The Internet … Where you could learn everything from making a fertilizer bomb to baking a cherry pie to celebrate after you’d blown up your designated target.
O’Neil consulted his file. ‘No video cameras in the area. Solitude Creek’s too shallow for serious boating but in any case I didn’t get any hits in canvassing for fishermen. And no stolen kayaks or canoes.’ He’d had the same idea as she.
Her phone dinged: a text from TJ. The Serrano case. She typed, ‘
‘I get “church”. As in: “It’s true.” And also “It’s a thing.”’
‘“Thing”?’
Dance was going to tell him that she’d first heard the expression when Maggie was talking to her friend Bethany on the phone and she’d said, ‘Yeah, Mom and Jon, it’s like a thing.’ She instead told the detective: ‘Means, I think, it’s a phenomenon. More than what it seems. Significant.’
She wondered if he sensed the stumble and the overexplanation.
O’Neil said, ‘“Thing”. Better than “phenomenon”. I’d worry that crept into my kids’ vocabulary.’
Dance laughed.
Michael O’Neil wasn’t a chatterer. This was, for him, rambling.
Dance glanced down to the crime-scene file. She said, ‘Oh, wanted to mention: Sorry we had to cancel the fishing.’
O’Neil lived for his boat, which he’d pilot out into Monterey Bay once a week at least. He often took his own children and Dance’s. She herself had been a few times but her inner ear and waves were bad co-conspirators. If the Dramamine and patch didn’t kick in, she’d end up hanging over the side, unpleasant for all involved. And the trip would be cut short. They’d talked about having a day on the water last weekend but before plans had been firmed up she and Boling had decided to take the children to San Francisco. Dance had not told O’Neil the reason they’d canceled. She suspected he’d guessed. But he didn’t ask.
They talked for a few minutes about their children, plans for spring break. Dance mentioned Maggie’s forthcoming talent show at school.
‘She playing violin?’
Maggie’s instrument. She was far more musical than her mother, who was comfortable with a guitar but didn’t have the ear for a fretless fingerboard. Dance told him, ‘No, she’s singing.’
O’Neil said, ‘She’s got a great voice. Remember, I took them to
‘She’s doing that song from
‘“Let It Go”. I know that one too.’ Being a single parent with custody could take the edge off the hardest major-crimes detective. Then O’Neil, studying her: ‘What’s wrong?’
Dance realized she’d been frowning. ‘She’s uneasy about the talent show. Usually you can’t keep her offstage but, for this, she’s reluctant.’
‘She ever sung before in public?’
‘Yep. A dozen times. And her voice’s never been better. I was going to start her in lessons but all of a sudden she decided she didn’t want to. It’s funny. They whipsaw, you know, their moods. For a while Wes was depressed and Maggie was flitting around like Bella. Happy as could be. Now it’s the other way round.’ She explained that it might be a post-traumatic reaction to her husband’s death.
He said softly, ‘I know Bill died around this time of year.’
O’Neil had known Bill Swenson well; they’d worked together occasionally.
‘I’ve thought of that. But when kids want to stonewall …’
O’Neil, whose children were close in age to Maggie, said, ‘Don’t I know. But — persistence.’
Dance nodded. ‘So, Sunday, at seven? You and the kids want to come?’ She dug through her purse. ‘Hm. Have a hundred flyers in the car for her show. Thought I had one with me.’ She snapped the Coach bag shut.
‘Can I let you know? We might have plans. Bring a friend?’
‘Of course.’
Had he been dating? she wondered. It
Dance’s mother called him ‘the Catch’, because he liked to fish … and because he was.
She glanced at the Timex. ‘I’ve got to get into the field.’
‘Our case?’
‘No. The other thing.’
He sighed, glanced at her hip, where her weapon would otherwise have resided. ‘I’ll go with you.’
‘Not for this. It’s all right. I’ll have backup. I have to handle it a particular way. This one’s tricky.’ She almost said, ‘It’s a thing,’ but from O’Neil’s concerned expression she knew he wouldn’t have appreciated the levity.
CHAPTER 22