Jeff sat up a little straighter, his hands tight on the steering wheel as he leaned forward. I held my breath. The shop was closed. I assumed the door was locked. Was Parker going to break in?
Turns out he didn’t need to.
The door to Murder Ink swung open, and Parker went inside.
Chapter 49
We hardly had time to register what had happened when my phone rang. Tim. I flipped it open. “Hey,” I said.
“That license plate. On the blue car. I got it.”
“It’s Will Parker’s, isn’t it?” I asked.
“Parker? No. It’s that Love Shack guy. Martin Sanderson.”
Sanderson?
Jeff had opened his door, and I put my hand on his arm to stop him from getting out right away as I said to Tim, “I’ll give you a call back, okay?” and flipped my phone closed. “Where are you going?” I asked Jeff. My phone started to ring again, and I saw it was Tim. I turned off the ringer and stuck the phone back in my bag.
“Someone let him into my shop,” he said, his eyes dark with anger. “My mother’s at Rosalie’s. I’m with you. No one else has a key. The shop was locked. I was here earlier and made sure everything was shut down.”
Okay, so he had a legitimate reason to be concerned. If it were my shop, I’d be the same way. I pulled my arm away and nodded. “Okay,” I said, opening my door.
That caused him to pause.
“You are not coming in with me.”
“I am so.”
“I told your brother I’d take you home, and I can’t have you getting hurt or anything on my watch.”
I glared at him. “I’m a big girl, Jeff. I can take care of myself.”
I expected him to come back with some nasty retort, but instead he chuckled. “You’re right about that. Just stay behind me, okay?”
We got out of the car and walked slowly up to the corner of Goodfellas. An alley between Goodfellas and Murder Ink stretched back to another alley where Jeff usually parked his car and smoked with the Mexicans who cooked at the Chinese take-out place on the other side of his business.
“I’m going down here,” he whispered, “in the back way. Hopefully, I can catch them by surprise. But you stay here, in case someone comes out this way. Can you whistle?”
I cocked my head at him and rolled my eyes. “I pucker up and blow, right?” I asked, making my voice all husky and Lauren Bacall-like.
He caught himself before he chuckled. “Nice to know you’re a Bogie fan,” he said, then went down the alley, around to the right, and out of sight.
I leaned against the side of the stucco building that was Goodfellas Bail Bonds. I’d never seen anyone go in or out in all the time I’d known Jeff, but then again, their clientele might keep odd hours. Much like a tattoo shop.
I was concentrating so hard on watching the shop that when my cell phone rang again, I nearly jumped. I leaned down and felt around in my bag for my phone, finally finding it and flipping it open.
“Where’s my Godiva?” Bitsy asked without saying hello, her tone definitely frosty. “Where did you get off to?”
I kept my eye on Murder Ink’s door as I gave it all to her in a nutshell. I wondered what was taking Jeff Coleman so long. Was he inside with Parker and whoever had let Parker in or was he waiting for the right moment to go in the back way?
“You could’ve called earlier,” Bitsy chided, interrupting my thoughts.
“I’m sorry,” I said, and I truly was. I didn’t need Sister Mary Eucharista on my shoulder to remind me that I was shirking my duties.
“When will you be back?”
Still nothing at Murder Ink.
“I’m not—” I started to say when the tattoo shop’s door suddenly flew open and Will Parker came scrambling out with Jeff Coleman on his heels. “Gotta go—call you right back,” I said, uncertain whether I could keep that promise.
Will Parker was coming toward me, and I stuck my foot out in the sidewalk.
He tumbled over it, did a somersault, and somehow landed back on his feet, like some sort of Cirque du Soleil acrobat. Come to think of it, maybe he had been with Cirque at one point. He was a performer, after all, and you couldn’t throw a cat in Vegas without hitting one of those Cirque shows.
The image of him wearing tights for that Renaissance show had bothered me; a leotard would’ve been much worse.
I didn’t have much time to ruminate, though, because Parker was halfway down the block with Jeff behind him. He wasn’t even huffing and puffing. Maybe it was his Marines training. He certainly hadn’t been off the cigarettes long enough to make a difference.
I hesitated to go after them. I wouldn’t be able to keep up, most likely, and as I glanced back at the shop, I couldn’t help but wonder where the person who’d let Parker into the shop in the first place was. Had Jeff managed to tie him to a chair or something before chasing Parker?
I tentatively went toward Murder Ink and peered in the window below the neon sign advertising tattoos. The sign was off, which made it easier to focus.
Jeff’s tattoo stations looked as they normally did: chairs, shelves, flash lining the walls. I didn’t see anyone else in there.
I pulled the door open and stepped inside.
Yup, everything looked normal in here. I touched the top of a box of baby wipes as I stood in one of the stations, checking everything out.
It all seemed so normal that I felt myself relax a little. So when I heard someone clear his throat, my heart started pounding.
Chapter 50
The light from the window caught the wisps of his white hair, illuminating them.
“Bernie?” I asked, my heart racing.
Bernie Applebaum was holding some sort of quilted thing. He held it up, and I could see now that it was a bag.
“Sylvia wanted me to pick this up for her,” he said.
For a second, I wondered why. Jeff had been on his way to Sylvia’s for a change of clothes, and he could’ve stopped here and picked this up on the way. But then I remembered it was Sylvia, whose requests usually didn’t make much sense to anyone but her.
“So you let Will Parker in,” I said.
Bernie was staring out the window at the street, and the sound of my voice seemed to startle him. He ran a hand over the top of his head, smoothing out the sparse white hairs.
“Oh, oh, yes,” he said, looking at me again. “Is that his name? He said he was here for a tattoo.”
Really? Will Parker had just had his tattoo touched up—by yours truly. I doubted that’s why he was here, but couldn’t figure out another reason.
Of course it could’ve been my own vanity, wanting to think that Parker wouldn’t come to Jeff Coleman for another tattoo if he’d been happy with the one I gave him.
Okay, so I’d conveniently forgotten that Will Parker said he lived at an In-N-Out Burger and was driving a blue car that was all smashed up as though it had been in an accident and that Lou Marino was hit by maybe a blue car.
I hoped Jeff had caught him, but since he wasn’t back yet, they were probably halfway down the Strip by now.
“So you don’t know him?” I asked.
Bernie shook his head and indicated the quilted bag. “She said it was yellow. Is this yellow?”
It was a mishmash of fabrics, and some did have yellow in them. “I suppose,” I said and had another thought. “Why did you let him in? The shop is closed. You couldn’t help with a tattoo.”
Bernie sighed. “I don’t know. It was reflex, I think. He knocked on the door, and I saw him and let him in. I told him no one was here, no one could help him.”
But he had been in here longer than a couple of minutes, which was how long it should’ve taken Parker to get the message and get out of here. Unless he knew we were waiting for him outside. It’s possible he’d seen us pull up behind him.
“I didn’t do anything wrong, did I?” Bernie asked tentatively. He didn’t wait for my answer, though; he started back toward the office, where he u
ndoubtedly had found Sylvia’s quilted bag.
I took a step after him, but the bell on the front door made me jump, and I turned to see Jeff coming in. He was huffing and puffing now.
“Did you get him?” I asked.
He scowled at me. “Does it look like I got him?” he asked, his tone definitely testy.
“Bernie’s here,” I said to change the subject.
“Yeah, I know,” he said, still taking deep breaths.
“It’s a good thing you’re quitting smoking,” I said before I could stop myself.
“I think you need to shut up right now,” he said between breaths.
Okay, got the picture. I made like I was zipping my lips and then locking them.
In a flash, his face lightened and he laughed out loud. “You are way too sensitive, Kavanaugh.”
“So what happened with Parker? Where did he go?”
“I want to know what it is with these Dean Martins and public transportation. Guy hopped a bus. I think he paid the driver to close the doors before I could get on.”
“So what happened? In here, I mean. You were in here a little while with him.”
“He said he wanted a tattoo. I played along, but then I think he recognized me. You know, as the guy you were supposed to marry?”
“Don’t remind me.”
“It wouldn’t be that bad, would it, Kavanaugh?” He was teasing me again, that little glimmer of amusement in his eyes.
I ignored him.
“That’s when he took off?”
“Said he made a mistake. Apologized, then ran out the door. You know the rest.”
I knew what happened, but I didn’t know why. This didn’t set right with me. I couldn’t get past him having me touch up his tattoo only hours ago, and now he was visiting Murder Ink. Something wasn’t right. But then again, there wasn’t a whole lot right with the whole day.
A crash in the back of the shop made us both jump, and we went through the sixties-style beads into the office where Bernie stood over a metal ashtray that had apparently toppled to the ground. His eyes were wide.
“Sorry about that, buddy,” he said to Jeff, who picked up the ashtray and put it on top of the file cabinet. Bernie was no longer holding the quilted bag. In fact, I couldn’t see it anywhere.
“Where’s Sylvia’s bag?” I asked.
Bernie’s face turned red and he wrung his hands. “I put it out in the car. I parked in the back, like Sylvia said.”
Jeff put his arm around the elderly man’s shoulders. “That’s all right. Do you need a ride? It’s getting dark out. I can take you back to Rosalie’s.”
Relief washed over Bernie’s face. “That would be great. But what about the car?”
Jeff looked at me. “Kavanaugh can follow us in your car, and then I’ll take her home.” He raised his eyebrows at me with the question.
I nodded. “That’s fine. It works out perfectly. I just need to call my shop. Tell them I’m not coming back.”
I stepped back into the front of the shop. It was getting dark out. The neon from the Bright Lights Motel sign across the street slipped through the window and cast a red glow on the floor.
Bitsy seemed resigned to the fact that I had skipped out and wasn’t going to return.
“Joel’s done at ten. Ace is already gone. Can I leave with Joel?”
“Absolutely,” I said, eager to meet any demands she might have. The guilt was inching through me, and I could feel it settle between my shoulders. “And you can come in late tomorrow. I’ll open.”
“Thanks,” she said, although it wasn’t as heartfelt as I’d hoped. She was holding a grudge, and it was well deserved. I should wear a hair shirt to bed tonight.
Jeff stuck his head through the beads.
“Ready? We need to get Bernie back.”
“Sure,” I said, sticking my phone in my bag.
We all went out the back, and Bernie gave me the keys to the white rental, which I saw now was one of those little Chevy Aveos that are no bigger than my kitchen table.
“Drive safe,” Bernie said nervously.
Jeff chuckled. “She’s the safest driver I know. No worries.” He began to steer Bernie toward the alley so they could go out front where the Pontiac was parked. “I’ll wait out front for you,” he tossed back at me before they disappeared.
The car was small, and my head almost hit the ceiling. It was almost as bad as Bitsy’s Mini Cooper. But not quite.
Sylvia’s yellow quilted bag sat on the passenger seat next to me. I picked it up and fingered the fabric, which was frayed around the edges. Why would she want this old thing? I opened it up and peered inside. Nothing, except a small piece of paper at the bottom.
I couldn’t help myself. I plucked it out and turned on the overhead light to read it.
It was a bank withdrawal receipt. Sylvia had withdrawn ten thousand dollars from her account.
Chapter 51
I let out a long breath and sat back in my seat, holding the receipt. Between the ten grand in Lucci’s locker, Dan Franklin’s ten grand, and now this, we were looking at thirty thousand dollars floating around. Unless, of course, Lucci’s money was from either Franklin or Sylvia.
I checked the date on the receipt.
The day before the wedding.
Had Sylvia given Lucci the money? Had she remembered about this receipt and asked Bernie to get it so no one would find out?
I tried to tell myself that Sylvia could’ve taken the money out for anything. It could’ve been to pay for their honeymoon. Although the Grand Canyon wouldn’t cost that much, and they were driving themselves. And I knew how little it cost to get married at one of those wedding chapels, so that wouldn’t cost much, either.
I stuffed the receipt back in the bag and resolved to ask her about it directly when I got to Rosalie’s.
I wasn’t sure I wanted to mention it to Jeff, in case I was way off base. He wouldn’t like it if I was interrogating Sylvia. At least without telling him why ahead of time.
I pulled out of the alley and turned the corner to see Jeff and Bernie sitting in the Pontiac, waiting for me. Jeff made a sort of gesture with his hands that made me realize I’d taken way too long ruminating about that bank receipt.
In a few minutes we were on Charleston Boulevard, heading toward Summerlin—and Red Rock Canyon.
I’d never been out there at night, and I wasn’t sure I wanted to. Because it was definitely night now, and the mountains blended in with the sky, so it looked like a black hole in the distance. It had gotten chillier, and I wished I’d thought to bring my jacket with me, but when I started out for Godiva, I had no idea where the journey would take me.
I shivered as I watched Jeff’s turn signal flash red.
We pulled into a condo complex that didn’t even attempt to look any different than any of the other condo complexes out here. In the dark I couldn’t tell whether the buildings were brown or beige, but I was willing to bet they were one or the other. The plantings were nicely done, adding to the desert theme of the complex. No fountains that I could see, which made me happy. At least they weren’t wasting water.
Jeff eased the Pontiac in front of one of the town houses. All the lights were on inside. Every room. Okay, so there was no water waste, but what about electricity? I parked the Chevy behind Jeff.
“Where were you?” he asked as I approached, my bag and Sylvia’s bag in hand.
Bernie grabbed Sylvia’s bag. “I’ll take that,” he said. As if he wanted to be the one to hand her the bag, since it had been his mission to go get it. I had no problem with that, even though I doubted it would make any difference to Sylvia.
Bernie led the way into the foyer, which was painted gray with a mauve trim. A wreath of dried flowers hung on the wall over a white table with three fat candles of varying heights that smelled like vanilla. A little precious for my taste.
“Where have you been?” Sylvia stepped out of the kitchen on our left, a dish towel wrapped around her wa
ist, doubling as an apron. She wielded a wooden spoon.
I smelled it then, the distinct scent of tomato sauce. Homemade tomato sauce, not that stuff you get in a jar. My stomach growled. Loudly.
Jeff laughed. Sylvia merely patted my arm, then pulled me into the kitchen with her, the spoon leading the way.
“I’ve got a nice pot of sauce going. You make a salad.”
It was an order. But I wasn’t going to argue. I opened the refrigerator and started taking out lettuce, cucumbers, and carrots.
Sylvia had already put a bowl on the granite-top island for me. I dumped the salad makings next to it and began washing the lettuce while she stirred the sauce. I glanced around at the country kitchen, with its white French cabinets and sleek stainless steel appliances. Lou Marino must have done pretty well as an impersonator, or else Rosalie was making more money than I thought over at the university.
“So where did you find Bernie?” Sylvia asked as she produced a can of chickpeas and handed it to me.
I glanced around but didn’t see Bernie or Jeff. Or Rosalie, either.
“He was at Murder Ink,” I said.
“Why on earth was he over there?”
She had her back to me, so I couldn’t see her face.
“He went to pick up your bag for you.”
Sylvia didn’t say anything for a second, then, “Oh, oh, that’s right.”
Something was off. Either she really didn’t know why Bernie was at Murder Ink or she was having one of her all-too-frequent senior moments. I couldn’t tell.
Sylvia came over next to me, wiping her hands on a towel, and peered into the bowl, where I’d already assembled a pretty decent looking salad.
“You’ll find, dear, that men sometimes do the damndest things.” And then she was back to the stove, emptying a box of spaghetti into a pot of boiling water.
I rinsed the chickpeas in the sink before putting them in the salad. Sylvia was nodding, watching me.
I couldn’t help myself. No one else was in here with us, so it seemed as good a time as any.
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