Rebecca Schwartz 05 - Other People's Skeletons

Read Online Rebecca Schwartz 05 - Other People's Skeletons by Julie Smith - Free Book Online Page B

Book: Rebecca Schwartz 05 - Other People's Skeletons by Julie Smith Read Free Book Online
Authors: Julie Smith
Ads: Link
that couldn’t be it because then he wouldn’t have asked her out in the first place.
    “Do the Hunters know him well?”
    “Actually, I don’t think so. I think that’s the only time they ever had him to dinner. I guess it was dicey, considering their career and his.”
    “And how did you know them?”
    “I guess … that’s the sort of thing I’m not supposed to talk about.”
    Which told the whole story, of course— that one of them was a patient; Toby, probably. That Toby felt Felicity had saved her life and wanted to pay her back. And so she decided to introduce her to the man of her dreams— and Felicity was a good sport who’d gone along with it.
    I liked her. Why, I wondered, wasn’t she McKendrick’s cup of tea? Why weren’t Rob and I each other’s? What was this thing called love?

Chapter Six
    “So he was gay. I’ll be damned— Jason McKendrick.”
    “Well, it could have been a war wound,” I said.
    “No way. You heard what Felicity said about ‘guy behavior.’”
    “But Jason must have been complicated— I’ve been thinking about something.”
    Rob was driving on the way back to the city to try to catch couple friends and men friends. We’d decided to go for the men first— the better to check out the gay idea.
    He looked at me curiously.
    “If you work at the Chron , you have to make guild scale, right?”
    “At least.”
    “And Jason was a pretty big star and an aggressive guy, so it’s reasonable to assume he was paid over scale, right?”
    “I got a look at one of his checks once. He was way over scale.”
    “And are you?”
    “Not much— just a little.”
    “But you live in a pretty nice place. How come Jason lived in a hovel with no furniture?”
    “I was wondering about that. And his car was an old wreck.”
    “Why don’t we ask Adrienne what he spent his money on?”
    “Good idea. I already did.”
    “Speedy Gonzalez.”
    “I phoned to make sure she was okay at her dad’s, and just happened to inquire. She doesn’t know.”
    We had three men on our list— Barry Dettman, Cal Perotti, and Bobby Auerbach. Barry was our first stop— we’d been told he was one of Jason’s oldest friends, maybe his closest. He lived on Potrero Hill, apparently with another friend. A woman answered the door. Television sounds came from somewhere.
    As it turned out, Barry was watching a baseball game he just couldn’t miss and agreed to see us only if he could take time out when something important happened. We went for it.
    Rob gave him the spiel about who we were, and he nodded, not even looking our way. “Oh, man, oh, man, I could just kill Jason for this— he had a hell of a nerve dying on me.” It sounded weird coming from a man I could see only in profile. “Know how we met? Playing softball about a million years ago, in Golden Gate Park. We were both on some bar’s team. We had a league, bars that played other bars. I’d just gone to Sanborn-Permenter then. ” That meant he was an architect. “Oh, man, I loved Jase like a brother.”
    I said, “It must have upset you the way he didn’t take care of himself.”
    “What?” Now he did look. It was written all over his face:
Who is this broad, and what the hell is she talking about?
    “I mean his apartment. It was just so depressing.”
    He stared. “His apartment was depressing?”
    “You know, the black walls. No furniture. And the mess— I guess he wouldn’t even get a cleaning lady.”
    His cheeks grew slightly pink. “It’s a funny thing. I don’t even know if I was ever in it. We used to meet in restaurants, or at the theater sometimes. And of course he came over here— about once a month, I guess. I guess we dropped him off there— a million times maybe— but I never thought about it. In all the years I’ve known him it just never came up.” The announcer said, “There’s a play at the plate,” and his head turned like a robot’s.
    “And of course there was that terrible old car.”
    The

Similar Books

Ossian's Ride

Fred Hoyle

Bonfire Masquerade

Franklin W. Dixon

Paranormals (Book 1)

Christopher Andrews

Two For Joy

Patricia Scanlan

Parker's Folly

Doug L Hoffman