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Death Rides the Surf (A Kate Kennedy Mystery Book 5)

Page 16

by Noreen Wald


  Marlene Friedman’s third and last husband, Jack Weiss, had been a very successful man, and his widow was now a wealthy woman. Marlene’s estate would be divided among Kate, Katharine, and Lauren, though Kate had always hoped that she would die before her best friend. If Roberto had his way, she might get her wish.

  Lovesick women do foolish things. Katharine had told Jon Michael about her grandaunt’s bank account. Roberto had overheard, and the seeds of his sick plan had been planted, becoming one of several motives for Jon Michael’s death.

  She wanted to reach over and touch Katharine. The girl looked so ill. So vulnerable. What kind of drug had that bastard given her? Could her granddaughter be in a coma?

  Roberto’s plan had included using Katharine’s ID to cash the cashier’s check. Kate knew once that transaction was completed, Katharine and Kate would become expendable.

  The plan also called for Roberto to hang up as soon as Kate had given Marlene the money transfer instructions. She had to do something now. Send some sort of a signal to Marlene.

  “Where are you?” Marlene asked, her hysteria on hold.

  Roberto shook his head.

  “I can’t tell you where I am.”

  “Can the kidnapper hear me?”

  “Yes.” Kate watched Roberto’s face. “He can hear you.” She took a deep breath, and then spoke. “Listen very carefully to what I’m telling you.”

  Kate was about to insert her first ad-lib. Would Roberto notice?

  “As time goes by, you must remember this.” She paused. Roberto’s expression hadn’t changed. She might be able to pull this off, and then pray Marlene had gotten the message. Kate continued, “For the sake of our beautiful friendship,” she paused again for less than a second, and said, “you must understand what I’m saying and do everything I’m trying to tell you. If you don’t, Katharine will be killed.”

  “Go on, Kate.” Marlene sounded almost calm.

  “Be at SunTrust tomorrow morning when it opens at eight. When you leave the bank, a woman will approach you. An older woman. Give her the cashier’s check, then get in your car and drive home. Don’t talk to the police or discuss this call with anyone.”

  Roberto nodded, indicating Kate should wrap it up.

  “You must remember what I told you. Otherwise we’ll both regret it for the rest of our lives. You’ve always understood when I tried to tell you something important, Marlene. I’m counting on that now.” Kate didn’t dare look at Roberto.

  “I understand,” Marlene said.

  Kate prayed she did.

  “Dinner’s here.” A woman’s voice shouted from the hall.

  Roberto leapt from his chair and opened the door.

  An old lady, balancing two pizza boxes and a six-pack of Diet Coke, entered. She wore a lavender sweat suit and her perfectly coiffed hair looked like a wig. Huge diamonds dangled from her earlobes, neck, and wrist.

  Roberto’s face sparkled like the old lady’s jewels. As Marlene had said, lots of odd couples in this case.

  Kate checked out the woman’s eyes. Yes! She was about to meet Diamond Lil. Damn. Where had she seen those eyes before?

  Katharine stirred, then woke up crying.

  Kate ran over and held her granddaughter close, murmuring. “It’s okay. Everything will be okay, darling.”

  “Nana, I’m so sorry. He grabbed me after Marlene dropped me off at church. I tried to scream, but I couldn’t. He put something over my face and shoved me in the trunk.” Katharine sobbed. “No one saw us, Nana. The parking lot was empty.”

  “It’s okay,” Kate said again. Why did she keep saying that when everything was so wrong?

  “Stop crying, Katharine,” Roberto said. “We all want to enjoy our dinner, don’t we?”

  As Diamond Lil served the pizza, Kate noticed her hands. Nary a vein, a sunspot, or a dry patch. Not an old lady’s hands. They were the smooth, tanned-to-perfection hands of a teenage girl.

  Forty

  Friday morning, November 3

  This could be the last day of my life, Kate thought as she awoke from a fitful sleep in the chintz chair. The last day of Katharine’s life. She remained still, her eyes closed, fighting an urge to check on her granddaughter. She didn’t want her kidnappers to know she was awake. Kidnap. What a strange verb to describe such a horrific crime. Children weren’t the only ones abducted, grabbed off the street, taken from their beds, and held against their will. Kate, a senior citizen, and Katharine, a college student, had been kidnapped. Kidnap was a misnomer.

  Murder, on the other hand, was an all-inclusive verb. Kate felt helpless, frightened. She no longer had control over her destiny; she could only pray Marlene had gotten her message. She asked St. Jude to give her strength. And maybe a small miracle.

  “Wake up,” Roberto said as he shook her shoulder. Kate opened her eyes and glanced at her watch. Six thirty. Beyond those drawn drapes, the sun was coming up and early risers, with freedom of choice, had started their day.

  Six thirty. If Marlene had understood Kate’s message, the police should have been here by now. Had she seen her last sunrise? An inner voice scolded: get hold of yourself. Don’t give up.

  Katharine snored softly. Kate’s fear was replaced with anger as she stared at her granddaughter. She turned to Roberto. “What did you give her?”

  He shrugged, seeming to realize that whatever he told Kate wouldn’t matter if his plan worked, and he was arrogant enough to be sure it would. “Equal parts Tylenol PM and water.”

  God, when help arrived, she’d take Katharine to the hospital. Kate smiled, and a small giggle escaped: she’d thought when, not if.

  “Something is funny, señora?”

  “An inside joke, Roberto.”

  The bathroom door opened and a beautiful young redhead in white shorts, a t-shirt, and no shoes walked out.

  Amanda Rowling, the missing co-ed, was alive and well, and Roberto’s partner in crime. She had her mother’s eyes.

  Amanda must have dyed her hair red so she could pass for Katharine when she cashed Marlene’s cashier’s check for over $350,000. She’d have Katharine’s driver’s license, student ID, and credit cards. Kate had spotted her granddaughter’s handbag on the bureau.

  “Would you like a cup of tea, Kate?” the girl asked, and then poured boiling water from an ancient coffeemaker into two mugs.

  Kate sipped her tea, watching in silent, sick fascination as Amanda transformed herself into Diamond Lil.

  Grace Rowling had told Kate what a great actress her daughter was. She was also a great makeup artist, using gray eye shadow to create dark bags and the illusion of wrinkles. She even used cotton balls to make her face fatter. Roberto taped pillows to her breasts, buttocks, and thighs. Dark tights covered those slim, tanned legs. When Amanda pulled on her frumpy housedress, she looked lumpy in all the right—or wrong—places. She stepped into Dr. Scholl’s sandals, winking at Kate. She adjusted her white wig and topped it with a tiara. Her transformation was complete. Amanda Rowling had become Diamond Lil.

  Kissing Roberto on the cheek, she pushed him away as he tried for her lips. “Stop, you’ll mess up my makeup.” They both laughed at what had to be their private joke. “I’ll call you when I’m on my way back.”

  Diamond Lil left the Casablanca Motel at seven fifteen, allowing more than enough time to arrive in Palmetto Beach by eight.

  If Roberto’s plan worked, and Amanda got the check and cashed it on her way back to the motel, Kate figured she and Katharine had about an hour and a half to live.

  Kate sat in the dirty chintz chair, trying to disappear into its flowers.

  Katharine slept and neither Roberto nor Kate spoke.

  At eight fifteen, Roberto, the gun in his shirt pocket, paced as Kate boiled water to make a cup of tea for Katharine. The gi
rl had awakened about five minutes ago and had heeded her grandmother’s index finger to her lip as a signal to keep quiet.

  Amanda could be calling any minute, authorizing Katharine and Kate’s death warrant.

  Kate poured the hot water into a mug. Should she try to grab the gun? Yell for Katharine to run and save herself? Kate had to try. Now.

  Something crashed through the widow facing the beach. The drapes billowed and then parted, revealing a man’s arm. Behind Kate and Roberto, the door made a wheezing sound, then burst open.

  Roberto swung around, aiming the gun at Kate. She threw the hot water in his face as Katharine screamed and Nick Carbone yelled, “Freeze!”

  Marlene had gotten the message.

  Epilogue

  Saturday morning, November 4

  “Kate, did you know the police checked out one hotel, two restaurants, and three motels in Broward and Dade Counties, all called Casablanca?” Marlene held up her mimosa. “A toast to classic movies and their great dialogue.”

  “Yes, Nick told me.” Kate smiled at the detective who sat to her right. “And I’d thought there was only one Casablanca.”

  Kevin and Jennifer had insisted on hosting a brunch at the Boca Raton Hotel to celebrate Kate and Katharine’s safe return.

  Katharine had told Kate, “Mom wants to make nice with Detective Carbone.”

  They were sitting on the hotel’s elegant terrace, being served delicious food on beautiful china, sipping drinks from crystal glasses, and watching a surfer trying to catch a wave in the aquamarine water of the Atlantic Ocean.

  “And I understand the police arrested Amanda in the SunTrust parking lot,” Kate said.

  “That was such fun,” Marlene said. “I handed her an empty envelope and they carted her off: Her white wig fell off.”

  Katharine laughed. “Even with red hair, Amanda wouldn’t look anything like me, ID or not.”

  “Roberto would have killed you and Katharine, Nana,” Lauren said. “He’s a sociopath.” There were a few of them running around Palmetto Beach, Kate thought. “He killed Grace because that private detective she’d hired had found out about Roberto’s smuggling operation, and he slit his rich mistress’s throat because she’d served her purpose.”

  “I think Grace may have been murdered because she’d discovered her daughter wasn’t dead,” Kate said. “She probably saw through Amanda’s Diamond Lil disguise, recognized her daughter’s eyes. They were so like Grace’s.”

  “Detective Carbone, I’m so sorry I didn’t tell you I’d gone to Grace Rowling’s room on Monday night,” Jennifer said. “I thought Jon Michael might harm Katharine and that Grace knew more than she’d told me. I made a bad judgment call, the deal in Bangkok was coming to a head, and I didn’t want to be stuck in Palmetto Beach as a prime suspect.”

  Kevin, who was sitting between his wife and his younger daughter, put an arm around each of them.

  Katharine reached over and patted her mother’s hand. Nick just grunted.

  “Talking about sociopaths,” Marlene said, changing the subject, “Amanda aided and abetted her own mother’s murder.”

  “But Jon Michael was murdered because Roberto had overheard me talking about my inheritance.” Katharine sounded ashamed.

  “Well, that was one reason. It’s complicated,” Nick said.

  “Jon Michael believed Amanda had been murdered and he was the prime suspect. He also believed Roberto was his friend who’d protected him and given him an alibi. He felt he owed Roberto big-time. Then he found out Amanda was alive and Roberto had been using him. Jon Michael became a threat, and Roberto wasn’t about to divide the money three ways. Hell, Roberto had Claude begging to become a smuggler. Roberto rigged the wire cage’s opening so the pig’s blood would seep out of the plastic bag and into the ocean.”

  “Now it’s over,” Jennifer said, and turned to her daughter. “Are you coming home?”

  Kate heard the nervousness in her daughter-in-law’s voice.

  “Yes,” Katharine said. “I’m going back to NYU. Nana, I’m going to write a screenplay about all this. Want to hear the title?”

  “Yes, darling.” Kate laughed. It felt good.

  “Death Rides the Surf. And I’ll get Mary Tyler Moore and Valerie Harper to play you and Marlene.” Katharine looked at Nick. “And Paul Sorvino can play you.”

  “As long as I get the girl,” Nick said.

  Decades ago, Marlene had accepted her guilt over the one-night stand with Charlie. She’d even written Kate a letter confessing the adultery to be opened after Marlene’s death.

  Now that they were so much older, Marlene felt she should suffer the guilt alone. Why should she hurt her best friend?

  She mixed a martini, opened a pack of Virginia Slims, lit a match and burned the letter.

  About the Author

  Noreen Wald lives in downtown Sarasota, Florida with her husband, Steve. Their sons visit often. Hey, surf and sun are great lures. She has served terms as a local chapter president for Mystery Writers of America, as well as Executive VP and Secretary for their National Board of Directors. A winning contestant on seven television game shows—including Jeopardy!—Noreen later worked for Goodson-Todman and Merv Griffin Productions. She’s lectured at the Smithsonian, the CIA , the National Press Club and aboard the QE II. Her Ghostwriter Series was a Mystery Guild selection and praised in The New York Daily News, The Sun-Sentinel, and hit #1 on The Dallas Morning News bestseller list.

  The Kate Kennedy Mystery Series

  By Noreen Wald

  DEATH WITH AN OCEAN VIEW (#1)

  DEATH OF THE SWAMI SCHWARTZ (#2)

  DEATH IS A BARGAIN (#3)

  DEATH STORMS THE SHORE (#4)

  DEATH RIDES THE SURF (#5)

  Available at booksellers nationwide and online

  Visit www.henerypress.com for details

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  Henery Press Mystery Books

  And finally, before you go...

  Here are a few other mysteries

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  GHOSTWRITER ANONYMOUS

  Noreen Wald

  A Jake O’Hara Mystery (#1)

  With her books sporting other people’s names, ghostwriter Jake O’Hara works behind the scenes. But she never expected a séance at a New York apartment to be part of her job. Jake had signed on as a ghostwriter, secretly writing for a grande dame of mystery fiction whose talent died before she did. The author’s East Side residence was impressive. But her entourage—from a Mrs. Danvers-like housekeeper to a lurking hypnotherapist—was creepy.

  Still, it was all in a day’s work, until a killer started going after ghostwriters, and Jake suspected she was chillingly close to the culprit. Attending a séance and asking the dead for spiritual help was one option. Some brilliant sleuthing was another-before Jake’s next deadline turns out to be her own funeral.

  Read all about it and/or grab the book from Amazon

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  MACDEATH

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  Like every actor, Ivy Meadows knows that Macbeth is cursed. But she’s finally scored her big break, cast as an acrobatic witch in a circus-themed production of Macbeth in Phoenix, Arizona. And though it may not be Broadway, nothing can dampen her enthusiasm—not her f
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