'But obviously he didn't'
'Nope. When it came down to it, Brian always talked him out of it.'
There was only one boss of the Paradise Coffee plantation, John went on, and that was Nick Druett, founder and president; when big decisions were to be made, Nick made them But he was open-minded, as autocrats went, and he liked to get the advice of his management team and his immediate family before committing to a major course of action. In this case, as John understood it, most of them had been eager to accept the offer and walk away with the money—but not Brian, who had made a strong, emotional appeal to Nick on the grounds that the plantation was the glue that held the family together; once it was sold, they would scatter to the four winds. And in the end it was this that had carried the day with Nick the Patriarch. Twice.
'And you think,” Gideon said, “that Brian might have been killed by one of the others so they'd have a better chance of convincing Nick to sell?'
'Who knows? I think that's what
'It's funny when you think about it,” he mused after they'd gone a little farther. “I mean, here's Brian, the one guy who's not related to everybody else—he's not even an in-law, officially speaking—and he's the one who's always getting all choked up about family.'
They stopped walking, and for a few moments John stared without speaking toward the white, curling ribbon of surf that marked the coral reef half a mile out, dividing the sea into a bright green foreground and a deep blue background. “Well, Brian didn't have any family of his own left, you know, and Nick was like a father to him. It went both ways—Brian was practically like a son to Nick too.'
'But if that's so,” Gideon said, “why would he call us off? Wouldn't he want to see the killer caught?'
'Would he? How would he feel if it turned out to be—just say—Therese? Or Celine? Or—'
'Or Maggie.'
'Yeah, or—wait, what do you mean, Maggie? What'd you say it like that for?'
'A couple of things, John.” He started them walking again. “Did you know that the day Brian had the accident with the jeep he wouldn't have been in it except for a change of schedule that Maggie arranged? Did you know she'd been in the drying shed for a couple of hours—all by herself—the night before it gave way and nearly killed Brian?'
'So?” John demanded aggressively. “What's that supposed to mean?'
'Probably nothing. But it's also pretty clear she wasn't particularly fond of Brian—'
'Sure, she was. She loved Brian. He was like a, like a—” Brother to her, Gideon said to himself.
'—like a
'From talking to her,” Gideon said, moving off a step or two to get safely out of range. “For someone who loved him she sure found a lot to criticize about him.'
'Oh hell, Doc, that's just Maggie. You should hear her take after me sometimes; or poor old Nelson.'
'John, relax. I'm sure you're right. I just thought I ought to mention it, that's all.'
'Yeah, well, sure, of course.” After a moment he smiled. “Sorry, Doc, I didn't realize I was so touchy. I apologize. Obviously, it's all right for
'Human nature, John. Don't worry about it.'
'Well, but I do worry about it. We're a team, Doc. The last thing I want is for you to hold back what you're thinking because you think it might hurt my feelings.'
'Not a chance, you know that.'
All the same, if a few vague uncertainties about his maternal cousin could bring him to the arm-waving stage, how was John going to feel if the finger of suspicion were to begin to point toward his own brother, Nelson? Gideon pondered that for a few steps, and then brought himself up short. Suspicion of
The end of Nick's private beach was marked by a falling-down Cyclone fence laid out across it, with a sign alongside in three languages.
'Gee, I wonder what they're trying to tell us,” John remarked as they started back.
There was no one snorkeling along the hotel's beach, no one scuba-diving, no one sunning, and only one lumpy body in the long row of hammocks. A mile farther along the shore, in opulent contrast, the grounds of the modernistic Hotel Captain Cook were crammed with sunbathers and snorkelers. If this was a typical day at the Shangri-La, Gideon thought, Dean Parks wasn't doing as well as he claimed in his battle with the big players.
'John, what do you suggest we do now?'
'What do you want to do?'
'Well, you might want to stay on, but I think I ought to pack up and go home,” said Gideon. “Regardless of what did or didn't happen to Brian, there's nothing here for me to do. I don't like living on Nick's money for nothing, and he's made it clear that he doesn't want us poking around after all. Neither do the police, so that would seem to be that. There's nothing we can do about it.'
John stared at him, open-mouthed. “You just want to go home and forget anybody's been murdered?'
Gideon sighed. “John...the thing is, I don't really think anybody