Read The Housewife Assassin's Guide to Gracious Killing Online
Authors: Josie Brown
Tags: #action and adventure, #Brown, #chick lit, #contemporary romance, #espionage, #espionage books, #funny mysteries, #funny mystery, #guide, #handy household tips, #hardboiled, #household tips, #housewife, #Janet Evanovich, #Josie Brown, #love, #love and romance, #mom lit, #mommy lit, #Mystery, #relationship tips, #Romance, #romantic comedy, #romantic mysteries, #romantic mystery, #Romantic Suspense, #Suspense, #Thriller, #thriller mysteries, #thrillers mysteries, #Women Sleuths, #womens contemporary
He hesitates just long enough to gaze down at my naked, damp body. I know he’s thinking how easy it would be to pull me down onto that king-sized bed. How fun it would be for me to undress him. How he aches to be inside me.
Well, if he’s not thinking this, he should be.
I get my answer when he draws me in close. As he leans in to give me a kiss, his lips linger over mine.
“Soon,” I whisper, and the spell is broken.
He sighs, then heads out, closing the door behind him.
I’ve just started to dry my hair when I hear a knock. I grab my robe and tie it around me before answering the door. I presume it’s a servant with our extra towels.
Abu is standing there. He still has Eddie in his arms. “Ah, Mrs. Stone! Your daughter asked I retrieve her bear from you,” he says in a conversational tone.
“Why, thank you,” I respond. “Please come in.” But before I usher him in, I turn on my iPod to an Elvis Costello song, then shut the bathroom door. This signals Arnie to loop an innocuous twenty seconds of pre-recorded empty room digital footage, so that the covert surveillance camera won’t pick up what’s happening.
I run to the door to let Abu in. When Eddie starts to whine, Abu picks up the dog and muzzles him. “This job is driving me crazy! This mutt has a mind of his own.” As he sits down on the bed, the dog licks his beard. “Why do I get the feeling he’s just looking for crumbs?” He shakes his head in disgust. “Hey, listen. Emma just texted with a tip on the Chechen. Apparently, our target is one of the good guys, part of a rebel group, which calls itself the Gray Wolf Brigade. Its operatives have a tiny tattoo of a wolf on the inside of their wrists.”
I pet Eddie, who immediately rolls over to get his belly scratched. “It’s not much of a lead. I guess if we shake enough hands, we may uncover our target.”
“For now, it’s all we’ve got.” Abu scratches his beard. “I think this darn dog has fleas.”
“It’s your imagination. Eddie’s got to be the best kept dog in the world. Which reminds me: I saw a Nova episode on the intelligence of dogs. Seems that they take their behavioral cues from us. If we’re happy, so are they.”
Abu shakes his head helplessly. “Then this dog must want to jump off a cliff.”
“The point I’m trying to make, Abu, is that you should watch how Eddie responds to those around him. For example, does he act differently when Janie is happy or sad, or if Babette seems harried?”
“Nothing like when Breck is in the room! Then Eddie goes bonkers. The growling is unbelievable.”
Yeah, well, he’s not the only one who tenses up around the lord and master of the manor. Not that I’d say that to Abu. “Have Arnie’s toys been of any help?”
“Nope. This pooch is stubborn. Refuses to shut up, no matter how many times I push Arnie’s squeeze toy silencer. I’ve tried bribing and scolding. Babette has already warned me that they aren’t pleased with my results. They’re afraid Eddie is going to bite some head of state. I just hope I can hold onto my gig until this shindig is over.”
“Do yourself a favor and download that Nova program. Maybe it’ll give you a clue as to what you’re supposed to be doing.”
“Aye, aye, boss lady.” As he salutes me with one hand, he opens the door with the other. Big mistake. Eddie, seeing his chance at freedom, races down the hall.
“Dog whisperer my ass,” Abu mutters, as he takes off after his charge.
I’ve just clicked on the dryer again, when there’s another knock on the door. I crack it open to find a maid standing there, with an armful of towels. “Shall I take them into the bathroom, Madame?” Her accent is slightly British, which is par for the course around here.
“No, that’s okay. I’ll take them.”
She smiles and hands them to me.
That’s when I see it—a small tattoo of a wolf on her left arm.
Her eyes follow mine. She senses I know who she is.
Her arm comes up toward my face. I block it with my forearm, then kick her in the gut. She falls back, slamming into the dresser. This stuns her, but just for a second. She reaches behind her and yanks the dryer from the electrical socket. In no time at all, she’s got the cord wrapped around both her wrists and arms.
“You won’t stop me from killing him.” Her vow is soft, but deadly. “With what he’s done to others like me? That pig does not deserve to live!”
“Trust me I get it. But it’s not happening here, or now.”
We both know I can’t talk her out of her mission anymore than she can talk me out of mine: to save Asimov’s sorry ass.
We circle each other warily, assessing each other’s weaknesses: She’s got more bulk than me, but she’s also slower. I’m taller, too. Best yet, I’m now up against the dresser. Obviously, she considers this a weakness because she charges me.
Even with the cord wrapped around my neck, all it takes is one squirt of my spray cologne in her eyes to blind her.
She stumbles into the bathroom, dragging me with her into the shower, where she turns on the water, full force. She’s hoping to wash the sting out of her eyes.
What she doesn’t count on is my ability to kick her into the shower.
She bangs her head against the marble wall. Before she comes to her senses, I untangle myself from the cord, plug the dryer into an electrical socket, and throw it into the tub.
Wolverine’s death mask stare and the smell of her frying skin sends me gagging from the room followed by a shower of sparks as the electrical system shorts out.
I shut the bathroom door, then lay down on the bed to catch my breath.
This time when there’s a tap on the door, I throw it open, to let Jack in.
But no. It’s Jonah Breck.
I pull my robe tightly around me. “My husband is out right now.”
He smirks. “I know, dear. That’s why I’m here. Don’t worry, we’ve got all the time in the world. He’s with the Japanese defense minister, who is somewhat long-winded.” From behind him, he pulls a bottle of Tattinger’s and two champagne glasses. “I presume you’re finding your accommodations to your liking.”
“In all honesty, there’s a short in the bathroom’s electrical system—”
Before I can say another word, he has backed me onto the bed. When my robe falls open, he whips the sash out from around me. Before I know it, he’s flipped me onto my stomach.
“I could use that drink right now,” I gasp, as he binds my wrists with the sash.
“We’ll celebrate afterward.” I hear him fumbling with his zipper. “You will, anyway. Trust me, I’ll have you begging for more.”
Promises, promises.
I struggle and try to sweet talk some sense into him, but no use. He’s got me pinned. I’ve just about given up any hope of the Calvary coming when there is a sharp knock on the door.
“Mrs. Stone?” Both Breck and I recognize Edwina’s voice. “Mrs. Stone, your daughter requests you come immediately.”
“Answer her.” Breck’s hot breath sears my ear.
I shout, “I’ll—I’ll be right there.”
“I’ll have to escort you. The girls are eating in the south wing media room tonight, and with security as tight as it is… Well, you can just imagine.”
Breck mutters a curse as he rolls off me. Even as he unties me with one hand, the other gently follows the curve of my ass—
When he smacks it hard, I swallow the urge to cry out.
“A love tap. There’s more where that came from. You’ll love the tour of my dungeon.”
He’s got a dungeon? His corporate bio doesn’t mention a sadistic streak, but yeah, okay, makes sense.
I leap up and grab my dress, which is hanging over the chair.
Breck smiles as I struggle into it. “Allow me to zip you up.”
I suppress a shudder at the thought of his hands anywhere on me. Instead, I nod.
He presses the zipper into my skin as he inches it up, ever so slowly. When he’s done, I feel his lips grazing my neck. They linger there as he breathes in the scent of my skin, sweat, and disgust.
How I long to smash that champagne bottle over my host’s head, but seriously, what kind of guest would that make me?
And besides, I can’t deal with the disposal of two dead bodies tonight.
Before I leave, I flip off Elvis Costello.
I can just imagine Ryan and Arnie’s shock and awe at seeing Breck slithering out of the room.
I don’t even want to think about Jack’s reaction.
Let alone what he’ll say about the fried maid in the shower. I guess I have a lot of explaining to do.
“I’ve got a pretty good sense of direction,” I say to Edwina. “We aren’t headed to the south wing, are we?”
Edwina, somewhat embarrassed, shakes her head. “I presumed you needed… some fresh air.”
She ushers me out to a terrace. The sun is setting. From here, we can actually see directly into the ballroom, where many of the guests have already gathered in anticipation of President Asimov’s arrival.
I turn to face her. “Thank you, Edwina. Please tell me, how did you know Breck was in my room?”
She shrugs. “He’s predictable. You’re available. Or at least, he’s arrogant enough to think so. Even if you put up a fight, he presumes your husband will make you do whatever is necessary to make his deal. Most of them do.”
I can only imagine.
“He had me put you close by,” she continues. “But after he attacked you in his office, I felt it necessary that I keep an eye on him.”
“Babette mentioned you’d shown her the security feed.” I shake my head in wonder. “Why doesn’t she divorce him?”
“She has no alternative. If she leaves, he’ll see to it that she never sees Janie again.” Edwina’s voice trembles. “It sickens her, but his infidelities are a small price to pay.”
“I see now why she’d put up with it. But you’re not like his other lackeys, who find it easy to look the other way. Tell me, Edwina, what’s your excuse?”
Instead of answering, she gazes out over the horizon. “Ah, look. President Asimov has arrived. By the time they’re settled, the reception will have already started. I must meet him and his security team, to show them to their quarters.”
She’s right. The helicopters are still far enough away they can’t be heard, but they can be seen, if barely.
“You still have the time to answer me.”
“I owe Mr. Breck my life.” Her smile is slight, and not happy at all. “Now if you’ll excuse me, I have to alert him as to our guest of honor’s arrival.”
So, both of the women in Breck’s life feel tethered to him, despite hating his guts.
As she walks off, all I can think of is how badly I want this mission to be over, so that I can divorce Carl. That way, Jack and I can get on with the rest of our lives.
Chapter 9
Dealing with a Party Crasher
Big parties come with big headaches. One of the worst is the party crasher because he fraternizes with the guests, eats the food you’ve so carefully chosen and prepared, guzzles your liquor, and upsets your seating chart.
So, how should you eliminate him without making a scene? Easy! Slip a roofie into his drink, declare him drunk or tired from “over-exertion,” and call a taxi to take him—
To the city dump.
A great hostess always keeps the trash out of sight, and out of mind.
“I see you had company while I was out,” Jack murmurs in my ear, as we dance, cheek to cheek in the grand ballroom, which takes up the whole top floor of Lion’s Lair.
For an hour now, a twenty-piece orchestra has been playing classic pop tunes. Excitement is in the air, but the natives are getting restless. While some of the swells make tepid attempts to be great sports and escort the handful of ladies around the dance floor, most of the movers and shakers congregate in clusters, like penguins staking out their territorial icebergs.
The security guards are also in tuxedos, but you can tell who they are by the way they talk to themselves, or tilt their heads and tap their ears in order to listen to any internal chatter on possible threats.
Despite my gritted teeth, I give Jack—and any camera pointed our way—a dazzling smile. “You betcha, lots of company. In fact, so many people knocked on the damn door, I felt I was in that Marx Brothers movie. You remember the one: where everyone crams into a tiny stateroom?”