Wine, Dine and Christmas Crimes Maria Swan (read e book txt) đ
- Author: Maria Swan
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In exchange, Ana cleaned for Dale Wolf and his live-in partner. She also did the laundry. Wolf kept track of her finances, and she was only months away from having enough to go back home. The Los Angeles Chinese Consulate was providing the paperwork she missed, having been smuggled into the States as a teen by a man who had promised her much R+R. Romance plus riches. Once in the States, he put her to work in one of his parentsâ businesses, without pay as he wanted to be reimbursed for the smuggling fees. She was able to escape during an immigration raid.
It wasnât that they spent the twenty minutes telling me all that. Some snippets were part of the conversation. I filled the gaps on my own while I felt like someone should whip me and whip me good, as the song went, for all the bad scenarios and imaginary sins I had created in my suspicious mind about those two good souls. And none of this explained Kayâs crying and Daleâs person of interest status.
After twenty minutes of listening to their personal info, I felt entitled to ask a few questions. By then Kay had run out of tears and tissues and Dale was calculating how much value the 14th-floor condo had lost due to the circumstances. And letâs not forget it was really on the 13th floor, so that was a double whammy. Kay and Wolf agreedâno superstitious soul in his right mind would touch such a tainted place, not even at half price.
All that while we still didnât know how Ana Martin ended up in the rooftop pool in her underwear on a cold December night while a few floors down, her benefactor was having a lovely Christmas party catered by my own former aunt-in-law. One thing was clear, I totally understood why Kay didnât like Dale Wolfâs real estate ethics. I also understood why he was a successful broker in this hard-to-crack town, while I was a newbie without much ambition or talent.
âI guess Iâll let myself out.â I stood. âYour place is lovely, Kay, and your Christmas tree is even better in person than in the photos you shared at the office.â
âSit down,â Kay said. âWhat were those detectives asking regarding trash?â
âMore than trash, the questions were in regard to Letaâs fingerprints on the ice machine and the garbage chute. There may have been more, but I left. They are trying to âwork out a time sequence,â or so said Detective Ross. Kay, Iâm told the clothing I found on the floor of the 13th floor condo was actually Miss Martinâs work uniform. So, where did she keep her real clothes? I mean, shoes and stuff.â
She didnât need to answer, her shaky hand searching for more tissues told the story. Thatâs why the cops had visited her condo, looking for the dead womanâs belongings. Ouch!
âWait,â I said. âNow I get it. When I saw Mr. Wolf parking his Maserati, he was here to pick up Miss Martin.â
âYou saw me parking my car? Where were you?â
âHey, you think itâs funny? I know my Fiat is small, but the color makes up for the size. Next youâll tell me you didnât take a pic of my license plate.â
The horror on his face was no joke. He fumbled inside his suit pocket and pulled out his cell phone. More fumbling, then he slid the phone to the center of the table. âYou mean that?â
I stretched to look. âYep. All coming back to you now?â I may have hummed the last part. I know, I can be juvenile at times. He sat back, a pained look on his face, eyes closed, and for a nanosecond I thought he was getting sick.
âWhat else did I do?â he asked.
âHow should I know? I drove out of there as fast as I could. That creepy Gold Buttons doorman wasnât happy to see me.â
âWalter? He was there? What time was it? Do you remember?â
âI had just delivered the goods to Leta. We met at the service entrance.â I looked at Kay. This was screwed up. âI left andâmade a wrong turn.â I had already told all that to the cops, and this guy claimed he didnât remember? Ah, now the âperson of interestâ made sense. Freaking liar. Or not? âYou lookedâsauced,â I said to the person of interest. âBut not enough to not remember parking your Maserati and checking your back bumper. Just out of curiosity, where were you when they found Miss Martin in the pool? Wait, who found her?â
He got up and started to pace the room. I wanted to get up and run out of there. Something was totally wrong, and since I wasnât lying, they must be.
âThe bartender,â Kay whispered, âfound her.â
Bartender?
This was getting weirder by the minute. I glanced at the man pacing like a maniac, at Kay quietly sobbing or pretending to, and I mentally calculated the distance to the front door. Would I make it? I would count to three and sprint. One, twoâ
And Kayâs doorbell rang. What now? The two of them exchanged glances, then looked at me. That was my cue.
âIâll get it.â And I sprinted. Yanked the door wide open and found myself staring at Brenda and Leta. What?
âTootsie, got yourself a new job?â Leta chided. My lips moved without a sound getting through, and my eyes were probably in danger of falling off my face as I tried to communicate to the two innocent women that we should all run.
Too late, Kay was suddenly behind me, grabbing my arm and moving me out of the way to âwelcome the next victims? Mercy.
âCome in,â Kay said. âWe need to talk.â Well, we outnumbered the enemyâthree
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