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Authors: Heather Webber

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BOOK: The Root of All Trouble
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Too bad about their criminal inclinations.

Speaking of which, I hadn
't seen Jean-Claude since I pulled in the driveway. I snuck a peek out the front window to see that the cab of my truck was empty. Jean-Claude was long gone, and I could only imagine where he'd wandered off to.

Or why he
'd been so fidgety when we pulled up and he saw the police. As far as I knew he wasn't involved in any recent dirty dealings.

Which didn
't mean too much. He was a sneaky one, and often kept his extracurricular activities a secret.

Most of the time.

I had once uncovered his secret life as JC Rock, an exotic dancer. He still moonlighted down in the Blue Zone to earn extra money, but that wouldn't explain his current nervousness around the Freedom PD.

It was something to look into. Later.

Plum flicked her gaze toward me, and like Ethan, I didn't see much humanity in her eyes. There was a cold calculation within the blue depths that made me shiver. I wanted to wring Perry's neck for ever agreeing to hire this group. Although, I couldn't completely blame him. It had been Mario who hired them.

Not that he
'd brought this on, of course. No one brought on a
murder
.

Well. Okay. Sometimes it was brought on. By scummy people like Joey Miller. And if you hired Joey Miller, then yeah, I suppose you brought it on.

So...technically all this was Mario's fault.

Perry came back and doled out luxurious bath towels to the group. Kevin declined taking one and instead walked over to me while the others dried off.

"I need to use the facilities," Mr. Cabrera announced loudly.

I pried his
empty glass from his hands and set it in the sink. He toddled away, bumped into a wall, and kept on going.

Kevin didn
't say anything, he just stood close by. So close that his body heat radiated toward me. Raindrops slid down his cheek and dripped off his chin. The moisture soaked into his blue button-down shirt, which was already drenched and clung to his arms and chest, molding to his muscles.

Not that I noticed or anything.

That was me. Nina Colette Oblivious Ceceri Quinn.

With a bit of effort, I forced myself to look away. His quietness was making me nervous. Usually he was quick with a quip or some sort of criticism of my involvement—yet again—with his murder cases.

I caught him looking at me out of the corner of his eye. "I had nothing to do with this," I whispered.

"
I didn't say anything, Nina."

"
You were thinking it."

"
You don't know what I'm thinking."

"
Yes, I do, and you're thinking that this is my fault. Or if not my fault, that somehow I brought this on. I'll have you know, this is all Mario's fault. He hired them, fully knowing the Reaux family reputation."

"
No," he said darkly, "you don't know what I'm thinking. Or else you'd be covering up. Wet T-shirts become you."

I looked down, saw my nipples standing at attention and gasped. I practically tackled Perry to grab a towel.

The corner of Kevin's mouth quirked.

I frowned at Perry.
"You could have told me."

"
What?" he said innocently. "Wet T-shirts do become you."

"
Uhn," Bear said.

He pried
his eyes off Delphine long enough to give me the once over. I wasn't sure if he was agreeing or disagreeing. I really didn't want to know.

Jealousy flashed in
Plum's eyes as she gave me a dirty look.
Oh please
, I wanted to say. As if I was competition with her triple Ds.

She should be more worried about her sister because it was obvious Delphine was the competition for Bear
's affections.

Delphine, however,
was
oblivious as she studied her nails, or at least pretended to be.

Ethan glanced toward me, then away again, dismissing me with barely a blink.
Huh
. No need to be rude about it.

Mr. Cabrera came back from the bathroom, took a look at me huddling under the towel and said,
"Someone finally tell her about the headlights?"

"
I'm going home," I said.

Kevin grabbed my arm.
"Not yet. I have questions, lots of questions. For all of you."

I eyed the gin but decided aga
inst drowning my embarrassment. Mr. Cabrera, however, had no such qualms and poured himself another drink.

All I could picture was Brickhouse
's teeth.
Chomp, chomp
.

"
If we could get this over with, Luvie," Delphine purred to Kevin, "I'd appreciate it. I have things to do today."

I bristled at her calling him
"Luvie" even though she called everyone that. I had no reason to bristle. None whatsoever. But bristle I did.

"
Ice, ice baby," Plum said loftily to her sister. "Your boy toy is dead and all you can think about is your manicure appointment?"

Talk about
meow
. Maybe Delphine wasn't the only one who had feline tendencies.

Delphine narrowed her eyes but didn
't say anything. Fortunately, Kevin did. "Boy toy? Were you dating Joey Miller, Miss Reaux?"

"
We went out a couple of times." Delphine adjusted her skirt. "He was single. I'm single. No big deal." Tipping her head, she said saucily, "And trust me when I say he wasn't worth killing over."

I noticed Bear clench his hands. This grizzly sure wasn
't happy that Delphine had been seeing Joey.

Kevin walked around the table.
"When did Joey go missing?"

"
Two days ago," Perry said. "He went out for lunch Wednesday afternoon and never came back."

"
Did you think that was strange?" Kevin asked. "That he'd just up and walk away?"

"
From the job? Or from
me
?" Delphine purred.

I gagged a little bit.

Bear patted Delphine's hand. "No one would walk away from you, baby."

Plum outright rolled her eyes and said,
"Joey has a history of walking off jobs—it's why he's been fired from previous employers more times than I can count. It was a risk taking him on with our company, but we were desperate for experienced help and willing to take a chance. It's not like we're unfamiliar with shady histories and we believe in second chances. It was more surprising that he left behind his paycheck—not my sister."

Delphine said,
"Jealous much?"

"
Slutty much?" Plum countered.

Kevin jumped in before a full-blown catfight erupted.
"How long had he worked for you?"

"
Two months or so," Plum said, eyeing Bear's hand, which hadn't budged from Delphine's arm.

"
And how long were you dating him?" Kevin asked Delphine.

"
About a month," Plum answered for her. She pointedly looked at Bear. "She has a thing for skinny little runts."

It was an apt description of Joey Miller. Skinny. Runt-y. She neglected to add slimy, which would have also fit.

Delphine glared. "It's not the size of the man, it's the size of his di—"

The end of her sentence was drowned out by a crack of thunder.

"Amen, sister." Perry took a big gulp from his glass.

Mr. Cabrera wiggled his eyebrows and said to her,
"Do you like older men?"

Oh good God.
"Maybe it's time for you to go home, Mr. Cabrera?"

Bear threw a menacing look at my neighbor.
"Good idea."

"
Oh, simmer down. I was just asking." Mr. Cabrera topped off his drink. He added, "I'm a catch."

"
You would be," Delphine said with a flirty smile, "except I heard about your curse. I'm too young to die."

Mr. Cabrera pouted.

"I should take him home," I said to Kevin.

Kevin raked his hand over his face.
"A few more questions. Who was working here the day Joey disappeared? Who saw him last?"

"
We were all working," Ethan said, taking a pack of cigarettes from his pocket. He shook one out, brought it to his lips, and reached for his lighter.

Perry walked over and drew the cigarette from Ethan
's lips and handed it back to him. "Uh-uh. Not in the house."

There was a collective inhale in the room as we waited for Ethan to stab Perry to death.

Perry seemed oblivious to the danger as Ethan's eyes narrowed into dark terrifying slits. From Perry's outstretched palm, Ethan took the cigarette and tucked it behind his ear. His eyes promised retribution.

"
Coffee? Cocktails, anyone?" Perry asked, his hand resting on Ethan's shoulder. "I just made cookies."

I thought Perry was the bravest man I knew.

"This isn't social hour," Kevin said.

Perry made a face at him and came to stand next to me. I could practically feel his itch to do something more with my hair.

"Who saw him last?" Kevin asked again.

The corner of
Plum's lips lifted. "I do believe it was Delphine. They'd been fighting."

We all looked at Delphine. Kevin said,
"Is that true?"

"
I wasn't the only one who got into it with him that day," she deflected. "Plum was put out that Joey called her plus-sized—"

"
I hate that term," Plum cut in, apparently still seething.

"
—and Ethan and Joey got into it about the sawdust…"

"
He was a slob. I can't stand slobs," Ethan said, looking my way.

I really wanted to go home.

"Oh, oh!" Delphine sat up. "Joey also argued with Perry about the work in the bathroom."

"
That's true," Perry said darkly, as though remembering the argument. "He was trying to put in ceramic when we paid for marble."

If they
'd paid for marble but Joey was installing ceramic, where'd the money go? It had to be thousands of dollars in missing cash. Marble was not cheap.

"
He apparently didn't realize that I could tell the difference." Perry scoffed. "Amateur."

Scammer was more like it. I didn
't doubt for a moment that Joey had pocketed that money.

"
He told me that the ceramic was what Mario and I had ordered. As if. I told him he'd picked the wrong man to con."

"
Wait," Plum said, spearing Delphine with a sharp gaze. "Did you know about this?"

Delphine didn
't seem fazed. "Perry told me."

"
And?" Plum demanded. "What did you do about it? We run an honest business, we can't be having our foreman cheating our clients."

"
Well, I was going to confront Joey about it, but he went to lunch and...I didn't see him again."

I didn
't miss the way she faltered on that sentence.

Neither did Kevin if the set of his jaw was any indication.

Delphine had just lied. About which part, though? Confronting him or not seeing him again?

"
It doesn't matter much now, does it?" Delphine said. "The man is dead."

"
But where's the money?" I asked, and tried not to cower when they all turned and stared at me. "I mean, if Perry and Mario paid for marble..."

"
I'm looking into it," Delphine said with an edge to her voice.

Her tone told me all I needed to know—the money was gone.

Kevin took a deep breath, leveled his best cop-like stare at Delphine, and said, "You've told me why everyone else argued with Joey that day, but what were you arguing with him about, Miss Reaux?"

Plump lips pursed like she
'd just sucked on a lemon. Obviously she'd been hoping Kevin had forgotten about that line of questioning.

However, she was saved from answering by wild knocking on the front door. It was followed by female cries of
"Let me in! I just heard the news! Let me in!"

Kevin crossed the living room in three angry strides and threw open the front door. A young curvaceous blonde, maybe twenty-five at the oldest, stood on the doorstep sobbing. Big breasts spilled from a skin-tight mini dress, and bronzed legs appeared to go on for miles.

"Who're you?" he asked, sounding completely exasperated.

The woman fell into Kevin
's arms and cried a river onto his chest.

BOOK: The Root of All Trouble
12.51Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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