guard was checking out the van, Boone took a quick glance of the little nameplate pinned on his shirt pocket. “You’re Jim Nerburn, right?”
“Yeah.”
“Any relation to Ken Nerburn?”
“He’s my kid.”
“He’s a good guy, Ken.”
“You know him?”
“We’ve surfed together a little.” Boone sticks his hand out the window. “Boone Daniels.”
“Jim Nerburn.”
“We met at a Padres game, didn’t we?” Boone asks. “You were with Ken and some of his friends?”
“That’s right,” Nerburn says. “That Cardinal rookie threw a no-hitter.”
“I remember that. Dollar hot dog night, too.”
Nerburn pats his belly. “Yes, it was. What brings you here today, Boone?” Boone takes out his PI card and shows it to Nerburn. “I’m on the clock. I need to talk to some folks about Corey Blasingame.”
Nerburn’s face darkens. Funny, Boone thinks, how faces tend to do that when you bring up Corey’s name. “They’d like to forget about Corey around here.”
I’ll bet they would, Boone thinks. LJPA students go on to Stanford, UCLA, Princeton, and Duke, or maybe closer to home at UCSD. They don’t go to jail. Boone seriously doubts that Corey is going to make the holiday newsletter this year. “LJPA alum Corey Blasingame was admitted to San Quentin State Prison for the coming term, twenty-five to life. We wish Corey all the luck in the world as he starts his exciting new career. . . .”
“You knew him?” Boone asks.
“I knew him.”
“Trouble?”
Nerburn looks thoughtful. Then he says, “That’s the thing—no. God knows we got our rich-kid chuckleheads around here, think they can get away with anything, but the Blasingame kid wasn’t one of those. Never came blasting in or out of my gate.”
“What’d he drive?”
“Had a Lexus,” Nerburn says, “but he totaled it. Then his old man got him a preowned Honda.”
“Good cars.”
“Run forever.”
“He get hurt in the accident?”
Nerburn shakes his head. “Bumps and bruises.”
“Thank God, huh?”
“Truly,” Nerburn says. Then he asks, “The dad hired you?”
“Indirectly. The lawyer.”
“That’s the way it works?”
“Usually.”
“Maintains the privilege,” Nerburn says.
“I guess.”
Nerburn reaches inside the booth, pulls out a clipboard, and scans it. “You have an appointment with anyone?”
“I could lie to you and say I did.”
“You’re supposed to have an appointment.”
“You’re right,” Boone admits. “But, you know how it is, you let people know you’re coming, they start to think about what they’re going to say . . .”
“You get canned stuff?”
“Yup.”
Nerburn thinks it over for a few seconds and then says, “I’ll give you a pass for an hour, Boone. That’s it.”
“I don’t want to cause you any aggro.”
“I can take care of myself.”
“I get that.”
Nerburn writes on a piece of paper and hands it to Boone. “I’m going to assume you’re not carrying.”
“I’m not,” Boone says. Then he asks, “Hey, Ken didn’t go here, did he?”
Nerburn shakes his head. “I could have sent him here—they have a program for long-term employees’ kids—but I didn’t.”
“Can I ask why?”
“I didn’t want him thinking he was someone he wasn’t.”
“Got it.”
And so much, Boone thinks as he winds down the window, for my condescending, full-of-shit theory about loyal dogs guarding the gates.
Boone maneuvers the Deuce along the narrow, winding driveway, past pink stucco buildings and broad green soccer, football, baseball, and lacrosse fields. Some boys are out playing lacrosse, and Boone is tempted to sit and watch, but he has work to do.
He parks in a slot marked “Visitor” and finds the admin building.
33
The head of school is real happy to see him.
The name Corey Blasingame is an automatic smile-killer.
“Come into my office,” Dr. Hancock says. She’s a tall woman, gray hair cut short. Khaki suit jacket over a matching skirt, white blouse with a rounded collar. Boone follows her into her office and takes the offered chair across from her desk.
Framed diplomas decorate the walls.
Harvard.
Princeton.
Oxford.
“How can I help you, Mr. Daniels?” she asks. Right down to business.
“I’m just trying to get a sense of the kid.”
“Why?” Hancock asks. “How is your getting a ‘a sense of the kid’ going to help him?”
Fair enough, Boone thinks. He says, “Because you can’t know what you don’t know, and you don’t know what may or may not be useful until you find it out.”
“For instance?”
“For instance,” Boone says, “was Corey in a lot of fights in school? That’s something the prosecution is going to ask, so we’d like to know it first. Was he popular, unpopular, maybe picked on? Did he have friends . . . a girlfriend, maybe? Or was he a loner? Did he do well in school? How were his grades? Why didn’t he go to college,