CHAPTER 35

Helen heard Captain Josiah Swingle knock on the door of Coronado Investigations at precisely seven thirty the next morning. Something was different.

He was punctual as usual. But this time his knock was a polite, almost timid tap.

When Phil answered the door, Helen saw the captain’s sandy hair and sunburned face. But under his crisp white uniform, Josiah’s shoulders were bowed.

This wasn’t the same man Helen had said good-bye to at Port Everglades. Now Josiah carried a heavy burden.

Helen felt her stomach drop. Please, she thought, let me be wrong.

The captain greeted Helen and Phil, then sat in the yellow client chair. They took their black leather-and- chrome chairs opposite him. Josiah hesitated, then said, “You were right, Helen. Louise is dead.”

Helen reared back as if she’d been slapped. “No!” she said. She knew it was true, but she didn’t want it to be.

“Some Bahamian fishermen found her body yesterday,” he said. “She was wearing her uniform, including her Belted Earl polo shirt. The Bahamian authorities made a tentative identification and Louise’s dental records confirmed it.

“I’d been expecting bad news since I got back from immigration yesterday. Her boyfriend, Warren, was waiting for her at the marina. He asked me where she was and I knew then that she’d never made it home. I checked with the dockmaster at the Miami Beach Marina. They didn’t have a fishing charter called Aces High. The Bahamian officials confirmed they could not locate the charter.”

“Mira killed her,” Helen whispered.

“That’s my guess,” Josiah said.

“But there’s no way to prove it,” she said. “At least Mira will go to prison for smuggling.”

“There may still be a way to convict her for murder, too,” Josiah said. “A barrette with blond hair in it was found in Louise’s back pocket.”

“Then they may have the killer’s DNA,” Phil said.

“It’s being tested now,” the captain said.

Helen grabbed the arms of her chair as if she needed to hold something solid. “Poor Louise,” she said. “I’d hoped she’d gone over the side unconscious. But she died alone in those wild waves, without any hope of rescue.”

“She was determined to get her killer,” the captain said. “She spent her last few moments buttoning her killer’s hair and barrette into her pocket.”

I hope they were only a few moments, Helen thought. In her mind, she heard the howling wind and felt the water slam the ship.

“Do you know what the chances were of her body being found?” Josiah asked.

That’s when Helen started crying. I won’t indulge in dramatics, she told herself. I knew her less than a day. But Louise complained about her job and I felt the same way, too. She was only twenty-three. Tears are unprofessional. They won’t help her.

The harder Helen tried not to cry, the more she wept. Phil handed her his handkerchief and squeezed her hand. Helen mopped her eyes. Finally, her tears stopped.

“I’m sorry,” she said.

“Don’t apologize,” Josiah said. “You should cry for her. Louise was a brave woman who died a terrible death. Now she deserves justice.”

“I may be able to help,” Helen said. “Was that barrette two-toned silver and about four inches long?”

“Yes. How did you know?” the captain said.

“Because Mira wore one and I admired it. She told me she bought it online at Head Games. The brand is Ficcare and the barrette costs about forty bucks.”

Josiah pulled out a small notebook and wrote down the details. “Good,” he said. “If she bought it online, there should be a credit card record. That will help the investigators. This is all my fault. I should have known.”

“You should have known what?” Helen said. “That Mira was a killer? We had a nice girlie talk about hair. She helped me with the laundry and bawled me out for putting a wet bucket on a marble floor. I didn’t have a clue she was a smuggler, much less a murderer.”

“But still—” Josiah began.

“What?” Phil asked. “You didn’t read Mira’s mind? You think killers are easy to spot, Captain? The police don’t. People get away with murder because they don’t look like killers.”

Josiah refused to take that excuse. “If I’d listened to Helen—”

“You still couldn’t have saved Louise,” Helen said. “Unless you saw her fall overboard, she didn’t have a chance.”

“But I could have prepared her father,” Josiah said. “Louise is his only daughter. He’s a widower and lives in Kansas City, Missouri. He didn’t want her to work on the yacht, but she wanted adventure before she settled down. I had to break the news to him, then ask for her dental records. I’ve never heard a man cry like that before, and I hope I never do again. It was like I ripped out his heart.”

“You did,” Phil said. “And he’ll never get over it.”

The captain seemed to find comfort in Phil’s blunt statement. He sat back in his chair and looked a little less tense.

“There is no way to tell a family their child is murdered,” Phil said. “My first case was a young girl who ran off to South Beach and became a coke whore. I had to tell her father his daughter had OD’d. You don’t get over it, ever. But you do learn to live with it.

“You didn’t kill Louise. She’s dead because Mira killed her.”

“Is Mira going to be prosecuted in the Bahamas?” Helen asked.

“She’s already in custody here for smuggling,” the captain said. “The crime took place on a ship registered in the United States and was probably committed somewhere between Florida and the Bahamas. It will be treated as a U.S. crime.”

“When is the funeral?” Helen asked.

“It will be in Kansas City as soon as her body is sent home,” the captain said. “Her father made it clear he wants nothing to do with Fort Lauderdale. We’ll hold a memorial service for her later.”

He sighed, stood up and said, “Thank you, Helen, for catching Mira. At least she’s no longer on my ship. I want my bill. Here’s your stewardess pay.”

Josiah didn’t bother looking over Coronado Investigations’ carefully itemized bill. He simply wrote a check for the full amount. Helen didn’t charge him for the broken china cup. She figured she did more damage. She’d also dyed the crew polos pink.

Josiah shook hands with Helen and Phil. They stood at the door and watched his bowed back as he left the Coronado.

“I wonder how long he’s going to carry that weight,” Helen asked.

“A long time,” Phil said. “He’s a good man.”

He glanced at the clock on their office wall. “It’s eight oh three. Time to change into my Cabana Boy suit and work for Blossom.”

Helen and Phil walked hand in hand across the Coronado courtyard on a cool April morning. They waved at Margery, who was skimming dead leaves out of the pool with a long-handled net.

“You’re a great detective,” Helen said. “Solve this mystery for me, Phil: How did Margery know we went to the taco truck last night?”

“Because we talked about it on the way to the Jeep,” Phil said.

“Oh,” Helen said. “That was no big deal.”

“Once I told you, the mystery is gone,” Phil said.

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