Authors: K.J. Larsen
“Not interested.”
“I’ll double it.”
She shook her head stubbornly.
“I have to be honest with you,” I lied. “Billy has gone on a vacation. I mean a really long vacation. And I can’t help you. I catch cheaters. I don’t negotiate with other people’s families. I have enough problems with my own.”
“Who said anything about negotiating with Howie’s gold-digging family? I told you I was here about my
fiancé
. You should take notes.”
She shoved a picture in my face.
“Holy hot guy,” I breathed.
The photograph was taken somewhere tropical with white sand, palm trees, and a shared beach blanket. It was easy to understand why Sylvia fell for the piece of shit fiancé. Garret was a hunk with four-pack abs and a disarming smile. His arm was slipped loosely around Sylvia’s shoulder and the butterfly, I noted, wasn’t her only tattoo. Sylvia tucked the photo back in her purse.
Her lip trembled. “After my husband Howie was creamed by that truck—”
“And you became filthy rich,” I soothed her.
She nodded. “I met Garret. He had moved in, and I planned the wedding. But then last week I found Garret going through my financial statements. I was furious but he blew me off. Said he was looking for stationery. Ha!”
“You didn’t believe him.”
“There’s a fat stack on the desk.” She slugged down the last of her drink. “Last night Garret stayed out late. When he came home, he reeked of cheap perfume.”
My head hurt. “What do you want from me?”
“I want you to tell me if I should marry Garret.”
“Whoa.”
“I have to know I’m not making a terrible mistake.”
Sylvia didn’t need me to tell her the truth about her fiancé. In my experience, women know when a partner is chipping. We don’t always trust our gut. I know this because my gut was screaming at me when my ex was boinking one of the waitresses at his restaurant. One day they passed me on South Throop Street. I actually fell for Johnnie’s “she was picking up an empty soda bottle” line.
Sylvia reached for me, and I sat on my hands. “Garret is meeting a friend at Bernice’s Tavern at eight. Get close enough to hear what they’re talking about. Let me know how he acts around women when I’m not around.”
It sounded easy enough. At least no naked pictures were involved.
I said, “I should warn you I’ve had more experience with men you wouldn’t want to marry.”
She laughed and splashed Billy’s bourbon in my coffee.
And just like that, I watched my bath bubbles disappear.
I jetted home for a quick shower and a change of clothes. I blow-dried my hair and slipped on a three-quarter sleeve blouse and a pair of skinny jeans. I sat in my office and was checking emails when the phone rang.
It was Savino. “Hey, Babe. I met Kyle Tierney. He has a rock-solid alibi for the night Billy was killed.”
“Of course he has. He’s a liar.”
“He also has security footage at his house. He was in at eight. Didn’t step outside until five the next morning.”
“Tierney ordered the hit. He’s guilty as the schmuck who pulled the trigger.”
“Maybe.”
“Cristina told Billy what really happened. Tierney had to waste him.”
“Why? He served his time. Billy’s testimony didn’t have any punch. Hearsay. It wouldn’t stand up in court.”
“I can’t believe you’re defending him.”
“Kyle Tierney is a calculating guy. He’s not impulsive. He’s not going to order a hit on a guy in a Santa suit for pissing him off. If he had Bonham killed, there’s a solid motive we haven’t uncovered yet.”
“You can bet your cute ass there is.”
I heard Savino smile. “How much do you really know about Billy’s client?”
“Uhm…”
“There could be more to the story than she’s telling. Did you check her out?”
A professional guffaw on my part. “Nope.”
“You’ve been through a lot, Cat. And you were taking over for Billy. I’m sure Cristina was convincing. You want me to run a background check?”
“No, that’s okay. I’ll have Rocco take care of it.”
I glanced around the seat and smiled. Cristina had left a soda can in the car.
“I have her prints.”
***
My brother picked up on the first ring. “Yo.”
“I need to see you, bro. Where can we meet?”
Jackson mumbled something in the background.
“My partner’s hungry,” Rocco said. “We can meet at Mickey’s.”
“Gotcha. On my way.”
“Last one there buys lunch.”
“You’re almost there, aren’t you?”
“Walking in the door. Jackson says, bring mucho dinero. He could eat a horse.”
“Order for me. Extra peppers. Hold the horse.”
Ten minutes later I skated into Mickey’s with Cristina’s soda can in a zip-lock baggie. Our server was just serving heaping plates of golden fried chicken, mashed potatoes and gravy, and coleslaw.
Jackson leaned over, took half the chicken off my plate, then pocketed the soda can. “Evidence from another slap and tickle?”
For some strange reason, the Chicago PD doesn’t take my Pants On Fire Detective Agency seriously.
“Don’t listen to him, sis. He knows you’re good at what you do.”
“It’s true,” Jackson winked. “I like dirty pictures.”
I made a face.
Jackson said, “Rocco’s playing nice cuz his birthday’s coming up. He wants you to babysit a few days.”
“Cool. My house rules stand. The girls get ice cream every night.”
“Just don’t tell Maria. And I need tickets for the Bears/Forty-niners game. We’re flying to San Francisco for my birthday.”
“I’m guessing the game’s sold out.”
“Is that a problem?”
“Nope. I just want you to be grateful.” I emptied my wine glass. “I saw Mrs. Bonham this morning. She wants to know what’s going on with the investigation. What do you have?”
Rocco blew a sigh. “I can tell you what we don’t have. Not a witness, a weapon, or a motive. It’s like somebody shot Billy and disappeared into thin air.”
“But you have the man responsible. Billy’s death is on Kyle Tierney. I’m sure of it.”
Rocco opened his mouth to say something and changed his mind. He stuffed in a mouthful of mashed potatoes instead.
“Captain Bob was right about one thing,” Jackson said. “Bonham bought trouble like a horse draws flies.”
Rocco smiled. “Billy loved the ladies. They bought him more than a little trouble. If you’re right about Tierney, this bartender chick could have been the final ticket that checked him in to the wooden Waldorf.”
“Billy was a sucker for a good-looking woman,” I admitted. “Here’s an example. Last week two blonds picked him up at a bar. They took him home to play strip poker.”
Jackson said. “How can I meet these women?”
“Bonham?” Rocco said doubtfully. “There had to be a whole lotta alcohol involved.”
“Women loved Billy. He was down to one sock and his undies when one of the women screams that her husband is home. They push him out a window in his tightie whities. He couldn’t get his stuff back.”
“Ouch. The dumbass got hustled.”
“That’s what I told him. But he still didn’t get it. Billy thought those blonds were crazy about him. It’s just as well, I suppose. He was going through a messy break-up. His ego needed a few strokes.”
“That’s a full-fledged beating,” Rocco said. “I’ll ask around at the station. There could be other incidents.”
“Keep it on the down-low,” Jackson said. “We don’t want to piss off Captain Bob any more than he already is.”
“What’s wrong with Bobby?”
“He’s getting a lot of pressure from the guys upstairs about the Bridgeport Bandit. Jackson and I have been after this guy for weeks. Nada. We’re getting reamed by the press.”
I said, “If you want some help, I—”
“We got it handled,” Jackson said hastily.
I pointed to the bulge in his pocket. “Those are Cristina’s fingerprints. I appreciate you running them for me.”
Rocco and Jackson looked at each other, then me. “Why?”
“I’m not sure her story is adding up. Cristina said Tierney had her diamond earrings. So we, uh, kind of broke into his safe.”
“
You broke into the Irish Pub?
Dammit, Cat.
Bob told you to stay away from Tierney.”
“He wasn’t there.”
If my brother’s fingers weren’t busy with a chicken breast, he might have tried to shake some sense into me.
“In case you were interested, the results were zip on the earrings. But Tierney left a note in the safe for Cristina. It said she has something that belongs to him.”
“What?”
“The diamond earrings.”
“You said Tierney had them.”
“That’s what Cristina thought. And Tierney thinks Cristina has them.”
“So where the hell are they?”
I shrugged. “The note said he was coming for her.”
“That’s a threat.” Rocco said.
Jackson deadpanned, “Do you want to report the threat you found in Tierney’s safe to Captain Bob?”
“You’re hilarious.”
“It looks like Cristina was shaking more for Kyle Tierney than his martinis,” Rocco said. “Makes you wonder what else she’s lying about.”
Jackson grunted. “If Tierney left a note, he expected her to break in. But why? Not for the earrings.”
“A couple of his guys were waiting too,”
“Dammit, Cat.” Rocco said.
“No worries. We roughed them up a little, knocked them senseless.”
Rocco said, “You and Cristina managed this?”
“Cleo was at the symphony.”
“Uh huh.”
“And she was out of buckshot anyway.”
Jackson was all bug-eyed. “Damn, girl.”
I thought steam would come out of Rocco’s ears. He blew air instead.
“Thank Max for me. I owe him for this one.”
My fox-killing client suspected her fiancé was cheating on her. But there wasn’t time for 8x10 glossies. The caterers were already frosting the cake. I wouldn’t be able to tell Sylvia what Garret was up to last week. But I could give him the chance to man-up tonight. He could prove to Sylvia that he loves her. Or not.
I cracked out the serious ammo—sassy, sexy, and just a half-inch short of slutty.
I tromped into the Bernice’s Tavern a little after four in red-hot stilettos and a little black dress. The dress was a Roxanne Barbara original and a study in leg and cleavage. Guaranteed to smoke out guys who aren’t blind, committed, or gay.
Or, you know, getting married Friday.
I recognized Sylvia’s piece of shit fiancé from the hunky beach blanket photo she showed me in Billy’s office. His steel-gray eyes caught mine in the bar mirror. I looked away. He nearly whiplashed his fine self rubbernecking around.
I sat at a small table in line with the mirror over the bar and slid a gold cigarette lighter beside me. The “lighter” was a voice activated recorder—a gift from the much hunkier Savino.
I glanced at the drink menu. When I looked up, the piece of shit fiancé hovered over me. Two drinks in his hand.
“Hi, gorgeous. If you’re waiting for someone, here I am.”
Seriously
? Did Sylvia actually fall for such a cheesy line?
“I have a date,” I said. “He’s late.”
“Is that a problem?”
“It is if he wants to get laid.”
“I like that. You’ve got fire.”
Was this guy for real? I had to wonder how someone—even my loony tunes, fox-killing client—got mixed up with this hustler.
“Let’s make him jealous.” He dropped his bum in a chair and slid us both a martini. “Why waste a perfectly good happy hour just because your date is a—”
“Putz?”
He wrapped his arm around the back of my chair. “I’m Garret.”
“Cat.” I traced a finger on the rim of my glass. “The last stranger who bought me a drink turned out to be married.”
“Not guilty.” He held up his left hand.
“Girlfriend?”
“Can I answer that in the morning?” His fingertips danced along my arm.
Gag me
. The thought of spending the night with him made me want to hurl.
Garret leaned close and his lips twitched a smile. “The night is young. Who knows how it will end?”
Actually, I did. And so did he. He was going home to Sylvia. She owned the big house, and she paid the bills. Her grieving money probably bought the martinis on the table. The only thing I didn’t know was if I’d get out of there before smacking the creepy grin off his face.
I downed my drink and flexed my fingers. A few more of those and I’d go for his throat.
With an intimate gesture, Garret pulled two cigarettes from a pack and held one to my lips. I shook my head.
“I don’t smoke.”
His curious gaze dropped to the gold lighter on the table.
“I’m quitting. The lighter’s like a familiar friend.” I scooped it up quickly and stood.
“You’re not leaving?”
“I am.”
Garret’s hand restrained me. “Wait. How can I reach you?”
“We could meet here Friday,” I said all straight-faced.
Like between the wedding and the reception
.
He exaggerated a sigh. “Unfortunately, I’m leaving on a business trip this weekend. I’d like to call you when I get back. You and me, we got something special here.”
“Do we?”
“We do.” He drained his glass. “I got a feeling the gods are smiling on me tonight.”
“Yeah?”
I dropped the lighter in my bag and slung it on my shoulder. Leaning low, I whispered in his ear.
“Cuz I got a feeling the gods are laughing their socks off.”
***
I slid behind the wheel and the smell of sausages filled my nostrils. I wasn’t alone. Fear froze everything but my eyeballs. A distinct wheezing sound came from the backseat. Inga was at grandma’s. And she didn’t have sinus troubles. But I knew who did.
My gaze whipped to my rearview mirror and I jumped.
Devin waved a sausage at me.
I opened my mouth twice before a sound came out. Then I reached over the backseat and slugged him with my bag.
“Get out. You scared the crap out of me.”
Devin snorted a laugh. I put the bag away. He clambered over the seat and plopped down beside me.
“I was just released from treatment. They let me out early for good behavior.”
I could smell the stench of cheap alcohol on his breath. I put the key in the ignition and rolled down the windows. The treatment did wonders.
“Yeah, right. They don’t let you out of rehab for good behavior, dumb ass. You escaped.”
Devin twisted his mouth. “You DeLucas think you’re so effin’ perfect.”
“
Seriously?
Have you met my effin’ perfect family?” I closed my eyes and counted to ten. When I opened them again he was still there. “Why are you here, Devin?”
“I want to make things right between us.”
“Good luck with that.”
He threw me a look. “You’re not helping me with this situation here. I think it’s the least you could do.”
I bit my tongue. “Really? Please, continue.”
“I can’t remember much about that night—”
“That’s convenient.”
“I’m guessing things ended pretty badly.”
He waited for me to say something. I pressed my lips together to keep from screeching like a crazy person.
He finally said, “This is awkward.”
I screeched like Cleo. “Awkward? You tried to
kill
me. You crashed my thirtieth birthday party.
I didn’t get cake!
”
“Chill, Cat. I’ll buy you a cake. I’ve changed.”
“Changed? You haven’t changed. You stole cars and ran a chop shop before they hauled you off to treatment. Then when you break out, the first thing you do is break into Tino’s car.”
“This is Tino’s car?” He looked like he was going to be sick.
“You ate my dog’s food.
Dog
food.”
He gagged.
“If Jack wasn’t your uncle I’d shoot you myself.”
It’s hell to find a good mechanic.
“No, you wouldn’t.” Devin grinned. “Besides you didn’t bring your gun. I can tell.”
He got me. My 9mm was at home in my lingerie drawer, keeping them safe.
“We grew up together, Cat. You wouldn’t whack me.”
“I would whack you in a hot minute. You ruined my three-hundred dollar dress! I wore it
two hours
. And don’t even get me started on my Valentino metallic stilettos!” My voice reached a near fervent pitch.
“Ha!” Devin barked. “
Three hundred dollars for a dress?
You are such a bonehead. That’s a hundred-fifty ya-yos an hour.”
I made a sputtering sound that would terrify small children.
He reached into the backseat and pulled out a couple bottles of soda from my surveillance cooler. He handed me one, and I hit him with it.
He laughed and rubbed his arm.
“Anyway, when I was away, I had a lot of time to think about our, uh, misunderstanding. He cleared his throat. “I wanted to say—I…uh… uhm…”
“Yes?”
“I was uh—well…”
“Come on—”
“What I am trying to say is…”
“You can’t say it, can you?”
“I can say it. I’m—”
“You can do it. Spit it out, Devin.”
“I’m spitting already. I’m…I’m…”
“Sor–ry.” I prompted. “Just say it.”
He did a mean goldfish imitation.
“Un-flipping-believable.”
“Oh—just shut up and get over it, Cat!” Devin got out his flask from his inside jacket pocket and took a hefty pull.
“I don’t know how far you got with the twelve steps. But you didn’t stay in the program long enough for the one where you ask
forgiveness
for
trying to
kill people.
Devin shot a sullen look. I inspected his mouth. There was a white powdery substance around his lips.
Powdered sugar
.
“You got into Mama’s cannoli? My God! Is nothing off limits to you?”
He opened the door. “We’ll talk later. You’re being a raging bitch right now. Aunt Flo must be visiting.”
I lunged for him as he jumped outside laughing. I caught a flash of something in his hand.
I couldn’t wrench my jaws apart. “That’s my mama’s Tupperware,” I said through gritted teeth.
He winked. “I’ll finish these off and return the container myself. I bet your mama makes me supper.”
I watched as Devin disappeared into the night.
I pounded the steering wheel with my fists, took a few deep, balancing breaths. I closed my eyes and felt healing energy wash over me as I visualized slowly choking the life out of Devin.
I was ready to face my next hurdle. I punched Cleo’s number on my phone.
She answered on the first ring. “Hey, girlfriend.”
“So, whatcha doin’?”
“I took Cristina and Halah out to dinner, and we’re on our way to a movie. Halah wants to see some weird vampire flick.”
I heard Halah giggling in the background. She seemed happier now. More like a fifteen year old should be. In theory, anyway.
“You’re scared of vampires, Cleo.”
“And zombies. Well, all dead men walking, really.” I heard her shudder.
“You should be.” I laughed. “Drop the girls off at the theatre and give them cab fare. We’re working tonight. We have a murder to solve.”
Cleo tried to infuse regret in her voice. “Sorry to ditch ya. The Pants On Fire Detective Agency is hot on the trail of a killer!”
“We wanna come,” I heard Cristina say.
Cleo’s voice came back. “Cristina said—”
I cut her off. “Trust me. Cristina will be safer with the vampires.”
***
I removed a recorder from my glove box, put in the tape, and plugged in the cord from my cigarette lighter. I had one more call to make. In my business, I make a lot of these. They don’t get easier.
Sylvia answered on the first ring. She had to be staring at the phone.
“Okay, Cat. What happened? Tell me all the details. And don’t hold back. Please. Cat? Are you there? Hello?”
“I will tell you everything, if you will just listen,” I breathed in deep. Softening my voice I continued. “I met Garrett at Bernice’s Tavern. I had a little quality time with him before his friend showed up.”
“Dammit, Cat, don’t beat around the bush. What did he say about me? Did he show you that picture of us on the beach?”
“Uh…no.”
“Did he tell you he was engaged?”
“Sylvia,” I sighed. “Please just shut up for a minute and listen to me. I recorded our conversation, so you will be able to hear our whole encounter. I’ll play it for you.”
I heard her take a deep breath and hold it. I wondered if she’d stopped breathing.
I pressed
Play
. She was oddly quiet through the entire exchange.
“That’s it,” I said when it was over.
Silence.
“Sylvia, are you there?”
Her voice caught. “The caterers are gonna be pissed.”
***
Cleo and I pushed through the Irish Pub’s heavy oak doors, tromped past the bar and two other servers, and took a table in the back where the woman I remembered waited tables.
She breezed over and slapped a couple menus on the table. “I’m Katie,” she said in case we couldn’t read her nametag. “May I bring you ladies something from the bar?”
“I’ll have a Manhattan,” I said.
Snapping closed her menu, Cleo said, “A martini. And I’d like to start with an appetizer. What’s good?”
“The Corned Beef Rolls are a favorite. I like the Pear and Bleu Cheese Salad. The Guinness BBQ Wings are the best I’ve found anywhere.”
Cleo dropped the menu. “We’ll take them all. I’m famished.”
I waited until Katie returned with our drinks to plop my camera-purse on the table. She did a double take.
“I know that purse.”
“You do,” I said.
She squinted, peering closely at my face. “Same green eyes. Wow. I wouldn’t have recognized you.”
“Cat’s incognito,” Cleo blabbed. “If your boss sees her…”
Cleo seized her butter knife and mock-sliced her throat.
“Smooth, Cleo,” I said. “Next time, you can wait in the car with Inga.”
Katie’s eyes swept the room. “She’s right. You do
not
want Kyle to find you here. We’re supposed to tell him if we see you.”
I slipped a C-note from my purse pocket. “You didn’t.”
She palmed it. “Ben’s a good friend of mine.”
“What about Cristina? Your old bartender from a few years back.”
“Not so much.”
“Why’s that?”
“I don’t like to speak ill of the dead.”
“Cristina’s not dead.”
“The boss hasn’t found her yet.”
Cleo reached in my bag and dragged out another Benjamin. “Another good friend might loosen your tongue.”
Katie smiled and took it saying, “You can’t have too many friends. Cristina didn’t work here long. She started in the kitchen, slept with the boss, next day was promoted to bartender.
“I guess you know about the shooting. The cops closed the bar for a week. We all came back except Cristina. Maybe she figured once the boss was gone, the perks she got sleeping with him were gone, too.”
I shrugged. “Or maybe she left because she was traumatized by the shooting. She worked that night. It’s possible she saw something.”
“Cristina’s a drama queen. You got that right. But she didn’t work that night. She was on the schedule, but she traded shifts with another bartender.”
“Liar, liar, pants on fire,” Cleo said.
The server looked taken aback. “She means Cristina,” I said. “Thanks for the information.”
She turned to leave, then twisted around again.
“You know if my boss finds out I talked to you…”
I crossed my heart, finger-locked my lips, and threw the key away.
“Mmuaymmm,” I said.
“Huh?”
“Her lips are sealed,” the one with the big mouth said.
“I don’t know what happened between Cristina and Kyle. But I can tell you this. The only time I’ve seen the boss this mad, someone was ripping him off.” And Katie was gone.