breakfast here almost every morning for the past ten years, and always orders the same thing.
The waitress, Not Sunny, is a tall blonde, leggy and pretty, and Petra wonders if thereâs some sort of secret breeding facility in California where they just crank out these creatures, because there seems to be an inexhaustible supply. When the original Sunny left her job at The Sundowner to go off on the professional surfersâ tour, the new tall, blond, andleggy replacement appeared immediately, in a seamless progression of California Girls.
Nobody seems to know her real name, nor does she seem bothered that she has been tabbed Not Sunny, doomed to exist in Sunnyâs shadow, as it were. Indeed, Not Sunny is a pale version of her namesake; on the surface as pretty, but lacking Sunnyâs depth, intelligence, and genuine warmth.
Now Not Sunny stares at Boone and says, âEggs machaca with jack cheese, corn and flour tortillas, split the black beans and home fries, coffee with two sugars.â
Boone pretends to study the menu for an alternative, then says, âJust flour.â
âHuh?â
âJust flour tortillas, not corn.â
Not Sunny takes a moment to digest this change in her world, then turns to Petra and asks, âAnd for you?â
âDo you have iced tea?â
âUh, yeah.â
âIâll have an iced tea, please,â Petra says. âLemon, no sugar.â
âLemonnnnn . . . no sugar,â Not Sunny says to herself as she walks away to place the order, which, in fact, the cook had thrown on the grill the second he saw Boone come through the door.
âOh, put the menu down,â Petra says to Boone.
Boone puts the menu down and looks at her. It isnât a nice look.
âWhy are you so angry?â she asks.
âKelly Kuhio was one of the finest people I ever knew,â Boone answers. âAnd your piece-of-shit client killed him.â
âHe did,â Petra says. âIâm by no means convinced, however, that heâs guilty of first-degree murder.â
Boone shrugs. Itâs a slam dunkâif the DA can put Corey on death row, good for her. Mary Lou Baker is a tougher-than-nails veteran prosecutorwho doesnât lose a lot of cases, and she is coming hard on this one.
Hell, yes, she is, because the community is outraged. The killing made the headlines every day for two weeks. Every development in the case makes the paper. And the radio talk show jocks are all over it, demanding the max.
San Diego wants Blasingame in the hole.
âIâll tell you what I am convinced of, though,â Petra says. âIâm convinced that this city has formed a collective lynch mob for Corey Blasingame because heâs bad for the tourist industry upon which the economy depends. San Diego wants families to come to Pacific Beach and spend money, which theyâre not likely to do if the area gets a reputation for violence. So the city is going to make an example of him.â
âYeah?â Boone asks. âYou have any other kook theories?â
âSince you asked,â Petra says, âI think youâre so angry because this stupid tragedy has shattered your image of surfing as some sort of pristine moral universe of its own, removed from the rest of this imperfect world where people do horrible things to one another for no apparent reason. Poor, stupid Corey Blasingame has spray-painted his violent graffiti all over your cozy Utopia and you canât deal with it.â
âYou mind if I sit up, Doc?â Boone asks. âOr should I just lie down on the floor, seeing as how thereâs no couch?â
âSuit yourself.â
âI will,â Boone says. He cranes his neck to see Not Sunny leaning against the bar and says, âMake that to go, please?â
Petra says, âCoward.â
Boone stands up, digs in his jeans pocket, and comes out with a couple of crumpled dollar bills that he