that which Utagawa had ordered in 2003. Utagawa straightened both.
We all looked from antemortem to postmortem and back, and back again, comparing details of bony architecture and microstructure.
Everything matched. The shape and robusticity of the malleolus. The diameter and contour of the medullary cavity. The density and orientation of the trabeculae. The number and positioning of the foramina.
The size, depth, location, and angulation of the traction pinhole.
“Oh, my.” Utagawa spoke for all of us.
Minutes later, Perry and I were wending through the parking deck. She now carried two large brown envelopes.
“Lo and Hung plan to canvass Gloria Kealoha’s neighbors?” I asked. “See if Francis was known in the neighborhood?”
“They’re on it as we speak. If someone recalls Kealoha dropping from the radar, maybe they’ll remember a pal vanishing at the same time. A twofer would make my job a hell of a lot easier. And God knows I could use a break. My ass is in a sling over the Halona Cove closing.”
“Who’s unhappy?”
“Everyone.”
Wishing Perry luck, I headed to my car.
There seemed little point in returning to the CIL. Ryan and Lily were in Turtle Bay.
I dialed my daughter’s cell.
Katy was pumped. Her new blog post had stimulated a lot of response. She wanted to stay with it for a couple more hours, then she’d be up for some beach time.
Oahu’s windward shore stretches about forty miles from Kahuku Point in the north to Makapu’u Head in the south. Lanikai lies roughly three-quarters of the way down, between Kaneohe Bay and Waimanalo Bay.
I considered a moment. Decided.
Instead of shooting west on the Pali then down, I’d take the long way home, circling the island’s southernmost tip, then looping back north. The views would be spectacular and, with luck, might include whales. Or some buff boy surfers.
But
After buckling up, I exited the parking deck and eased into traffic.
Bypassing Waikiki, I pointed the Cobalt toward Diamond Head and slipped through a neighborhood of opulent homes. Kahala. The Lapasa family turf.
Past Kahala, the H-1 dwindles to a narrow two-laner called the Kalanianaole Highway. Highway 72. The day was Hawaiian tropic perfect. I lowered the window and let the wind play with my hair.
I followed the Kalanianaole past Hawaii Kai, Hanauma Bay, and Koko Head, stopping at every scenic marker along the way. Forty minutes out, I pulled into an overlook near Makapu’u Beach Park and got out of my car. Two dozen vehicles crammed the small lot.
To the right, the craggy cliffs of Makapu’u Point rose in the distance. To the left, tourists circled the Halona Blowhole, cameras poised, willing the capricious waterspout to make an appearance.
Far below, off the southernmost railing, lay Halona Cove, a golden crescent cradled in the palm of towering black cliffs. From Here to Eternity Beach.
Not a single greased body lay on the sand. Not a single bronzed boarder rode Halona’s waves. Newly erected signs blocked the narrow path snaking down the cliffside.
I stood a moment, wondering how Francis Kealoha and his unnamed companion had ended up in the cove. Had they picked their way down the rugged trail to swim? To fish? Had they died elsewhere, then their bodies washed in and been trapped among the rocks? Had the sharks attacked when the men were still alive? Had they scavenged following some deadly turn of events?
I had no answers. But, oddly, I felt better having visited the site.
Past Makapu’u Point, I skirted Waimanalo Bay; at three and a half miles, Oahu’s longest uninterrupted stretch of sand.
I was stealing peeks at a line of surfers when I felt a bump and the Cobalt lurched.
My foot hit the brake. My eyes jumped to the rearview mirror.
A black SUV was riding my tail. Its windshield was tinted and afternoon sun bounced from the glass.
I squinted, trying to see the vehicle’s occupants. Two hulking silhouettes suggested a male driver and companion.
“Well, aloha to you too.” Glaring into the rearview, I lowered my speed.
The SUV dropped back.
My eyes returned to the road.
Seconds later, I felt another bump, this one harder than the first.
Through my open window, I heard an engine roar.