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Authors: Nancy J. Parra

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BOOK: Flourless to Stop Him
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“I don’t see any obvious signs of struggle,” I said to Sarah and I stepped farther into the room. “The beds are made so whoever it is hadn’t slept yet. There’s a duffel filled with clothes and such on the floor by one of the beds.”

“Be careful,” Sarah said.

I pulled my key chain out of my pocket. I had a palm-sized can of pepper spray attached to it and put my finger on the trigger. “I am.” The bathroom was at the back of the room. The door stood open and I peered inside. The light was on. The white vinyl shower curtain was torn from the rod and tangled around the fully clothed body of a man who appeared to be in his thirties. He had on jeans and a dark tee shirt with the words
ARE WE HAVING FUN YET?
scrawled across in white. The man’s arms showed signs of needle marks. His mouth hung open, and blood pooled under his head. His blue eyes stared at the ceiling. White foam caked his mouth. His hair was thin with a few long strands of blond pasted down over a shiny dome where it wasn’t coated in brownish-red blood.

“Toni?” Sarah’s voice pulled me back to reality.

“Yeah, I’m fine. He looks pretty dead. Do I need to check for a pulse?”

“No, the guys should be there any second. Can you hear the sirens?”

I paused, trying to sort the sound of my pounding heart from the rest of the room. Somewhere music played. The announcer said it was radio station 102.9. I carefully walked out, one foot in front of the other, following the same path I had walked in. The television was off. The clock radio on the night stand blinked, revealing the source of the music.

When I got to the doorway I heard the sirens. “I can hear them,” I said.

“Good. Stay on the line with me until they get there.”

“Okay.” I watched as a police car pulled into the parking lot followed by an ambulance. I waved my arms to let them know where I was. It wasn’t hard to see since it was after noon and most of the hotel was cleared out for the day. Checkout time was 11:00
A.M
. and check-in time was at 3:00
P.M.,
so we were at the odd housekeeping time between occupants.

Not too many people spent more than one night at the Red Tile. It was more of a stopover hotel than a destination.

Officer Calvin Bright climbed out of the police car. He nodded toward me and headed up the stairs.

“I’m going to hang up now,” I said to Sarah. “Thanks.”

“Okay,” Sarah’s voice said. “Toni?”

“Yes?”

“Take care of you.”

I could detect the concern in her voice. “I will,” I said. “I’m pretty sure this one isn’t linked to me. Not this time.”

“I certainly hope so. I’m starting to dread hearing your voice on the line.”

“I know,” I said. “I know.” I hung up as Officer Bright came around the corner. Calvin was a good-looking guy with brown hair and thoughtful brown eyes. There was a calmness about him that came from years of knowing he was able to take down any bad guy. He was also dating Tasha. Which made him a real hero in my eyes as she had gone out with so many losers before him. Officer Bright treated my best friend like a princess. I had to give the guy props for that.

“Toni.” He nodded his welcome like most guys do.

“Hi, in here.” I waved toward the open door. “Maria found him.”

Officer Bright stopped inches from me and the door. His dark gaze studied me. “Did you go inside?”

“Yes, I had Sarah on the line when I did,” I said and
clutched my phone in one hand and the pepper spray in the other. “I didn’t touch anything.”

“Okay. Stay here.” He held out his hand palm-up and then pulled out his gun and stepped inside.

I could have told him it was clear, but I thought he needed to figure that out on his own. So I hugged myself against the bitter cold and leaned on the warm brick wall outside the door.

An ambulance crew had arrived right behind Calvin. They made their way up the steps.

“Hey, Toni.” Pat Sheridan dragged a stretcher behind him in one hand and his medical bag in the other. Kathy Neal lifted the back end of the stretcher and helped him maneuver it around the corner.

“Hey, Pat. Hey, Kathy.” I acknowledged the EMTs. “He’s in there.” I jerked my thumb toward the open door.

“Are you okay? Did
you
find him?” Kathy asked.

“I’m fine, and no, I didn’t find him. Maria did.” I sent her a small smile. “Tasha’s taking care of Maria, and I’m here waiting for you.”

“Does Maria need us to check on her?” Pat asked as he stepped over the threshold.

“No, I think she’s fine. Just a bit of a shock is all.”

“We’ll check her out before we leave.” Pat disappeared into the room, dragging the stretcher. Kathy followed behind.

A second squad car pulled up beneath me. The lights flashed opposite Officer Bright’s car, creating a frenzy of flashing blue and red. Officer Joe Emry stepped out of the car. He hitched his gun belt up on his skinny hips and looked around.

“Up here,” I called from the railing.

“I knew that.” Officer Emry cleared his throat. “I’m checking for anything suspicious.” He wandered around the lower deck of rooms for a while.

I rolled my eyes. Officer Emry meant well, but he had
the brains of a gnat. My family called him Barney Fife. He was a skinny guy on a power trip that came with wearing a badge in a small town like Oiltop. At least Officer Bright was first on scene. As I said, Calvin was a large bear of a man with a killer square jaw. A big difference from the giant Adam’s apple on toothpicks that was coming up the steps. A third car pulled up and Officer Phil Strickland stepped out.

Officer Strickland was a twenty-year veteran of the police force. He rarely came out from behind the desk, so I was surprised to see him here. Then I remembered that Grandma Ruth said Strickland had started campaigning for Hank Blaylock’s job as chief of police. As far as Grandma was concerned Hank wasn’t going anywhere. But it did answer the question as to why Strickland was there. I watched him walk over to Officer Emry and speak to him before turning and heading toward the stairs.

The odd part was that Officer Strickland never even looked up. He must have been familiar enough with the Red Tile to know where room 202 was without needing any direction. I rubbed my arms and shivered in the cold. Officer Strickland came around the corner and stopped next to me. He was about six feet tall, with gray hair and brown eyes. He wore dark dress pants, a white shirt, and a black tie under his leather coat. His feet were encased in black leather cowboy boots, and he wore a Stetson hat.

“What happened?” His voice was as smooth as his expression.

“Maria opened the room to clean and found him. I called 911.”

He narrowed his eyes. “Did you touch anything?”

“No.”

“Good.” He went inside, leaving me to blow on my blue fingers.

Next to arrive was my friend—most of the time—and local reporter Candy Cole. Candy’s dark blue Toyota whipped
into the parking lot at a speed that should have gotten her a ticket. Except that most of the Oiltop police force was busy with the dead guy. Not that it mattered what the police were doing. Candy always drove like a bat out of hell. She never got a ticket. I suspected it was because she bribed the police force with regular breakfast donuts, bagels, and assorted pastries. I knew this because she bought them from me.

That, too, had a purpose. You see, neither Candy nor any of the officers needed to eat gluten-free. Candy could have gotten her sweets anywhere and probably had in the past. But recently she had decided that I was a magnet for news and she was going to stop by every day and ensure I didn’t discover something she needed to know about.

She stepped out of her car, her cell phone camera rolling. “Hey, Toni.” She waved up at me. “Did you find the body?”

I waved. “No, Maria did. She’s with Tasha in the lobby.”

“Thanks!” Candy headed toward the clubhouse. Her champagne blonde bob was camera perfect. She was my height—around five foot seven—in four-inch killer heels. Today she wore a trench coat against the bitter cold wind. All she needed was a fedora to look like a 1940s Hollywood star.

I shivered and turned back to the room. “I’m going to the clubhouse,” I called in to the busy crime scene. The contrast to the inside and the outside struck me as huge. Inside was warm, dim, and stinky. Outside was bright sunshine, ice-edged wind, and the fresh scent of snow. How it could smell of snow on a bright cloudless day had always baffled me, but it did.

“Don’t talk to anyone until you’re interviewed,” Officer Emry said behind me.

“Candy’s here,” I said as I stepped back out into the cold.

“I saw her,” he said and sniffed. “Don’t tell her anything until we get your statement.”

“Okay.” I shrugged. “You know Grandma Ruth would
kill me if I talked to Candy first.” Grandma had been the county’s top reporter in the day. She was officially retired but still wrote a daily blog. A blog that was meant to scoop the press—especially Candy. It was a competition between the two to see who could do a better job of reporting quickly and accurately.

“Don’t talk to your grandma, either.” Officer Emry narrowed his eyes and swallowed hard. His Adam’s apple bobbed in his skinny neck.

“Emry?” Officer Bright stepped out of the tiny bathroom. “Did you bring a camera?”

“Yes.” He raised his hand and a digital camera dangled by its string. “I’m ready to record the crime scene.”

“Better get started,” Officer Strickland said, his tone at once dismissive and authoritarian. “The EMTs want to take the body to the morgue.”

“I’ll be in the lobby when you need me,” I said and pointed toward the other building.

“I’ll be over there in a few minutes to take statements.” Officer Bright nodded. “Do me a favor while you’re down there.”

“Sure, what?”

“Find out who the room was registered to,” he said. “See if Tasha has a camera on the parking lot. If we can find footage of whoever else was in the room it would be very helpful.”

“Sure, no problem,” I said. The trip down the stairs and across to the lobby was short and quick. Spurred on by my nearly frozen feet, I rushed into the lobby and went straight for the fireplace to warm my hands.

“Where’s your coat?” Candy asked. “It’s twenty degrees out there.”

“I left it hanging.” I pointed to the wrought iron coat tree next to the door. “I wasn’t thinking about the cold when I left.”

“I bet you weren’t.” Candy made a note in her notebook. Her bright pink planner had notepaper and a pen always handy. “Can you tell me what happened? What’d you see when you got to the room?”

“You know I can’t say anything.” I rubbed my hands together and held them out to the heat.

“She has to ask,” Tasha said as she came out from the office next to the reception desk. “I told her we couldn’t tell her anything until the police took our statements.”

“A girl has to try,” Candy said. She raised her hand and snapped a cell phone photo of me warming my hands.

“Hey,” I protested and grabbed a tissue. The difference between hot and cold had left me with a runny nose. The Christmas tree twinkled in silent disapproval. “No pictures.”

“We’re in a public place.” Candy snapped a second picture.

Tasha stepped in between her camera and me. “Oh, stop it. Toni didn’t do anything but call the police. I know. She was with me all morning.”

“Fine, let me talk to Maria.” Candy headed toward the office.

“No.” Tasha put her hands on her hips and stopped the overzealous reporter. “The office is private property and off-limits.”

“Oh, come on, you know I’ll be talking to Maria whether it’s now or later,” Candy said.

“I’m opting for later,” Tasha said and pointed toward the lobby door. “Why don’t you go bug the cops?”

“It looks like they’re bringing out the body,” I said and pointed with my chin. The lobby windows revealed a flurry of activity.

Candy hurried out to capture pictures.

“That was convenient timing.” Tasha sent me a look.

“Calvin needs to know who the room was registered to and if you have any security footage.”

“Yeah, I figured.” Tasha’s baby blue gaze grew concerned. “It’s not good news, Toni.”

“No?” I drew my eyebrows together. “I didn’t recognize the dead guy. . . .”

“Good,” Tasha said. “That’s what I thought when I saw your face. I was worried, but when you didn’t look stricken I figured whoever had died in that room was not who was registered.”

A bad feeling crept down my spine. “Who’s the room registered to?”

“Your brother, Tim.”

CHAPTER 2

“O
h no.” I sat down hard on the couch closest to the fireplace.

“I know.” Tasha took my hands in hers and rubbed them. “With your brother’s juvenile record, this doesn’t look good.”

“I don’t understand.” I cocked my head. “Tim signed a lease on a new place. He moved out of the homestead a month ago. He had his life together.”

“I wasn’t working last night so I really don’t know what happened, but there’s a signature on the registration,” Tasha said. She pulled out the credit card stub. It had Tim’s name and a bold scrawl across the top.

“I’m going to call him.” I pulled my cell phone out of my pocket and scrolled through my contacts until I came to Tim’s, then I hit
CALL
.

“If I were you, I’d call Brad, too. Tim’s going to need a lawyer.” Tasha tucked the receipt back into the register drawer. “I can’t hide this from the police—or Calvin. I
respect him too much, plus I’d lose my job. It’s bad enough that I told you to call Brad. Calvin’s going to be pretty mad when he finds out.”

“Don’t tell him.”

“I think I’m in love with him,” Tasha said, her big eyes filled with trepidation.

“Oh,” I said and gave her a big hug. “That’s great.”

“I love you more,” she said. “It’s why I told you to call Brad. Now go make that call.”

“Okay,” I said and stepped away from my friend.

“Hello?” Tim’s voice sounded tired on the other end of the phone. I turned from Tasha and walked to the farthest corner of the lobby.

“Tim, it’s me, Toni. Are you okay?”

“Sure.” He yawned. “Why? You know I work third shift. This is the middle of my night.”

“Did you pay for a room at the Red Tile Inn?” I asked.

“What? No . . . Why would I do that? I just moved into my new place.”

“Where were you last night?” I watched as Officer Bright instructed Officer Emry to stand guard over the room.

“Geeze, Toni.” Tim yawned again. “You’re not Mom, you know.”

“I know.” I switched ears as I followed Officer Bright’s progress down the steps and across the parking lot. “This is important. Do you have an alibi for last night?”

“An alibi—what are you talking about? I was at work.”

“Are there witnesses?”

“Toni—”

“Listen carefully.” I spoke fast, doing my best to get it all out before Officer Bright entered the lobby. “There’s been a murder at the Red Tile Inn.”

“What? When? Who?”

“I think last night,” I said. “Maria found the body about
an hour ago. I called you because the room was registered in your name.”

“What?”

“Officer Bright is going to find out that the room was registered to you and then they’ll be calling you in for questioning. So please, whatever you do, have an alibi. I’m going to call Brad right now.”

“Toni, this is a bad joke to play on a man who’s gotten only four hours of sleep.”

“I’m not joking. I’ve got to go. Don’t talk to anyone until Brad gets there.” I hung up on my brother as Officer Bright stepped into the lobby. I smiled at him. He nodded and headed to where Tasha worked at the counter.

I turned my back on him and hit Brad’s number on my cell phone.

“Ridgeway and Harrington Attorneys at Law,” Brad’s receptionist, Amy Jones, said. “How can I help you?”

“Hi, Amy,” I said. “This is Toni Holmes. I need to speak to Brad. It’s a matter of life and death.”

“Um, okay, hold on. Let me see if I can find him.”

She put me on hold and the Muzak played in my ear. I glanced over and saw Tasha handing Officer Bright the room receipt. My heartbeat picked up. “Come on, Brad,” I whispered. I turned my back on the officer and Tasha. If he wanted to catch my attention he’d have to call out or come get me.

“Brad Ridgeway.” Brad’s voice was a deep rumble and a comfort. Back in the day, Brad was a high school jock. The tall, handsome, deadly blond kind with electric blue eyes and a killer body. He’d played everything from football to baseball but had excelled at basketball and gone to KU on a basketball scholarship before earning his law degree.

Brad had been crush-worthy in high school and continued to be crush-worthy as a grown-up lawyer with his own practice. There were simply two things wrong with that thought:
1) I wasn’t ready to date after my divorce from hell and 2) Brad was my lawyer. You should never get involved with your lawyer. Even if he smells divine.

“Hi, Brad, it’s Toni.”

“Hey, Toni, what’s up? Amy said your call was life-or-death.”

“Maria found a dead man in room two-oh-two of the Red Tile Inn,” I said. “I’m here with Tasha.”

“Please tell me you’re not a suspect again.”

“I’m not a suspect.”

“Good.”

“Tim is.”

“Oh.” He blew out a breath. “That’s not good.”

“Listen, can you go to Tim’s place?” I stared out and up at the open door of room 202. “I think he may be in real trouble.”

“Ms. Holmes, who are you talking to?” Officer Bright asked over my shoulder.

“Got to go.” I hung up the phone before Brad could answer. I felt as guilty as a kid caught with their hand in the cookie jar. My face heated up. With my being a redhead, my porcelain skin would never let me get away with anything. “I’m sorry, what?”

“Who were you calling, Toni?” Officer Bright took in my heated face. “Was that your brother Tim?”

“Um, no.” I shook my head. “Why would I call my brother?” I widened my eyes and tried to look innocent.

“According to the hotel registration, room two-oh-two was rented by your brother. Have you seen him?” Officer Bright tilted his head. His brown gaze studied me.

It made me very aware of each facial tic. I’m certain my skin was blotchy with guilt. “No, I haven’t seen him today,” I replied as honestly as possible. “He works third shift at FedEx and is usually sleeping at this time of day.” I swallowed. “You say the room was registered to Tim?”

“That’s what the record shows,” Calvin said. “Does this look like his signature?” He held out the slip of paper.

“Well, now, I’m not sure.” I studied the paper. “I suppose it could be . . . but I’m not a handwriting expert. Really I haven’t seen Tim’s signature in a while.” I took a deep breath and tried to calm my nerves. “You don’t think my brother was involved in this murder, do you?”

“Being as the room was registered in his name, he is a person of interest. Do you know where he is?”

“I suppose he’s home sleeping.” I shrugged. “I don’t know for sure. He moved out of my house last month.”

“Can I have his new address?”

“Sure. Listen, you can call him if you want. . . .” I pulled up Tim’s number on my cell phone.

“No need. Give me the address and I’ll send Emry over to ensure your brother’s still alive.”

I blinked rapidly. “Wait—you think Tim could be dead?”

“Most likely not,” Officer Bright reassured me. “But we should check on his well-being, and if he’s good, then we need to speak to him.”

“I sincerely doubt Tim killed anyone,” I said in defense of my baby brother.

“Maybe, maybe not,” Officer Bright said. “Either way I need you to stay out of the investigation, Ms. Holmes. Can you do that?”

“It depends, Officer Bright.”

“On what?” He put his hands on his hips.

“On how much trouble Tim’s in. I know my brother. He wouldn’t kill anyone.”

“Let’s hope you’re right,” Officer Bright said.

“Oh, I’m right,” I said. “I’ll bet my life on it.”

“This time we’ll hope you don’t have to go that far.”

BOOK: Flourless to Stop Him
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