Crush - Alan Jacobson [48]
Vail and Dixon headed for the sheriff’s department, but Vail wanted to stop first at the bed-and-breakfast to poke around in the light. Since the meeting was scheduled for ten, they had a little time to peruse the grounds.
As they approached the driveway, Vail said, “So it seemed like you knew Eddie Agbayani.”
Dixon chuckled. “Yeah, you could say that. We dated for a year, but we ran into some problems.” She hung a left into the bed-and-breakfast’s parking lot. “It was good for a while, but there was always an edge to our relationship. Still, we love each other. It’s hard. We hit a wall when we ran into some . . . dominance issues.”
Dominance issues. Vail wondered who was the aggressor, but from Vail’s observations, and the greeting Agbayani had for Dixon when they saw each other, she figured it was probably Agbayani’s insecurity with their relationship that caused the problems. Male testosterone and ego getting in the way. As Vail pushed open her car door, she realized that wasn’t necessarily a fair assessment. What did she really have to go on, anyway? It was hard for her, as a profiler, to refrain from making psychological assessments off the clock. The constant analysis, the evaluation of body language and vocal tones and facial tension sometimes made it tough to sit back and casually converse with someone.
“When did you two call it off?” Vail asked.
“I called it off, not we. I’m not a typical woman, whatever that is. I’m headstrong, I know that. And sometimes we clashed because Eddie likes to call the shots, too. We had a balance for a while, but it shifted when I started spending more time at the gym than with him. I just, I had a couple stressful cases and working out helped settle my mind, put things in perspective.
“So I guess some of that was my fault. But toward the end we were always at each other’s throats, and I felt it was best we took a rest.” They got out of the Ford and headed down the gravel path. “It’s been hard. I’ve missed him a lot. But time passes, distance opens up between you, and before you know it . . .” She shook her head. “It’s been almost four months.”
That coincides roughly with her shift from Vallejo PD to the district attorney’s office. The smell of burnt wood and gasoline sat heavy on the air like cheap perfume, and made Vail’s nostrils flare. “Wonder how long till this stench dissipates.”
Dixon scrunched her nose. “Probably not till they bring in a demo crew and get this shit out of here.”
Approximately a quarter of the structure was still intact, no doubt due to the fire department’s rapid response. What was left was charred charcoal black, a ghostlike shell with fragments of flowery wallpaper stuck to odd-shaped wall fragments untouched by flame but doused by water.
Vail walked the periphery, stepping carefully through the ash that carpeted the ground. Dixon’s shoes were half a size small, which made them uncomfortable, but not unmanageable. Still, Vail was aware of each step she took.
She stopped beside Dixon, who had her hands on her hips, surveying the lay of the land: Off to the left, there was another building, once a garage that had been converted to the more lucrative Cabernet Truffle Room, as noted by a hand-painted sign above the door. A larger, two-story structure extended perpendicular to it, deeper into the wooded area, containing another four rooms.
At her feet lay the charred Hot Date sign that had hung on their door