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Bad Publicity

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by Joanne Sydney Lessner




  Bad Publicity

  Joanne Sydney Lessner

  Copyright © 2013 by Joanne Sydney Lessner

  Smashwords Edition

  Smashwords Edition, License Notes

  This book is protected under the copyright laws of the United States of America. Any reproduction or other unauthorized use of the material or artwork herein is prohibited.

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Dulcet Press

  New York

  For Kate, who was there at the beginning and never left

  Table of Contents

  ONE

  TWO

  THREE

  FOUR

  FIVE

  SIX

  SEVEN

  EIGHT

  NINE

  TEN

  ELEVEN

  TWELVE

  THIRTEEN

  FOURTEEN

  FIFTEEN

  SIXTEEN

  SEVENTEEN

  EIGHTEEN

  NINETEEN

  TWENTY

  TWENTY-ONE

  TWENTY-TWO

  TWENTY-THREE

  TWENTY-FOUR

  TWENTY-FIVE

  TWENTY-SIX

  TWENTY-SEVEN

  TWENTY-EIGHT

  TWENTY-NINE

  THIRTY

  THIRTY-ONE

  THIRTY-TWO

  THIRTY-THREE

  THIRTY-FOUR

  THIRTY-FIVE

  THIRTY-SIX

  THIRTY-SEVEN

  THIRTY-EIGHT

  THIRTY-NINE

  FORTY

  FORTY-ONE

  FORTY-TWO

  FORTY-THREE

  FORTY-FOUR

  FORTY-FIVE

  FORTY-SIX

  FORTY-SEVEN

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  READ A SAMPLE

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  LOOK FOR THESE MYSTERIES

  CONNECT WITH ME

  ONE

  Isobel Spice stared at the handsome young man slumped over his coffee cup and thought desperately: not again.

  She carefully set her tray of melon chunks and assorted pastries on the credenza at the side of the windowless conference room and tiptoed over to the solitary figure at the large oval table.

  He’d probably just dozed off. Or maybe he’d passed out. There was no reason to think he was dead just because she’d stumbled across a dead body in an office once before.

  But something about the angle of the young man’s body was just plain wrong. Isobel gingerly pressed her fingers against the pale, slender wrist. She’d never been good at locating a pulse, even on herself—she’d lied to many an exercise instructor over the years—but somehow she knew that in this case, if there were a pulse to be found, she would be able to find it.

  There was nothing. Not even the faintest throb.

  Isobel let the man’s hand drop back onto the table. His gold signet ring cracked loudly against the wood, startling her. She turned his hand over and was disproportionately relieved to find the ruby-colored stone still intact within its school crest. Isobel gently released his hand and slipped out into the hallway, her panic rising as she gathered steam and burst into Katrina Campbell’s office.

  “Your client is dead!”

  But Katrina’s office was empty.

  There were several other employees on the lower floor of Dove & Flight Public Relations Isobel could run to, but for several reasons, Katrina was the person least likely to jump to the wrong conclusion. On the other hand, Isobel had to get help. Now.

  She dashed back out into the hallway just as Aaron Grossman, a senior account executive, came into view at the far end of the floor.

  “Help!” Isobel called, waving him down. “I have to find Katrina! It’s an emergency!”

  Aaron gave Isobel an odd look and pointed over her left shoulder. Isobel turned to see Katrina, a towering, freckled redhead, coming up behind her from the direction of the small company kitchen.

  “Isobel!” Katrina said, drawing closer. “You look like you’ve just seen a ghost!”

  “I have,” Isobel croaked. “The body, not the spirit. Come on.”

  She seized Katrina’s arm and pulled her back toward the conference room.

  Katrina shook her off. “What is wrong with you?”

  But Isobel, who came up roughly to Katrina’s shoulder, grabbed her again and propelled her wordlessly down the hall.

  At that moment, Aaron emerged from the conference room, his skin paler than usual under his heavy, dark beard.

  “Help! HELP! Somebody call 911!”

  “Isobel, call 911!” Katrina suddenly seemed to understand, and, breaking free, she ran toward Aaron.

  Relieved to be believed, Isobel darted into the nearest office, surprising an eager young junior associate whose eyes grew wide as Isobel relayed to the dispatcher what she had seen.

  By the time Isobel returned to the hallway, a small crowd had gathered around the door to the conference room. Katrina was leaning against the wall, visibly shaken. Angus Dove, a dapper, elderly gentleman wearing a tartan bow tie, was making his way slowly down the internal spiral staircase that connected the two floors of the public relations firm.

  Time seemed to stop as Dove descended the steps. The crowd parted to let him pass into the conference room. He emerged a moment later.

  “Will somebody please call emergency,” Dove said, his lightly Scots-accented voice wavering. “And nobody touch him.”

  Before Isobel could volunteer the information that she’d called already, the hush was broken by another man galumphing down the stairs so heavily it seemed the wrought iron might give way at any moment.

  “What the hell is going on?” he bellowed through lupine, nicotine-stained teeth.

  “Barnaby,” said Dove, “I fear we have a little situation.”

  “Don’t be such a goddamn PR flack, and tell me what the hell is going on!”

  “A client, here for a meeting. Seems to have…seems to have…”

  “Seems to have what, Angus?”

  “Died,” Isobel blurted out, her voice projecting several notches higher than she’d intended in both pitch and volume. Angus Dove and Barnaby Flight, the two senior partners of the public relations firm, turned to look at her.

  Isobel swallowed. “It’s Jason Whiteley. He was here for a meeting with Katrina, Aaron and Liz, and I had just settled him in the conference room with some coffee. I left to get the snacks, and when I came back he was dead.”

  Behind Dove and Flight, she could see more employees lining the spiral staircase, conveying the news upward from rung to rung in muted whispers.

  “Who the hell are you?” roared Barnaby Flight.

  Isobel looked around at the sea of suspicious eyes and shrugged meekly.

  “Nobody. I’m just the temp.”

  TWO

  James Cooke tried to ignore his cell phone, which was ringing again at the bottom of his gym bag. He was determined to finish two more rounds of bench presses, then shower and have a cup of coffee before talking to anyone about anything. Mondays were always busy at Temp Zone, and today would be worse than usual because his boss, Ginger Wainwright,
was on vacation. Knowing that he and the other recruiters would have to pick up the slack and stay into the evening, he’d given himself permission to work out longer and arrive late. He wasn’t ready to leave his endorphin high behind and face the world. Besides, he couldn’t imagine who could be trying to reach him so urgently.

  “Excuse me? Excuse me!”

  James set his weights down with a clang and looked up at the skinny white girl standing over him. She’d recently started working out at his Harlem gym and was always lurking in the weight room chatting up guys with the lamest, most transparent conversation-starters. So far he’d been able to avoid her by pretending not to speak English.

  “Can you either turn off your phone or answer it? It’s kind of annoying.”

  So are you, thought James, grunting in response.

  He sat up and dug around in his bag for his phone. Just as he disentangled it from his spare jock strap, it stopped ringing.

  “Oh, well.” The girl tossed her long dark hair over her shoulder and pointed at his midriff. “Arms look good, but you want to pay more attention to your abs.”

  James full out growled at her as she walked away toward the weight machines swinging her thin hips, but she just waved at him over her shoulder. One way or another his workout was over, so he hauled his 250-pound frame off the bench, tucked his bag under his arm, and headed for the locker room. He considered the gym a shrine for private, intense workout, a time to commune with his body. This little squirt was trying to turn it into her personal pick-up joint.

  To be fair, she hadn’t been trying to strike up a conversation this time; she’d only been suggesting that he answer his phone. Well, he thought sternly, one thing always led to another.

  James had just stepped into the shower, when his phone rang again.

  “Goddammit!” he cursed at the tile walls.

  He took his hand off the hot water knob, which, fortunately, he had not yet turned on, and reached for his bag. This time he managed to grab the phone on the third ring.

  “What?” he barked.

  There was a pause, and then an all-too-familiar voice launched into an all-too-familiar monologue.

  “I’m sorry to keep calling, but it’s an emergency and you’re not at your office. You were so mad at me last time when I didn’t tell you right away, and the police aren’t here yet, and I didn’t want you to be mad at me again, so I—”

  “Isobel! Slow down, slow down!” James grabbed his towel and wrapped it clumsily around his waist. “Where are you?”

  “At Dove & Flight. I didn’t have anything to do with this—you have to believe me. It’s crazy! I mean, what are the odds of me being in an office with a murder two times in three months?”

  James felt his chest tighten, and he pulled the phone away from his ear to check the number. Yes, it really was Isobel, and she really was saying what he thought she was saying.

  “Isobel.”

  “What?”

  “Are you telling me that someone at Dove & Flight is dead?”

  “A client. And I didn’t do it. I mean, I did do it—but I didn’t mean to, I swear!”

  James massaged his brow, trying to make her words mean something else, but he couldn’t.

  “What do you mean, you did do it?” he asked slowly, not wanting to hear the answer.

  “I served him coffee right before he died.”

  “And the coffee killed him?”

  Isobel paused. “Well, actually, I don’t know. I just sort of assumed it did. But—oh, my God! The pot is still on in the kitchen. I have to go!”

  “Wait—WAIT!”

  But she was gone. James threw the phone into his bag. So much for his shower.

  She was right—it was crazy, he thought, as he pulled on his pants over his slick, sweaty legs. But he had no reason not to believe her. In the three months he’d been sending her out on temp jobs, James had learned that Isobel was many things—endearing, annoying, witty, and even, sometimes, if his defenses were down, attractive—but she wasn’t a liar. Nor, despite the fact that she was an actress, or a would-be actress, or some sort of actress-in-training, was she unnecessarily dramatic. There had been real panic in her voice. If she said someone was dead, as unlikely as it might seem, someone was dead.

  He had to get his ass down to Isobel’s office in midtown, that much was certain. He couldn’t let her face the cops alone if there was any chance she was responsible, even accidentally. Isobel didn’t always know when to cork it, and she didn’t always make the best first impression, especially on people who lacked a finely tuned sense of the ridiculous. And cops fell squarely into that category.

  James cast his mind back to their first meeting, when Isobel had flounced into his office with her round gray-green eyes, shiny brown ponytail and translucent skin. Against his better judgment, he’d let her steamroll him into sending her out on a temp job, despite the fact that she’d never worked in an office. It was only supposed to be a half-day of phones and light typing at a bank. Nothing in the job description mentioned discovering an obnoxious secretary sitting on the pot with a pair of scissors plunged into her chest, nor the task of cleaning up the mess. Of course, the crime scene folks and the building staff had taken care of the blood, but Isobel had been the one to clear up the confusion by correctly fingering and trapping the killer. She had never been more appealing than at that moment.

  But there was nothing appealing about Isobel now, and he groaned in frustration at the garbled message assaulting his ears over the subway loudspeaker. It was just intelligible enough for him to catch the general drift: a suspicious package at 145th Street. Downtown trains delayed until further notice. He pounded up the steps to the street, his breath misting in the frigid January air, just as a bus barreled up to the curb. James shot his MetroCard into the reader and started down the aisle.

  “Need the fare,” the bus driver called after him.

  “What? This is an unlimited card.”

  “You gotta wait eighteen minutes before you can use it again. You just used it.”

  James stormed back to the front of the bus. “Damn right I just used it. On the subway, which isn’t running.”

  “They shoulda given you a transfer.”

  “Well, they didn’t,” James growled.

  Two elderly women exchanged a glance and pulled themselves to their feet. They hobbled toward the rear of the bus, preferring to maneuver their canes down the aisle than be attacked by a raving, fare-deficient madman.

  The driver gave an exaggerated sigh, as if he were talking to a five year-old. “You gotta ask for one.”

  “I didn’t have time to ask. I’m late, and I’ve already shelled out the money for an unlimited card, so don’t you go goddamn limiting me!”

  “Well, this is the Limited bus,” joked a wiry Hispanic kid in horn-rimmed glasses. James glared at him and he shrank back into his seat.

  “Eighteen minutes or pay the fare,” the bus driver said stoically.

  James ignored him and plopped down next to the Hispanic kid, who receded even further into the blue plastic.

  The bus driver shifted into neutral and turned around in his seat. “Either pay the fare or get off the bus,” he said, in a voice that brooked no argument.

  “What are you gonna do, throw me off?”

  There was a collective intake of breath from the passengers. In response, the bus driver pulled his walkie-talkie from his belt and began to speak.

  “This is the 101 Limited, bus number 6650, operator 142. I’ve got a large, African-American male, won’t pay his fare—”

  “Son of a bitch! I don’t have time for this!” James roared.

  He stormed through the open doors, nearly knocking over a gaggle of teenage girls running to catch the stalled bus. A middle-aged woman in a suit stuck her mouth up against an open sliver of window.

  “Now you’ve held up the whole damn bus! You’re not the only one who’s late, you know!”

  “I’m the only one who’s late to
a murder!” James shouted back, although he realized as soon as the words were out of his mouth that they didn’t exactly help his cause.

  THREE

  Isobel crouched eye-level with the counter and examined the coffee in the pot. Had any of the others helped themselves? She wished she could remember how much was left after she’d poured Jason Whiteley’s cup. Then again, if she waited long enough, the answer might manifest itself in the form of another dead body. Horrible thought.

  “What are you doing?”

  Isobel jumped and turned to see Katrina standing behind her.

  “Don’t do that!” Isobel held her hand over her pounding heart. She pointed to the half-empty carafe. “I’m checking the coffee. Has anyone else had any?”

  “Why?” Katrina looked puzzled. “What does it matter?”

  “Because that’s obviously what killed him. There was something in the coffee.”

  Katrina stared at Isobel.

  “What?” Isobel said.

  “That never even occurred to me,” Katrina said, sweeping a coppery curl behind her ear.

  “It didn’t?” Little warning hairs began to prickle the back of Isobel’s neck. “Wasn’t he your biggest pain in the ass client?”

  Katrina’s face flushed the color of her hair. “Are you suggesting that I—”

  “Of course not! I just thought that somebody might have…” Isobel shook her head. “I don’t know what I thought.”

  Katrina stepped further into the kitchenette and pulled the door closed. “Look,” she said quietly, “I know what happened at that bank job you were on, but even though Jason is…okay, dead…it doesn’t mean somebody killed him. I’m sure there’s a logical explanation, like he was sick and nobody knew it. But nobody here—and that includes you and me—poisoned his coffee.” Katrina allowed herself a little laugh. “You were always such a drama queen.”

  Isobel bristled. “That’s not true!”

  Katrina cocked her head at Isobel. “Freshman year? When you had a crush on that guy, what was his name? And you wrote all those love poems and stood outside his dorm and sang them to your own tunes?”

 

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