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Authors: Debra Purdy Kong

BOOK: Deadly Accusations
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With voices raised, the jackets started yakking about the girl with long, red hair at the front. The girl, sitting sideways in her seat, scowled at the boys. Two older passengers in front of Casey exchanged wary glances. Lou eased the bus forward and glanced in the rearview mirror. One of the boys up front, a cutie with freckles and blond curls poking out from beneath his cap, stared past Casey's shoulder. Casey followed his gaze to the South Asian girl who suppressed a smile at the boy's goofy stare.

“Stop looking at my sister, freak!” a boy shouted at the freckled cutie.

“Shut up.” The sister punched her brother's bicep.

“Why are you assholes looking at me?” the redheaded girl yelled at a couple of the South Asian kids. “Mind your own damn business!”

Casey stood and saw Jasmine just sitting there, staring at the kids. Why wasn't she stepping up to control the situation?

The boy who'd leered at Casey's chest shouted, “When are you going to grow boobs like her?” He pointed to Casey.

Ignoring the laughter, Casey removed her
ID
card from her pocket. “All right, settle dow—”

“Who wants to look like that fat cow?” the girl yelled.

Fat cow? Casey moved closer to the redhead. A few extra pounds around the middle hardly qualified for cow status. Somewhere behind her, a woman laughed. Probably Jasmine.

“I said settle down.” Casey flashed her
ID
at the girl.

“You should scrape the fat off your big ass and put it some place useful, ho-bag!” one of the jackets shouted at the redhead.

The redhead's face turned crimson. “You're dead!”

“Enough!” Casey's voice rose. “Everyone calm down.”

The words were barely out before an apple flew past Casey and struck the freckled cutie's shoulder. The jackets whooped and high-fived one another. The ball caps began scrambling through their backpacks.

“Keep the food in your packs,” Casey ordered, “or you walk home.”

Passengers mumbled and shook their heads. The exit bell rang

Jasmine stood and said, “Do as you're told.”

A banana flew past Casey and nearly hit a passenger. Lou stopped the bus.

Jasmine marched up to the jackets. “Put that pear down!”

Casey glanced at the ball caps when something thunked the side of her head. “Ow!” She looked down to find a partially eaten pear rolling along the floor.

“Oops,” one of the jackets said. “Sorry, lady.”

“How stupid are you?” Jasmine said, shoving her
ID
in the kid's face.

Casey gaped at her colleague. Jasmine knew better than to insult passengers.

“Leave my brother alone!” His sister swatted Jasmine's arm.

“Don't tell me what to do, little girl.”

Why was she making things worse? As Lou stopped the bus, Casey watched Jasmine grip the girl's shoulder. “You're out of here,” Jasmine said.

The girl punched Jasmine's stomach. Jasmine recoiled and then slapped the girl's face.

Casey gasped and rushed toward them. “Jasmine!” What the hell was she doing?

The jackets swarmed Jasmine, who screamed, “Get out or I'll charge you with assault!”

“Good lord,” a middle-aged woman muttered as she hurried to the front exit.

“You kids in the black jackets will have to go.” Casey kept her voice firm but calm while Jasmine stood there, hands on hips, glowering at the group who were either too smart or too inexperienced to retaliate. Lou joined Casey as the jackets exited the bus while muttering obscenities.

“You're in so much trouble!” the girl yelled at Jasmine from the threshold. “My parents will have you fired, bitch!”

“Tough talk for someone in a training bra,” Jasmine shot back.

Casey shook her head. Stan would be furious.

“Can you get this bus moving?” a passenger yelled at Lou. “Some of us have appointments.”

Lou hurried back to his seat. “Sorry for the delay, folks.”

Before he could pull away from the curb, the ball caps opened the windows and shouted more obscenities at the jackets.

Casey approached the group. “Stop that right now, or you're all out of here at the next stop.”

The freckled cutie, who hadn't taken part in the verbal abuse, turned his back on Casey while his friends complied. Casey walked the length of the bus, apologizing to passengers for the altercation. Jasmine slumped back in her seat and looked at Casey with disgust.

Casey kept her voice low as she leaned close to her. “Where in the operations manual does it say you can slap anyone?”

“She punched me first, and if you didn't see it, then you need glasses,” Jasmine replied. “You are thirty, after all.”

“I have perfect vision and am absolutely clear about what I saw,” Casey whispered. “You didn't try to control things until it was too late, and then you completely lost it. This all goes in my report.”

“Whatever, super-cop.”

Tempted to do some slapping of her own, Casey marched back to her seat. Lightning sliced through the clouds and muggy air. Thunder cracked, but she was too angry to pay much attention to the approaching storm. Minutes later, Lou pulled into Mainland's yard. Jasmine wasted no time stepping off the bus. Casey and Lou followed.

Jasmine was several paces ahead when Casey said to Lou, “Did you see the slap?”

“Uh-huh.”

Jasmine spun around. “I didn't need your help! I didn't even want you here, but there you were butting in and acting like you know everything. It's pathetic.”

“What's pathetic is your behavior.” Casey's heartbeat quickened. “You were completely unprofessional.”

“And you've never made mistakes because you're just so perfect.” Her eyes blazed.

“What's wrong, Jasmine?” Lou asked. “I've never seen you lose it like that.”

“I've never had to work with
her
before.” Jasmine charged toward the administration building.

“What is her bloody problem?” Casey asked.

“Who knows? You've got a bit of pear stuck in your hair.” Lou removed the scrap of food and flicked it on the ground.

“Thanks.” She stroked his freckled cheek. “I need a hot shower.”

“Seeing as how Stan will probably hear from the parents of a girl in a training bra, maybe you should write your report first.”

“True.” Raindrops started to sprinkle her face. “How loud do you think he'll yell after he's read it?”

TWO

CASEY STARED AT HER COMPUTER
screen and wished to god that Jasmine would get off the damn phone. Her desk was so close that words like “Miss Perfect,” “meddling,” and “self-righteous” were especially distracting, not to mention galling. Where in hell had Jasmine come up with the “Miss Perfect” notion? Nearly everyone at Mainland knew about Casey's failed marriage. Some knew about her estranged relationship with her mother, and how things were still unresolved when Mother died last spring. Sure, there'd been some success at work, but she'd also made mistakes. Who hadn't?

“I'll be okay,” Jasmine said. “No, it's not just that. I'll tell you about the other stuff later; too many big ears around here.”

Casey felt rather than saw Jasmine's stare. She hadn't wanted her desk to face the one Jasmine and Marie shared, but the security department was cramped. Over the summer, Stan restructured the security department, making Casey second-in-command and ensuring she had her own desk. Marie still complained now and then about having to share hers.

Casey started to reread the last paragraph of her report when a familiar voice said, “Who called you an ass?”

She looked up to find Summer standing behind her chair, reading a Post-it note fastened to the top of her screen. “Oh, hi.” She checked her watch.

“It says, ‘Don't forget time sheets, ASS,'” Summer said.

“Remember Stan's assistant, Amy? The tiny lady with the white hair you met last month?”

“Yeah, she was nice.”

“Her full name is Amy Sarah Sparrow. I think she uses her initials on purpose.”

“Oh.” Summer smiled and looked at the cluttered desk beside Casey's. “Where is she?”

“Delivering documents for Stan. Shouldn't you be at swim practice?”

Summer's gaze drifted to the accounting and human resources areas at the other end of the room. “I quit the team.”

“What?” Six months ago, this child was determined to make the national team one day. “Why?”

Summer glanced at Jasmine, who'd finally ended her call. “I've got too much homework, and my grades are bad.”

“What grades? School started only two and a half weeks ago.”

Summer sat on the edge of Casey's desk. “I had a math quiz today and couldn't answer half the questions. Grade seven's way too hard.”

Casey folded her arms. “Did you study?”

She looked away. “With Tiffany and Ashley, yeah.”

That explained it. Those two girls had been hanging around the house ever since Summer met them at the rec center in August. All the girls did was listen to rap music and gossip about boys. Apparently, no one else's mom was cool enough to hang with. Casey sensed that the girls didn't think of her as a real parent.

She still remembered the tears in Rhonda's eyes as she practically begged her to become Summer's legal guardian. Part of Casey had wanted to say no, but Rhonda had been Casey's surrogate mom and later, her close friend. She'd helped Casey through tough times, so turning Rhonda down wasn't an option, especially when Rhonda's emotional state had been so fragile.

“Don't tell Grandma about the test, okay? She still wants me to change schools and move in with her.”

“Don't worry, I won't say a word.” Winifred's frequent remarks about how and where Summer should be raised bothered Casey. “You know she can't make you move unless I allow it, right?”

Summer bit her lower lip. “Are you sure?”

“Totally.” Casey squeezed her hand. “I'll help you with math, but I want you to rethink quitting the team, okay?”

“What for?”

“You've always loved competing.” Aware that Jasmine was staring at her computer screen but not typing, Casey murmured, “You have a room filled with medals and ribbons proving how good you are.”

“That's for babies.”

Where did this come from? Summer had always been proud of her accomplishments. Still, the poor kid had changed a lot since Rhonda's sentencing four months ago. The naïve little girl who used to tell Casey everything had lost most of her sweet-natured innocence and, sadly, her willingness to confide. Neither of them had talked about Rhonda since her last tearful, phone call on Summer's birthday in early August. Her incarceration was still too painful to think about, let alone discuss.

“Can my friends come over?” Summer asked.

“Sorry, no. I have another shift this evening, and it's a school night. Anyway, it sounds like you have lots of math to review.”

“But Tiffany and Ashley help me.”

“Not this time.” She'd been hearing too many protests lately. “I'll ask Mrs. Nally from next door to stay with you.”

“I don't need a babysitter.”

“Hi,” Lou said, entering the room, his eyes widening when he saw Summer. “How's it going?”

“Craptacular.” She stomped to the row of palms and dracaena separating security from the other departments.

As Lou's smile faded, Casey could almost guess what he was thinking. He'd had misgivings about her becoming Summer's guardian; said that parenting a teen who'd be missing her mom would be tough for a busy single woman with no experience. Lou didn't know what it felt like to have a mother leave home. The shame and anger Casey had once felt over Mother's adultery had gradually transformed into sadness and emptiness. At least she'd had Dad and Rhonda. No one even knew who Summer's father was.

“Who's your young friend, Lou?” Jasmine's voice was all honey and charm.

“Summer.”

“Hey, Summer,” Jasmine called out. “I hear you hate math. Me too.”

Summer strolled to Jasmine's desk and started complaining about her teacher.

“Stan wants to see me,” Lou whispered to Casey.

“I figured he would.”

“Lou, come here a sec.” Jasmine waved him over.

Seeing his hesitation, Casey said, “Go ahead, I need to finish my report.”

Once he moved to Jasmine's desk, the woman started whispering. Casey bit the inside of her mouth to keep from saying something petty about the obvious attempt to exclude her. The sooner she finished this report, the better. She resumed typing, careful to stick to the facts and not add her opinion about Jasmine's behavior on the M10. The facts were damning enough.

Stan stepped out of his office, scowling. “Jasmine, I want you in my office right now. Have you finished your report?”

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