Название: Hearts in Vegas
Автор: Colleen Collins
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Современные любовные романы
isbn: 9781472096869
isbn:
Frances paused at the bottom of the steps and looked at the pile of old car parts stacked in a corner of the worn wooden porch, the bent metal frame of the screen door. They reminded her of a similar building she had lived in nearly twenty ago, and how for a few weeks she and her parents had spent their evenings in the dark because of an unpaid electric bill.
Not total darkness, though, because her dad lightened their moods, literally, with magic tricks. He’d light candles with a wave of his hand, make lightbulbs glow with a touch of his finger. She and her mom had seen the tricks dozens of times, knew the secrets behind the maneuvers, but they had laughed and clapped as though experiencing them for the first time.
Their responses had been real, not contrived. Although there was always trickery behind a magic act, something mystical bonded an audience to a magician. They shared a belief, as far-fetched as it might seem, that everything would be all right. That the rabbit would reappear, the magician would escape the water tank, the lady sawn in half would be whole again.
Frances met the girl’s gaze. “What’s your name, hon?”
“Whitney.”
She handed the girl a bill. “Whitney, do something nice for yourself and your family.”
The girl’s mouth dropped open as she looked at the fifty-dollar bill, then her eyes narrowed with suspicion.
“I don’t do nuthin’ for money.”
“It’s a gift.”
“Why fo’?”
“For you to pay it forward someday.” She saw the confusion on the girl’s face. “Which means...when you’re all grown up, give a gift to another young girl and her family.”
As Frances headed back to her car, she heard the girl’s barely suppressed squeal, followed by the thumpity-thump of feet running across the porch and the slam of a screen door.
* * *
WHILE DRIVING PAST the Clark County courthouse a few minutes later, Frances punched in the speed-dial number for her dad’s cell, hit the speaker button and set the phone on the console. It was against Nevada law to make handheld cell-phone calls. In her opinion, that meant as long as she wasn’t holding her phone, she stayed legal.
After all she’d been through, Frances was definitely keeping her life on the right side of the law. In five years, she would no longer be under court supervision, her payments would be completed for the necklace she stole and her felony conviction would be discharged. When that day came, she would have a second chance to live her life right.
“Hey, baby girl,” her dad said over the speaker, “how’d it go?”
“Slick as glass.”
“Get the brooch?”
“Of course.”
“That’s my girl!”
As she idled at a stoplight, a black cat dashed across the street in front of the Benz. She muttered, “That’s not good.”
“Something wrong?”
“I just saw a black cat.”
“You and your superstitions,” her dad said with a chuckle. “On your way to meet Charlie now?”
“He’s in meetings until five. Figured while I’m downtown, I’ll pull some files at the clerk and recorder’s office to see if Enzo has recently used his jewelry inventory as collateral for a loan.”
“This has something to do with the brooch?”
“Enzo’s up to his teeth in litigation, probably having trouble borrowing money from banks right now. People in tight spots sometimes turn to questionable money sources, especially in Vegas. If Enzo took out a loan within the past week or so, which of course coincides with the brooch mysteriously surfacing, the identified lender might be the thief, too.”
“My daughter, Sherlock—or should I say Shirley—Holmes.”
In her rearview mirror, she saw swirling red lights from a white Crown Victoria hugging the bumper of her Benz.
Anxiety rippled through her. “Looks like I got company. Unmarked cop car’s pulling me over.”
“That’s odd. Why an unmarked?”
Seemed odd to her, too, but she didn’t have time to analyze the situation. “Charlie’s office and cell numbers are written on the bottom of the whiteboard in the kitchen. Leave messages on both that I’ve been pulled over on Third, across from the courthouse. Gotta go.”
After stopping the car, she eased the brooch from her pocket and set it carefully between the leather seat and the console, then rolled down her window and killed the engine. Slowly, she placed her hands on the steering wheel where they could be seen.
Exhaust fumes and the scents of hot dogs from a nearby street vendor wafted into the car as she watched the man in her rearview mirror unfold himself from the vehicle and swagger to her car. He wore jeans, white T-shirt, windbreaker—universal undercover-cop attire.
His steps crunched to a stop next to her window. Leaning over slightly, his blue eyes fastened on hers like steel shards to a magnet.
“Is there a problem, Officer?” she asked politely.
“Howdy,” he said, all friendly like, “mind handing over your phone and car keys, ma’am?”
Not asking for her license and registration? “Uh...isn’t this out of the ordinary?”
Looking around, he puffed out his chest while stealthily opening his jacket just enough for her to see his shoulder holster. Was this for real? The guy was acting like some kind of yahoo, showing off his big bad gun. If she wasn’t so unnerved by being pulled over like this, she might laugh.
But even yahoos could be law enforcers, and she wasn’t about to argue with a loaded gun, so she handed over her phone and key fob.
He powered off her phone and dropped it into his jacket pocket. “Step out of the car, please, ma’am.”
Once she did so, he swiftly tied her hands behind her with a plastic handcuff, then leaned in close and whispered, “Where’s the brooch?”
Maybe Enzo had been sharper than Frances had given him credit for, realized she’d lifted the real pin and left behind a look-alike. At least her dad was calling Charlie, alerting him to this snafu. He’d call the police department, get this ironed out. What a hassle.
Meanwhile, it’d be stupid to play dumb.
“Between the front seat and console,” she said, more irritated than nervous at this point because she’d just blown the case.
Sure, Charlie would make nice with the police, and Vanderbilt СКАЧАТЬ