Authors: June Whyte
A few minutes later, the thud of Edward's feet on the polished wooden floor of the hallway had me undoing the ties on my halter neck dress. If that didn't make it easier for seduction nothing would. Still intent on seduction, I slid my empty wine glass onto the coffee table and plastered a sultry expression on my face. Then, batting my eyelashes, I shot a playful, come-hither glance over my shoulder at him.
And almost choked.
Edward Granger lounged against the doorway in nothing but a pair of grey silk socks, sausage grinder on high alert, leather riding whip tapping suggestively against his naked thigh.
Oh. My. God.
As I bungee-jumped off the sofa, the top half of my dress plunged and bunched around my waist. Not being a good time to stop and retie the halter straps, I ignored the chill on my skin, snatched up my shoes, bag and overcoat, and barrelled toward the front door. No way was I hanging around long enough to discover whether I was meant to be the beater or the beatee in Edward's warped game of slap, smack and beat the crap out of someone's backside.
Last thing I heard before I slammed the front door was Edward's little boy voice, calling out to me. “Aw, Danielle, come on back and spank little Eddy. He's been a very naughty boy and needs to be punished.”
Yeahâ¦well tell that to your shrink!
After the overpowering heat of Edward's lounge-room fire, I was suddenly out on the street, miles from home, teeth chattering with cold. And there was no one but myself to blame. If I hadn't listened to the over-sexed leader of my hormone pack, I wouldn't be in this miserable mess. A stark naked Little Boy Lost bleating to be spanked inside the house, and a frigid Arctic wind blowing a gale outside.
To free both hands, I dropped my shoes on the footpath and draped my coat over the front fence. All I needed now was for someone to saunter along the street and cop an eyeful of my goose-bumps. Naturally, it would be a man. And I'd had a gutful of those alien creatures.
The street was empty of night marauders so I yanked the bodice of my dress up over my skimpy see-through bra (another of my antsy hormone leader's ridiculous ideas) and retied the halter neck straps. As I attempted to push my arms through the sleeves of my coat, an icy wind sent it flapping. And as I hopped up and down, staggering to retain my balance while fitting stupid, strappy sexy sling-backs onto my feet, a razor sharp stone just happened to be sitting there on the footpath, waiting for me to land on it with the bare sole of one foot.
A fitting finish to a day-to-forget.
Now I'd have to ring for a taxi I couldn't afford: a taxi from Burnside to Gawler. Probably cost more than my fortnightly grocery bill plus next week's petrol allowance.
Hobbling up the street, I dug for my cell phone and flicked through the listed phone numbers in search of United Taxis.
“Hey, good lookin', need a lift?”
I glanced up, a snarl at the ready. If that was a pick-up line, I'd rip the guy's tongue out. If it was
little Eddy
in his silky grey socks, I'd happily beat the crap out of him before stuffing him in the nearest dumpster.
“Come on, Dani, hop in.”
“Simon?” I peered at the familiar fire-engine red Echo idling along beside me. “You
are
stalking me?”
Simon stopped the car, leant across the console and opened the passenger side door for me. “You okay?”
“No. I'm not okay.” Doing up the last button on my coat I hunched over and squashed into the car beside Simon. “I don't know what you're doing here, but don't ask me what happened. Okay? The tropics will freeze over before I divulge that secret.”
Simon was silent for a moment while he contemplated the view of the upper-class street through his windscreen. “So⦔ he said at last, eyes still on the pools of light that spilled from the streetlights onto the roadway ahead. “Guess who I ran into at the Gawler Arms tonight?”
“How should I know?”
And why would I care?
“Megan Starr. She was there with a couple of friends. We ended up having a drink and a nice long chat.”
“What?” I screeched. “Megan had time to chat to you but she couldn't be bothered answering my phone calls.”
Out of the corner of my eye I could see Simon's lips twitching. And then it hit me. He knew. Simon had been waiting for me outside Edward's house because he knew. I closed my fist and punched him on the arm. “Why youâ”
He gave a yelp of pain and then must have seen the hurt in my eyes, because next minute his arms were around me, holding me close, rocking me. “It's okay, Dani,” he crooned pressing his lips to the top of my head. “You're way too good for scum like Edward Granger. All muscle and silk suits, and yet he'd slit his own grandmother's throat if he thought it would net him an extra couple of bucks. And don't worry, I gave Megan a decent serve for fixing you up with
Little Eddy
. Can't work out why she'd do that to you. Anyway, I'm just glad you didn't get hurt.”
I don't know whether it was the roughness of his overcoat warm against my cheek, or the comforting familiar sound of his voice in my hair. I sniffed and burrowed deeper. If only I could stay in Simon's arms forever. Let the world with all its ugliness and hurt pass me by.
But this was Simonâand Simon didn't do forever.
“That's it!” I told him at last, surfacing for air before I embarrassed him by blubbing all over the front of his coat. “No more blind dates. No more trying to find Mr. Right. No more drooling over hot-looking guys who are way out of my league. It's just Horace and me and romance novels from now on.”
“Good,” Simon said.
Thursday, 7:00 a.m.
“Tell me, Simon, exactly what did you mean by
good
?”
It was seven o'clock the following morning. When the phone rang and I picked up and discovered Simon on the other end, the words just burst from my mouth of their own accord. Not, “Hi Simon,” or “What's up, Templar?”, or “Hope you managed to get some sleep after dropping me home six hours ago.” Nope. Straight to the main event.
“Good?” I could hear the confusion in Simon's voice. “What are you raving on about, Dani?”
“Last night. You said
good
when I told you I'd finished with blind dates, looking for Mr. Right and wearing sexy red sling-backs.”
“Umâ¦I did?”
“Come on, you know you did.”
“Okaaay.”
“Well, I was wonderingâyou know, vaguely tossing it aroundâwhat exactly did you mean when you said,
good?
”
Vaguely tossing around? Hell, except when I was in the middle of a nightmare featuring a naked Edward and his swishing riding whip plus God knows what other instruments of torture he had stashed under his bed, I'd lay in bed for hours, still wired, tearing the word apart, juggling half a dozen scenarios in my head.
Good. Simon was jealous of me seeing other men. Good. He was beginning to think of me as a sexy lady as well as an old friend?
“All I meant was
good,
I can finally get some sleep.” Simon's voice was dismissive; even had the suggestion of a shoulder shrug about it. “I'm getting too old to rescue you from your kinky blind dates, Dani.”
Deflated, I sniffed and thought, well, there goes my jealousy theory, blown up in one barbwire remark. And then the blood rushed to my face and the heat pulsed and radiated from my cheeks like old-fashioned fire bellows.
Was last night's hug from Simon a pity cuddle?
“Anyway,” Simon went on in his normal
let's-stick-to-the-facts-ma'am
voice, “the reason I rang is because I have more bad news.”
My shoulders drooped as I let out a sigh. “Honestly, Simon, I don't want to know. I'm up to my ears in bad news. Any more and I'll drown in the depressing stuff.”
But of course the retired ex-cop wasn't interested in my feelingsâonly the facts. “Our mystery murderer has tampered with your column again, Dani. This time one of your letters mentions âtea and toast with vegemite spread on top', which is exactly what
DF
's wife was eating when the killer broke into her house.”
“
Oh
,
shit
!” I let my body slide slowly down the old-fashioned wallpaper until I was sitting on the floor, legs bent, back hard against the wall. There was a grating pain in my chest. Like all the air had leaked out of my lungs.
“Hey, you still there, Dani? Are you okay?”
“Yeah,” I whispered, one fist rubbing rhythmically at the centre of my chest. “What's going on, Simon? And why me? I just don't get it.”
“It's got to be one of the staff at the
Tribute
. Who else would have access to your column before the paper gets onto the streets?”
“But
who
?” I wailed, fighting tears. Horace must have heard my cry because his head poked anxiously around the bedroom doorway. Seeing me on the floor he padded across the carpet and stretched out beside me, his head heavy on my lap. “Who at the
Tribute
hates me enough to use me as a tool for murder?” I went on, scratching behind the greyhound's ears. “And who at the
Tribute
would be violent enough to ram a hot poker down a woman's throat?”
“Not Tracey, our literary guru. She's too busy partying all night. And can you imagine the fashion conscious Dee Dee with a hot poker? Hell, she'd be too worried about breaking a nail to wield anything heavier than a mascara wand. And Rob, the
Tribute
's photographer? Put him in that situation and he'd hang around for hours afterwards taking photos of the murder scene from every angle, until the cops arrived and arrested him. Andâ”
“What about Alice?” Simon broke in, effectively ending my rave. “I know you consider Alice a harmless flake, but if you went to jail for murder, who's the likely candidate to take over your column? Alice! I can easily imagine her chanting spells and brandishing a poker while calling up the dark spirits of the night.”
“Maybe.” I gently shifted Horace's head off my lap and stood up as a sudden thought struck me. “And maybe it's no one at the
Tribute
. Maybe it's Jack Rivers from
Gape
magazine. He'd also fit the description of the
devil with the face of an angel
that Alice saw in her crystal ball.”
“Rivers? I don't follow you. Okay, the man's a slimy scumbag who'd camp out in a ladies' toilet for a week if he thought there was a possibility of catching the Queen in mid-flowâ¦but a murderer? And what reason would he have to kill Mary Foster? And why would he involve you?”
“I don't know,” I moaned and my head started to pound. That was the troubleâI really didn't know. “It's justâ¦well, why did Jack Rivers pretend to be my blind date the other night? Don't you think that's suspicious? My niece, Suzy, told me that Jack paid the real Craig from Accounts two hundred dollars to stay home and let him take his place at the restaurantâ¦.”
“Yeah, but Rivers set you up because he planned to have you photographed in an uncompromising positionânot to kill anyone.”
My dog bumped me on the leg with his head, demanding attention, so I scratched behind one of his velvety ears again. “I know, but thinking back, when Jack came up behind me at the restaurant, he surprised me into dropping my handbag on the floor. And he didn't give me a chance to pick it up. Instead, he distracted me with his blarney, while he bent down and retrieved the bag himself.”
Still trying to recollect every detail of the scene in the restaurant, I drifted across to the sofa and flopped back onto its tapestry cover before going on. “And the following morning the police found a draft copy of my column inside that same bag. Coincidence? I don't think so. And instead of the original answer to
DF
's letter, which was on
my
draft copy, the corrupted answerâthe one published in the morning's paperâwas on it. That's the reason I was marched off to the police station for questioning.”
Horace leaped up on the sofa beside me. After swiping his rough tongue across my cheek, he settled down, resuming his earlier position with his head on my lap.
“Jesus, Dani.” Simon sounded agitated. “Why didn't you tell me about your handbag falling on the floor before?”
“Hey, I've had a few things on my mind over the last couple of days,” I told him. “And anyway, I didn't put one and one together and come up with Jack Rivers until just now. We both thought someone at the
Tribute
must have put the evidence in my bag.”
He gave a resigned sniff. “Fair enough. Soâ¦Jack Rivers had every opportunity to slip that paper into your handbag at the restaurant. Interesting. I say we pay our sleazy journalist mate a visit. Should be fun beating a confession out of him.
And
if he's not at home, perhaps his front door might be open and we can have a look around. See what the sneaky turd's up to.”
“But why would Jack kill Mary?” I asked, more confused than ever and
so
against breaking into someone's house, even if the “someone” was Super Sleaze, that my heart rate escalated to a thousand beats a minute. “And why would Jack tamper with my column? I still don't get it. To me, the only one with a motive for killing Mary is Derek, and he seems genuinely devastated by his wife's death.”
“Okay, how's this? What if, say, Jack Rivers was having an affair with Derek's wife?”
“Mmm,” I said, not at all convinced.
“Hey, it's not only the husband who can stray in a relationship, you know.”
“It's not that. It's just, well, wouldn't that give Derek
more
of a motive to kill Mary? And what reason would Jack have for killing his lover?”
“She could have dumped him.”
I had to laugh at this theory. “Come on, Simon. Be real. We know Jack Rivers has an ego the size of Uluru, but hey, being dumped isn't a strong enough motive for murder.”
“Dani, darlin', you are so sweet. And
so
naive. If only the world was full of people with your philosophies we wouldn't need correctional facilities.”
“Humph,” was all I could think of in my defense.
“Anyway, I've gotta love ya and leave ya now. I need to pick up yesterday's court details from the police-station on my way to work.”
“I'll see you at the
Tribute
later then.”
“And don't worry; you can leave that other business with me. I'll ring my contact at
Gape
and find out where and when we might catch Super Sleaze away from the office today.” His chuckle sounded low in his throat. “I think I'm going to enjoy this meeting with Rivers. Could be a bagful of laughs.”
“Maybe for you, Templar, but not for me,” I said to the flat sounding buzz of the dial tone.
Steeped to the eyeballs in bad news, I dropped the phone as though it was contagious, slid out from under Horace's comforting head, and trudged, bare-footed across the carpet, towards the kitchen.
I hadn't even had a chance to drink my first cup of morning coffee yet. And already I'd made a fool of myself thinking Simon cared about my love life, my sex column at the
Tribute
was sabotaged for the third time, and it looked like I'd have to come face-to-face with sleazy Jack Rivers again.
It didn't need gut instinct to tell me this wasn't going to be one of my better days.
* * *
Anticipating the heady taste of caffeine, I'd barely finished pouring steaming hot coffee into my giant-sized Smiley mug when the phone set my head pounding again.
“Oh bugger!” Glancing across at the ringing phone on the nest of tables beside the couch, I wrapped both hands around the warmth of my mug, and frowned. “Answer that please, Horace. I'm in need of my caffeine fix.”
The black-and-white greyhound stretched full length on the couch, lifted one ear and then promptly went back to sleep.
“Hey, Inspector Rex can grab the phone in his mouth and bring it to his master. Why can't you?” I told the drowsy dog as I marched across to the table and snatched up the cordless phone.
“Hello, Danielle Summers speaking.”
“Don't bother coming into work today. Or tomorrow. Or any day for that matter. You and your column are finished.”
“Joe?”
“Of course it's Joe. I had the police banging on my door this morning. Woke me at six o'clock to tell me not to print any more of your columns until further notice. And as far as I'm concernedâthat's forever.”
“Butâ”
“You're sacked! Hear me? S. A. C. K. E. D!”
The tightness in my chest had me gasping for breath. Vaguely in the background, I could hear my sister, Penny, shouting. Something about a pair of garden sheers and Joe's testicles. What sounded like a scuffle and a colorful curse was followed by Penny's sharp voice on the line. “Danielle, are you okay?”
“N-no. Not really, Pen,” I admitted, forcing a deep breath from my constricted lungs. “Did Joe justâ¦just sack me?”
“What Joe
meant
to say was take a holiday, with pay, until this awful business is over.” Her voice, laced with steel, went on to query her husband's earlier statement. “That's
exactly
what you meantâisn't it Joseph?” Joseph must have nodded or grunted or protected his head from a flying saucepan because Penny went blithely on to berate me further. “However,” she added, like the harbinger of doom, “I am not at all happy with your latest shenanigans, Danielle. For a start, I do
not
enjoy members of the police department knocking on my front door. What will the neighbors think?”
“Iâ”
“And I
don't
enjoy having my sister's name attached to a murder case. It's not seemly.” She paused and I could visualize her tossing her fringe from her suddenly narrowing eyes. “You didn't murder this beastly womanâ¦did you, Danielle?”
“Penny, of course Iâ”
“Because, if you did, I know an excellent lawyer who'll get you off on mental instability,” she blathered as though taking part in a talking race and her life depended on winning. “You know, you've always been a bit unstable, Danielle. Ever since mother dropped you head first on that cement floor in the bathroom when you were eighteen months old. If we need to, we can dig up the old hospital records from that time and use them as evidence.”
“Penny!” I yelled, exasperated. “I didn'tâ”
“And speaking of our mother, it's
your
turn to visit. Find out what's going on in that den of iniquity she calls a retirement home. Whoever heard of a retirement home with Happy Hour twice a day, its very own pokies room and a no-holds-barred game of poker every Friday night? She was on the phone yesterday demanding I bring her cigarettes and condoms. I ask you. What does an eighty-three-year-old woman want with condoms? Of course I told her she'd get neither of those disgusting things from me and I want you to promise you won't let her talk you into getting them for her, either. You're such a marshmallow, Danielle.”
Exhausted, shattered, totally bushed, my brain turned into ice cream and I melted onto the couch beside Horace.