Holidays Are Murder. Charlotte Douglas
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Название: Holidays Are Murder

Автор: Charlotte Douglas

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Зарубежные любовные романы

Серия:

isbn: 9781472089052

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СКАЧАТЬ style="font-size:15px;">      “I bet you say that to all the girls.”

      “You also look beautiful,” he hastened to add, “but I’m worried about you. You wore yourself out on the weight-loss clinic murders. I was hoping with those solved, you might slow down a bit.”

      “No rest for the weary.” I sipped my beer and hoped it wouldn’t send me into a deep coma.

      While we waited for our food, I gave Bill the details on our rooftop burglar. “Looks like I’ve hit a wall,” I said when I’d finished.

      “Have you tried tracking the Clinton mask?”

      “Adler worked on it all day. But the masks were produced over a decade ago and carried by the thousands by Wal-Mart and K-Mart, as well as other specialty stores. Nobody kept records on individual purchases of the masks. Besides, you know how many transients and new residents we have in this county. That mask could have been brought in from anywhere in the country.”

      “What about online?”

      “I’ll make sure Adler checked that, too.” I hated computers, didn’t own one and barely tolerated using the one at work. In a profession becoming increasingly high tech, my technophobia was another compelling reason to toss in the towel. I refused to own a cell phone and only reluctantly carried a beeper.

      Our meals arrived and as I bit into my burger with gusto, I realized I’d forgotten to eat lunch. Good thing, since the food in front of me represented an entire day’s ration. Fresh memories of three overweight murder victims had me counting calories.

      Bill put down his burger and wiped his lips with his napkin. “Margaret—”

      Besides Bill, only members of my immediate family called me Margaret. When I’d first partnered with him, he’d called me Princess Margaret, a derogatory reference to my debutante days, but after I saved his life during a domestic dispute call, I’d won his respect and he’d referred to me as Skerritt on the job. Later, after his divorce, when our relationship developed outside of work, he’d begun calling me Margaret, often with a tenderness I found hard to resist.

      “Margaret, I’ve given this a lot of thought.” His blue eyes locked gazes with mine and his expression was deadly serious.

      My heartbeat stuttered. Had my unwavering rejections of his marriage proposals convinced him to move on?

      “I’ve decided,” he continued, “to accept your invitation to have Thanksgiving at your mother’s.”

      “That wasn’t an invitation,” I said, relieved only until the prospect of Bill and my mother in the same room hit me. “That was a threat.”

      “She can’t be that bad.”

      “She doesn’t approve of anything about me,” I countered. “And she lets me know it every time our paths cross.”

      My mother was a social scion of Pelican Bay. Her father had been a prominent physician, my late father a distinguished cardiologist, and she enjoyed her position of wealth and influence. When I had graduated from college with a degree in library science and announced my engagement to Greg Singleford, who was completing his internship in the ER, Mother had been over the moon. But Greg’s brutal murder by a crack addict in an ER treatment room had changed everything.

      I’d loved Greg with all the passion and innocence of youth, and his death had shaken my core values. As a result, I couldn’t see spending my life with books, or, as my mother had intended, at meetings of the Junior League and Art Guild, once I’d realized that the world was such a dangerous place. Daddy had supported my decision to enter the police academy and had openly expressed his pride in my accomplishments. He’d served as a buffer between Mother and me until his death twelve years ago. But Mother had been horrified from the beginning that her younger daughter had chosen a down-and-dirty career in law enforcement over social prestige. And she never let me forget it. During the recent publicity over my arrest of Lester Morelli for the clinic murders, she’d taken to her bed with a sick headache and had remained there until after Morelli had been indicted and the news coverage had ceased.

      “So you’re withdrawing the invitation?” Bill asked.

      “No, I’m just warning you that dinner with Mother will be an ordeal. It always is. So you might want to reconsider.”

      He reached across the table and grasped my hand. “Maybe just once you ought to tell your mother to take her hoity-toity attitude and stick it up her—”

      “Bill!”

      “You’ve heard the word ass before,” he said with a rare flash of temper. “You’ve even used it a few times yourself.”

      “But never in relation to my mother. Mother wouldn’t be caught dead with a common ass. She has only a very sophisticated derriere.” I teased to defuse his irritation.

      “You’ve got to stop tiptoeing around her.”

      “She and Caroline are all the family I have.”

      Pain flashed through his eyes, and I wished I could take back my words. Bill had even less family than I did.

      He took a deep breath and exhaled. “Maybe it’s time for a family of your own. We could be a family, you and I.”

      I was on the verge of choking up over his proposal when my beeper sounded. “I have to call the station.”

      “I’m giving you a cell phone for Christmas,” he promised with a scowl.

      “I’d either lose it or forget to charge it, so save your money.” I hurried from the table to the pay phone in the lobby.

      I was gone only a couple of minutes before I returned and cast a longing look at my unfinished burger. “Gotta go,” I said. “Another break-in.”

      “You’re dead on your feet,” Bill said. “At least let me drive.”

      For a few seconds I luxuriated in the unaccustomed comfort of having someone fuss over me. Then duty kicked in.

      “Okay, but let’s roll. Shelton was already frothing at the mouth over last night’s burglary. I don’t want him putting me on report for slow response.”

      CHAPTER 2

       Last night’s burglar may have been stupid, but if he was hoping to make the Pelican Bay Police Department look bad, tonight’s repeat break-in had definitely accomplished that goal. Bill parked his car in the same space I’d used the night before. I thanked him for the ride and left the car in a hurry. I didn’t know whether to feel relieved or disappointed that our discussion about families had been interrupted. Relieved, I decided. Being with Bill when he was relaxed and laid-back was easy. When the serious stuff kicked in, I was out of my element.

      It was just after 8:00 p.m., and light poured from the windows of Mama Mia’s, doing a booming take-out business, judging by the activity visible through the plate glass and the number of drivers scurrying from the restaurant with insulated bags. Monday night football apparently created a huge appetite for pizza.

      My attention this evening, however, wasn’t on Mama Mia’s but Bloomberg’s Jewelers next door. Steve Johnson let me in the front СКАЧАТЬ