E-Book, Englisch, 200 Seiten
Bean A Magic Island Silence
1. Auflage 2018
ISBN: 978-1-5439-4736-6
Verlag: BookBaby
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet/DL/kein Kopierschutz
E-Book, Englisch, 200 Seiten
ISBN: 978-1-5439-4736-6
Verlag: BookBaby
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet/DL/kein Kopierschutz
Nash MacKay sets out to find David Kuhio's killer. David is active in Save Our Surf and a university student, murdered on the beach at San Onofre.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Chapter 1 Thick fog rolled onshore as I pulled into San Onofre’s rutted dirt parking lot fronting the beach. It was January, and out in the thick curtain of mist a few diehard surfers scrambled for the early morning waves. After twenty-seven years of surfing, interrupted with moments of responsible work, at forty I was simply happy to be surfing at all. I pulled my wetsuit out of the van and gently eased my nine-foot longboard out, anticipating the glassy morning surf. Only a few other cars were visible nearby. The sand was damp, cold on my bare feet as I ran down the deserted beach, sliding like a parallel skier down the wall of sand created by last night’s high tide. The cold water stung my feet for a few moments before it warmed against my skin in the tight fitting wetsuit. A wave formed in the mist outside of where I was sitting and I knee paddled farther out, lined-up perfectly in the gray peak of the wave. I took two hard strokes and dragged my feet to stall the board before cranking a hard turn off the bottom of the wave. A fast winter freight train wall lined-up in front of me. I climbed and dropped to gain speed and then walked foot-over-foot to the nose, cruising on the tip in a classic arch when the gun went off. Not once, but three times. My left foot slipped off the nose, raking my ankle with sharp pain. Underwater, my board leash yanked at my ankle, hands automatically over my head all the way to the surface. Feeling foolish as I got back on my board, unhurt but shaking. The shots must have been a backfire on the I-5 freeway above the cliffs and parking lot. But if there was a sniper on the cliff above the break, I wanted to get the hell out of there now. I caught a wave on the inside break without standing up and rode all the way to shore. The lifeguard’s jeep with its blinking red light was faintly visible in the fog near my van. Other surfers were already there on the beach, gathered in a tight circle next to the yellow lifeguard jeep as if warming themselves by a firepit. I put my board down on the sand. Two lifeguards were on their knees attending to an injured surfer. The surfer lying on the sand was David Kuhio, one of my students at the university. His head, just below where his left eye used to be was caved in and two smaller holes were visible on his chest, matted with blood. I felt a wave of nausea and quickly shifted my gaze from David’s body. His surfboard, a bright yellow and purple Wavetools tri-fin now looked out of place but I fixed my eyes on it to escape the image of David’s shattered face. “Move back.” I felt one of the lifeguards pushing me. “I know him,” I said. “The police will be here in a minute. Everyone else can go unless you have some information for the police. I have your names and phone numbers if they need to talk to you later.” The lifeguard looked at me. “You stay. The police will want to talk to you.” I sat in the canvas enclosed jeep, shivering but not from the cold. David’s body was now covered and a tan female lifeguard with brown sun-streaked hair was busy cordoning off the section of blood soaked sand surrounding the body. I watched the waves toppling over in the shorebreak in the shadow of San Onofre’s shuttered twin nuclear towers but the image of David’s bloody face kept reappearing. The other lifeguard in the jeep, a husky looking blond with a walrus moustache and sad eyes interrupted my thoughts. “You want some coffee while we’re waiting?” He held up a battered thermos with the name Rick printed on it. “Yes, thanks,” I replied. “This is the first shooting we’ve ever had here,” he said. “I know him.” “I’m sorry.. It’s hard to lose a friend.” His eyes squinted into the fog. I sipped the hot coffee, wrapping my hands tightly around the plastic cup. “Not a friend. He was a student in one of my classes at the university,” I said. “You’re a professor?” He asked, in a slightly startled tone. By now I was used to this line of questioning from most people. Even at forty I looked like an archetypal California surfer. The deep tan, blue eyes, and two-toned sunbleached blond hair didn’t jibe with the image most people had for a professor. Not even the beard and my ever-expanding beer belly could overcome the surfer image enough to suggest that I spent more time at the university than on the beach. Perhaps that was the reason I’d been stuck at Associate Professor rank for so long. My learned colleagues couldn’t believe I was conducting research rather than squandering my time at the beach. “What are you a professor of?” Rick the lifeguard probably expected me to say oceanography or marine zoology. “Literacy,” I replied. “Literacy?” His eyebrows arched in disbelief. “I teach classes in reading methods for beginning high school teachers from different subject areas. David was a beginning social studies teacher in one of my classes.” By the look on lifeguard Rick’s face it was obvious I’d just added to his wildest suspicions about academe and the flagrant misuse of his tax dollars. “They have a whole field called literacy in college?” At that moment his partner yelled, “Hey Rick, how about helping me with this before the police get here, huh?” “Gotta go.” “Listen, maybe I’ll visit you at the college sometime. I need help with my reading. Where did you say you teach?” “State College,” I replied, knowing I was on safe ground since I’d had these conversations a thousand times and so far, none of these future students ever showed up at my office door to enroll. I was relieved to be alone to think before a police detective grilled me with questions about David Kuhio. Not an easy task since I knew very little about David. In fact, until this morning, I didn’t even know he surfed. I saw two uniformed police and a detective coming toward the jeep out of the fog. Behind them in the mist a group from the county medical examiner’s office headed toward David’s lifeless body. The detective got into the jeep on the driver’s side and introduced himself with a strong handshake. “Detective Hewlett,” he said. “Matt Hewlett.” He looked out of place on the beach in a blue blazer and tie. His close-cropped black hair, carefully trimmed moustache, and strong square jaw brought an air of military formality to San Onofre that made me uncomfortable. But mostly it was his eyes. Hazel, clear, and dead serious. Detective Hewlett worked in homicide. “Nash MacKay,” I said, wishing I’d just had a normal day of surfing instead of volunteering myself as some sort of expert on David Kuhio, a person I barely knew. “Tell me, Mr. MacKay, what is it you do?” I repeated what I had already told Rick the lifeguard. “David Kuhio was a student who sat near the back of the room in my Reading 402 class.” Detective Hewlett nodded. “David’s class last fall semester had forty-eight students in it so I really didn’t know him well at all. You see it’s a lecture course. David did indicate on his personal data form that he planned to student teach in social studies at Grove High School this spring semester. He’s been an intern there this fall. I think he planned to return to Hawaii to teach once he completed his credential.” I was again struck by how little I knew about most of my students, especially David, now lying dead on my favorite surfing beach. Detective Matt Hewlett looked questioningly at me, clearly hoping for more substantive information than I had given him so far. “Can you tell me anything about David’s family, friends, jobs, who he lives with?” “I think David is from Honolulu. He’s a hapa-haole, only part Hawaiian. I’m not sure where he lives in Orange County and until today I didn’t’ know David surfed. He was a quiet student.” “Listen, I just remembered something. What I can do is go back to my office and check the file for last fall’s 402 class. I have a database in my office with David’s personal data form and a digital photo. David’s personal data form should give his home address here and phone number if that’s helpful,” I offered, hoping to end this interview. We’d appreciate that Professor MacKay,” he said, looking amused at my faded Snoopy surfs up towel with Snoopy and Woodstock riding a wave. My four year old daughter gave it to me for Christmas before the divorce. Now she lives in Colorado with her mother and step-father, a dentist. For the past year, I’d been living with Kathy, a recreational therapist. “Thanks for your help Professor.” “Look,” I said as we stood outside the Jeep. “Could I call you and find out how David died after the medical examiner has completed the evaluation?” “Sure, no problem. I’d appreciate getting that address.” He moved off in the direction of the body, David’s...