tried. Shot a few images. Nothing very interesting. Wrought iron and bougainvillea. Superhero piñatas. Sheâd seen these photos before, she was certain, and seen them better executed.
Michelle put the camera back in its bag and slung it over her shoulder.
The road ahead was cobblestoned, the banks lining it tangled with browning vegetation that would not green until after the summer rains, with plastic bags and food wrappers caught up in the branches. A lot of the houses looked expensive. New construction clung tenuously to the hillside, as though the flesh of the land had wasted away, leaving skeletal frames stacked unsteadily on top of one another, foundations undermined before theyâd even been laid. With enough rain saturating the hill, she could just see one of these buildings giving up, letting go, the cheap rebar popping out of the ground like a rotten tooth.
Halfway up the hill was a little street that branched off the main road at an impossibly steep angle. She followed it, per Garyâs directions. The street led to a cluster of small, multistory buildings â apartments or condominiums.
The one on the right, Garyâs note said, light brown with a dark roof.
She looked. She thought the description fit, but blue tarps covered most of the roof, and there was other evidence of ongoing construction or repairs: a small cement mixer and a pile of gravel, a dug-up walkway, a boarded window. No workers. The place looked abandoned.
Danielâs unit was the one on the upper right, according to Garyâs note. The tarps extended halfway across what would have been his roof.
Michelle stood there for a moment. She was absurdly sweaty, drenched; her blouse was actually wet, her hair separated into salty tendrils. Really, she wasnât in any condition to see Daniel if he
was
there.
Did she want to see him? She wasnât sure.
Stupid, she told herself. You need your phone. Youâve come all this way. Say hello, how are you, and good-bye.
She shifted the tote bag on her shoulder and approached the building.
An external staircase with a wrought-iron banister led up to Danielâs unit, crossing the side of the building and leading to a balcony facing the ocean, wide enough to accommodate two chairs and a small glass table.
When she reached the balcony, she could see only a sliver of water above the roof of the building below. Still a nice view, she supposed.
There was no name on the door, no number, no mailbox. Sheâd have to take Garyâs word that this was the right unit. If it wasnât ⦠well, this was a small building. Someone would have to know where Daniel lived.
If no one answers, she thought, Iâll leave the bag by the door with a note. Take his phone back to the hotel, and he can pick it up there.
Heart pounding, she knocked on the door.
Which swung open. About six inches before the rusting hinges slowed it to a halt.
Michelle hesitated at the threshold.
âDaniel?â she called out.
She heard something from within. Not a person. She couldnât make it out at first. A sort of hum.
A fly flew out the door, bumping into her shoulder.
I have to look, she told herself. I have to look.
She pushed the door further open.
It was dim inside, the curtains drawn, and hot. The smell, the flies â for that was the hum sheâd heard, the buzzing of flies â hit her at once, and she couldnât entirely sort out one thing from the other â the darkness, the closed heat, the smell: a sweetish rot. She fumbled for a light switch, thinking there must be one, but there wasnât, not by the door at least.
Her eyes adjusted. It wasnât really dark. There was enough light seeping through the curtains, from the open door.
The living room. This was the living room. It was simple, hardly anything in it. A couch. A chair. A television. A coffee table.
On the coffee table was something dark, an oval shape with protrusions she couldnât