Dying to Call You (7 page)

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Authors: Elaine Viets

Tags: #Women detectives, #Telemarketing, #Mystery & Detective, #Florida, #Fiction, #Mystery Fiction, #Women Sleuths, #Thrillers, #General, #Hawthorne; Helen (Fictitious Character)

BOOK: Dying to Call You
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“What do you do when a telemarketer wakes you up?”

Fred asked.

“I don’t have a phone,” Helen said.

“Huh,” Ethel said. “You bother people all day, but no one can bother you.”

Helen was not about to tell Ethel the reason she didn’t have a phone. “Nice meeting you,” she lied. “It’s getting late.

I’d better head home.”

“Me, too,” Peggy said.

Helen felt mean and petty. Five minutes with the new neighbors, and she hated them. Fred and Ethel had attacked her job and her integrity. They didn’t even know her. Was that what nice, down-to-earth people did? She’d been living in South Florida so long, she didn’t know.

On the way to her room, Helen walked through the perpetual marijuana fog outside of Phil the invisible pothead’s apartment. In some ways, he was the perfect neighbor. He was quiet and considerate. He was supposed to be a Clapton fan, although he never bothered her with loud music. But he drove her crazy. She’d never seen him in the year she’d lived at the Coronado, not even when he’d saved her life.

There had been a fire in her apartment and Phil had pulled her free. All she saw then was his CLAPTON IS GOD T-shirt, and felt his powerful hands pulling her out of the smoke and flames.

She’d give a lot to know what he looked like.

Gator Bill’s was the tackiest restaurant in South Florida—and that was no small claim. As she stepped inside, Helen was nearly blinded by the decor. The walls were slashed with strips of orange and blue neon, the Gators’ colors. The neon blinked on and off, making Helen’s eyes cross.

The lobby fountain had a ferocious twenty-foot blue gator with orange teeth. Brightly painted wood fruit and vegetables spilled from its open jaws, cornucopia style. It looked as if the gator was barfing bushels of corn, carrots, strawberries and oranges. Helen wondered if this said something about the food.

Gators were everywhere. Small gators slithered up the walls. Large gators lurked under plastic palm trees. Gator tracks crossed the ceiling.

Orange televisions hung in every corner. When there were no live Gators games, taped games featured Gator Bill’s exploits. In between, there were tapes of Mr. Two Bits leading his famous Gator cheer: “Two bits, four bits, six bits, a dollar. Gator fans, stand up and holler.” Naturally, all the Gator fans in the restaurant did that every time he went into his chant.

No opportunity to honor the Gators was overlooked. Even the bathroom was Gator country. When Helen closed the orange stall door, she saw “Go, Gators!” on the inside door.

The rest room had an attendant, a dignified older AfricanAmerican woman in an orange uniform. She had the usual tray of hair spray, mouthwash and perfume. But instead of hand towels, the attendant took two pulls on the towel dispenser and handed Helen a strip of brown paper. Helen tipped her a dollar. This woman had an even worse job than she did.

Helen found the hostess stand, which was shaped like the state of Florida. It was crawling with blue gators.

“Is Debbie working tonight?”

“Sure is,” the perky hostess said. She was dressed as a Gators cheerleader. “I can seat you in her section.”

She showed Helen to a tiny table under a huge stuffed alligator. It was so lifelike, Helen felt like gator bait. The hostess handed her a leather-bound menu the size of a law book, decorated with heavy gold tassels.

“Can I bring you some Gator Bites while you wait?” she said.

Helen stared at the gleaming gator teeth over her head.

“Er, no thanks.”

She read the menu, which featured wildly overpriced meat. Thirty bucks for prime rib. Fifty for filet mignon. Five bucks for a baked potato. She’d rather starve. She might, if Debbie didn’t show up soon.

Then she saw the middle-aged man at the next table put down his salad fork and stare. His teenaged son blushed until his ears turned red. A waitress in a cheerleader uniform was putting steaks on their table. Her platinum blond hair fell below her waist. Her white bosom nearly popped out of her orange top. The older guy almost had a coronary.

This must be Debbie. Helen didn’t think she was drop-dead gorgeous. Debbie’s features were small and regular but without character. Helen doubted the men noticed. They could not take their eyes off her gorgeous platinum hair, which was rippling past her cheerleader’s skirt. That gleaming silver waterfall caught every man’s eye.

Helen expected Debbie would ignore a mere woman, but she was fast and efficient. She took Helen’s order for the crab-cake appetizer and a small salad. In less than fifteen minutes, she plunked down the plates.

“Anything else I can get you?”

“Debbie, do you know another waitress who works here?

Her name is Laredo.”

“Laredo, sure. But she’s not here anymore. She took off a week or so ago. Got restless, packed up her car and headed out. That’s what I’d like to do.” Debbie’s smile did not reach her pale blue eyes.

“Do you know where she went? I owe her some money.”

“No, she took off real sudden.” Debbie flipped her shimmering hair away from her face and every man in sight practically sat up and begged. Helen was not so easily distracted.

She noticed Debbie would not look her in the eye.

“That’s odd,” Helen said. “I didn’t think she’d leave town without her money.”

“Well, she did,” Debbie said sharply, her good nature gone. “Anything else I can bring you?”

“The check,” Helen said.

Interesting, she thought. Debbie’s attitude did a one-eighty when her story was questioned.

Helen counted out half a day’s pay for her meal and went to the bar. The bartender’s name tag said TAMMY. She was another eye-catching blonde surrounded by a gaggle of gaga males. Tammy’s hair was shorter and brassier than Debbie’s, but her bosom was bigger. Helen knew it was unfair to judge a woman by those attributes, but Tammy didn’t seem to have any others.

When a fat, red-faced man got up to go to the john, Helen took his seat. She figured she was doing him a favor, saving his liver. She ordered a club soda. Tammy brought her a tall glass garnished with lime.

“I’m trying to find Laredo,” Helen said. “I need to give her some money. Do you know where I can reach her?”

“Took off for greener pastures, the way I heard it.”

Tammy poured something blue into a blender, added ice, and switched it on. Over the noise she shouted, “I don’t think she’ll need your money.”

“Did she strike it rich?”

Tammy poured the drink into a margarita glass, added a plastic gator and an orange slice, and set it on a tray for a server. She started washing glasses while she talked.

“All I know is she was flashing lots of cash before she left, and it was more than tip money. One night, she came in and wanted change for five one-hundred-dollar bills. The next night, she had another five hundred. Then it was a thousand. That was cash, too.”

“Where’d she get that kind of money?”

“Some charity gig. She wanted me to work it, but I said no thanks. I’m not giving up a job with health insurance, no matter how much it pays in cash under the table. But Laredo was too young to worry about medical bills.”

“Laredo never mentioned anything like that,” Helen said.

“Are they hiring? I could always use some extra money.”

That was the truth, at least. Helen might need another job soon, with stone-faced Penelope looking for an excuse to fire her.

“Well, she left me some cards. I’ve got one here somewhere. I’ve sent a couple girls there.” Tammy dried her hands on a blue towel, then picked through a pile of papers by the cash register.

“Here it is. You’re supposed to call and ask for Steve. It’s OK to mention my name.”

She handed Helen a business card. It was plain white, with stark black numbers. No name, no address. There was nothing on it but a phone number.

Helen thought the number looked naked and slightly sinister.

 

Chapter 6

It took three calls before Helen found Savannah. That meant three dashes to the lobby pay phone on her breaks, although you could hardly call them that. Helen got five minutes each hour. When she finally got Savannah, Helen was so rushed, she sounded like a telegram: “I found something. I’m off at one.”

“Me, too,” Savannah said.

She’d never noticed it before, but Savannah drawled her words. It took precious time. Helen had to clock back in in two minutes.

“Sounds like we better meet,” Savannah said, drawing out each word with irritating slowness. “I don’t have the time or money for lunch. How about we find a bench on Las Olas about one fifteen?”

“Fine.” Helen hung up and clocked in with thirty seconds to spare.

There wasn’t a bench free on the entire street. Whole families and entire offices roosted on them all. The best bet was one bench occupied by a white-haired man primly eating a tuna sandwich, but he didn’t look like he’d be moving soon.

Savannah sat down on the other end of the bench. The man glared at her and rustled his lunch bag. Savannah said loudly, “Helen, my period is really awful this month. There’s so much blood—that nasty black stuff—and I...”

The white-haired man picked up his sandwich and fled.

Helen was caught between horror and admiration. Today, Savannah looked like a dignified matron in a fussy ruffled dress and pink high heels. But she’d chased off a grown man with a few words.

“I hated to do that, but I only have ten minutes.” Savannah pulled two soda cans out of her floppy purse. “Want a Vanilla Coke?”

Helen found two slightly melted chocolate energy bars in her purse. “Chocolate, caffeine and sugar. All the major food groups are covered.”

“I don’t know. The energy bar’s a little healthy,” Savannah said. “It might throw off my system.”

The two munched and sipped, while Helen talked about Debbie the waitress and her dramatic mood change.

“Here’s what burns my buns,” Savannah said. “You figured out Debbie was lying—but the cops didn’t.”

“Were they male cops?” Helen said.

“Yep. Cute young doughnut chompers.”

“There’s your answer,” Helen said. “Debbie gives most men an instant lobotomy.”

“I’ve got good news and bad news,” Savannah said.

“Which do you want first?”

“Let’s get the bad over with,” Helen said.

“Hank busted me. I followed him nearly four hours yesterday. He ran errands—the dry cleaner, the bank, the gas station and this fancy salon for a haircut. Then he stopped at Publix. I pulled into the side entrance where I could watch him go in and out, thinking I was real clever. Next thing I know, he’s standing by my car. Snuck right up on me, and I didn’t even know it till I smelled his cologne.

“He said, ‘Why are you following me in that junk heap?’ Hank’s a scary dude, Helen. Huge, too. And he’s got this one big old eyebrow all the way across his forehead. You’d think he’d get that fixed. They could’ve cut it in two when they did his hair.”

“Savannah,” Helen said. “What happened?”

“Nothing. I hemmed and hawed and said I wasn’t following him, it was just a coincidence.

“He said, ‘One more coincidence and I’ll call the cops and have you arrested for stalking.’ I think he meant it.”

“We’re stuck,” Helen said. “I can’t follow him. If he busts me, I’ll lose my job and get sued. Besides, I don’t have a car.

We’ll have to find some other way to get him. Give me the good news. I could use it.”

“I found out something interesting. It wasn’t easy. Brideport doesn’t allow solicitors. I thought of collecting for a charity door-to-door, but those rich old buzzards would have called the police the minute I rang their bells. So I made me up some flyers.”

She reached in her purse and handed one to Helen.

“SAVANNAH’S SUPER-CLEAN SERVICE,” it began.
“Excellent references. Will do windows and hands-and-knees scrubbing your housekeeper won’t touch. Cheap.”

“Is that what you do for a living? Clean houses?” I’m getting lazy, Helen thought. I never bothered asking her occupation, but it would explain the bleach odor under the flowery perfume.

“It’s one of my jobs. I have three. I’m an office manager by day. I work at a convenience store on State Road 7 four nights a week. In my spare time, I clean houses.” She said that last line with a straight face.

“Jeez, Savannah. What happened?”

“A bad divorce and some medical bills that weren’t covered by insurance.” Savannah shrugged. She was not looking for sympathy.

“A dozen flyers from Kinko’s got me all over Brideport.

Nobody turns away a cleaning woman, even if they have a housekeeper. In fact, some rich folks hire me to keep their housekeepers happy. What are these energy bars, anyway?

They’re not bad.”

“Pria bars,” Helen said. “I live on them.” She’d been trying to eat them instead of the salt-and-vinegar chips. Instead, she ate both. She’d gained another two pounds.

“Most of that stuff tastes like chocolate-covered ceiling insulation.” Savannah looked at her watch and said, “I have to get back to work. I talked with the neighbors on either side of Hank Asporth. One was a lovely saleslady, Ms. Patterson.

She sells medical equipment and travels all the time. Must make boo-coo bucks.

“We got along real well. Ms. Patterson hired me to do her heavy cleaning. I told her I saw the police cars at her neighbor’s house the other night, and I wasn’t sure it was safe to work in Brideport. She assured me it was a secure neighborhood. She wasn’t home at the time, but Mr. Asporth told her the police were called for a false alarm.”

“He would,” Helen said.

“Mr. McArthur, the old man on the other side, was eighty-two and almost deaf. He was also lonely and liked to talk. We sat in his kitchen and drank coffee and ate butter cookies. He didn’t hear a thing that night, which was no surprise. I had to practically yell at him the whole time. Hank Asporth has a lot of girls at his house, but Mr. McArthur never heard any wild parties. The old man sounded kind of disappointed. His house could use a good cleaning, but he didn’t hire me.

“There’s only one neighbor across the street, Mrs.

Kercher. She lives on a big five-acre spread. She didn’t hear anything, but she saw something. A little yellow Honda was parked in Ms. Patterson’s drive for several hours that evening. That’s the medical saleslady’s driveway—the one who was out of town.

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