 28
CHAPTER 29
CHAPTER 30
CHAPTER 31
CHAPTER 32
CHAPTER 33
CHAPTER 34
CHAPTER 35
CHAPTER 36
CHAPTER 37
THE
LAST
BREATH
CHAPTER 1
I WAS DRINKING with Rachel Mann at Charley Copek’s new brewery, the soon-to-be-famous Blind Pass Brewing just off Stickney Point Bridge, east of Siesta Key. What we’d planned as a fun summer evening in the brewery’s new tasting room was a bust. The gang of Seminole Indians from Lee County that Copek had hired to build the chickee hut left early without finishing the job. The parking lot was a mess of dry Palmetto palm fronds and lumber. So Copek put us in a corner of the antiseptic warehouse where we sat on a pair of white plastic Walmart chairs surrounded by big stainless-steel vats full of Charley’s famous Siesta IPA.
At least the beer was free.
Despite a nice buzz, I was miserable. Money had come in, and it had gone out. For the last few weeks I’d been fishing in an empty pond. I was broke.
“If I don’t get a gig soon,” I complained, seeking a little sympathy from Rachel, “I’m gonna have to start liquidating my record collection.”
“You know what your problem is?” She pointed at me with her glass. It was obvious Rachel had had it with my whining. She was full of herself since she’d hooked up with her old girlfriend, Dana, the guitar player for the Funky Donkeys, a Goth with an attitude who had a day job with the Sarasota Medical Examiner’s Office. She was feeling mighty powerful under the influence of Copek’s magic brew. “You don’t know how to function in a freelance economy,” she said. “You get money, you spend money.”
“I got expenses.”
She shook her head, took a long drink of beer. “I’ve been doing this all my life, Dexter. When you’re not getting a paycheck every two weeks, you gotta build a slush for the dry spells. When it rains it pours, buddy. But when it don’t—”
I raised my eyes, gave her a little grin. “My life’s a goddamn desert.”
She drained her glass, tilting her head all the way back. “Welcome to another Dexter Vega pity party.”
It was true. Rachel had me pegged. She’d been trying to help me ever since I was laid off from the paper, telling me how to freelance, save my money, nagging me about that kind of shit. I guess I wasn’t listening.
She ambled over to the keg Copek had set out for us in a big tub of ice, refilled her glass.
“Look here,” she said, leaning against the keg. “If you hate it here so much, why don’t you leave? Do a national search. There’s gotta be something somewhere.”
I shook my head and stared down at my beer. I complained about Florida, but I didn’t want to leave. Sure, I had my issues with Sarasota. The town and I were like an old couple constantly quarreling about noise ordinances, or the expensive restaurants downtown, or all the new condo buildings that were sprouting like weeds around the bay.
But Sarasota was home.
And despite being a sleepy coastal town where nothing happened—things were happening. I just had to look at Charley Copek—bald with a long red beard, a huge barrel chest, and a belly to match, looked like a goddamn Viking. Two years ago, he was selling storm windows and brewing malt liquor in the garage of his home in Gulf Gate. Now he was a big shot in our local microbrew scene and was drawing a paycheck for himself doing exactly what he loved in little sleepy Sarasota.
If he could do it, so could I.
But hanging out behind the scenes at Blind Pass Brewing sounded more glamorous than it was. The place stank of bleach and yeast, and the fluorescents made us look dead. And Charley wasn’t even drinking with us. He was holed inside his little office crunching numbers and freaking out about his unfinished webpage.
“Life’s expensive no matter where you live,” I said doing what I did best: make excuses. “I had to fix the sewer line and the AC. It’s like everything breaks when you’re broke.”
“You should rent.”
“In this town? I couldn’t afford a place like mine for what I pay in the mortgage.”
“True.”
“I swear …”
Rachel took her seat, poured half her beer into my glass. “You know what my Uncle Herbert used to say?”
“You really had an Uncle Herbert?”
“Either shit or get off the pot,” she said.
Yeah, I got the message loud and clear. When I had money, I sat around and loafed like a college dropout. When the money ran out, I panicked. It happened every time. Rachel was right. I had to take action. And I had to take it now.
I slept on it.
* * *
The following morning, despite a mild hangover, I did what Rachel’s Uncle Herbert suggested. I sat at my desk and stared at the screen of my laptop. I had two items on my to-do list: pitch story ideas to possible clients and write copy for Charley Copek’s website. But that was a freebie—sort of. And I’d been stuck from the moment he got me drunk with that delicious new IPA with a twist of grapefruit and honey. He said if I wrote him a catchy slogan for Blind Pass Brewing and a few seductive paragraphs that would give people a sense of our low-key lifestyle in Siesta Beach, he’d give me a case whenever I wanted.
But I was blocked.
Short and brief wasn’t my thing. I tried a few phrases, turned them every which way. Dull. Dull. Dull.
My mind wandered. I glanced out the window. The old house that had occupied the lot catty-corner from my place since the early twenties was bulldozed a few months ago. A developer had cleared the land and was getting ready to start work on yet another condo building. I had attended the city council meetings with some of my neighbors arguing against the project, citing the history and character of our little downtown neighborhood. But the developer got his way. In S
arasota, they always did.
Surveyors had staked out the land prepping for a nine-story monstrosity that would cast a permanent shadow on my little cracker house. Pre-construction prices were a steal at $750K for a one-bedroom unit with a view of the parking lot of another condo on Ringling Boulevard.
The land was marked with little orange flags. At the corner of the lot was a big sign with a fancy logo for “The Majestic,” by Dieter & Waxler. Luxury downtown living with exquisite views of Sarasota Bay. Sold exclusively by Alex J. Trainor, Real Estate. Across the sign like a strip of yellow police crime scene tape with big block letters, it read: 90 Percent Sold!
The shit made me sick. It didn’t even have a foundation and it was almost sold out.
I turned my eyes back to the computer screen. I had nothing. Just a few sleepy sentences that lacked punch.
But then magic struck. I sent Copek an email suggesting he hold a contest to see who can come up with the best slogan for the beer. Make a party out of it. The winner gets a case of Siesta Key IPA.
I was off the hook, at least temporarily. Now I just needed to write a couple of paragraphs about our beachy lifestyle. Problem was, I lived less than five miles from Siesta Beach but hadn’t been there in months. What was a beach lifestyle like anyway?
I set that project aside. I needed to focus on getting work that paid. I switched gears, got busy pitching editors. Problem was, I was in the wrong profession at the wrong time. No one paid writers anymore. Everyone wanted free articles or an exchange of services. Eight hundred words for a burger—as if.
But there was something else bugging me: my daughter, Zoe. Last Sunday we’d been on the phone making plans for her next visit, and the whole conversation had gotten away from me. I was all riled up because my ex-wife had hooked up with some oil tycoon in Houston, and they were living high on the hog. They were going to Paris for a week. I had to offer Zoe something awesome.
By the time we hung up the phone, I’d had a few tequilas and had promised her a week at an all-inclusive in Punta Cana, Dominican Republic.
Cheap—but not so cheap.
I followed Rachel’s suggestion. I went through all my old emails and made a list of clients. Then I wrote out a few story ideas and sent them out to everyone on the list.
Three days later I got nothing. Not even a thank you for thinking of us.
Finally, I swallowed my pride and called the editor of Sarasota City Magazine to pitch a story on people who adopt racing grey-hounds for pets in order to save them from the slaughterhouse.
“I’m terribly sorry, Dexter,” she said in her usual superior tone. “We just put the summer issue to bed. Why don’t we talk in August and come up with something truly fabulous for the fall.”
“My summer’s looking pretty sad,” I admitted. “You need any editing, restaurant reviews? Anything?”
“It’s summer. You know how it is.”
Summer in Sarasota: hot and humid and wet and very dead. Businesses closed, restaurants reduced their hours. Tourists and snowbirds, that’s what we lived for. When it wasn’t “season,” we didn’t exist.
“Listen,” she said breaking the static. “I’m sure we’ll have something when season picks up.”
“That’s November.”
“I wish I could—wait a sec. I have an idea. It’s not writing, but I think it might be right up your alley.”
“Go on.”
“Last weekend I was at a fund-raising event at the Ritz-Carlton and I was talking to Bob Fleming. Do you know Bob?”
“I don’t think so.”
“Oh, a dear of a man. Real sweet—and very wealthy. He used to manage a hedge fund in New York. Anyway, apparently his son passed away in a bizarre accident.”
“I’m sorry to hear that.”
“Yes. Well, it turns out Bob’s not happy with the police report.”
“How do you mean?”
“Well, he said something about hiring a private investigator to look into what really happened.”
“I’m not a detective,” I said. “I’m not licensed.”
“The case is closed. He’s got the police report. Hold on a sec.” There was a brief pause. I could hear the clacking of her manicured fingernails on a computer keyboard. Then she was back. “Sorry about that. Okay. Where was I?”
“This guy Fleming wants someone to look into his son’s death.”
“Oh, yes. Bob. He’s older, well into his seventies, I believe. And not in the best shape, but a real sweet guy. You’d like him. Anyway, I think he just wants proper closure. It was his only son.”
“So what happened?”
“It was in the paper.”
I glanced at the stack of unread Sarasota Herald newspapers next to my recycling bin. “I don’t read the paper. Ethical reasons.”
She laughed at that, then said, “He drowned while kayaking on the Intracoastal.”
“What’s so bizarre about that?”
“He was fit, twenty-seven. Calm waters …”
“So? It can happen.”
“Apparently it did,” she said quickly. “Look, I can give you Bob’s number and maybe you two can come to an arrangement. You get a little paid work, and he finds the closure he’s seeking.”
“Yeah, a win-win,” I said reluctantly. It sounded simple enough. But the truth jabbed at my gut: nothing’s ever simple.
CHAPTER 2
BOB FLEMING AGREED to see me right away. I put on a pressed shirt and drove out to his mansion in the Sanderling Club, a vintage, mega-exclusive gated community on Siesta Key where every property is worth millions. And if that wasn’t enough, you still had to pay over three thousand bucks a month in homeowner fees, plus a 20K club membership. In return, you got a pleasant and safe neighborhood that felt like old Florida with Gulf views, a lagoon at the back, and a small private beach between Point of Rocks and Turtle Beach. No riff-raff, no tourists, no traffic, no hassle. It was paradise—as intended—with just a dash of snob.
Fleming’s place was on the Gulf side of the road, just past the community beach and the cool-looking fifties cabanas. There was nothing tropical about the house. It was a large, two-story traditional Georgian Revival with a red brick facade and white columns at the entrance. It looked as if it had been plucked out of McLean, Virginia, and dropped on the side of the ocean. In the driveway was a crisp white Maserati Grand Turismo. Sweet.
A small, elderly Latino lady in a maid’s uniform opened the door and led me into a living room that screamed conservative Republican: tall ceiling with elaborate crown moldings, the standard red brick fireplace surrounded by a pair of ghastly flower-patterned Chippendale sofas, a love seat, and two hard-back chairs on a Persian rug that covered most of the hardwood floor in that part of the room. On the other side was another, more comfortable-looking furniture arrangement, which also seemed to be the one that got more use. And just past it were pane windows and two sets of French doors that led out to a screened, covered patio, the pool, and then the deep aqua of the Gulf of Mexico as a backyard.
“Dexter Vega.” A pudgy man in khaki pants and a light blue Polo shirt with the collar turned up came into the living room from a doorway at the opposite end from the fireplace. He looked to be in his late sixties, and he fit the house perfectly: trim whitish-blond hair, sad blue eyes, and a red nose and heavy jowls. He looked like the kind of man who’d never suffered a day in his life. I could tell he was a drinker. And now that he’d gotten old, the good life was taking a toll on him.
His handshake was firm, but his flesh soft. He introduced himself as if everyone in the world knew who he was. “Bob Fleming.” Then he took a deep breath, straightened his back, and added, “I appreciate you coming on such short notice.”
He didn’t invite me to sit. Instead, he stared at the scar in my ear for a moment longer than was polite, took my arm, and led me to the foot of the stairs. A large formal painting of a family hung on a wall beside the stairs. It had its own special light that was attached to the top of the
elaborate gold leaf frame illuminating the canvas.
He pointed at the young Bob Fleming in the painting: slim, blond, smiling. Sitting next to him was a pretty blond lady in a long, dark dress and a nicely groomed preppy child about ten years old. The painting was a trophy, a picture of success.
“Liam was my only child,” he said. “My wife says I’m delusional thinking that it was something more than an accident, but I’m just not convinced.”
“Why’s that?”
“In here.” He tapped his chest with a stubby index finger, his gold Rolex catching a glint from the light atop the painting. “It just feels wrong.”
“No, your wife,” I said. “Why does she think you’re delusional?” “Liam’s my son from my first marriage. She doesn’t have any children.”
“But she knew Liam.”
“Of course. But he was at the University of Florida when I met and married Brandy.”
“Did they get along?”
His glassy blue eyes searched my face, probably trying to decide whether I was kidding. “The point, Mr. Vega, is that Liam was a competitive swimmer in high school. He went out on his kayak just about every day. It doesn’t seem right that he drowned. Not like that. Not in that backwater. The Intracoastal is dead calm.”
I didn’t know what he wanted me to give him. If the cops had looked into it, and they had declared it was an accident, then that was probably what it was.
Fleming tapped my arm and gestured to the living room. “What do you say we have a drink?”
I followed him. “I don’t know that I can do any better than the cops. And I’d hate to set you up for disappointment.”
He led me to a small bar situated between the kitchen and the dining room and opening up to the living room. I could hear the maid doing something in the kitchen. “Marta,” Fleming called, “two glasses with ice.”
I heard the ice dispenser doing its thing somewhere in the kitchen. Fleming grabbed a bottle of Grey Goose and removed the cap. The maid came with the glasses on a tray and set it on the counter. Fleming gave her a quick smile and she went back into the kitchen.