MURDER
IN
PARADISE
PARADISE SERIES, BOOK 4
DEBORAH BROWN
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or to actual events or locales is entirely coincidental.
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Copyright @ 2014 by Deborah Brown
Excerpt from Greed in Paradise @2014 by Deborah Brown
Published by: Paradise Books April 2014
Cover: Natasha Brown
PARADISE SERIES NOVELS
Crazy in Paradise
Deception in Paradise
Trouble in Paradise
Murder in Paradise
A SPECIAL THANK YOU TO
Colleen Albert
Marlene Engel
Chrystal Graham
You’re the best!!
Table of Contents
CHAPTER 1
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 3
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 5
CHAPTER 6
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 8
CHAPTER 9
CHAPTER 10
CHAPTER 11
CHAPTER 12
CHAPTER 13
CHAPTER 14
CHAPTER 15
CHAPTER 16
CHAPTER 17
CHAPTER 18
CHAPTER 19
CHAPTER 20
CHAPTER 21
CHAPTER 22
CHAPTER 23
CHAPTER 24
CHAPTER 25
CHAPTER 26
CHAPTER 27
CHAPTER 28
CHAPTER 29
CHAPTER 30
CHAPTER 31
CHAPTER 32
CHAPTER 33
CHAPTER 34
CHAPTER 35
CHAPTER 36
CHAPTER 37
CHAPTER 38
CHAPTER 39
CHAPTER 40
CHAPTER 41
CHAPTER 42
CHAPTER 43
Preview Of Greed In Paradise
CHAPTER 1
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
CHAPTER 1
Dark gray thunderclouds filled the sky, threatening to pour big fat raindrops at any second. With the mugginess stripped from the air, the temperature began to drop and streaks of lightning flashed to the west. I opened the back door of my Tahoe and put Mother’s birthday gift on the back seat. Creole, an unofficial cousin, had called in a favor and gotten me an invitation into Patron’s Cigar Factory, an appointment-only cigar bar where I scored a small handmade teak humidor filled with hand-rolled Cubans, the kind that Mother enjoyed.
Sliding into the driver’s side door of my Tahoe, I had one leg under the steering wheel when someone jerked me from my SUV.
“Hey, bitch, I’ll be taking this ride.”
I elbowed my assailant hard, making contact. He yelped, twisted me around by my hair, and tossed me airborne until I landed in the middle of the busy street. “Get up and I’ll shoot your ass,” he said as he pointed his gun at my face. He jumped behind the wheel, spinning the tires as he squealed off down the street.
A beat-up sedan honked furiously, screeching to a halt just inches before rolling over me. The driver put his car into gear to go around me and yelled from the passenger window, “What the hell’s the matter with you, lying in the street?”
Carjacked––and in broad daylight no less.
Sylvia, Patron’s wife, rushed out of the cigar bar. “Madison, are you okay? My daughter is calling 911.” Her big brown eyes checked me over.
“I’m fine. I need to place another order.” I’d waited six months for the humidor I picked to come in, and now I refused to be empty-handed.
“You’re a good daughter,” Sylvia said. “The best birthday gift for your mother is that you’re not hurt.”
A Miami police car flew up the street, lights flashing. If this had to happen, it would’ve been nice to have been closer to home where I knew the sheriffs on a first name basis, for a variety of reasons, both good and bad. The officer climbed out of his patrol car.
“You the one who got jacked?” he asked, as he pointed at me.
“Come back inside when you’re done here,” Sylvia said.
The officer’s name tag read, “Durango.” I gave him the straight facts, veering away from the tabloid-style I enjoyed when relating details to friends. I knew when not to overplay the drama.
“Here’s my card. I wrote the report number on the back for your insurance company.” Durango looked bored. “If––when––we find your vehicle, you’ll get a call from the tow yard. Cancel your cell phone and credit cards if they were left inside.”
Standing in Little Havana, reality set in that I was an hour away from home and I knew no one. I had no ride, no money, no phone. Mother’s birthday party started in less than two hours and I needed a stand-in to handle the last minute details. I also needed someone to break it to Mother that I’d be lucky to get there before her party ended.
I went back inside Patron’s and asked Sylvia if I could use their phone. The aroma of tobacco from the open boxes displayed filled the air. The family-run business specialized in cigars rolled on site.
Bitsy answered on the first ring. “Famosa Motors.”
“This is Madison Westin. Tell your boss it’s urgent.” It could be loosely said that I work for Brick Famosa, trying to get hours for my PI license. He calls me when there isn’t another person in town who will accept the job. At least tracking down a missing urn of ashes didn’t land me in jail.
“Red, you in trouble?” He gave me that nickname because I have red curly hair, and lots of it.
“I got carjacked. I need one of your rentals; my insurance will cover the cost.” He owned the largest high-end car lot in South Miami.
“Did you shoot him?”
I knew Brick would be disappointed with my answer. If he had his way, the bad guy would wind up dead every time. “He grabbed me from behind. My gun was the only thing he didn’t steal.” I reassured myself by touching the holster at the small of my back.
“I’m on my way out. You can choose any rental on the lot—Bits will give you the key.” Bitsy was a former employee at Brick’s gentlemen’s club whom he’d promoted from stripper to receptionist. The customers at Famosa Motors loved her bubbly personality and ginormous assets.
“Don’t hang up,” I said. Brick had a tendency to be abrupt when ending calls. “I need a ride from Patron’s to Famosa’s along with one of your phones.” He ordered phones by the case, along with phone cards.
“Your ride’s on the way. When you’re done, take the SIM card out and throw the card and phone away.” He clicked off, not giving me an opportunity for another word. Pure Brick!
Brick had been named Cuban entrepreneur of the year. In addition to the car lot, he owns The Gentlemen’s Club out in Alligator Alley, a string of pawnshops, a bail bonds place by the courthouse, and he’s a private investigator.
<
br /> Fabiana Merceau, my best friend and roommate, would be annoyed that my next call wasn’t to her, but I knew she was spending the day with her underwear model boyfriend, Didier. To put it bluntly, she lacked hostess skills.
I dialed my brother Brad, instead. “I need a favor,” I said when he answered. “Are you with Julie?” Julie, my brother’s girlfriend, was the perfect choice to attend to last minute details for the party. “First off, I’m okay.”
“What the hell does that mean?”
“I got carjacked. A rental car is on the way. I need you and Julie to see to the last minute details of Mother’s party. Cook knows what I have planned and everything is ready, except for last minute stuff like ice. You need to open up Jake’s, turn on the lights, and put out the ‘Closed for Private Party’ sign.” I didn’t give Brad a chance to interrupt.
“You better be okay.”
“You’re the best brother ever. One more thing, I need you to tell Mother I’m going to be late and why. I’m borrowing a cell phone so pick up your calls and I can let you know when I’m on my way.”
“You’re bratty,” he snorted. “Any problems, you call me.”
Sylvia held a Patron’s shopping bag out to me when I was done with my phone call. “Your Mother will love this. It’s a small personal humidor that holds a half-dozen of her favorite cigars.”
“I’ll send you a check.” I almost started to cry.
“It’s the least we can do since this horrible thing happened in front of our store.” Sylvia patted my shoulder.
“I’ll tell Mother it’s from the both of us and she’ll love it even more.”
* * *
A black Land Cruiser pulled up to the curb. The window rolled down and I could see Gunz sitting behind the wheel. “Get in, crazy,” he called out to me. “Brick sent me. He owes me, and so do you.” After I slid into the passenger seat he handed me a phone and an envelope with cash in it.
Gunz, short for Theodore Gunzelman, is big-boy material, dressed in all black that’s an enigma I hadn’t begun to understand. If one needed a new identity, he’d be your first call. He stopped painting his bald head with fake hair paint, which was a big improvement.
“What the heck happened to you?” I asked, since there was tape across his nose from one side of his face to the other.
“I had to have a little cut-and-paste on my nostril.” Gunz shook his head. “Mango and I got into a disagreement, and her tooth got lodged in my nose.”
“Owwey,” I scrunched my nose. “Who’s Mango?”
“Stripper chick from The Gentlemen’s Club; she’s a little excitable,” he sighed. “They were able to extract her tooth, but the dentist said it wasn’t reusable.”
Gunz turned into Famosa Motors. “So, which car are you taking?” he asked.
“Brick said I could have my pick. Thanks for the ride.” I climbed out and looked around. I saw the SUV I wanted and went in to get the keys from Bitsy. I slipped behind the wheel of the black convertible Hummer knowing full well my insurance wouldn’t cover it, but thought that maybe I could work a deal on the difference with Brick.
CHAPTER 2
Getting carjacked forced me to stop at home to shower and change. I couldn’t show up to a party with dried blood on my arms and legs, not to mention the little pieces of gravel that embedded themselves into my skin from the pitch and roll. After going through my closet I chose a black lacey push-up bra and spaghetti strap dress. My first dress choice lay on the floor, a large unrepairable hole along one side. Since one of the heels had snapped off my shoe, I opted for a pair of black wedge designer flip-flops.
I inventoried the cars in the parking lot of Jake’s and determined I was the last to arrive. Jake’s, my favorite sports tiki bar, was under new management. Jake, one step ahead of heavy hitter collectors, had transferred his entire interest to me for safekeeping. Word had it they wanted their money, or him dead. I hadn’t made any major changes to the exterior, but I hired a contractor to make long-needed repairs and to add more outdoor lighting. All the palm trees were wrapped in lights with colorful annuals planted at the base of each.
As soon as I put the Hummer in park, the door handle jerked open and I screamed. “How did you know it was me?” I grabbed Zach’s head and curled my hands in his thick black hair. Bringing his mouth to mine, I met him with a hard, hungry kiss.
Zach Lazarro is my boyfriend, practically from the first moment I laid eyes on him. We had a fun relationship, although lately I had to remind him more often that I wasn’t a stay-at-home, bake cookies kind of girlfriend. I bought them from the bakery and passed them off as homemade.
“You have a driving style all your own that the previous pimp owner of this auto would never emulate.” Zach lifted me up, our bodies fitting together, softness against hardness. “Why in the hell didn’t you call me?” He pushed me away, his deep blue eyes checking me over.
I licked my lips, staring at his, hoping to forestall the lecture that waited on the tip of his tongue. “Talking and driving is out of the scope of my skills and although there’s a phone inside, I need the owner’s manual to learn all the tricks.”
“What strings did Brick attach to this little baby?” Zach looked over the Hummer in appreciation for its mechanical capabilities. I choose it for its hotness. “Why couldn’t you go to a regular rental car place and get a nice two-door sedan?”
“Brick takes insurance.”
Zach laughed. “I put a man on locating your SUV. We’ll get it back, then beat the hell out of the guy and drag him to jail.”
Zach, a former Navy Seal, owned AZL Securities, which boasted an impressive clientele and provided a wide variety of investigative and security services, including extreme ass-kicking.
“How’s Mother?” I asked.
Recently, she sat at my kitchen island with her drink of choice, a Jack on the rocks, while lighting up a cigar she knew I forbid inside the house. I decided not to mention it because her topaz-colored eyes had turned a deep brown when mad, like my own. She issued a new order that under no circumstances was she to be the last person to “know” anything. Or she’d kick my adult butt.
“I saw her wagging her finger in Brad’s face and knew you were in trouble again. I only exhaled when Brad assured me you hadn’t been shot,” Zach said.
“On the angry scale, one to five…”
“You skated again. Whatever Brad told her, she relaxed. Then he made her laugh and put his arm around her.” Zach nibbled on my bottom lip, covering my mouth with his. “I can’t believe you’re throwing your mother’s birthday party here at Jake’s. She doesn’t have the same attraction to dive bars that you do.”
“Jake’s is the perfect place. We have the best Mexican food in The Cove and all the Jack Daniels Mother can drink. Haven’t you noticed the improvement?”
“What are you going to do when Jake slithers back to town and wants his bar back?” Zach bit my earlobe.
“That’s going to be a problem. We’ll have to work out a co-ownership or something. I have big plans for this place.”
“I knew it,” Zach groaned, “You couldn’t be happy to just pop the top on a beer and slide it down the bar.”
“Party-face time, honey. We can argue later, after sex.”
We walked through the door; Mother spotted me and ran over. I held out my shopping bag two step-lengths in front of me.
“Gift,” I said.
“Oh, stop. I’m happy you’re here and in one piece.” Mother looked me over. “You better go make up with Fab. She’s not happy she wasn’t your first phone call. That boyfriend of hers wished me a happy birthday in French; so sexy sounding.”
“I think Didier could say, ‘Take out the trash,’ and make it sound sexy.”
Mother had changed her look; she still had the blonde bob, but gone was her usual conservative knee-length dress, replaced with a wildly colorful three-quarter length tropical sheath with deep slits. I eyed her open-toed striped linen wedges, thinking they’
d look good in my closet.
A finger tapped me on my right shoulder. Only one person had that annoying habit. I looked left. “No chance to shoot your jacker?” Fab slinked up behind me.
“By the time I picked my butt up off the ground he had disappeared. Wait until you see my rental.”
“Brick?” Fab smiled knowingly, scooping up her waist-length brown hair and putting it behind her shoulders. She traded her cars in every three months or so in exchange for unspecified jobs that she never talked about. I knew some of her methods pushed the limits—others were outright illegal—but sometimes you have to stack the deck when dealing with a dirtball.
Liam ran up and threw his arms around me. I groaned, several places on my body tender to the touch. “When Brad told us the story, I was happy to hear you were okay.”
“We have a date for the aquarium this weekend. I’m not missing that.”
Liam was fourteen going on thirty, an atypical teenager. Mother and I already claimed him as our grandson-nephew even though his mother, Julie, and Brad were only in the dating stage. Neither of us entertained the idea that Liam wouldn’t always be a part of our family.
Familiar arms wrapped around the front of me, turning me around. “This place looks like someone actually cleaned it.” Creole scanned the restaurant and each guest; it would make his night to haul in a drug dealer. Only a handful of people knew he was an undercover cop. “Food’s good; I came in the back and sampled my way through the kitchen.” His lips looked ready to zoom in on mine. I turned my face away at the last second and he kissed my cheek.
“If you start a fight with your best friend at Mother’s birthday party she won’t be happy.”
“Zach just gave me the finger. It’s nice being friends again, but he knows if he screws up and you dump him, I’ll be banging on your door.”
Creole, aka Luc Baptiste, is an unofficial cousin in our family; only family knew his real name. My Aunt Elizabeth had adopted him with her heart, giving him protection from an abusive home life. As a young boy, he grew up several houses down from her. They formed a bond that was as close as mother and son. Mother had warmly welcomed him into the family. He was actually a good fit, which annoyed Zach. Creole dripped sex, had caramel-colored skin, and he’d cut his black ponytail that hung down to the middle of his back, in favor of shoulder-length hair.
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