Alvarez Family Murder Mysteries Boxed Set: Books 1-3 (The Alvarez Family Murder Mysteries)

Home > Other > Alvarez Family Murder Mysteries Boxed Set: Books 1-3 (The Alvarez Family Murder Mysteries) > Page 53
Alvarez Family Murder Mysteries Boxed Set: Books 1-3 (The Alvarez Family Murder Mysteries) Page 53

by Heather Haven


  “Who’s Lou?” Flint and I said in unison.

  “We have to get out of here,” Nick whined. “I can’t stay here. Like you say, if you found me, they can, too.”

  I looked at Flint and nodded. In the car, we’d discussed where we might bring Nick for safety, if it came to it. While my first choice for lodgings in Vegas would have been the Bellagio, this wasn’t the time or place. Besides, I’d rather go there one of these days with Gurn.

  “I know a safe place,” said Flint, “but you’d better not bring any bedbugs or lice with you. I run a clean establishment.”

  Chapter Seven

  I Don’t Know Who’s the Bigger Idiot

  Without much conversation, we jostled Nick out of the room and down the stairs. As a precaution, we used the back exit, Flint flinging boxes of DVDs every which way so fast, the clerk only managed one “hey” before we were out the door. The exit led to a narrow back alley filled with garbage, trash, and more small scurrying animals that should be calling the SPCA to complain about the conditions under which they’re forced to live.

  While Flint went to bring the car to the side of the alley, I waited in the shadows next to Nick and pulled out the Glock. The irony of the situation hit me like a double charge on a credit card bill for shoes not only too tight to wear but last year’s style.

  On the left, a disgusting dumpster; on the right, an even more disgusting ex-husband. And me stuck in the middle as usual—a reluctant PI if ever there was one.

  Rather than inhaling the stench of fly-ridden garbage, I’d really rather be sniffing out dastardly doings of computer sabotage or thievery, in particular, long after said dastardly deeds have gone down. It’s my idea of a good job, especially when I get to zip off whenever I want and have a great lunch.

  The part I like best—besides the food—is sitting at a highly polished, recently vacated mahogany desk in an air-conditioned office, sifting through the rubble of high-tech deceit and betrayal. I like gathering enough evidence to point a manicured fingernail at the culprit and shout j'accuse! Backlit by enough briefs, memos, emails, and other telltale papers, the culprit is mine. That is a real high.

  This was a real low. But I had to think about Stephen. My cousin was dead, and Nick knew something about it. Hell, maybe he even had something to do with it. And, of course,

  there were the cats. If Nick was in any way responsible, I might do him in myself and save whatever goons there may be the trouble.

  All these things were flitting through my mind when Nick—the stupid idiot—made a lunge for my gun, muttering he could take better care of himself than I could. Sometimes an ex-marine, like an ex-husband, needs to get over himself.

  One of the first lessons you learn as a PI is to not to carry a gun if you’re going to let anybody take it away from you. All the years I’ve been carrying, ten to be exact, people have taken all sorts of things from me—including my virtue—but never my gun.

  So when Nick came at me, my knee went up fast, strong, and accurate. Ex dropped to the ground in a fetal position. God only knows what else was lying there with him, but I left him on the dirt, anyway. He was busy moaning while I cocked the Glock and gave a 360-degree spin, prepared to do whatever was necessary to keep the jerk safe. At least, for the moment.

  Fortunately, no one showed up except a passing rat or two, excluding the one I stood over. After what felt like a lifetime, I saw Flint’s headlights, although I’m sure it didn’t take him more than three minutes to get there. I helped Nick up. He limped to the car, and Flint, bless him, raised an eyebrow over Nick’s condition but didn’t say a word. What a guy.

  During an uneventful fifteen-minute ride to Flint’s apartment, I rang an excited Richard back and learned he had commandeered a piece of software, which overlaid a grid onto his tracking map, enabling him to pinpoint the whereabouts of Tugger’s carrier within five hundred yards. According to Richard’s calculations, the cats should arrive in Las Vegas in about an hour and a half.

  I was mightily impressed, not to mention hopeful, but couldn’t respond with much enthusiasm on my end. I didn’t

  want Nick picking up any information, him being a first class louse. Said louse was quiet once I’d bested him, sitting next to me in the backseat of Flint’s Jeep. I watched him lean his head against the window with his eyes closed. I whispered to Richard that Nick was in the car, and after he told me Lila had landed without incident in Phoenix, we ended the conversation.

  * * * *

  Flint resides in a two-story apartment complex, complete with gardens and pool, in an upscale residential area of Vegas. Sometimes I forget people actually live here. Being a transient visitor, I tend to think of Vegas as a transient place, but there’s a large population willing to call this gambler’s paradise home. Flint was one.

  He’d left the police force and reservation, where he had been until his early thirties, and set up shop in Vegas. He was still committed to his people, donating money, sponsoring kids for college, contributing funds for tuitions, all that good stuff, but he’d moved off the reservation twenty or so years ago and never returned. His son once mentioned a falling out with the elders over the burial of his wife, who committed suicide after being diagnosed with ovarian cancer. As far as I could tell, he’d never returned to the reservation.

  We entered a two-bedroom corner apartment on the second floor, with enough sophisticated locks on the front door to make the picking of them pretty undoable, further aided by an alarm system which could wake the dead. The back door had been cemented up years ago, and each window wore interior bars, released from an inside latch. There was only one way in or out, and that’s how Flint liked it. When he came home, he once said, he wanted to know it was his castle and not his crypt. It’s the downside of doing his type of work,

  with divorce and bond jumping being a major part, but nobody does it better than Lonato, aka Flint. He makes a very good living.

  I gave the living room a quick once over and saw a room heavily decorated with Native American art, blankets, and crafts. Nick ripped my attention away from the décor, his whole demeanor changing once inside this restful space. He stood taller and wore a smug grin. “I could sure use a shower,” he said, turning to the bigger man.

  Before Flint could reply, I gave Nick a shove, threw him off balance, and onto a sofa covered with intricately woven and colorful blankets. He fell down, with a surprised look on his face.

  “Not until you answer some questions, Nick. Now who’s Lou?” I sat on the edge of a sturdy looking coffee table across from Nick and leaned into his face.

  “All right, all right. Don’t get your liver in a quiver.”

  “And you can drop the cocky, smart-assed routine, too, before somebody does something to you I’m not going to regret.” Flint played along with me and scowled at Nick in a menacing way. “Now who’s Lou?”

  Nick licked his lips and ran a fast hand over his stubble. “Okay. Okay. Lou Spaulding.”

  He paused and looked down at nervous hands. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Flint react to the name.

  “Who’s Lou Spaulding?” I looked from one man to the other.

  “Believe me,” Nick said, “you don’t want to know.”

  “Yes, I do.”

  “He’s bad news, Lee,” answered Nick.

  Flint came forward, folding his arms across his chest. “He came to Vegas about three years ago from Chicago and financed the new hotel across from the Encore, the Fantasy Lady. It’s for serious gamblers. No families, no penny slot machines; just big players from all over the world. Rumor is, it’s part of a syndicate coming out of Dubai, run by some of

  the world’s wealthiest businessmen. They’re into heavy betting, and they play for keeps.”

  “You don’t want to mess with them, Lee,” said Nick, looking down and picking at a scab on his hand.

  “We messed with them when we took you out of that hotel room, Nicky Boy,” said Flint.

  I glanced at him and then back at
Nick. “Right,” I said. “So what’s Kelli got to do with this Lou Spaulding?”

  Fear washed over Nick’s face again at the mention of his wife’s name. I smacked him on the leg to get his attention again.

  “Talk to me,” I yelled into his face.

  He looked up, and I saw the teenage boy I’d known so many years ago, the one whose father had run off with another woman never to be heard from again. Once again, Nick reeked from betrayal, loneliness, and fear.

  “How does she fit in, Nick?” My voice was softer but firm.

  “She started fooling around with Lou about two or three months ago. At first, I didn’t catch on. She told me she was working at the casino late, visiting with friends, you know, girl stuff.”

  “I thought she quit working once you got married,” I said, the words popping out of my mouth before I thought better of them.

  “Where’d you hear that?” Nick asked. “She never stopped working. She didn’t want to, and I’ve always liked a working wife, you know that.”

  Score another one for the nefarious Kelli. “Never mind. Go on.”

  “Anyway, the bottom had dropped out of the real estate market by then, and Kelli, well, I think Kelli thought I had more money than I did.” He paused, picking at the scab again. The sore started to bleed, and he wiped the blood away with an impatient gesture.

  “Maybe I gave her that impression. I was…I was in love with her.” He took a ragged breath. “Right before we got married, I’d bought her a new car for her birthday, ninety-five grand, but I couldn’t keep up the payments after I closed the office, so the collection agency came to take it away. The next day it was sitting in the parking lot again. I asked her about it, but she said she had some savings and went and paid for it in cash.” He shook his head. A look of sadness came over him, almost heartbreaking. Nick blinked his eyes rapidly, as if unsavory memories ran amuck before them.

  “Right before I met Kelli, I was doing a pretty big deal with Lou on a penthouse condo on the strip he wanted. I had a year’s exclusive on it, one of the last deals I made before the bottom dropped out of the market. Otherwise, a man like Lou Spaulding is out of my league. I knew it, he knew it.” Nick shrugged and inhaled another tired breath.

  “That’s how she…Kelli…met him. We went to a couple of parties he threw. After the deal was done, he stopped answering my calls. Looking back on it that must have been the time she started seeing him. She got the money for the car from Lou. I know it. After a while, she didn’t even hide what she was doing. She’d come and go as she pleased, staying out all hours, coming home mussed up, or smelling of another man’s aftershave. About two weeks ago, I confronted her, and she said, ‘Screw you, Nick. You don’t like it? Get out.’” Nick looked at Flint. “You got a drink? I need a drink.”

  “Finish your story first,” I said. “What happened then?”

  “I started sleeping on the couch. Last week while she was at the casino, two men showed up at the door. They shoved their way inside and started knocking me around, demanding I give them back what I took from Lou Spaulding.”

  “What did you take?” I shot at him, the words flying out of my mouth.

  “Nothing. I didn’t take anything.” He spread his arms out wide, as if offering up his life to the truth. “I hadn’t seen Spaulding in months. And what the hell would I take? I told them, but they didn’t believe me. They ripped the place apart, looking for I don’t know what. Then they broke my nose and told me nobody messes with Spaulding and his races.”

  “They used the word ‘races’?” I asked.

  He nodded. “They said I had twenty-four hours to return it, or I was a dead man.” Nick paused and looked at me. “And they weren’t kidding. I didn’t know what was going on, but I knew Kelli had something to do with it. I sat in the dark waiting for her to come home. When I told her about the visit from Spaulding’s men, she looked me up and down and laughed. She just laughed. Here I am with a bloody nose, a black eye, they threatened to kill me, and she’s laughing. Then she did a turn around—she does that a lot. You know, one minute she accuses you of cheating on her, lying to her, or something, and the next minute she’s saying she loves you, hugging you, kissing you. Anyway, she tried to hug me, but I’d had enough. I pushed her away, took off my wedding ring, and threw it at her feet. Then I left, with her yelling at me to come back. I hadn’t packed; I didn’t take any keys, just the clothes on my back. I must have walked for hours trying to figure this out. And I’ve been in hiding ever since.”

  “How does Stephen fit into this? What made you call him?”

  “Right after Lou’s men left, I found a piece of paper with his name on it in the mess in the bedroom those two left.”

  “You mean Stephen’s name?” I asked.

  “That’s what I said, didn’t I?” His voice was sharp and annoyed. Flint stepped forward protectively. Nick became docile again. “I think the paper fell out of one of Kelli’s drawers when they pulled everything out. I’d never seen it before. At the time, one of the names on the list seemed familiar, so I picked up the note and put it in my pocket. I

  didn’t remember Stephen was your cousin until the night I called his wife, when it came back to me. I’d met him at a New Year’s party back when you and I were married.

  “Once I realized, well, seeing Stephen’s name on anything connected with Lou Spaulding was scary, so I called to warn him. I would have kept calling until I reached him, but my cellphone ran out of juice, and I didn’t have my charger. I didn’t have any money to buy one, either.”

  “Tell me about the races,” I said.

  “What races?” His voice gained an exasperated edge, adding to the fear and impatience. “The first I learned about any of this was the day I found that paper. I don’t know what the hell’s going on, but I’m scared. Those men find me…I’m dead. I know that much.”

  “Show me this piece of paper.” I put out my hand.

  He thought for a moment, reached inside his jeans, and hesitated before turning it over to me.

  I unfolded the three by five inch lined sheet, torn from a small notepad. On it were written seven names. The top one was Stephen’s. I scanned the rest of the list and found the name Gurn Hanson at the bottom. I fought to keep my cool about the man I loved being on a possible dead man’s list. No small feat for a Latina who wears her emotions on her sleeves. Besides, I had talked to Gurn several hours ago. He was fine.

  Ignoring the thudding heart inside my chest, I studied the list. After each name was a date, some past, some future. Then the phrase ‘take out’ and a set of numbers, followed by the letter ‘K.’ The date next to Gurn’s name was the Sunday coming up, seven days. Whatever was going on, we had to stop it by then.

  “Whose handwriting is this?” I asked. “Do you recognize it?” Nick shook his head and looked down.

  I passed the note to Flint, who studied it, while I turned back to Nick. “What do the numbers mean? The ones followed by the letter ‘K’? Does the ‘K’ mean the length of a race?”

  “I’m telling you, I don’t know. I wish I did.” His impatience, fear, and frustration rang true. He knew nada.

  Flint jumped in, saying, “It could be a race. I’ve heard high rollers on the top floor of the Fantasy Lady will literally bet on anything, with the minimum bet being a million dollars. Maybe they’re into foot races now. They’ve sure been into soccer for a long time.”

  I absorbed the info and turned back to Nick. “Why did you tell Kelli about me? Why did she show up at my place early this morning?”

  Nick’s eyes got huge as he stared at me. I could see the wheels turning inside his head. “I don’t know why she’d come to you. I’ve never said one thing about you to her, ever.” He thought. “Wait a minute, once, when we first got together, she asked me about my ex-wife. I told her you and your family ran a detective agency in the Bay Area, a pretty successful one. Other than that, I’ve never said one word about you to her.”

  I crossed one leg ov
er the other and considered this. So either Kelli had made up all the malarkey about Nick thinking I was the most beautiful, wonderful, yada yada in the world, or Nick was lying now. I looked at him. He wasn’t lying. He was too scared. Besides, he’d just admitted he loved her. So it was Kelli. She knew by making it sound like he still had a thing for me, she’d hit me in my ego. Ex-husband still pines for ex-wife and admits it to younger, newer wife.

  I’m such an idiot.

  “Spaulding and his men are still after you, Nick,” I said, uncrossing my legs and standing. “So they must think you have whatever they say you took from him. Get up and strip.”

  “What?”

  “I said, get up and take off your clothes. You can have a shower while Flint and I go through your things.”

  “Are you crazy?” He looked at both of us. “I’m not going to stand up and take off my clothes just because you say so.”

  Flint came closer. “Yes, you are, Nicky Boy, or I’ll take them off for you.”

  Nick studied me for a moment, and I glared back. Then he shrugged and pulled the wrinkled and stained polo shirt over his head. His Marine dog tags clinked against themselves, protesting the rough treatment.

  “You still wear those things, Nick? After all these years?”

  “Never take them off,” he said, throwing the shirt to the floor and unzipping the fly of his jeans. I averted my eyes and looked down at the floor. “What’s the matter, Lee? You’ve seen it all before.”

  “Yeah, but I don’t want to see it again.” Both Nick and Flint laughed, Flint’s laugh more hardy than the embarrassed chortle Nick gave out. I kept my eyes down but joined in the laughter after a moment. His movements ceased, and there was silence. “Done?”

  “Done,” said Flint. “Naked as a jaybird.”

  “Can I take that shower now?” Nick asked. “I haven’t had one in four days.”

  “And you smell like it, Nicky Boy,” offered Flint. “Sure. Second door on the right; towels in the linen closet. Take the blue ones, those are my guest towels.”

 

‹ Prev