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Deadly Deceptions. Linda Lael MillerЧитать онлайн книгу.

Deadly Deceptions - Linda Lael Miller


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eyes with the back of one hand.

      I felt a little pang as I drove past Bad-Ass Bert’s, too. I’d finally worked up my courage to move back into my apartment, but it wasn’t going to happen any time soon. I’d have to stay at the guesthouse, in case Greer needed me.

      Shit. I really wanted to go home.

      It was still too early, but I headed for Beverly Pennington’s place anyway. It was an upscale condo in a gated community, and there were police cars clogging the entrance. The sheriff’s department, Phoenix and Scottsdale PD—the gang was all there.

      I made an executive decision and canceled lunch.

      No lobster for me. Maybe I’d spring for a box of fish sticks.

      Jolie called again just as I was pulling into Greer’s driveway.

      No squad cars in evidence there, anyway. And no sign of Greer’s pricey SUV.

      Call me callous, but I was relieved.

      “Was it Alex?” I asked, without a hello.

      “Yes,” Jolie said.

      I swore. There’d been, as they say, no love lost between Alex Pennington and me, but I wouldn’t have wished him dead. And Greer was going to come unglued when she found out. “What happened?”

      “He must have pissed somebody off, big-time,” Jolie said. “The term ‘riddled with bullets’ has new meaning.”

      “Where are you?” I whispered loudly, getting out of the Volvo.

      “In my car, headed for Greer’s,” Jolie replied. “Where are you?”

      “Waiting for you at Casa Pennington,” I said, punching in the security numbers on the back gate with a stabbing motion of one finger. “Are there any leads?”

      “The suits don’t discuss things like that with lowly crime-scene techs,” Jolie answered. “Right off the top of my head, though, I’d say they haven’t got a clue.”

      “If that was supposed to be a play on words, it bites,” I snapped.

      “Moje?”

      “What?”

      “I’m on your side.”

      “Greer is going to freak.”

      “Maybe,” Jolie said.

      “What do you mean, ‘maybe’?”

      “She’s the wife, Moje. She and Alex haven’t been getting along lately. She’s automatically a suspect.”

      I dealt with another jolt of adrenaline. Yanked open the front door of the guesthouse and went in. “You mean a person of interest.”

      “That’s a bullshit, politically correct term for suspect,” Jolie told me.

      “You don’t think she could actually have done this?” I challenged, furious because the possibility, so readily dismissed before, suddenly seemed more viable.

      “What do we really know about Greer?” Jolie asked reasonably. “She’s a stranger, remember? And she’s being blackmailed—she told us that herself—so it’s safe to assume we might find some nasty surprises if we went poking around in her background.”

      “She’s our sister,” I argued.

      “That doesn’t mean she isn’t a killer,” Jolie pointed out.

      “She wouldn’t!”

      “Wouldn’t she?”

      “Jolie, stop. You know better than to think Greer—Greer—is some kind of monster!”

      “Chill, Moje. I’ll be there in half an hour. We can talk more then.”

      She hung up.

      I hung up.

      I flung the phone onto the couch and nearly hit Justin Braydaven, who must have blipped in while I was pacing and ranting at Jolie.

      “What are you doing here?” I asked.

      “I don’t know,” he said. “I just thought about you, and here I was.”

      I stopped. I’d meant to look Justin up on Google, find out how he’d died, but I’d been too busy. No time like the present, I thought. Greer wasn’t home, the police hadn’t arrived and Jolie was still thirty minutes out. I went to the computer, a laptop I’d borrowed from Jolie since my desktop was still at the apartment, and logged on. There was the daily threatening e-mail from my ex-husband’s girlfriend, Tiffany, who had been riding with Nick the night he died. She’d been thrown through the windshield and permanently maimed, and for some mysterious Tiffany reason, she blamed me for her disfigurement.

      I tucked the message into the Death Threat file and forgot about it.

      “My mom isn’t doing too well,” Justin said.

      I looked back at him over one shoulder. “Are there any other kids in the family?” I asked hopefully.

      Justin shook his head. “Just me and old Pepper,” he said sadly, “and he’s about on his last legs. Poor old dog. If I died six years ago, that means he’s almost fourteen. When he goes, I don’t know what Mom will do.”

      I went to the Google page and typed Justin’s full name into the search line. “Does she have a job? Hobbies?” The Damn Fool’s Guide to Insensitivity, page forty-three. But I was trying.

      Justin didn’t seem offended. He simply sighed and said, “She works at home, doing billing for a credit card company in a back bedroom. And her hobby is ordering stuff off QVC.”

      There were something like seven thousand references to Justin on the Web, according to Google, but I wasn’t going to have to wade through them. The first one told the story.

      “You were killed in a drive-by shooting,” I said.

      There it was again, that ole sensitivity o’ mine.

      Justin winced. “What was I doing at the time?”

      “Waiting for a streetlight to change after a concert,” I answered, turning in my chair. “If it’s any comfort, they caught the perp. He’s doing life in the state pen.”

      Justin absorbed the news with admirable ease. “Then I guess I’m not hanging around here waiting for my killer to be caught, like Gillian is.”

      My heart seized. “Did she tell you that’s why she’s here? In sign language or something?”

      “No,” Justin said. Then he reached for the TV remote, lowered the screen expertly and flipped to a rock-video channel. “You had me ask her if she knew who killed her. It was no great leap to guess why she’s still around. The question is, why am I still around?”

      I thought I knew the answer to that one, though I wasn’t about to say so.

      I do have some sensitivity, after all. There are moments when I positively exude it.

      Justin hadn’t gone into the Light, if there was such a thing, because his mother couldn’t—or wouldn’t—let go.

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