information.â
Jonas stared at the door a momentâthe door that led down the stairs, down the corridor and to his brotherâs body. âIâve got to walk,â he murmured.
Moralas waited until theyâd crossed the grass, then the road. For a moment, they walked near the sea wall in silence. âWhy did your brother come to Cozumel?â
âI donât know.â Jonas drew deeply on the cigarette until it burned into the filter. âJerry liked palm trees.â
âHis business? His work?â
With a half laugh Jonas ground the smoldering filter underfoot. Sunlight danced in diamonds on the water. âJerry liked to call himself a free-lancer. He was a drifter.â And heâd brought complications to Jonasâs life as often as heâd brought pleasure. Jonas stared hard at the water, remembering shared lives, diverse opinions. âFor Jerry, it was always the next town and the next deal. The last I heardâtwo weeks agoâhe was giving diving lessons to tourists.â
âThe Black Coral Dive Shop,â Moralas confirmed. âElizabeth Palmer hired him on a part-time basis.â
âPalmer.â Jonasâs attention shifted away from the water. âThatâs the woman he was living with.â
âMiss Palmer rented your brother a room,â Moralas corrected, abruptly proper. âShe was also among the group to discover your brotherâs body. Sheâs given my department her complete cooperation.â
Jonasâs mouth thinned. How had Jerry described this Liz Palmer in their brief phone conversation weeks before? A sexy little number who made great tortillas. She sounded like another one of Jerryâs tough ladies on the lookout for a good time and the main chance. âIâll need her address.â At the captainâs quiet look he only raised a brow. âI assume my brotherâs things are still there.â
âThey are. I have some of your brotherâs personal effects, those that he had on him, in my office. Youâre welcome to collect them and what remains at Miss Palmerâs. Weâve already been through them.â
Jonas felt the rage build again and smothered it. âWhen can I take my brother home?â
âIâll do my best to complete the paperwork today. Iâll need you to make a statement. Of course, there are forms.â Helooked at Jonasâs set profile and felt a new tug of pity. âAgain, Iâm sorry.â
He only nodded. âLetâs get it done.â
Â
Liz let herself into the house. While the door slammed behind her, she flicked switches, sending two ceiling fans whirling. The sound, for the moment, was company enough. The headache sheâd lived with for over twenty-four hours was a dull, nagging thud just under her right temple. Going into the bathroom, she washed down two aspirin before turning on the shower.
Sheâd taken the glass bottom out again. Though it was off season, sheâd had to turn a dozen people away. It wasnât every day a body was found off the coast, and the curious had come in force. Morbid, she thought, then stripped and stepped under the cold spray of the shower. How long would it take, she wondered, before she stopped seeing Jerry on the sand beneath the water?
True, sheâd barely known him, but heâd been fun and interesting and good company. Heâd slept in her daughterâs bed and eaten in her kitchen. Closing her eyes, she let the water sluice over her, willing the headache away. Sheâd be better, she thought, when the police finished the investigation. It had been hard, very hard, when theyâd come to her house and searched through Jerryâs things. And the questions.
How much had she known about Jerry Sharpe? Heâd been American, an operator, a womanizer. Sheâd been able to use all three to her benefit when heâd given diving lessons or acted as mate on one of her boats.