Authors: Stephanie Bond
already bought it. He’s not sure—you know how men are.
Is it possible to look up an item number for our location,
then track the purchase of each item back to a name on a
credit card? I’d doubt if we carried more than a dozen of
this particular item.”
“It’s possible,” Jeanine said, “but it’l be a few hours before
I can run a report. And if she paid with cash, you’re out of
luck.”
“I understand.” She gave Jeanine the item number and her
cel -phone number. “Call me when you have the results?”
“Wil do.”
“I owe you one.”
“You owe me about fourteen. When are you going to pay
up?”
Carlotta bit into her lip. “How do you feel about skin
care?”
“Huh?”
“I have cleansers, scrubs, peels, all of it pharmaceutical
grade. Name your poison.”
“Hmm—got any glycolic acid gel?”
“Twenty percent solution.”
“You’ve got yourself a deal. I’l call you back.”
Carlotta returned the receiver and walked back toward her
section, wondering how angry Detective Terry would be if
he knew she was stil asking questions.
And that after tearing apart her bedroom and car she stil
hadn’t found that damn cigar.
“Carlotta to the men’s department,” a woman’s musical
voice sang over the P.A. system.
Carlotta looked toward the ceiling, frowning at the hidden
speakers. Pages were made only as a last resort—someone
had obviously been by her station and couldn’t find her.
She hurried downstairs, perplexed. But when she walked
into menswear and saw Dennis Lagerfeld lounging against
a counter as if he owned it (and he probably could), she
realized that she’d been “summoned.”
“Carly,” a menswear associate said, shooting arrows her
way, “Mr. Lagerfeld asked that you assist him today.”
“I’d be happy to,” she said, trying to tamp down the
nervousness that threatened to paralyze her. The fact that
he’d come looking for her told her a lot about the man: He
was predatory, accustomed to going after and getting
what he wanted. She conjured up a smile. “Hel o, Mr.
Lagerfeld.”
He splayed his large hands and she noticed that he wasn’t
wearing his wedding ring again. “Please, call me Dennis.”
She nodded. “Dennis.”
The other associate slipped away, leaving them alone.
Stil leaning, he perused her skirt suit—yel ow-and-gray-
striped, with a lime-green T-shirt underneath, and gray T-
strap high heels. It was, she relented, a great ensemble,
but the man looked at her with those languid, pale eyes of
his in a way that made her feel as if she needn’t have
bothered getting dressed.
“You’re looking lovely today,” he oozed.
“Thank you. You look nice, too.”
He brushed a hand over the fine knit of his long-sleeve
black shirt. In fact, he was dressed all in black, with every
garment fitting his big, athletic body like a glove. She
couldn’t help but wonder if his leaning pose had been
practiced in order to show off his long, muscular figure to
best advantage.
“I have a guest appearance later today,” he said. Gesturing
vaguely to the racks of clothing around them, he said,
“Meeting you yesterday reminded me that I needed some
things.”
“Suits? Sportswear? Shoes?”
“Yes,” he said with a moneyed smiled.
Her return smile was genuine—a potential murderer’s
money was as good as anyone else’s. Maybe she could
repair her sales record while plying him for more
information. “Then let’s get started, shall we?”
She gave him a guided tour through every section of the
men’s department, making suggestions along the way,
although she soon realized that Dennis Lagerfeld had
developed an eye for what types of clothing
complemented his large physique. She could see how a
woman could get caught up in his aura, she decided. Just
watching the man move was a treat—his physicality
suggested he’d probably be a great lover. Plus, he was
undeniably handsome…and rich.
And married, she reminded herself. And on the prowl.
And quite possibly, a dangerous man.
He shopped for shoes first, flirting with her while he
walked around picking up exquisitely made styles. “I wear
a size fifteen,” he announced, “but I like a tight fit.”
She squirmed, unable to stop from visualizing the exact
image that he’d intended. “I’m sure we can accommodate
you,” she murmured, wondering what it would be like to
be the mistress of someone like Dennis Lagerfeld. He
seemed like someone who enjoyed the chase but would
probably tire of the conquest.
A chil settled over her when she returned with a selection
of size fifteens and knelt before him. Was he pursuing her
because he’d recently rid himself of a mistress and was in
search of a new one?
His cel phone rang and he answered while working his
foot into a black ostrich-skin lace-up dress shoe. “Yeah,
Patrick, what’s up?”
Carlotta tied the shoe slowly, shifting when she realized
that Lagerfeld was trying to look up her skirt. What a cad.
“I don’t want to deal with this right now,” Dennis said into
the phone, his voice agitated. “Just make it go away,
Patrick. That’s why I pay you the big bucks.” He snapped
the phone closed.
“Trouble?” she asked lightly.
“Comes with the territory,” he said. “There’s always
someone plotting to sabotage me or trying to get to my
money—fans, competitors, strangers…even friends. It gets
to the point that I don’t know who I can trust.”
“Sounds lonely,” she observed.
“It is,” he said, then leaned forward and gazed into her
eyes with a pained expression so convincing she could see
how a woman might fall under his spel . “More lonely than
you could possibly imagine.”
She smiled nervously, then stood and looked down at the
two-thousand-dol ar pair of shoes. “What do you think?”
He didn’t even look down. “I think I’l wear them. You’re a
great salesperson.”
She laughed, going along with his flattery. “Then let me
sel you something else.”
She led him into the suits section, accumulating armfuls of
things he liked, eventually stopping next to a rack of
cashmere jackets with a crest embroidered on the lapels—
the same brand that Angela had purchased. She hung
back, watching his reaction. He fingered the same jacket
that Angela had purchased, even removed it from the rack,
then frowned thoughtful y. Carlotta held her breath. Did
he recognize the jacket?
“Nice jacket,” she murmured. “Would you like to try it
on?”
He glanced up, then grinned. “Only if you’l help me get
undressed.”
She blushed and delicately picked a hair off his sleeve. She
was getting pretty good at DNA col ection on the sly.
“You’re going to get me into trouble.”
“Trouble excites me,” he said with a low laugh. Then he
donned one of those interested-in-an-offhand-way
expressions. “Say…do you ever take back clothes that have
been worn?”
Her mind flashed back to the days when she’d returned
worn clothes herself. She made a rueful noise. “Not unless
there’s a defect…although funny you should ask. A woman
just returned that same jacket a few days ago, you know,
the customer of mine who drowned.” She frowned. “It was
very strange. She caused a bit of a scene, so we took it
back—not that it mattered in the end.”
His eyebrows rose almost imperceptibly. “I’m curious.
What happens to clothing that’s been returned?”
The back of her neck prickled. Resisting the urge to run,
she said, “In this case, I put it with our other returns. It was
too…soiled…to be put back on the floor. Eventually it’l be
sent back to the manufacturer, I suppose.”
“Ah.” He leaned down and wet his curvy lips in slow
motion. “What time do you get off work?”
“S-six.”
“Let’s go somewhere,” he said. It wasn’t a question but a
foregone conclusion in his mind.
“I can’t,” she said. “I…already have a date.” He didn’t have
to know it was with her brother and a plate of lamb chops.
Dennis pouted. “I promise I’l show you a better time than
he can.”
“Maybe some other time,” she said and conjured up a
hopeful smile.
He continued to flirt while he tried on the clothes and then
she rang up his sale. When she told him the total, he shook
his head and handed over his credit card. “This is the most
money I’ve ever spent just trying to get someone to go out
with me.”
“Really? I pictured you as a generous guy—lingerie,
perfume, the whole bit.”
He grinned. “Wel , I admit, I do have a weakness for a
beautiful woman wearing beautiful lingerie. I’ve purchased
quite a lot of lingerie here, in fact.”
Her pulse picked up, but she played the demure flirt as she
handed back his card. “Wel , I’m not so sure I want to be
part of a harem. You probably have ladies falling all over
you. I bet you don’t even have to look farther than your
own neighborhood to find a wil ing woman.”
In the span of two seconds, his expression morphed from
playful to panicked. He jammed his credit card back into
his wallet. “It’s not like that.”
“Come on,” she said, baiting him. “A celebrity like you—
you’re probably fueling the fantasy of every housewife in
your zip code.” She gave him a sexy wink. “Women talk,
you know.”
His swarthy coloring faded to a sickly green-gray. “You
don’t say.” He glanced at his watch. “I didn’t realize it was
getting so late. I need to go or I’m going to miss my
speaking engagement.”
She handed his bags over the counter. “Thank you for
shopping with us. See you around?”
“Yeah,” he muttered, then picked up his shopping bags
and strode away.
Carlotta crossed her arms and watched him walk away,
wondering if Detective Terry had questioned Dennis
Lagerfeld, if he’d given any credence to her information
that a man who smoked the same cigar that she’d found in
the pocket of the returned jacket just happened to live in
the same neighborhood where both women had been
murdered. And who seemed inordinately interested in
what had happened to a jacket that had been returned.
She held up the Baggie with the hair she’d plucked from
Lagerfeld’s sleeve. The detective would probably be
furious with her if he knew she was stil poking around, but
she’d resigned herself to the fact that the man was in a
perpetual bad mood where she was concerned.
As she walked back to her department, her cel phone
rang—it was Jeanine.
“Got those names for you,” she said.
“Go ahead,” Carlotta said, certain now that Dennis
Lagerfeld’s name was on the list and that she had cracked
the case.
“Six garments sold, two of them cash sales. The credit card
sales were in the names of Rebecca Bright…Regina
London…Robert Kenny…and Peter Ashford.”
Carlotta froze, her vital signs going haywire. Peter?
“Are you there?” Jeanine asked. “Does this answer your
question?”
“Yes,” Carlotta managed on an exhale. “Thanks, Jeanine.”
“When wil I get my gel?”
“It’s in the mail,” Carlotta murmured, then disconnected
the cal , feeling as if she were moving in slow motion.
Peter had bought the lingerie that Lisa Bolton had been
wearing when she died? She recalled something that
Angela had said on her last shopping spree when she had
bought some lacy underthings. Peter likes me in black.
Perhaps he liked al of his women in black.
She covered her mouth, afraid she might be sick. Had
Peter been having an affair with Lisa Bolton? Had he
gotten her pregnant? Had Angela found out? And had
both women died at his hands? Had he always possessed
the capacity for violence and she hadn’t seen it, or had he
changed after they’d parted? Feeling light-headed, she
considered crawling behind the counter and curling up in a
ball. But no, she could—and would—col apse later. Right
now she had to make a phone call.
She picked up the counter phone, dialed the police station
and asked to speak to Detective Terry. After a few
minutes, his voice came on the line.
“Terry here.”
“Detective…it’s Carlotta Wren.”
“Yeah. What’s up?” She could hear him shuffling papers in
the background.
“I need to talk to you.”
“So talk.”
“Not now—I’m at work. But I get off in an hour. Can I meet
you somewhere?”
“I’m leaving soon, too, and I need to make a few stops.
How about I meet you at your place?”
“My brother will be there.”
“Even better. I’d like to talk to him as wel .”
Why did she have the feeling that he had more questions
about her parents? She sighed and massaged her temples.
“Okay, I’l see you there.”
Somehow she made it through the next hour without
flying apart. But by the time she got to her car, her feet
and her heart were dragging. She was terrified that Peter
might be waiting for her again, but thankful y he was