Dead Cold Mysteries Box Set #4: Books 13-16 (A Dead Cold Box Set) Blake Banner (ereader iphone txt) đ
- Author: Blake Banner
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Dehan flopped back in her chair.
Xara turned to look at her. âI ainât kidding. Thatâs why I donât believe he couldâa done that murder. He could no more rape a woman than I could. And I ainât got a dick.â
I squinted at her. âWhat about Viagra, CialisâŠâ
âForget it! Ainât I tellinâ you we tried everything? He wasnât even interested. All he wanted was a woman to be sweet to him: hug him, hold him, stroke his hair, say sweet things to him. He loved beinâ told he was handsome. Truth is he wasnât bad lookinâ. Nice face. But his dick was like last nightâs fuckinâ Chinese noodles. As limp as a boiled shrimp.â
Dehan was staring at the wall. âIâll be damned!â
Xara looked at her and laughed. âAinât nobody in this room goinâ to the Good Place, thatâs for sure!â
I raised an eyebrow at her and smiled. âSo he gave you no indication that he was planning to leave?â
âUh-uh. He just stopped calling and stopped showinâ up.â
âOK, now think about this very carefully before you answer, Xara. Was there anything he said to you, any passing comment, anything at all that would give you some clue to where he might have gone?â
She held my eye for a long moment. Her expression was not friendly. âI already told you, I liked the boy. You get your filthy hands on him, and you gonna frame him for a murder he did not commit. So even if I had some idea, which I ainât, I wouldnât tell the likes of you, Mr. Gammon.â
Dehan sighed. âWe donât want to frame him, Xara. We just want to know what happened that night. If he didnât kill Sue, we need to eliminate him as a suspect. Because right now there is a man out there, who did kill Sue, who may have killed againâwho may still be killing. We want to stop this killer, whoever he is. Weâre not in the business of framing anybody.â
She made a face that was skeptical. âTell that to your buddies in Vice.â She shook her head. âI donât know. He talked a lot about going home. Only he didnât say it like that. He used to say âcominâ home,â âI wanna come home,â heâd say, like that had some special meaning for him. I know he was from Sacramento. I donât know if he was thinkinâ of going back to California. I know he liked the desert, but I donât think he was happy out west. He never talked about his family. He said once he had a sister, but he never talked about her.â She crushed out the butt in the ashtray and fiddled with the packet, turning it around in her plump, white fingers. âI know what thatâs like, not wanting to talk about your family.â She snorted. âWhatever he thought, I ainât no shrink, but I know he werenât happy as a kid. You could see that plain as day.â She hesitated. âAnd you know what else you could see?â
I jerked my chin at her in a wordless, âwhat?â
âHe wouldnât hurt a fly. He come across as sullen and rude sometimes, but it was defensive, not offensive. That was his way of protecting himself. Underneath that shell, he was the softest, sweetest boy I ever met.â
I looked at Dehan. She shrugged. I said, âOK, Xara. Thanks for your time. Youâve been very helpful.â
She laughed a smoky laugh and started coughing. âI been helpful to the cops. Iâm goinâ to whore hell for sure.â
We let ourselves out. As I closed the door, I could still hear her coughing in the kitchen. The sudden cold air made us shiver and I thrust my hands deep in my pockets.
Dehan said: âThe softest, sweetest boy a submissive hooker ever met isnât much of a recommendation.â
I grunted. âBut it was a very believable picture. What time is it?â
âEleven. Too early for lunch, Stone.â
âLetâs grab a coffee and a snack somewhere. This is one hell of a puzzle, Dehan. I need to think this through.â
We went to Monsignor del Valle Square and hustled inside the Café Sevilla. It was warm and close, it smelled of wet coats and sweet buns, and there was an espresso machine screaming behind the bar. We found a table by the window, squeezed in and ordered two cups of hot chocolate and two almond paste croissants. Then we sat and stared out at the soaking sludge and the traffic in silence. Dehan was the first to speak after the waitress had brought our order. She broke off a piece of croissant and dunked it in her chocolate.
âShe just blew a hole a mile wide in our case, Stone.â
I smiled at her. âIn my case. Your money was on Fernando and Giorgio.â
She tilted her head in a kind of one shouldered shrug. âYou had me almost sold on your semi-serial killer theory, but I have to admitâthe sweetest guy she ever met, who wouldnât hurt a fly and he has erectile dysfunction not even Viagra can cure... thatâs not much of a prime suspect.â
I nodded. âYouâre right. But I still think we need to track him down and talk to him. He is still the one guy who didnât give a sample, and he is the one guy who disappeared the very next morning after the killing. Itâs too much of a coincidence.â
She frowned at her croissant and made a âhmâ sound, then said, âI agree, but Stone, maybe we need to look at this again. Like I said before, maybe weâve been making assumptions.â She leaned forward and put
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