Read No Place Like Home - A Camilla Randall Mystery (The Camilla Randall Mysteries) Online

Authors: Anne R. Allen

Tags: #anne r allen, #camilla, #homeless

No Place Like Home - A Camilla Randall Mystery (The Camilla Randall Mysteries) (7 page)

BOOK: No Place Like Home - A Camilla Randall Mystery (The Camilla Randall Mysteries)
2.27Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Doria wasn't in the mood for one of Betsy's whine-fests.

"Somebody killed him, Bets. I think Harry was murdered."

And somebody named Mistress Nightshade knew who did it. Tomorrow, Doria was going to have to make a call to the San Luis Obispo police.

Chapter 18—Screw Rich People

 

 

 

When the horrible couple left, I ran to phone Plant and Silas. This could not be happening. It was insane. How could strangers just walk in and take my home. My workplace? My whole life? Buy it out from under me as if I had no needs, no feelings?

I'd been a rich person once. I was born into one of the wealthiest families in the U.S. I was the great-granddaughter of H. P. Randall, the founder of the Randall newspaper empire. Had he ever been that sociopathic? Had I?

Well, I had been pretty clueless…

I'd read a study recently that claimed to prove people with the highest incomes had the lowest empathy quotient. Now I could believe it.

Plant's line was busy. I slammed down the phone. I wanted to yell at him, not his voice mail. How could he and Silas have done this to me?

Fighting the urge to scream, I gulped wine. Then I tried stuffing a forkful of cold fettuccine into my mouth, but it felt like trying to eat a dishrag. I spat it out in the sink.

And gulped more wine.

Nothing could keep the anger stuffed inside me. I took the empty bottle and hurled it out the door in the direction of the recycling. It gave a satisfying clatter.

"I hope you get run over by a truck, you evil, clueless thieving parasites…" I screamed at the departed real estate buyers and the world in general. "Screw rich people!" There. I said it.

I found few more bottles in the trash can under the sink. I threw one and savored the shatter and clatter. Then threw another. Let the horrible Louboutin people pick up the mess.

"Fuck rich people!" I screamed as I hurled a third bottle.

I never, ever use that word, but it felt good to let it out.

"Yikes!" said a voice. "I'm not rich. I promise."

A tall figure emerged from the walkway to the store.

Ronzo.

"Wow," he said. "You could drink those Jersey Shore girls under the table. How many bottles have you had? I've only been gone an hour."

"I didn't. It wasn't me. I mean…um, those were Silas and Plant's bottles from last night. I'm still drinking the glass from before. When you were here. Before."

As he came toward the door, I looked into his grinning face and felt my own face scrunch with incipient tears.

Great. Now I was going to cry in front of this man. Who already thought I was a drunk. And needy. And undesirable.

"So you're not so drunk you can't have another glass? That would be good."

He grinned wider. "I wondered if you'd like to go out for a drink with me. I've finished my business in Morro Bay and I wanted to go into San Luis for a bite. I wondered if you'd like to come with me. You're the only person I know around here who's from back east. I thought maybe you could help me not look like an idiot to those wine waiters…."

"Not look like an idiot? When I'm standing here looking like the über-idiot of all time?" I sniffled and wiped my stinging eye with my sleeve.

"You're crying?" He looked genuinely concerned. "What happened?"

"It's a long story. A long, sad, stupid story."

"I'd love to hear it over dinner," he said, eyeing my Lean Cuisine box. "I see you never finished your fettuccine."

Chapter 19—Tornado

 

 

 

Doria woke in Betsy's guest house feeling as if she'd been in one of those devastating tornadoes they're always showing on the evening news. It was as if she'd been uprooted and whirled around for a few hours with flying branches, appliances, and pieces of house, then dumped to earth like so much useless debris.

And subsequently, a stray Buick had landed on her belly.

The pain was like a weight, pinning her to the bed.

In her sweet, drunken way, Betsy had helped Doria with the drains and bandages last night, and insisted she take two Vicodin in spite of Dr. Singh's prescription of one every four hours.

It had got her to sleep. But neither of them had factored in the added side effects of a tequila hangover.

Doria finally launched herself into the bathroom and took a Vicodin with quantities of water. Her stomach growled like a dangerous beast. She hadn't had any solid food in what—thirty-six hours? Maybe more. She wondered if Betsy had any Jell-O. Jell-O was what they gave you after abdominal surgery, wasn't it?

She managed to get herself into her underwear and a hideous jogging suit Betsy had lent her. Apparently she shouldn't expect to be able to wear regular clothes for a couple of days. Betsy had gone through three tummy tucks of her own, so she was a much better source of advice than Dr. Singh's people. Doria wished they'd warned her. She'd sent ahead all her loungey clothes to the new house.

They'd be incinerated now.

Along with the evidence of how Harry really died.

Doria knew she had to call the police up there—as soon as possible.

But until she had food, nothing was possible.

She walked along the poolside path and slipped into the big house through the sliding patio doors, hoping not to wake Betsy.

Poor Betsy had got a call from the Mexican ex-boyfriend rather late in the evening. It sent her off looking for another bottle of tequila. Doria had opted for bed, but suspected Betsy might have had a late night.

Doria headed toward the kitchen, hoping the maid would be friendlier than she'd been yesterday.

But a voice booming from the breakfast room stopped her in her tracks. It was a male voice, deep and rich, with the lilt of a Hispanic accent. A relative of the housekeeper, maybe?

Doria wanted nobody—absolutely nobody—to see her like this. Especially somebody who might alert the press.

She heard Betsy shouting. "Cesar, you're lying. You're a lying bastard!"

Cesar. That was the boyfriend's name. It seemed the telenovella star was back.

And they were arguing.

In a room Doria needed to pass to get to the kitchen.

Not what she needed this morning.

But she was almost there and her stomach was growling. She'd just pop in to ask the maid to bring some Jell-O out to the pool.

Cesar's voice got louder. "You do not understand. You have a criminal in this house! This makes you a criminal also. You will be arrested."

"Calm down, baby. Nobody knows. Except Rosa. And she won't tell, will you, dear? After all, none of it has been proved. It will all be straightened out, I'm sure."

Doria could hear the maid and Betsy murmuring, but the words didn't come through. She tiptoed a little further down the hallway, hoping get more information about this criminal they were talking about. One of Betsy's stepdaughters had a terrible drug habit. Maybe she'd showed up, expecting a handout.

Damn. Everything would be a mess if the wayward stepdaughter wanted to stay in the pool house.

"I know about her," Cesar said, in that mellifluous actor's voice. "If Rosa knows, others will find out. You are not careful with security. The gate still is not locking correctly. Besides, she could be dangerous. I cannot bear for the woman I love to be in danger. We have both lost so much. But we have each other."

More murmurings. They seemed to be having a reconciliation. Something it wouldn't be wise to interrupt.

Doria leaned against the wall, thinking she should go back out to the pool house. But Cesar might see if she walked back along the pool. Maybe she'd be better off using the front door and going around to the back.

Betsy's voice rose again.

"She is not dangerous. She's a sixty-year old widow who's just lost her husband. And is recovering from a tummy tuck, for God's sake!"

Chapter 20—Enchanted New Jersey

 

 

 

I woke and saw Ronzo's golden head on my pillow, gently snoring.

Why had I done it?

Because he was so adorably dorky with the wine list at the fancy new restaurant downtown by the creek?

Because he had talked to all the homeless people who panhandled in front of the Mission and given them each a few dollars?

Because he was from New Jersey and felt somehow like home?

It didn't matter. I'd done it. Casual sex with a stranger on the first date. For the first time in my well-mannered life.

And I wasn't sorry.

His eyes opened.

"Hi there, Dr. Manners." He gave me a quick, warm kiss on the cheek.

Then he jumped from the bed, grabbed his clothes and headed for the bathroom. His naked body looked perfect even in the daylight. He had a cute tan line. He must spend some time on the Jersey Shore.

Hey, maybe he'd ask me to go back to Newark with him. It would be like going home. Almost. Only far enough from Manhattan that I wasn't likely to run into my old friends and feel the shame of my poverty. Rents were probably cheap in Newark. And there was probably a bookstore or two. I wouldn't have to move in with him or anything. I'd get my own place. We could start slow.

But we could spend enchanting weekends together, making sweet, slow love like we did last night...

A knock on the front door startled me.

I so hoped it wasn't those awful Louboutin people.

But it probably was. Fine. Let them stand there. I didn't have to open the door for them. My rent was paid to the end of the month. It was still my home.

The door was locked, wasn't it? I'd been pretty tipsy when we got back from dinner…maybe I hadn't locked it.

Uh-oh. I heard the door open. Footsteps.

"No!" I shouted. "Don't come in here! You're trespassing."

The bathroom door opened and Ronzo stood in the doorway, looking ready to protect me, wearing nothing but his not-quite zipped trousers. Good. Let Lureen be shocked.

But the person who opened the bedroom wasn't Lureen.

It was Plantagenet, looking very ashamed, holding a huge bouquet of pink roses.

"Darling, forgive me, please…" He stopped as his jaw fell.

So did the roses.

Oh, sorry, man," said Ronzo. He scrambled into his shirt. "Sorry, man. Sorry. Didn't know the lady was spoken for."

He grabbed his absurd suit jacket and ran past Plant without giving even a glance toward me.

The slam of my front door sounded awfully final.

Chapter 21—Chocolate for Breakfast

 

 

 

Doria's stomach growled as she hovered in the hallway, praying Betsy and Cesar couldn't hear the roar coming from her insides.

She was fifty-nine for three more months.

How could Betsy say she was sixty?

Witch.

And Cesar kept going on about how she was a criminal.

Doria had no idea why a person she'd never met would make up lies about her, but as she remembered from Betsy's stories, lying was something of a habit with the man.

Doria's stomach continued to vocalize. She needed food. Lickity split.

She knew she did not make good choices when underfed. There was that summer she lived on nothing but cocaine and cigarettes and ended up marrying Jean-Claude. If she'd had possession of her faculties, she'd have known better than to marry a bisexual photographer. Especially a French one.

She tiptoed to the foyer and saw Betsy's big Fendi bag sitting on the sideboard by the front door. Score. Betsy never went anywhere without chocolate. Doria tiptoed over and started searching. Betsy had always carried a huge, messy purse, even in high school, when she was everybody's go-to person for the extra safety pin or Midol tablet. True to form, she had a regular survival kit in there: wallet, water bottle, pill containers, a vast array of grooming products—even a paperback book.

But Doria couldn't see any chocolate. Betsy usually had one of those Lindt bars, the extra-dark kind.

She heard a shout from the kitchen.

"Cesar! No! Don't go out there. She's just had surgery. She needs her sleep."

"She can sleep in jail."

Betsy shouted again as Doria heard the patio door slide open. Cesar must be going out to the pool house to look for her.

This was taking a turn for the worse.

The man was half Betsy's age, and volatile. Doria suspected he'd knocked her around a couple of times.

Doria had no idea what Cesar had against her. Maybe he thought a guest might ruin his little make-up honeymoon with Betsy. In any case, a run-in with him could be unpleasant.

She grabbed the handbag, ran out the front door and crouched behind Cesar's red Ferrari. But the top was down so it didn't provide much cover. Betsy's big Mercedes would be better. Or maybe she could get inside the Mercedes—one of the keys in the bag should open it—and hide until Cesar left.

BOOK: No Place Like Home - A Camilla Randall Mystery (The Camilla Randall Mysteries)
2.27Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Dare by Rachel Van Dyken
Midnight Rescue by Lois Walfrid Johnson
Haunted by Annette Gisby
No Worries by Bill Condon
Ghost Child by Caroline Overington
Ark Royal 2: The Nelson Touch by Christopher Nuttal
Eden's Garden by Juliet Greenwood