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Submission. Tori CarringtonЧитать онлайн книгу.

Submission - Tori Carrington


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passed her with the box she’d been carrying when Molly had arrived. “Would you like me to bring this one?” she asked.

      “Sure. Thanks.”

      Molly picked up the other box and followed her out into the living room, where Nick took the carton out of her hands and disappeared outside again.

      “You wouldn’t happen to have come across anything more of my sister’s while you were packing, would you?” She adjusted her purse still slung over her shoulder.

      “Funny you should mention that.” Joann put down the box and walked into the kitchen. A moment later she came back with a key on a ring that held a pink-haired troll with a blue ink stripe across its face. Molly immediately recognized it as belonging to Claire. She’d bought it to top off a Christmas gift years ago, and her sister had lamented that she’d put a pen mark on it during a phone conversation shortly thereafter.

      Molly hadn’t paid much attention. Until now.

      She took the key.

      “I don’t know what it opens. Not the apartment. I already tried. And Claire didn’t have a car.”

      “Maybe it’s to the place she lived before?”

      Joann shrugged. “Maybe. But Nick thought it looked more like a locker key—you know, like the type you see at the bus station? Only it doesn’t have a number on it or anything.”

      Molly ran her thumb over the top of the key, noticing where a line of jagged orange plastic seemed to indicate something had been removed. Nothing but the name of a popular key company was imprinted on the key itself.

      “Is there maybe something you’ve remembered since Claire died?” Molly asked. “Something you haven’t told the police?”

      “No. I’ve told them everything I know.”

      Nick came back inside for the last box. “You ready?” he asked Joann.

      “Yeah, give me a sec to double-check.”

      Molly stood exchanging glances with Nick as cupboard doors were opened and closed in the kitchen, then in the bathroom. Within moments Joann was back in the living room.

      “That’s it.”

      “Lock up. I’ll be in the truck.” Nick disappeared again for a final time.

      The key bit into Molly’s hand where she held it so tightly.

      “Hey, look,” Joann said. “I’m really sorry for your loss. I mean, what happened to Claire…” She crossed her arms and rubbed her hands over the bumps that dotted her skin. “I can’t imagine what you must be going through right now.”

      “Thanks.”

      Joann began to pass her.

      “Would you mind if I asked for your forwarding address? In case I have any other questions?” Molly asked.

      Joann looked hesitant.

      “I promise I won’t call unless I’m absolutely convinced you can be of help. In fact, chances are you’ll never hear from me again.”

      Molly pulled her pad and a pen from her purse. And, after a sigh, Joann took it and scribbled down an address and a phone number.

      “Thanks,” Molly said again, unsure how any of this helped her but glad that she’d caught Joann before she’d left.

      Molly led the way outside, then stood watching as Joann climbed into the truck cab, gave a final wave and drove away.

      THE GOOD THING ABOUT being a homicide detective was that you didn’t spend a lot of time at the office. The bad thing about being a homicide detective was that when you did need to be at the office, you were at a desk in a room shared by a dozen others.

      Phones rang, voices chattered, computer printers printed. And one of the younger narc detectives was even trying to figure out how to use the manual typewriter in the corner—and not having much luck, judging by the occasional string of profanities he muttered.

      At least I was no longer the center of attention. Ten months ago I couldn’t walk into a precinct room without it going completely silent, everyone staring at me.

      I guess that was what happened when you bedded the captain’s estranged wife.

      While few incidents could trump the losing card I’d dealt myself with that stupid move, the more time passed, the more people moved on with their own lives, leaving me alone to see to the ugly details on my own. Although I’m sure an office pool was running to see when the captain would finally fire my sorry ass.

      And that day would be soon if I didn’t catch a break in the Quarter Killer case.

      I edged my chair closer to my paperwork-covered desk and leafed through the mess that threatened to topple over into my lap. Actually, it appeared to have slid onto the floor and been piled back up by someone, because it was messier than usual. I sighed and started sorting through it, knowing it was too much to hope that somewhere in there I would find the clue I needed to solve the Laraway and Arkart murders.

      The phone on the corner rang. I ignored it.

      “Chevalier, line two for you,” a junior detective called out.

      “Take a message.”

      “Take your own damn message. What, do I look like your secretary?”

      I glared at him, wondering when he’d grown a pair of balls when only a short time ago he’d been all about pleasing everyone, then snatched up the receiver.

      “What?”

      “Alan?”

      A female voice. More specifically, a female voice belonging to the oldest of my three sisters, Emilie.

      I took a deep breath. “Now’s not really a good time, Em. Can I call you back?”

      “Normally I would say yes, but what I have to say really shouldn’t wait.”

      I rubbed my forehead, wishing for a cup of coffee. “What is it?”

      “Zoe hasn’t been back to her dorm room in two days.”

      My hand froze.

      Zoe was the youngest of the Chevalier family, although at twenty-one she liked to pretend otherwise. Em and Laure had long ago tried to convince me that they were overcompensating for the loss of their parents by spoiling her, but neither of them had seemed capable of doing anything differently. After all, Zoe had only been eleven at the time, and while they both had their own ghosts to wrestle with, it seemed easier to focus their attention on their youngest sibling than address their own needs.

      “How do you know this?” I asked.

      “I talked to her roommate.”

      “Does the roommate have any idea where she might have gone?”

      “Not a clue. Her overnight bag is still there and nothing seems to be missing.”

      Another junior detective called out. “Chevalier? Call on line four.”

      I gritted my teeth.

      Emilie said, “That’s not like Zoe at all. She usually lets everyone know where she is and what her plans are. Including me.”

      She was right. From a young age, all of us had drilled into Zoe the importance of keeping in contact at all times. And she’d complied. Probably because the one time she hadn’t, when she was fifteen and had gone to the movies with a male friend, she’d found half the NOPD drawing guns on her in the middle of the theater.

      “I’ll stop by sometime this afternoon,” I told Em, then rang off.

      I grabbed my hat and started to get up, half relieved that I wouldn’t have to tackle my desk just then.

      “You still have that call waiting on four,”


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