Название: Poisoned Tarts
Автор: G. A. McKevett
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Ужасы и Мистика
isbn: 9780758243041
isbn:
“Not a clue.”
“Well, that figures because you aren’t in the business. They are the most prestigious acting coaches in the world. And I studied under both of them last July. I have an agent, and a Screen Actors Guild card, and fantastic head shots and everything! Stupid Daisy wouldn’t even have this little sitcom walk-on if it weren’t for me! Jealous of Daisy O’Neil, that fat, no talent cow? That’ll be the day!”
Savannah listened to the tirade, watched the young woman’s face contort with pure, hot rage. And Savannah asked herself the standard question she always asked when interviewing potential suspects:
Is this person capable of hurting someone…really, seriously harming another human being?
Tiffany Dante was only three degrees away from frothing at the mouth, from having her eyes bug out of her head like a cartoon character.
Yes, Savannah thought. This spoiled rotten little brat could hurt another person. Badly.
Or pay someone to.
She looked at the two girls, Bunny and Kiki. Especially Bunny, who so obviously ached to be a Tiffy clone.
Savannah thought, Tiffany Dante is perfectly capable of doing it herself, paying someone…or manipulating others to do harm to a perceived enemy. No doubt about it.
Deep in her gut, Savannah felt a stirring of very real fear. Fear for Daisy O’Neil. Fear for her worried mother. Fear that this girl in front of her, a child who had apparently been raised without boundaries or empathy, could have done something truly terrible.
She stepped closer to Tiffany, deliberately invading her space, and fixed her with a laser stare that had melted far harder-bitten characters than Tiffy Dante would ever be. This time it was Tiffany who looked away, breaking eye contact.
“I’m going to find Daisy O’Neil,” Savannah said, her voice low and even, but with an ominous underlying tone. “I’m not going to rest until I find her. And when I do, she had better be alive and healthy. Or someone is going to pay a very, very dear price for hurting her.”
The girls said nothing. But Savannah carefully noted all three of their facial expressions. Tiffany looked cocky, as usual. Bunny seemed a bit nervous, maybe worried.
But it was the look in Kiki’s eyes that bothered Savannah most. Kiley Wallace looked sad, deeply sad…and guilty.
And that didn’t bode well for Daisy O’Neil.
Savannah left the girls to ponder her threat and headed back to the house. Entering by the same door she had exited in the breakfast room, she could hear male voices in a nearby room. And from the tone of those voices, she surmised that Dirk’s interview with Andrew Dante was going even worse than before.
But that was no great surprise. Dirk was highly skilled at leaning on street thugs and threatening the truth out of them. He was a lot less accomplished in dealing with “regular” folk.
In fact, most regular folk considered Dirk Coulter boorish, overbearing, and antagonistic, and they spent as little time as possible in his presence. And while Savannah agreed with their evaluation of him, she also knew that most of his less than gracious behavior sprang from his deep concern for crime victims and his passion to find justice for them.
And realizing that, she had decided long ago to cut the guy a lot of slack. She felt the same way he did about crime solving, and for the same reasons. She just had slightly better manners, having been raised by a Southern granny.
Except for abusive jerks in grocery stores.
And cocky, arrogant teenagers.
And the occasional street punk who rubbed her the wrong way and…
Okay, so maybe she wasn’t all that much better behaved than Dirk. She could live with that.
As she walked from the breakfast room into the kitchen, she heard Dirk saying something about search warrants, and Dante reply with the name of a powerful, prestigious local attorney.
No, things weren’t going all that well in the Coulter-Dante interview.
Any business of her own that she wanted to conclude had to be done right away. She had a feeling she and Dirk were due to be tossed out on their backsides at any moment.
Hoping she would run into the maid again, she walked through the formal dining room and back into the great room. But instead of the maid, she ran into yet another young woman.
Sitting at the grand piano, running the fingers of one hand lightly over the keys in a practiced scale, the woman appeared to be in her mid-twenties. She also looked deeply sad. With a pretty, heart-shaped face, enormous blue eyes, and extremely short, platinum blond hair, she had a fey quality about her, exuding fragility and vulnerability.
She, too, was abnormally slender, but instead of the Skeleton Key silk pajamas uniform, she was wearing an exquisite dressing gown of silver jacquard. And even though the fabric was most complimentary to her figure and coloring, the style seemed more be-fitting to an older woman.
She looked a little like a kid playing dress up in her mother’s clothes.
Except that she appeared anything but playful. Her big blue eyes were filled with tears, and her head was bowed in a defeatist pose as she practiced her scale with first one hand and then the other.
Savannah took a few steps closer, and the woman noticed her. She ended her playing instantly and stood.
“Oh,” she said. “I didn’t know you were here. I…uh…you probably want to see Tiffany. I’ll go get her for you.”
“No, that’s okay, thanks,” Savannah replied, thinking that even though this woman was wearing a dressing gown, she must be a visitor, probably another friend of Tiffy’s. No one would feel this ill at ease in their own home. She seemed painfully out of place.
“But she’s been expecting you,” she said, holding her robe tightly closed in front of her. “She was really upset that you weren’t here earlier, and you know how she gets when, well, you know.”
“I’m sorry. Obviously, you’ve mistaken me for someone else.” Savannah held out her hand. “My name is Savannah Reid. And you are…?”
“Savannah…? Oh, I thought you were the party coordinator. You aren’t here about Tiffy’s Halloween party?”
“No, I’m with Detective Coulter.” She nodded in the direction of the raised male voices. “We’re investigating the disappearance of one of Tiffany’s friends, Daisy O’Neil.”
Savannah watched the woman’s eyes closely to see what effect her words might have. But nothing seemed to register, beyond the sadness she had already shown.
“Daisy is missing? What do you mean, ‘missing’? Is that why her mother was here?”
Apparently, this member of the entourage is seriously out of the loop, Savannah thought.
“Yes. She hasn’t been seen since yesterday afternoon. Didn’t come home last night, and hasn’t contacted her mother in over СКАЧАТЬ