Point of Betrayal (28 page)

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Authors: Ann Roberts

Tags: #Crime, #Fiction, #Lgbt, #Mystery, #Romance

BOOK: Point of Betrayal
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She bit her lip. Ari was the last person she ever wanted to fight with. “I know. You’re right. I’m sorry. When are you coming home? I really need to see you. I need to hold you.”

Ari sighed. “Biz, I don’t know what to think right now. I’m not sure us being together is a good idea. We see the world too differently.”

Anger flared inside her heart. She’d waited so long. “You mean how in your world justice and truth always win and in mine they usually don’t, at least not without a little help?”

Ari didn’t reply and she slapped the counter. She shouldn’t have said it, but the tequila was stripping away her patience. She hated do-gooders like Ari, but she loved her because she was so good. It didn’t make sense.

“Look, just come home and we’ll talk,” she pleaded. “I know I screwed up.”

“Jane and I are going to hang out for a while. I’ll be back in a few days and we can talk then. Okay?”

“Yeah. Sure. No problem.”

She disconnected and finished her third shot of tequila. It was over already. She didn’t see that coming. She thought Ari understood. She’d had enough pain in her own life to recognize the means justified the ends. Biz was certain Ari would do
anything
to bring her brother’s murderer to justice, even if it meant resorting to devious or illegal tactics, but Bobby Arco and Steve Garritson weren’t Richie Adams. In Ari’s world there were two standards, but Biz saw only one for everyone, which is why she’d stopped by the police department and found a sister in the evidence department who gladly showed her the dress shirt pocket for the promise of a date. After a quick stop at the mall and a little help from her pocketknife, she’d left a piece of evidence the police wouldn’t miss.

Only slightly inebriated, she pushed Ari from her mind and returned to self-preservation and her plan. She grabbed a trash bag from the pantry and went to the bedroom closet to retrieve the blond wig and the slinky black cocktail dress, her only remaining connections to Wanda. She had hurled the highball glass from Wanda’s apartment into the desert on her way to California so once the wig and dress were gone, if the police searched her apartment, they would come up empty-handed. She just needed to dispose of the bag.

She donned her favorite baseball cap and took the Subaru keys from the peg in the laundry room. She was desperate for a shower but removing Wanda completely from her life was a priority. She was sorry to lose the wig. It was one of her favorites.
Damn that Molly
, she thought.

The parking garage was half empty, most of the residents still enjoying the end of their weekend. As she waited for the gate to scroll up, she debated where to dump the bag and decided to keep it simple. She’d drive over to the east side and find a garbage bin on the perimeter of a strip mall. No one would ever know, and it would be impossible to trace.

She’d just pulled out of the garage and was waiting to turn left when three black and whites converged on her, sirens blaring and lights flashing. She was too stunned to move. She took some deep breaths and glanced at the bag next to her.
It doesn’t matter
, she thought.
It’s private property. It means
nothing
.

Jack Adams and Andre Williams approached, motioning for her to get out.
Keep it together
, she thought, as she rolled down the window. She’d make them work for it.

“What’s going on?” she asked perturbed.

Andre pulled a warrant from his breast pocket and handed it to her. “Sorry, Biz, but we need to search your vehicle and your condo.”

She read the search warrant implicating her in the murder of Wanda Sykes. “This is crazy.” She looked at Jack, who wore a stony expression. “Jack, c’mon.”

He squatted, his enormous frame filling her window. “You need to think, Biz. The last thing Sol Gardener told me before he died was that Ari was still in danger. Someone could still hurt her. I’m guessing that someone is you.”

“I could never hurt Ari,” she said sincerely.

“Maybe you couldn’t push her off a balcony, but Vince Carnotti wouldn’t hesitate to take her out.”

He paused and she realized what he said was true. Eventually Carnotti would use Ari against her if he felt threatened.

“Now, you need to come with us for a little chat. On the way to the station you need to think about what should happen next, about what’s important and how to save yourself.” He checked his watch and added, “We’ve been here a little over a minute. How long will it be before Carnotti knows you’re in police custody? Think about that.”

She peered through the windshield looking for the dark Escalade. He was right. Carnotti’s people listened to police scanners and had cops on the inside. If he didn’t know about the search warrant he would soon, and he’d wonder what Biz would say or what she possessed that might incriminate him. Then he’d worry. Jack knew it.

Ever the gentleman, Andre opened the door for her. “I’ll run this back down the ramp to your parking space. Which one is it?”

“Forty-eight,” she mumbled, already sensing her life was shifting.

She walked with Jack up the street to his sedan. She glanced back at the lofts, wondering if and when she’d return. She suddenly realized it didn’t matter whether the police could prove a case against her. She’d taken painstaking precautions to kill Wanda and sifted through garbage to gain an alibi, but she didn’t need insurance against them. They were the good guys. If she wanted to stay alive, she needed insurance against Vince Carnotti, and she guessed that was what Jack and the DA would propose. They were the good guys—and she wasn’t. Despite all of her years helping women, she was a thief, a burglar and now a murderer.

As the car pulled away to join the downtown traffic, she noticed a red truck parked on the other side of the street. She glanced into the side mirror as they passed. She may have been mistaken, but she was almost positive Molly Nelson was leaning against the steering wheel, flipping her off.

Chapter Thirty-Four
 

Jack reached for a bottle of Maalox he’d found in Molly’s old desk and took a hefty swig. His stomach was doing somersaults and he couldn’t relax. Who would have imagined he’d get stage fright the first time he conducted morning briefing as the interim Chief of D’s? He’d been going to briefings for decades, never contemplating what the poor guy at the front might be experiencing. Now he knew, and it had turned out okay. The officers actually seemed to
like
him in the position.

It wouldn’t be official for a few more weeks, since he’d be getting a promotion to lieutenant, but according to Phillips it was a sure thing. He was definitely the hero of the hour for solving Escolido and getting an indictment on Vince Carnotti. It had been a great week.

“Have I told you how great you make me look?” Dylan asked, strolling into his office and folding herself into one of the small chairs. Today her hair was pulled back with some clips and he could see her high cheekbones. She was smiling. He liked it when she smiled.

“You have,” he said. “Thanks.”

“I want you to see this through with Elizabeth Stone. You know, work with the marshals, act as the go-between. Are you up for that?”

He nodded. “I was going to insist, actually. She was involved with my daughter.”

She didn’t hide her surprise. “Your daughter’s gay?”

“Yes,” he said evenly. “She’s a lesbian. Her previous girlfriend was Molly Nelson, whose help on this case, I may add, was critical to the indictment.”

She held up a hand in surrender. “I’m sorry. I take back everything I said. I was wrong, and I look forward to meeting her and shaking her hand. Satisfied?”

When she looked up, he saw a dimple on her chin. “Mostly,” he said, grinning.

She pointed at the darts on his desk. “Are you any good?”

“I’d like to think so. I became really good during my retirement, but I imagine I’ll get rusty really quick.”

She picked up a dart and fired it into the board on the opposite wall. It didn’t hit the bull’s-eye, but it came close.

“Beat that.”

His landed directly across from hers. “I’d say we’re evenly matched.”

She looked momentarily flustered, and they exchanged a long look before she sprung out of the chair. “I need to get back to work.”

He watched her go, enjoying her lingering perfume.

* * *

 

The music inside the apartment delayed his knock. He’d never heard Molly play, but Ari had said she was amazing. He listened to the lively and brisk melody. He knew nothing about classical music or the composers and had cringed the few times Lucia, Ari’s mother, had forced him to the symphony or, worse, the ballet. Violin music
and
dancing.

“She’s really good, isn’t she?” a nearby voice asked.

He peered over the rosebush and saw Molly’s neighbor sitting on her porch. She was a typical little old lady with her hair in curlers and wearing a duster.

“I love to come outside and listen to her,” she continued. “I can hear the music a lot better outside than through the wall.”

“I agree. She’s excellent.”

“Who are you? I’m not tryin’ to be nosy. I’m Dorothy Lyons, the head of neighborhood watch. So I’m watching—and listening to Molly.”

“I’m Jack Adams,” he said with a wave.

Her face lit up, and he realized she didn’t have her bottom dentures in. “Ari’s dad?”

“Yeah, Ari’s my daughter.”

“Great gal,” she said. “The best. We need to get those two back together as soon as possible. Molly’s turned into a grumpy Gus without her.”

“I’ll work on it. It was nice meeting you, Mrs. Lyons.”

“You too, Jack. You got a girlfriend? I can set you up. I know a lot of women, and all of them still have their original teeth.”

“That’s okay. I’m good.”

Before she could ask any more questions, he knocked, and the music instantly stopped followed by a commotion as if she was picking up things before she opened the door.

“Jack? What are you doing here?”

“I thought I’d come and give you an update on Biz.”

They went to her small kitchen table, and she brought them each a can of diet ginger ale. “I hope this is okay,” she said. “It’s the strongest I’ve got these days.”

“This is great,” he replied. “So, Biz agreed to immunity and witness protection in exchange for her testimony against Carnotti.”

She looked dumbfounded. “Are you serious? The DA’s going to let her get away with murder?”

“She’s not getting away,” he said. “She’s losing her life as she knows it, and we’re getting the biggest criminal in the city.”

“She
should
lose everything regardless! She’s a killer!”

He reached for her hand. “Molly, hear me. Biz knows the game. She knows how to play hardball. She doesn’t have to give us anything, and she’s also saying that Carnotti as much as ordered her to kill Wanda.”

“What?”

“She corroborated your story about the day at the apartments. The waitress who saw Biz in the coveralls was right. Biz and one of Carnotti’s goons went out the back way, and according to Biz, Carnotti told her to kill Wanda—or else.”

“She was already planning on doing it—”

“No,” he interrupted. “She was planning an accident, and it probably wouldn’t have worked.”

She shook her head, not liking any of it. “You don’t know that.”

He leaned back in the chair. “It doesn’t matter. The deal’s made. She’s out of here and Carnotti’s in custody.”

“And Wanda’s dead.”

“Yes,” he agreed, “she’s dead. The woman who ruined your career is dead. Have you forgotten that?”

She looked away. “She didn’t ruin my career. I made my own choices and I’ve spent the last nine months coming to terms with that.” She met his gaze with sincerity. “I’m an alcoholic. The only person who destroyed my life is
me
.”

Chapter Thirty-Five
 

Ari and Jane spent the next two days walking along the ocean, enjoying the hotel’s spa and relaxing by the pool as a way to forget Sunday’s traumatic events. By Monday, Steve Garritson’s death and the newly revealed family secrets were plastered across all of the California newspapers. Evan, Sam and Georgie had gone into seclusion, one paper reported, and another showed Scott Kramer leading the Garritsons out of the funeral home.

“I can’t even imagine how they must be feeling,” Jane said, clicking off the TV remote and pulling her last suitcase off the bed. “They watched their father die.”

“I feel horrible for Clay Justice,” Ari said. “It’s never easy to shoot anyone.”

“He was clearly a very sick man,” Jane concluded on her way into the bathroom to gather her toiletries. “Are you done packing already?” she called.

“Yup. I hardly brought anything, remember?”

Jane’s retort was inaudible but no doubt sarcastic. She stirred her tea and lingered at the patio door, watching the waves. After returning from the Garritsons’ on Sunday night, they’d switched rooms to gain an ocean view, deciding they needed a real vacation before returning to Phoenix.

The minute Justice had mentioned the dress shirt pocket, Ari had guessed the killer was Georgie and showed him the pool picture of Scott and the boys. After explaining the ramifications to their family and Steve’s appointment to the task force, he agreed to get a search warrant and expedited the lab’s review of Arco’s shirt, which she assumed Biz had planted. He’d managed to show up with the unis just in the nick of time, or she guessed she’d be dead. She shivered for a second and gulped the warm tea. She’d been cold since Sunday and she knew it wasn’t the November air.

Jane looked around the suite and counted her four suitcases. “I think that’s everything. Did you call the cab?”

She smiled sheepishly. “No, I made other arrangements.”

Her face lit up. “A limo?”

“Nope.”

Someone knocked and Jane looked at her suspiciously. “It better not be who I think it is.”

“Answer it,” she said innocently.

She went to the door and shouted, “Go away! I don’t want to see you!”

Ari couldn’t make out the reply, but she groaned and set down her mug. “Jane, don’t be an idiot.”

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