anything wrong. But I need her to spell it out for me. Just because everyone likes her doesn’t mean I can’t ask her a few questions.”
“Settle down, Joe,” Mike said. “I wasn’t saying you couldn’t ask her questions. I can’t tell you what to do anyway. I’m just telling you what I know. Doesn’t mean you shouldn’t follow up.”
I watched the crowd trickle out the door of the gym. “Sorry. I know. I’m just…I think I’m close. Getting a read on that other number might help, too.”
“I’ll call you as soon as I have something,” he said. “Hey, you free for breakfast tomorrow?”
“Yeah why?”
“Just something I wanna show you.”
“Alright,” I said.
He named a diner near the high school and we settled on eight o’clock.
“Call me if you get a hit on the number,” I said.
“Will do,” he replied.
I shoved the phone back in my pocket and left the empty gym.
The girls were slowly emerging from the locker room, most with the hoods of their sweatshirts pulled over their heads. They brushed past me without saying a word. I didn’t see Megan or Kelly and I waited for a couple of minutes, assuming Kelly was talking to her about her poor performance. Kelly wasn’t one to let things go or to let things ride. She addressed them immediately with the intent that always clearing the air made it easier to move forward.
But after ten minutes, I was tired of waiting and stuck my head into the locker room.
A locker room that was already empty.
SEVENTY-FIVE
I drove over to the opposite side of campus to my rendezvous point with Megan, cursing under my breath that I had taken so long to get back to the locker area. It didn’t bother me as much that Megan was gone. If she was really going to meet me, it made sense that she would’ve made a fast exit.
Kelly’s absence, though, felt wrong to me. She was always the last one out of the locker room after a game and several girls stepped out after I’d gotten there. I’d taken awhile, but it hadn’t been empty by the time I’d arrived. I expected her to be there if for no other reason than to tell me I was officially relieved of any and all coaching duties.
But she was already gone and I wondered why.
I pulled my rental into the small square lot near the admin building. It was dark except for a single street lamp in the middle of the parking slots. The buildings were shadows and there were no other cars.
I parked beneath the light and waited.
After a five minute wait that seemed like thirty, headlights split the darkness near the entrance and a car pulled up next to me.
Megan.
Her window was down and she motioned for me to lower mine.
“I’ll drive,” she said.
I was just relieved to see her, so I didn’t argue.
The interior of her car was warm and music drifted softly from the speakers.
“You didn’t tell anyone, right?” she asked. “That we were meeting?”
“No.”
She chewed on her bottom lip for a moment.
“Megan, I didn’t say a word, even to a cop who’s helping me out,” I assured her.
“Why weren’t you on the bench for the second half?” she asked.
“Long story,” I said.
“Coach was pretty pissed when she came in at halftime,” she said.
“She should’ve been. You guys were terrible.”
“Yeah, but it was a different kind of pissed.” She watched me. “It was more than the game.”
“Where are we going, Megan?” I asked, not having any intention of telling her about my conversation with her coach.
We circled my car and headed out of the lot and off campus.
I wanted to ask her more questions about our destination and Meredith, but I wasn’t ready to push it yet.
“What was going on out there tonight with you guys?” I asked to break the silence.
She had one hand on the wheel and an elbow on the door. She raised her shoulders in a lazy shrug. “I don’t know. Just wasn’t into it, I guess.”
“Doesn’t sound like you.”
She sighed. “We’re tired, all of us. It’s such a long season. It’s a grind. And the last week, it’s been even tougher.” She rapped her knuckles against her window. “I think we just hit a wall tonight.” She glanced at me. “And it didn’t help that you weren’t there in the second half.”
“Game was already over, Megan.”
“Maybe. But Rundles was already flaming pissed. We needed a steady voice. Yours.”
A twinge of guilt hit me in the stomach. Despite all the girls had done to make me a part of the program, I still felt like an outsider. I hadn’t considered that my absence would’ve mattered to them. Taking up Meredith’s disappearance with Kelly at the half had not only been pointless, but selfish, too.
“I’m sorry about that,” I said. “Couldn’t be helped.”
She nodded and I couldn’t tell whether she cared or not.
We cut through the center of the island, across Orange and over into the neighborhoods near the golf course on the east side of the island.
“Kind of a weird route to take to the bridge,” I said.
“We’re not going to the bridge,” she said.
“We’re staying here on Coronado?” I said, too surprised to bother hiding it. “Where are we going then?”
She turned left and cut the headlights, coasting to the curb. She shut off the engine, then pointed to my window. “There.”
The dark house outside my window took a moment to register with me. It was a small square bungalow. The yard was slightly overgrown. It looked empty.
It was the Jordan buy-in house I’d seen on my first day back.
The only thing that was different was that the windows had been empty before, but now there were curtains blocking the view to the interior of the home.
“This is the Jordan's home, right?” I asked.
Megan was flipping open her phone and stopped mid-flip. “How do you know that?”
“It’s the address listed for Meredith’s enrollment,” I said. “It’s a buy-in, right?”
She processed everything I said, then nodded. “It belongs to the Jordans, yeah.” She opened up the phone and started punching the keys. Then she shut it.
“What are we doing, Megan?” I asked. “Why did you bring me here?”
“Just wait,” she said.
“I’m tired of waiting,” I said. “What the hell are we doing here?”
She started to say something, but her phone chimed. She flipped it open, nodded at it, then closed it. “Come on.”
“Come on where?” I said, no longer hiding my agitation.
Megan got out of the car and I did the same. The street was dark and quiet. The only nearby lights seemed to be the faraway lights on the bridge crossing the bay. The air smelled of dead grass and dampness.
I was more acutely aware now that I was without my gun. I’d brought it with me on the trip, but I’d left it in my bag for most of my stay. I wasn’t comfortable carrying it around teenagers and the amount of time I’d spent on