Read No Such Thing as a Free Lunch (No Such Thing As...: A Brandy Alexander Mystery) Online

Authors: Shelly Fredman

Tags: #cozy mystery, #Philadelphia, #Brandy Alexander, #Shelly Fredman, #Female sleuth, #Funny mystery series, #Plum Series, #Romantic mystery, #Janet Evanovich, #Comic mystery series

No Such Thing as a Free Lunch (No Such Thing As...: A Brandy Alexander Mystery) (9 page)

BOOK: No Such Thing as a Free Lunch (No Such Thing As...: A Brandy Alexander Mystery)
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“Take something for it and be there, Giancola. If I have to suffer through my mother’s lasagna, so do you.” Bobby once said my mom’s cooking could be considered a lethal weapon. Of course I defended her, but we
did
have a cat once that died under suspicious circumstances…

“Anyway, Vince, I’m calling about something else. You probably heard about the Tamra Rhineholt suicide out in Jersey.”

“Yeah,” Vince said quietly. “I heard you found her too. Of all the freakin’ luck. Is there anything I can do for you?”

“As a matter of fact, there is. Can you stop a cremation and order an autopsy?”

“What? Are you, kidding me?”

“I wish I were.”

“How soon can you get over here?”

“Twenty minutes. I’ll bring a pizza.”

“Okay, so you’re telling me someone tried to run you over, they cut your break line, kidnapped you, stuffed you in a trunk and then left you for dead in a gutter, and you didn’t tell the police…
why?

“I thought it would put a damper on Paul’s festivities.”

“You’re nuts, y’know that?”

I was seated in Vince’s office chair, polishing off the last of the pizza. Vince was behind his desk, pawing through one of the drawers. After a minute he extracted a half-empty pack of Camels and some matches. He picked up a small fan he kept stashed behind a mini fridge and set it on his desk. Then he lit up the Camel and took a long drag.

“Hey, isn’t it illegal to smoke in a government building?” I asked.

As he flipped me the bird, there was a knock on the door and Vince’s boss stuck her head in. “Put it out, Giancola.”

I stifled the urge to laugh. He was mad enough at me already. “Look,” I said, when she was gone, “my point is I think Tamra was the real target, not me. People mistook us for each other all the time. It’s just too co-incidental that all those near-death experiences happened to me and then she winds up dead.”

“So how do you know you
weren’t
the real target, and she ended up dead by mistake?”

“Because the guy took a look at me close up and said they got the wrong girl. They wouldn’t have let me go if I was the one they were after. Vince, you’ve got to talk to the Jersey police. The husband plans to have her cremated tomorrow. And did I mention he thought she was having an affair and they had a big fight at a restaurant?”

Vince smiled. “You may have mentioned it once or a thousand times. Look, Brandy,” he said, drumming sausage-like fingers on the top of his desk, “you know I’d do anything in the world for you, but I can’t go telling the Jersey police how to run their department. They looked at the facts and determined it was a suicide. End of story.”

“Well, could you at least call them and tell them what I told you?”

Vince took another long drag off his cigarette before tossing the butt into a Styrofoam cup. “Sure.” He sighed deeply. “Just don’t get too excited. Like I said if the cops thought there was foul play involved they would have jumped all over it.”

“Thanks, Vincent. I owe you one.”

“Does that mean I don’t have to come for dinner on Saturday night?”

“If you don’t show up I will hunt you down.” I stood to leave when suddenly I thought of something. “Vince, Tamra came around here pretty regularly, right?”

“Yeah. I liked her. She was a good reporter.”

“Well, right before she died she told me something big was about to break. What if she was killed because she knew too much?”

“So now you think her death might be related to a story she was working on?”

“Maybe. And don’t give me that look, Vince. Do you recall any conversations you might have had the last time she was in here?”

“No… Yeah, come to think of it. She was asking a lot of questions about David Dwayne Harmon, the guy on death row who’s scheduled to be executed next month. He claims he’s innocent.” Vince shook his head. “They always do.”

The sun was setting as I left Vince’s, and the anxiety that lately accompanied the darkness began to creep up on me. I looked in the rear view mirror. No one looked back. That’s a good sign,” I thought. Then I looked again just to make sure.

I knew I should go straight home, and I had every intention of doing just that, so I was as surprised as anyone when I found myself instead crossing the Betsy Ross Bridge into Pennsauken. I called John along the way and asked him to stop by my house and feed Rocky and Adrian.

“No problem. Where are you going?”

“Nowhere.”

“What kind of an answer is that?”
A really stupid one. I should have just made something up.

“I have some errands to run. I’ll talk to you later,” I said, quickly hanging up. He called me back as I knew he would, but I let it go to voicemail. How could I explain to John what I didn’t understand myself?

I pulled onto Tamra’s block and parked across the street. The house was shrouded in darkness, her car sitting forlornly in the driveway, as if it knew she wasn’t coming back. The thought made me irrevocably sad and I felt my eyes fill with tears. I quickly wiped them away, telling myself that inanimate objects don’t have feelings—except, of course, for stuffed animals.

I reached into my bag for a tissue and my fingers grazed a small, metal object hidden under the weight of my pepper spray.
Tamra’s key.
I’d forgotten all about it. “I really should return this to the neighbor’s,” I thought. They didn’t appear to be home, but I figured I’d get out and stretch my legs and maybe wait for them.

I popped open the glove compartment and extracted a flashlight. It was dark on the street, I reasoned, and I didn’t want to trip and fall. It was also freezing out, so I pulled my hood up over my head and slipped on a pair of gloves I found in my coat pocket. Quickly I scanned the street and, finding no one out there, I climbed out of the car.

As I approached the sidewalk in front of Tamra’s, I was sure I heard a soft meow, which
could
have just been the wind, but why take chances.
What if her cat Mittens was stuck all alone in the house again? It would be so easy for Jeff to forget about her in the throes of his grief.
That settled it. I would simply go inside to make sure Mittens was okay and I’d come right out again. After all, by the time Jeff came home, the cat could starve to death. I took a cursory glance around and opened the front door.

Someone had tried to air out the place. The living room windows had been left open a crack, but even the crisp winter-night breeze couldn’t mask the lingering odor of tragedy. I flicked on the flashlight and made a half-hearted attempt to look for a cat I already knew wasn’t there. “Maybe she’s upstairs,” I announced, keeping up the ridiculous charade, on the off chance someone popped out of the closet with a video recorder.
“See, I’m just in here lookin’ for the cat.”

What was I looking for, anyway? Did I really believe Jeff had murdered his wife, or was this, like everyone else seemed to think, just an elaborate way for me to assuage my guilt over my friend’s death?

As I am much more functional when I’m irrationally confident about my convictions, I decided to stick with my murder theory. I may be emotionally stunted, but my gut feelings are always dead-on. (No pun intended.)

I went into the bedroom and began opening drawers. It felt really uncomfortable rifling through the Rhineholts’ personal belongings. Not that I’m averse to checking out other people’s stuff—I’m inherently nosy—I just didn’t want to get caught. I found an open box of condoms on the nightstand next to the bed and wondered if they had been used recently, in which case, their relationship was probably in a lot better shape than I had imagined
.

I moved on to the office. It looked marginally different from the last time I had been in there, but I couldn’t put my finger on why. “The computer screen is lit up,” I suddenly realized. Who had turned it on? Had Jeff come by the house to sift through his dead wife’s e-mails in search of proof of her infidelity?

As I thought about this, I noticed Tamra’s cell phone lying on the floor, under the bookshelf. I held it in my gloved hands and scanned the menu for recent calls. Resting the flashlight on the table, I scribbled down the numbers for the last calls she’d made. I knew one of them by heart—my own.

Next, I hit incoming messages. A guy’s voice, demanding and gruff filled my ears. “Goddamit, Tamra. You can’t keep avoiding me forever.”
Hmm… an angry bill collector, perhaps, or the mysterious— and evidently cranky Richard
? I checked for a callback number, but it was restricted. Message number two was from Jeff.
“Honey, I’m sorry about earlier. Can we please just talk about this? Call me. I love you.”
His voice was soft and pleading and I began to feel very ashamed of myself for invading their privacy. I placed the phone on the computer table and looked around some more.

My flashlight battery was beginning to dim and I hadn’t found anything incriminating yet. No bloody razor discreetly tucked away in his underwear drawer, no confessionary note proclaiming, “I did it, signed Jeff.”

Okay, assuming for a minute it wasn’t Jeff, who else would have a vested interest in killing off Tamra… hey, maybe her death was work related. What was that big story Tamra was about to break?

I opened her desk drawer and there among a pile of unrelated news items, I found a reprint of an article about a man who had been convicted of raping and killing a college student, out in Manayunk. It was dated four years ago. Vince said Tamra been asking questions recently about a Dwayne Somebody on Death Row.

I stared down at a blurry mug shot of a large, muscular African-American man. David Dwayne Harmon. He appeared to be in his late twenties, shaved head, a small tattoo located above his left ear; good looking by anyone’s standards, even
with
his homicidal tendencies.
Okay, that clinches it. I’m definitely going to hell.

Tamra had highlighted parts of the article. I held the paper up to my face and tried to make out the words in the fading light, but was suddenly distracted by a faint rustling noise. My body stiffened. “Mittens?” I whispered hopefully. The noise was coming from just outside the door. I was surprised I could hear it over the pounding of my heart.

I grabbed my bag and reached inside for the pepper spray, knocking the flashlight onto the rug in the process. The light went out, leaving me in pitch darkness. I quickly crouched behind the desk, taking a fraction of a moment to ponder how I always seemed to end up in these predicaments. I guess my fourth grade teacher Mr. Brownstein was right on the money when he wrote on my report card, “lacks impulse control.”

Oh God, the door was opening. I heard a soft intake of breath and suddenly the room was flooded with light. I stood and pressed hard on the pepper spray, aiming straight for the face that loomed in front of me. Too late, I recognized the uniform and gun that accompanied a command. “Don’t move! Police.” It was followed by a “Jesus Christ” and a few other choice expletives as the spray connected with his eyes.

His partner rushed into the room and tackled me to the ground, knocking the wind out of me. Squashed beneath his weight, I was hauled to my feet, hands bound behind my back and gasping for air.

Tears streamed down the first cop’s face. I must’ve gotten him good because the rims of his eyes turned all red, like a white rabbit. So in my mind I started referring to him as Officer Bunny. “What the hell did you spray me with?” he barked, wiping his face on his sleeve. “It smells like Binaca.”

“It is Binaca,” I huffed, trying to catch my breath. “I couldn’t find my pepper spray. I’m very sorry,” I added. “I didn’t know you were a cop.”

“Tell it to the judge, sweetheart. You’re under arrest.”

“For what? Assault with a breath freshener?”
Oh my God. I’m in real trouble here. Why can’t I just grovel like a normal person?

“What’s your name, ma’am?” Officer Bunny’s partner interjected, and I could see he was making a concerted effort not to laugh.

“Brandy Alexander.”

“You’re kidding, right?”

I resisted the urge to say “bite me” and nodded towards my pocketbook.

“My identification is in there. Officer, what exactly am I being charged with?”

Cop number one did a quick check of my drivers’ license. “Breaking and entering for starters. A neighbor saw you skulking around the property and called the owner. You have the right to remain silent.” Boy that guy could really hold a grudge.

“Look, officer, this is all just a big misunderstanding. If you’ll let me explain—”

He cut me off and read me my rights while his partner gave me the once-over. I thought I saw a glint of recognition in his eye.
He must have seen me on the morning news. Maybe he was a fan. This would be cleared up in a minute.
“Now I know who you are,” he said finally. But before I could offer him an 8 X 10 color glossy photo, he turned back to his partner. “She’s the nut who keeps calling the station saying the woman who lived at this house was murdered. It seems little Nancy Drew here wants to do our job for us.” Seeing as he had a gun and the authority to haul my ass off to jail, I let the sarcasm slide.

I sighed. “The woman who lived here was a friend of mine. I was the one who discovered her. Look, I realized I still had her house key and I wanted to return it to her neighbor. But when I got here I became concerned that their cat was left for days all alone in the house, so I went inside to see if it needed to be fed.”

“Why would you think that?” demanded a new voice. We all whipped around to see who had entered the room. It was Ricky, the buttinski kid from next door. “You were the one who told me to take the cat over to my house,” he said. “Don’t you remember?” Note to self: When the cops aren’t looking, push Ricky down.

In the end, they let me go, but not before they called Bobby to have him vouch for me. They spoke for several minutes. At one point, Officer Bunny glanced over in my direction and nodded his head vigorously. He even chuckled a few times. For once I figured two guys having a laugh at my expense was a good thing.

He hung up the phone and uncuffed me. “DiCarlo says to go home and stay put. He’ll meet you there.”

BOOK: No Such Thing as a Free Lunch (No Such Thing As...: A Brandy Alexander Mystery)
9.82Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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