Fuck, he's gorgeous. Concentrate, Travis. That's what Detective Travis Burkhardt was thinking, but it's not what he said to the young vineyard worker in the parking lot outside the Queen's Crown Winery in the plantation country Virginia eastern foothills of the Blue Ridge mountains. What he said was, "I just need to know where you were after 10:00 p.m. last night."
"Was that when Mr. Fouchet fell off the catwalk in the processing building?" the small, dark, achingly handsome Julio Cortez asked.
"It happened sometime after ten, yes, when a meeting broke up and he told someone he was staying to check the wine vats."
Fell or was pushed, Burkhardt thought. That wasn't clear yet, and until it was, he'd have to do as much checking as he could. The winemaker's skull had been crushed and more like from a blunt instrument than a two-flight fall onto concrete, the medical examiner thought in an initial check.
"I wasn't here last night. I didn't come to that meeting."
"Yes, well, we need to check on where everyone was. Where were you after 10:00 last night until just now?"
"I wasn't here before now. I don't want to get someone involved, though. Maybe I should talk to a lawyer first."
"You shouldn't need to talk to a lawyer to tell me where you were, Mr. Cortez."
"You can call me Julio," the young man said, giving Burkhardt a glorious—and Burkhardt thought, interested—smile that nearly made the detective melt into his shoes fighting just how much he'd like to jump this guy's bones. This dude is just too damn hot, he was thinking.
"Fine, but you'll have to tell me sooner or later. You were with someone, weren't you?"
"Yes, but . . ."
"Was it with a woman or a man?" Burkhardt had already gotten the lowdown on this guy and men. Considering his own interests, it had been the most interesting information he'd heard that day, accentuated by having found that Julio was sex on a stick. There were others he'd already talked to who were happy to say that all of the men who even leaned bi here wanted to get into Julio's shorts—and that some of them had done so. More than one had offered that the victim, the winemaker, Fouchet, certainly had.
And one of the employees here had said there had been a dustup between Fouchet and his boyfriend, Franklin Stanfield, the owner of the Stanfield Inn. Stanfield probably wasn't wild that his boyfriend was humping Julio. The detective made a note to check out where Stanfield was the previous night and maybe how he felt about Fouchet not coming home last night. But the fact was that this Julio was sex on overdrive and lots guys wanted to cover him. Burkhardt himself wanted to get into Julio's shorts and he'd just met the young man. The sexy Cuban was some sort of man magnet. And he seemed to know it.
"I really can't say. Not without talking to a lawyer, I think. I'm not up on the laws here."
"You have a lawyer on attainer, do you?" Burkhardt asked.
"No, but I know where I can get one." I can get one easy enough from Mr. Conner, Julio was thinking. He's the county prosecutor here. He could make this all go away, but he, of course, won't want to be dragged into this. He's the county prosecutor. And he's married. And he's who I was with last night. When I'd gotten home from the winery, there's been a note from Don, the guy I was living with, the chef at the Stanfield Inn, saying he had been given time at a beach house in Nags Head by his boss and telling me to come down there today. I was off anyone's leash last evening, so I'd gone out to that roadhouse over on the Waynesboro side of the mountain. Mr. Conner had been there. He's not going to want to alibi me, though. And Don wasn't home to do it.
They both looked up as a vintage Rolls Royce convertible drove up and parked facing them. Old Man Gordon, the patriarch of a local FFV—First Families of Virginia—family who had recently moved into a cottage on 250, down the road from the ancestral Vermillion plantation. Vermillion was the showcase of the region and had been in the family since before the Revolution. The third of his four daughters had married a rock star and they'd wanted to move into the main house. And they had the money to make a good case that they could manage the upkeep on the estate.
Gordon sat in his car, his eyes boring into Julio. Burkhardt was about to go over and ask the old man what he was doing here—had he heard about the death and knew something to pass on? Was he the one Julio had been with the previous night? That wouldn't have surprised Burkhardt. He knew the old man was bent that way. There was speculation, though, on whether the old man could still get it up, with or without the help of pills. He guessed that didn't mean the man couldn't still manage some form of sexual pleasure with a looker like Julio, though. Burkhardt knew quite a bit about the gay community here. He dipped his toes in that himself, although he mainly went over to Richmond for his needs. A gay detective was at a disadvantage in the close-knit Central Virginia community.
But, shit, he'd really like to get his cock in this honey. Maybe he didn't want an alibi right now. Maybe he wanted an excuse to meet with Julio again—maybe over a couple of beers. Maybe in his bedroom. He was contemplating how to say this as Julio and Gordon played nice-nice with their eyes, but a cop saved him.
"The ME is finished with the prelim and would like to talk to you before they haul the body away," the cop, who had come out of the processing room, said as he walked up.
Burkhardt turned to Julio, "You can get that lawyer if you want. We can meet to get your alibi. Lawyer or no lawyer, you're going to need to provide that information. You OK about meeting off the books to discuss that?"
Julio gave him a look, realizing what the detective really meant—and not just that maybe he could provide the information off the records. The detective wouldn't be any more interested in bringing the county prosecutor into the case than Conner would be. The detective looked good to him, and if they hooked up maybe Burkhardt would help smooth over the alibi business. "Maybe I could do that," he answered.
The detective smiled and picked up the thread again. "I just want to rule everyone out right quick if this appears to be more than an accident. I can understand if the guy you were with was someone powerful who should be keeping it in his pants. We know what's what here in Gordonton, what past for a village on this stretch of route 250 winding up to the mountains to the west. Talk to a lawyer and see what he says about you meeting with me informally—over a beer or something—and slipping me a name. I can see what I can do about keeping it secret and giving you a pass. I've got to go see the medical examiner now. Think about it. I'll get in touch later. Don't leave town until this is over."
It was with a great relief that Julio saw the hunky detective turn and walk back into the processing building. He was one sexy, rough-looking dude. Julio wouldn't mind going under him. He wouldn't mind that one bit. He broke off from that thought, though, and his gaze went back to Chance Gordon, sitting behind the wheel of his elegant old Rolls. Gordon nodded to him, put the Rolls in reverse, and slowly drove out of the parking lot and onto the winding rural road at the base of the Blue Ridge Mountains and back toward Route 250.
Julio walked over to a beat-up Ford 150 pickup that looked older than the 1960 Rolls Silver Cloud, but wasn't, got in, and followed Gordon out of the parking lot. As he drove, he took out his cellphone and put a call into the county prosecutor's office. The next call he made was to Don Fields to let him know Julio wouldn't be showing up in Nags Head anytime soon.
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