Read The Sex On Beach Book Club Online
Authors: Jennifer Apodaca
The door opened before she could think it out.
Holly got up, relieved that Tanya had arrived and the moment was broken. She walked around her desk and noted a big improvement. Tanya wore her hair straight, her makeup a little on the heavy side but not as thick as it had been at the book club. She wore a T-shirt that skimmed the top of her jeans. “Tanya, come in and sit down.”
Wes stood up. “Hi, Tanya, can I get you some coffee?”
She looked at Wes. She appeared a little confused.
Holly said, “I'm doing some work for Wes. That's one of the things that I wanted to talk to you about. Do you mind if he's here?” She should have made Wes go home. Tanya wasn't the only one he confused. She amended thatâshe wasn't confused. It was the attraction between them blurring the lines.
Tanya answered. “No, I don't mind.” She looked at Wes. “Can I have coffee with sugar?”
“Sure.”
“Sit down,” Holly said, and went around her desk. She gave Tanya a moment to get settled then got down to business. “So what kind of work experience do you have?”
“Not a lot. I've been a waitress and a sales associate for retail stores.” Tanya looked up when Wes handed her the coffee. “Thanks.”
“You're welcome.” Wes went to the couch against the wall and sat down.
Holly went on. “Okay, what about office work?”
“Uh, not really. I can use a computer at home.”
“Okay.” She made a note on her pad. “Any other skills?”
Tanya sat forward. “I learn fast and I'm willing to work hard.” She looked around the office.
Holly wasn't sure what she was looking for. Her desk took up about a quarter of the space. The couch and filing cabinets brought that up to half the space. The kitchen was in a small alcove, and there was a bathroom and storage area behind that. She picked up her coffee, letting Tanya finish her inspection.
“I could work for you. Answer phones, type stuff, handle your schedule, maybe”âher voice thinnedâ“like, you know, do little things like, um, help you investigate.”
Holly choked. Her nose burned and her eyes watered as the hot coffee spread in the back of her throat, then finally went down. She stared at Tanya.
“I know! You found me cheating on my husband. And I did sort of attack you. But I could be your secretary or assistant. Iâ”
Holly shook her head, struggling to find her voice. After a few seconds, she said, “I don't have an assistant. I'm a one-woman operation.” That was the way Holly liked it, both at work and in her personal life.
Tanya's shoulders seemed to deflate beneath her pink T-shirt. “Maybe I could try out? For free? See if you like having an assistant?”
This was what being soft brought. She should never have offered to help Tanya. She should have kicked her ass as soon as Tanya jumped her. She should haveâ
“You could put her on my payroll. Just while you're working on my case.” Wes stood up from the couch and walked over to stand at the end of the desk to look at Tanya. “It'd be temporary while Holly's working for me.”
She was getting a headache. “That won't work.”
Tanya ignored her. “Oh! Thank you! You'll see, Holly, I'll be really good. I can organize your files, handle your phone calls, um, clean the office⦔
“Just don't touch my Milky Way bars.” God, how did she get into these things? And why wouldn't Wes just shut up?
“Tanya,” he said, “you can get started by helping us figure out who killed Cullen.”
Her bottom lip slid out like a three-year-old kid's did, and her big blue eyes pooled.
That was it. Holly slapped both hands onto her desk and snapped, “Stop that right now. In this office, we don't cry over dumb-ass men! You can throw something, call him names, or just be damned glad the bloodsucker is out of your life, but we don't cry.”
Tanya's eyes rounded. The she sniffed once and said, “Okay.”
Holly nodded, purposely refraining from looking at Wes, who was standing by her desk. He might not like her methods, but she didn't care. To Tanya, she said, “Good. Now get it through your head that Cullen used you. He didn't take one look at you across the table at the book club and fall in love. That is not the real world.”
“Butâ”
She glared at her. “No buts!”
Tanya sat back in her chair. “Stop yelling at me. I get it.” She looked down at her lap. “Last night was the first and only time I slept with him. He spent a week making me feel like I mattered to him.”
Holly rolled her eyes and sighed.
Tanya looked up and said, “I know he seduced me for sex and nothing more.”
That was better. “Good. Now tell us about Cullen. Did he have any plans after you left him last night?”
Tanya picked up her coffee then sat back. “No, I assumed he would go back to his boat. I thought I wore him out.”
Ugh.
Holly took a drink of her coffee to try to burn that image out of her brain.
Wes jumped in. “Can you think of any reason he would be in my bookstore that late at night?”
She shook her head. “He never said a word about your bookstore or meeting anyone.”
Holly cut in, “I saw Tanya leave and followed her. I think we have to assume that Cullen must have gone into the bookstore right after dropping Tanya at her car. He was right there.”
Tanya went a little pale. “You followed me home? Isn't that kind of creepy?”
What did the chick think investigating was? “Creepy or not, I'm the one who told the detective that I watched you go into the house, turn out all the lights, and stayed for another twenty minutes to make sure you didn't leave again.”
“Oh.” Tanya looked sheepish. “My alarm system for the house records when it's disabled. It showed that once I came home, it wasn't turned off until the morning. But thanks. I wouldn't want to be a suspect.” She shuddered.
Wes got her focused again when he asked, “Any idea if Cullen might have gotten a key to my bookstore? Did he have a key you didn't recognize with him when he dropped you off? Anything like that?”
Tanya shook her head. “He had keys on his key ring, but I didn't know what they were all for. Sorry.”
Holly decided to try another tactic. “What did Cullen talk about that night?”
Tanya thinned her lips and said, “He talked about himself. Well, first he talked about me, how beautiful and special I was.” She dropped her eyes to the cup in her hand. “But once we were done with sex, he was fiddling with his laptop and talking about making it big as a radio personality. Like a Howard Stern kind of shock jock.”
This time Holly did look at Wes. “Did you know this?”
He shook his head. “First I've heard of it.”
Holly wrote down notes and asked, “How was Cullen going to do that?”
She compressed her lips in thought, then said, “He didn't really say. Just that he had big plans.”
Wes asked, “What did he say specifically?”
“Just what I told you, and he kept paying more attention to his laptop than me.”
She tried to make sense of it. “What was he doing on his laptop?”
“Don't know. I asked him, but he just laughed, looked at his watch, and said it was time to get me back to my car. He shut down his laptop and we got dressed and left.”
That struck her. “Time? Like he was meeting someone?” she said thoughtfully, not expecting an answer. She added that to her notes, and included questions about what was on the laptop, and how Cullen had planned to become a radio shock jock. Then she looked up. “What about friends? Do you know who Cullen's friends were?”
“No.”
“Family?”
“No. Wait, I remember he said something about his family being in Oregon. And maybe something about a cousin in Southern California, or used to be in Southern Californiaâ¦something about a cousin, I think.” Tanya shifted in her seat and set her cup on the desk. “I really was stupid thinking it was love. If we'd been in love, I would have known these things.”
Holly met her gaze. “You're not the first. What do you know about the other women he dated in the book club?”
“Bridget, Maggie, Nora, and Helene.” Tanya's blue eyes sparked in anger. “He made a point of telling me they had all wanted him. But that he wanted me. Shit.” She turned away.
Cullen had told Tanya what she wanted to hear, Holly thought. He'd used her to get sex. It was an old story that got repeated way too often, because it worked.
“So do I start today?”
Holly blinked. Hell. “Don't you have to find a place to stay? Maybe pick up some clothes from your house? Get a divorce lawyer?”
“Yeah, I guess I do.” Tanya got up. “Will you call me later and let me know when to start?”
Holly nodded. “Thanks for your help.” She walked Tanya to the door and held it for her while she left.
Then she turned back to deal with Wes. He sat on the end of her desk watching her. He looked good wearing a pair of jeans and a brown and green shirt. But that didn't change her annoyance. She stalked up until she was toe-to-toe with him. “What do you think you're doing hiring her for my office? I don't want help!”
He reached out, took hold of her shoulders, and tugged her toward him. “You're welcome.”
Holly brought both her hands up, using her forearms to push his arms away and break his hold on her. “Knock it off.” She was not going to be pushed around. Just his touch lit the barely banked sexual fire. Holly could handle that. But somehow Wes made her feel outgunned, as if she didn't have the defenses to handle him. “We don't have time for sex, Brockman.” She paced off the distance between her desk and the kitchenette. “We have a murder victim who appears to be a jerk, and he pissed off a group of women. Where's the murder weapon?” She went around her desk and pulled her cell phone out of her purse. She found the name in her address book and hit send. “Seth, any word on the murder weapon?” She'd asked Seth to charm information from Detective Rodgers.
He answered, “No murder weapon, but I do have something interesting. Vail's boat was broken into. The only thing that appears to be missing is a computer or laptop. There is equipment that goes with the computer, some kind of broadcasting shit, printer and scanner unit, that kind of stuff, but no computer. It's not in his car either.”
“When was the boat broken into?”
“Tuesday night, or that's the theory anyway. I assume Rodgers has a reason to back up the theory. She doesn't believe in coincidence.”
Holly wasn't much on coincidence either. That meant the killer wanted something. Something on the computer? “Any suspects for the break-in or the murder?”
“Rodgers wouldn't say who she thought looked good for either. I couldn't get a read on her about Brockman either. Watch yourself, AP Gotta run.”
“Thanks, Seth.” She hung up.
“What?” Wes asked.
“Cullen's boat was broken into, and the police can't find a laptop or computer. Tanya said he had a laptop. So what was on that laptop? Was it worth killing for?”
Frowning, Wes said, “You think someone killed Cullen in the bookstore then went to the boat and got his computer?”
Holly didn't know. She played the different scenarios in her brain. “Could be the killer saw Cullen leave with Tanya. He or she knows that it's going to take a little time to do the kiss-and-grope good-bye. They break in, grab his computer, then drive to the bookstore and kill Cullen.”
His gaze grew troubled. “Why not just kill Cullen at the boat when he gets back? Why do it in my store?”
“Excellent question.” She walked to her desk, reached past Wes and got her tablet. “There's Cullen, the killer, your bookstore, and the laptop. We're pretty certain those are involved.” Holly looked at the four items, trying to see a connection.
Wes pulled her down so that she sat next to him on the edge of the desk. Looking over her list, he said, “Tanya said Cullen wanted to be on radio, a Howard Stern type.”
Holly looked over at him. “How does becoming a radio shock jock connect to a laptop?”
“Research? Maybe sending out resumes?”
She thought about that. “Applying to radio stations. Hmm, wouldn't he have to have some kind of experience? A portfolio of some type?”
“No idea.”
“I'll find out. Damn, I wish we had some way to access that computer.” Holly made a note about radio stations, then said, “But now we have more questions for the women. And your clerks.” She looked at Wes, sitting next to her. “No word from them yet?”
He shook his head and looked at his watch. “I'd like you to wait until I can go with you to talk to the other women.”
That caught her off guard. “What do you mean wait? What are you doing now?”