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Authors: Juliet Blackwell

BOOK: Dead Bolt
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“I’m just so sick of it all. I wish I were, like, dead.”
Nothing like the histrionics of a teenager to put things in perspective.
“What’s going on?”
“Dad, like, left on a research trip. Valerie’s here. I so totally don’t want to be here with
her
. Could I crash with you for a couple of days, a week max? Mom’ll be home next Monday, and I can go to her house.”
“It’s okay with me if it’s okay with your folks. Want to check with them first?”
“Valerie kinda, like, kicked me out? So I’m pretty sure it’s all good with her.”
“And where’s your mom?”
“She’s in LA for a couple of days. I already talked to her and she said it was fine if it was okay with you.”
Luckily, I got along great with Caleb’s mother, Angelica. Caleb disliked his father’s newest wife, Valerie, so intensely that it wasn’t unusual for him to wind up at my house rather than stay at his dad’s when Angelica was out of town, as she frequently was with her high-powered job.
A little over two years ago I had walked away from my ex-husband Daniel with nothing but a sigh of relief—and an abiding regret at having wasted so many years on the relationship. But his son was another matter. Caleb had been only five years old when Daniel and I married; he wore a pirate costume and stayed in character for the better part of a year. It was love at first pretend sword fight. During the eight years I was married to his father, I helped teach Caleb to swim and to read. I packed smoked salmon sandwiches because he was the only kid in America who hated PB&J, laughed at countless knock-knock jokes, kissed dozens of boo-boos, and attended never-ending PTA meetings. So even though I no longer wanted Caleb’s dad, I figured I had earned my status as Caleb’s backup mom.
Emile Blunt still stood in front of the car, arms crossed over his chest, channeling a particularly stubborn rooster. As a city girl, I have no idea whether roosters are particularly stubborn, but it wouldn’t surprise me.
“I’m ten minutes away,” I told Caleb. “I’ll swing by and pick you up. Get your stuff together and be ready to go when I get there, okay?”
“ ’Kay. Can you get here any faster?”
“I’ll do my best, but at the moment I’ve got a man standing in front of my car.”
“Is he trying to wash your windshield? Just give him a buck and he’ll move. Or rev your engine. Maybe he’ll leave.”
I gunned it. Emile crouched, hands out, as though prepared to wrestle the Scion.
“Get this—now he’s gone into some sort of karate stance!”
“Dude!”
Caleb started laughing. I joined him.
“Okay,” I said, still chuckling. “I’m going to hang up and either run this guy over or talk him into leaving. If I don’t show up soon, come post my bail, will ya?”
I respect my elders. Really I do. That’s what my parents taught me, and most seniors deserve it. But ever since my divorce I was less inclined to deal with recalcitrant men of any ilk. Plus, I had lots of experience with aging curmudgeons—my father was one of the highest order. Caleb was the only male I had patience for right now.
I leaned out the window.
“Listen, old man,” I called. “Move it or I’ll run you over. I’m not kidding.”
Chapter Three
E
mile Blunt glared and seemed to be swearing at me under his breath. Other than my managing a construction site near his shop, I couldn’t imagine what could have inspired such animosity toward me. It was a little tough not to take it personally.
I took my foot off the brake. The vehicle started to creep ahead, though my boot still hovered over the pedal.
Blunt finally stepped aside, glowering.
I forced myself not to floor it.
As I prepared to turn the corner, the hairs on my neck stood up. I checked my peripheral vision, hoping no one—or no
thing
—had hitched a ride from Cheshire House. I was relieved to find nothing occupying the passenger seat besides the pile of job-related files and clipboards that I always hauled around with me.
But in the rearview mirror, Emile stood in the middle of the street, watching me the whole way.
Caleb’s dad still lived in the pretty Victorian we had once shared on Clay Street. It was less grand by far than Cheshire House, but nonetheless charming and historical. When I lived there, I had painted it in shades of maroon, gold, and dove gray with gold gilt highlights. Shortly after Valerie moved in, she had it repainted in muted tones of taupe and cream, making it blend in perfectly with the staid homes of this affluent neighborhood. Wouldn’t want to stand out.
I didn’t like coming here. I was slowly—
very
slowly—getting better about not wallowing in the pathos of my failed marriage, but it still felt like a deep-tissue bruise. It might not be noticeable at skin level, but it hurt like hell when you poked it. Seeing this house was a jab with a sharp stick.
I nosed my Scion into the shallow driveway, straddling the sidewalk, and called Caleb. He wasn’t ready, of course. His teenage sense of “hurrying” was tortoiselike, at best.
“I’m leaving in five minutes, whether you’re out here or not,” I threatened. “I am
not
in the mood.”
“Yeah, okay,” he said, not believing for a moment that I’d leave without him. I’m not nearly as hard-nosed as I try to be.
My heart dropped when a woman descended the steep stairs from the formal front door. Gray trousers with the subtle sheen of fine linen. A fuzzy lavender sweater, probably cashmere. Long black silky hair. Expensive yet understated gold jewelry around her neck and on her fingers. Leggy, svelte, with the hips-forward stride of a runway model. Valerie.
Swearing under my breath, I rolled down the driver’s-side window, forced a smile, and kept my tone neutral. “Hi, Valerie. How are you?”
She rolled her eyes and folded her slim arms over her waist. “Adolescents.”
I nodded. “He said something about you kicking him out?”
“I told him if he was going to talk to me like that, he should just leave.”
“Ah.”
“I wanted to ask you,” Valerie continued, “do you have more of the original doors for the house stashed anywhere?”
No, there are no original doors floating around that I just didn’t feel like putting up,
I almost answered in the snidest of tones. But I clamped down on my base tendencies for Caleb’s sake. I try hard to be my most diplomatic self whenever I am around Caleb’s father or newest stepmother. Since I have no legal ties to the boy, our relationship is sanctioned only by the good grace of his legal parents.
But inside, I screamed. I had sweated blood over the renovation of this house, the first project I had done myself, long before I took over Turner Construction. My father gave me advice and loaned me workers, even pitched in himself from time to time. But I was the one who dug up information at the historical society and the hall of records, talked to elderly neighbors to learn about its recent history, found old photos, steamed and stripped six layers of wallpaper, crawled around on all fours studying the marks on the wood floors to determine where walls had been moved.
At one point the house had been stripped in an appalling effort to “modernize” it, and much of the original charm had been lost. I found reproduction plaster medallions for the hanging lamps, window hardware, and even doors. I made lots of beginner’s mistakes. I hadn’t understood, for example, that copper and lead pipes can’t lead into one another without the proper catalyst. And I replaced several missing fixtures with newly crafted reproductions though I now knew I could unearth genuine articles in thrift shops and salvage yards. Still, I had restored the home as best I could with love and devotion .  . . almost as though it were a palette for my marriage.
Looking back on it now, I realized that in some secret corner of my mind I believed that if I could make our home beautiful and harmonious and perfect, our marriage might reflect those qualities. Turns out, that sort of magical thinking doesn’t really pan out.
Valerie’s dark eyes flickered over my outfit.
After years of dressing in a proper “faculty wife” wardrobe to please Daniel—a professor at UC-Berkeley—I had vowed to wear whatever I wanted, whenever I felt like it. As long as I completed the look with my steel-toed work boots and kept a pair of coveralls handy for inching through crawl spaces, I figured I was good to go. Once the men in my employ realized I knew my stuff—and that it was
my
signature on their paychecks—they accepted my eccentric garb with good grace.
Which was a lot more than I could say for Valerie. Suddenly self-conscious, I started to shift, pulling up the low neckline of today’s spangled dress.
“I’m doing a few projects in the house, fixing up some things,” Valerie said. “We’re going to redo the kitchen.”
I bit my tongue and counted to ten.
“And probably the master bath as well.”
“Really.” I had restored those areas with painstaking historical accuracy. “What are you going to do with the fixtures?”
“Oh, do you want to buy them?”
I already did,
I thought to myself. But I just shrugged; no sense getting into this with Valerie.
“So, how are things with you?” she asked. “Still living with your dad?”
“I’m, uh . . .”
Caleb appeared through the garage entrance, heavy backpack slung over one shoulder, computer case in hand, white wires falling from his ears indicating a hidden iPod. My heart swelled a little just to see him, this boy who seemed to be growing up too fast. His dark hair was disheveled, his cupid’s bow mouth rosy with the perfect blush of youth. He had a face worthy of one of Raphael’s angels, but the sullen air of the privileged American teen. Without saying a word, he opened the passenger door and climbed in.
“Hi, Goose,” I said, using the nickname I had dubbed him with, back when we used to pretend–sword fight.
“Hey,” he said with an almost imperceptible lift of his chin.
His current stepmother hovered outside my open window. I imagined she was torn between relief that Caleb was leaving and a vague sense of guilt at having kicked the boy out of his own home.
“Say something to Valerie,” I whispered to Caleb out of the side of my mouth.
“Something,” he said in a loud voice.
“Caleb,”
I warned.
He rolled his eyes, gave Valerie a wave and a tight smile, hunched over, and started texting someone on his phone.
Valerie rolled her eyes, just like the sixteen-year-old.
“Bye,” I said, as we pulled out.
 
“So how’s school?” I asked Caleb as I headed east across the Bay Bridge. I realized the moment it slipped out that this was the question dreaded by every high schooler.
He shrugged. “It’s school. Whatever. Hey, did you run that old man down, or what?”
“He finally got out of the way. Oh, don’t forget—Stan’s party tomorrow is a surprise, so don’t mention it, okay?”
“No prob.”
Caleb listened to rap music on his iPod while I tuned into a news channel. Traffic was light, so twenty minutes later we exited the freeway in Oakland. Our neighborhood is kindly referred to as “transitional,” which means there is widespread poverty, a large immigrant population, and a smattering of yuppies redoing the once-grand old homes. Friendly people and the best Mexican food in town, hands-down. I love it.
I turned onto a residential street. A clutch of scraggly plum and peach trees and the neighborhood moniker of “Fruitvale” were the only signs that this area had once boasted orchards as far as the eye could see.
Now it was home. Temporarily.
“Hey, look,” I said, hoping to wrest Caleb’s attention from his cell phone. “Dad put up the Christmas lights.”
“Cool,” he mumbled out of duty more than interest.
As we got out of the car, a barking bundle of brown fur barreled toward us. My dad must have heard my car pull up and had released the hound.
Dog came flying down the pathway, joyous at our reunion. The canine was happy to see me, but went bananas greeting Caleb. He twisted around so far that his shaggy, wildly wagging tail whapped his head repeatedly.
“Hey, boy, I missed you!” Caleb said, dropping to his knees to hug the ecstatic dog. His teenage ways were so typically monosyllabic that it warmed my heart to see him gush unabashedly when it came to Dog. “Do you have a name yet?”
“Not yet,” I answered for the dog. “You know how we are here at chez Turner. We’ve had the poor mutt for months now, and he still has no name.”
I glanced up at the second-story window sashes that were sagging. Back in the day, my father would never have put up the Christmas lights without first attending to the broken windowpanes or the detached gutter . . . or the hundred other things that needed fixing. Since it didn’t seem like he’d be stepping up to the plate anytime soon, I would have to take this never-ending project in hand one of these days. But for now the old farmhouse was like the proverbial cobbler’s child, running about town without shoes.

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