Dawn Patrol - Don Winslow [55]
Boone raps on the door. “Mick?”
Nothing.
“Yo, Mick.”
No response.
So either they’re in there hiding or in the bedroom, stoned, and can’t hear anything. Well, Boone thinks, if they can’t hear anything … He kicks the glass in, reaches through the hole, unlocks the window, and slides it open. Then he climbs through.
Mick Penner is asleep on the sofa.
Passed out is more like it. He’s lying facedown, one arm dangling to the floor, his right hand still holding a bottle of Grey Goose.
Boone walks right past him into the bedroom.
No Tammy.
He opens the bathroom door.
No Tammy.
He looks at the back door. Still locked from the inside.
Tammy isn’t here and she didn’t just go out the back. There are no women’s clothes, no makeup in the bathroom, no smell of perfume, moisturizer, hair spray, nail polish, nail polish remover.
It smells like a guy’s place.
A guy on a steep downhill slide.
Stale sweat, old beer, unchanged linens, garbage, a trace of eau de vomit. Mick himself reeks. When Boone steps back into the living room, it’s instantly apparent that the guy hasn’t hauled himself into a shower for a few days.
Mick isn’t cute or pretty right now. If his trophy wives could see him passed out on this couch—his dirty hair disheveled, his teeth green with grime, dried grunge caked around his lips—they wouldn’t be slipping between the clean, crisp sheets of the Milano with him. If they were in a good mood, they might, might, drop a quarter into his hand and keep moving.
“Mick.” Boone gently slaps him across the face. “Mick.”
He slaps him again, a little harder.
Mick opens one jaundiced eye. “What?”
“It’s Boone. Boone Daniels. Wake up.”
Mick closes his eye.
“I need you to wake up, dude.” Boone grabs him by the shoulders and sits him up.
“The fuck you doing here?” Mick asks.
“You want some coffee?”
“Yeah.”
“You got any?”
Boone walks into the kitchen area.
Dirty dishes are piled in the sink or strewn over the counter. Empty boxes of microwave meals overflow the garbage can or have just been tossed on the floor. Boone opens the fridge and finds an opened bag of Starbucks espresso on the door shelf. He dumps the grounds out of the filter in the coffeemaker, washes the carafe, finds a new filter, puts the coffee on, and scrubs out a cup while he listens to Mick puking in the bathroom.
Mick emerges, his face dripping with water where he splashed it on himself.
“Fuck, dude,” Mick says.
“You’ve been slamming it,” Boone says.
“Hard.” Mick sniffs his armpits. “God, I stink.”
“I noticed.”
“Sorry.”
“No worries.” Boone hands Mick a cup of coffee.
“Thanks.”
“It’s hot, bro. Don’t toss it.”
Mick nods and takes a sip of coffee.
Boone sees his hand quiver.
“Tammy Roddick.”
“Doesn’t ring a bell,” Mick says.
Something in Mick’s face—a little tension along the jawline, the blue eyes going hard. The look is unmistakable—it’s the look of a guy who’s in love with a woman who’s dumped him.
“Does this ring a bell?” Boone asks. “A burglary at the home of a Mr. and Mrs. Hedigan in Torrey Pines about three months ago. Maybe I should go over and ring the Hedigans’ bell, ask them if your name—”
“Nice, Boone. Real nice,” Mick says. “I thought we were friends.”
“Not really,” Boone says. I don’t slip my friends twenties to answer questions. My friends aren’t sleazy matinee call boys. “Have you seen Tammy lately? Like today, for instance?”
Mick shakes his head. “I wish I had.”
Yeah, Boone thinks. So much for the unrung bell. “What do you mean?”
Mick’s face gets all soft and serious. “I loved her, Boone. I mean, I loved that fucking bitch. Really loved her, you know?”
He met her at Silver Dan’s. Watched her dance and was, like, mesmerized. Got a lap dance from her and asked her out, like on a real date. To his surprise, she accepted. He met her at Denny’s after her shift and bought her breakfast. Then they went to her place.
“I thought I knew