Table of Contents
Title Page
Pier Pressure
Dedication
One
Two
Three
Four
Five
Six
Seven
Eight
Nine
Ten
Eleven
Twelve
Thirteen
Fourteen
Fifteen
Sixteen
Seventeen
Eighteen
Nineteen
Twenty
Twenty-One
Twenty-Two
Twenty-Three
Twenty-Four
Twenty-Five
Twenty-Six
Twenty-Seven
Twenty-Eight
Twenty-Nine
Thirty
Thirty-One
Thirty-Two
Thirty-Three
Thirty-Four
Thirty-Five
Thirty-Six
Pier Pressure
By Dorothy Francis
Copyright 2016 by Dorothy Francis
Cover Copyright 2016 by Untreed Reads Publishing
Cover Design by Ginny Glass
The author is hereby established as the sole holder of the copyright. Either the publisher (Untreed Reads) or author may enforce copyrights to the fullest extent.
Previously published in print, 2008.
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the publisher or author, except in the case of a reviewer, who may quote brief passages embodied in critical articles or in a review. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to your ebook retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
This is a work of fiction. The characters, dialogue and events in this book are wholly fictional, and any resemblance to companies and actual persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
Also by Dorothy Francis and Untreed Reads Publishing
Daiquiri Dock Murder (A Key West Mystery)
Killer in Control
www.untreedreads.com
Pier Pressure
Dorothy Francis
For Dee Stuart, my writing mentor and longtime friend
And
For Judith Pulse, who introduced me to foot reflexology
One
THE ONE THING my foot reflexology courses didn’t teach me was how to deal with a corpse. That Sunday had started out in a rush as I gathered my supplies for an early morning appointment.
My name is Keely Moreno and I’m the only professional foot reflexologist in Key West—or maybe in all of the Florida Keys. Four years ago I earned my certificate from St. Petersburg’s International Institute of Reflexology. I’ve worked hard to set up my private practice here on Duval Street. Many people are interested in new concepts of disease prevention, healing, and healthful living, and today as I glanced at the golden foot hanging above my sign, I smiled. ALTERNATIVE HEALING. KEELY MORENO. FOOT REFLEXOLOGIST. I have a thriving business.
Parking in Key West is the pits, so right now I don’t own a car. I walk or ride my bike. I stood loading my bicycle basket with a small battery-operated footbath, deep-piled towels, and the scented oils I use for Margaux Ashford’s treatment when Gram called to me from the doorway of her specialty shop next door to my office. CELIA HERNANDEZ SUNDRIES. That’s what the sign above her doorway says. Gram operates a coffee bar and sells specialty coffees and hard-to-find gourmet items for local restaurants, food hounds, and coffee lovers.
“Keely. Keely. Please to stop one momento.”
“Coming, Gram. Give me a sec.” I took time to tuck the tape recorder I use to record patients’ comments into my shirt pocket, slip my cell phone into my pants pocket.
Gram could see I’d dressed in my work-a-day khaki jumpsuit and was preparing to leave. I tried to act as if I had an eternity of time, but I was running late for my seven o’clock standing appointment with Margaux. Why was Gram being so impervious to my time schedule? Why was she delaying me? I didn’t want to be short with her, but neither did I want to be late for my appointment. Propping my bike on its kickstand, I stepped into her shop.
Although she pretends to be unaware of it, Gram’s one of Key West’s colorful tourist attractions. She dresses in a scarlet caftan and head bandeau, and her golden hoop earrings and sandals make her look like a make-believe pirate. Gram celebrated her seventy-second birthday last week, but she keeps her age a top secret, along with the fact that she wears earplugs at night so she can sleep in spite of Duval Street racket.
“Good morning, Gram. What’s the good news?”
I planted a kiss on her cheek and inhaled the fragrance of freshly ground coffee beans. Behind the serving counter with its high bar stools, a cappuccino machine dominated one corner of her shop, and an espresso machine the other. Gallon-size glass jars bearing coffee beans sat on floor-to-ceiling shelves. I grew up in this shop, living with Gram in an upper apartment after my mother’s death. I still remember the pungent scent of hickory nut coffee beans and the sweet taste of French vanilla cappuccino.
Gram barely smiled at me. “Keely, you see Jude Cardell this morning?”
My shoulders slumped. I hated thinking of my ex so early in the day. In fact, I hated thinking of Jude at all, at any time, on any day. “No, Gram. I didn’t see Jude. Why do you ask?”
“Because I see him. It be almost hour ago. He walk past your office. He no stop, but he look in. I think he up to trouble. Trouble for you.”
“It’s a public sidewalk, Gram. No law against people walking by. My window drapery’s still drawn. Jude could look forever and see nothing.”
I kept my voice light because I didn’t want Gram to know how much Jude still frightened me. Some things in my life are private. Private and scary. After five years, I still hear his threat. I’ll see you dead. His words replay in my mind. I’ll see you dead. I’ll see you dead. I worry. What real protection can a restraining order be?
“Jude hide his dark side well,” Gram said. “People see him, say Mr. Nice Guy. I see him, I say el Diablo. You watch out for that one, Keely. You watch out.”
“I’ll do that, Gram. Jude impresses people as a nice business person working his way up at the Hubble & Hubble law firm, but he doesn’t fool the Ashfords or me. We know Jude for what he is.”
I wished I felt as confident as I sounded to Gram. I watch my back. Now and then I imagine I see Jude’s hulking form lurking near, but I don’t tell Gram that.
I’d never told Gram that Jude had deliberately inflicted my back injury. Oh, she knew I’d seen lots of doctors. She knew that when they couldn’t relieve my pain they’d suggested spinal cord surgery. Scary idea. I’d stalled them off. Later, when I read an ad in the Miami Herald about foot reflexology as an alternative to surgery, I decided to give it a try. So Jude did one good thing. The pain he inflicted on me eventually led me to establishing my career—to becoming a foot reflexologist.
“Keely, where you go? Why you so loaded down?”
Gram’s voice snapped me from my thoughts, reminding me that I should be hurrying, but she didn’t fool me by changing the subject. She knew about my early appointment. She was making small talk, to delay me. She disliked Margaux and maybe she thought Margaux would fire me if I failed to arrive promptly.
“I’m going to Margaux Ashford’s. It’s Sunday, Gram. You know the drill.�
�� I love Gram, so in spite of running late, I didn’t hurry away.
Gram scowled. Few people in Key West smile at hearing Margaux’s name.
“Before you go, help please. Lift new bag of beans to countertop? It be cruise ship day. I prepare for many customers.”
Sometimes we locals resent thousands of cruise ship passengers making our sidewalks impassable. Then we remember the tinkle of our cash registers, and we smile.
“Sure, Gram. Where’s the bag?”
“Behind counter. Hate begging help. Simple chores I once do with ease.”
“No problem, Gram. No problem.” I hoisted the heavy jute bag to the counter near the coffee grinder, pulled the drawstring to open it, and smooched her a kiss.
“See ya later, Gram.” I mounted my bike and pedaled toward the Ashford home, lost in my thoughts.
Usually, I don’t make house calls, but when Margaux Ashford requested that extra service, I agreed to give early-morning treatments for her back problems in the privacy of her home. In spite of Key West’s live-and-let-live attitude, I still hear snide comments about Margaux’s May/December marriage to Beau Ashford, twenty years her junior.
“She’s tadpoling,” one woman snickered.
“I might tadpole, too, if I had her bod,” an older lady responded.
At sixty-nine, Margaux’s a woman other women love to hate. Not only has she inherited family money, but she also maintains the sleek and svelte body of a forty-year-old, a youthful hairdo that distracts the eye from a few wrinkles, and an agile way of moving that belies her age. In addition to all that, her editorial career is at high peak.
Margaux and her former husband and business manager, Otto Koffan, moved to Key West in semi-retirement a few years ago. Margaux had fallen in love with the island after visiting here several times as a guest speaker at the Key West Literary Seminar. Otto shared her enthusiasm for moving to this island in the sun the locals call Paradise.
Margaux’s current husband, Beau Ashford, lost his wife to cancer several years ago and he eased his grief by taking a deep interest in and financially helping sponsor the Key West Literary Seminar. Now, in addition to serving on the boards of a local bank and the community college, Beau writes a respected weekly column for Key West’s Citizen concerning historical events of this area.
Margaux persuaded Beau to submit a collection of his columns for book publication to her publisher and she offered to edit the manuscript. For weeks they worked closely together. Their association eventually led to Margaux’s divorce from Otto, her marriage to Beau, and then to Otto’s on-the-rebound marriage to Shandy Mertz, a cocktail waitress at The Wharf.
Now, three years later, some of the city’s gossips still mention Beau’s name in shocked or disgusted tones. Personally, I think they’re green with envy because Margaux not only shares Beau’s bed, but also enjoys a successful career working at home as an editor for HarperCollins in New York.
Margaux has been one of my top-notch customers for several years, and I make no judgments about her private life, or Beau’s. Margaux feels that it detracts from her youthful image to be seen patronizing my shop, so I humor her. On Sunday mornings, I bike to the old house on Grinnell Street where she and Beau live.
This early February morning is typical of a winter Sunday in Key West. On Duval Street, beer cans, sandwich wrappers, and soda bottles lay like malevolent snacks in a dip of spilled well drinks and upchucked beer. The orange-jacketed street cleaners worked with a minimum of enthusiasm.
Turning onto Simonton Street because less clutter threatened my bike tires, I rode through the almost-deserted streets. I enjoyed these few minutes before the island came to life complete with boom box noise, tourist RVs almost wider than the narrow streets, and people frantically seeking quarters for the parking meters that allowed only fifteen minutes per coin.
I pedaled a bit faster. Margaux told me that Beau would be at Key Colony Beach today helping with a fishing derby, and she invited me to stay for brunch following her treatment. I love their home. After his first wife’s death, Beau leased Ashford Mansion, the mansion he had shared with her in Old Town, to his twins, Jass and Punt, and moved to a different residential area. This morning, night-blooming jasmine still scented the air, and bougainvillea vines climbed the palm trees to the balconies of old-time Conch houses where they spilled over, dropping pink and purple petals onto the sidewalks below. At Truman Avenue I turned left and pedaled to Grinnell then headed toward the ocean. The Ashford home sat squeezed between two similar Conch houses, separated from its near neighbors by living privacy fences comprised of palms, seagrapes, and crotons.
On this crowded island, building contractors have only one way to go—up.
Beau and Margaux liked neither the sleek high-rise condos near the airport nor those on the other side of the island with a Gulfside view. Instead, they had chosen this old home decorated a century ago with gingerbread trim hand-carved by Conch sailors whiling away spare hours during long voyages. Like many of Key West’s wealthy families, the Ashfords had made no changes to their home’s exterior, but a Miami decorator had helped them modernize the interior.
I chained and locked my bicycle to a palm tree inside the white picket fence and entry gate. It’s never smart to leave an unattended bicycle unlocked—not even on Sunday morning. Hoisting the portable footbath and lotions from my bike basket, I headed for the front door. Dwarf hibiscus plants in large clay pots lined the sidewalk and porch steps. Scarlet. Yellow. Orange. Pink. White. They subtly advertised Jass’s career and business, her hibiscus greenhouse. I picked up a lavender blossom that had fallen on the porch steps and tucked it in the top buttonhole on my jumpsuit as I waited for Margaux to answer my knock.
All remained quiet. Then, through the window to the right of the doorway, I saw Margaux sitting in an armchair. A copy of Southern Living had fallen to the floor near her feet. At first I thought she sat sleeping. Then hairs rose on my nape. Her head lolled slightly to one side. Surely she had heard my steps on the porch. I frowned as I rapped again and my mouth went dry as my sense of foreboding increased.
“Margaux,” I called as I tried the door. “It’s me, Keely. Margaux?”
The door swung open and I stepped over the threshold. I had a horrible feeling I hadn’t caught Margaux napping. Heart attack? Stroke? Perhaps sudden illness or a seizure had prevented her from reaching the phone to call for help. I stepped from the hallway into the living room and gasped. Blood drenched her white robe and had dripped onto the chair, the carpet.
Then I saw more blood oozing from the bullet hole in her head.
Two
IN A REFLEX action, I rushed to Margaux’s side. Maybe she was still alive. Maybe I could help her, save her. I’d taken CPR training last year. Maybe. Maybe. But even as those frantic thoughts raced through my mind, I knew in my gut that Margaux was dead. Now the stench of blood and death that I hadn’t noticed at first made me want to run, but shock and nausea held me to the spot. I’d read many times about the unforgettable odor of death. Now I experienced it first-hand. My knees wobbled as I forced myself to stand motionless before her, frozen now by fear and the ever-rising urge to vomit. I grabbed a deep breath, clamped my hand over my mouth and nose, and somehow managed to swallow.
In the distance, bells pealed like a threnody from the Catholic Church. Closer at hand, a dog howled, a car horn honked, and brakes squealed—ordinary sounds, intruding on the early Sunday stillness. A breeze set nearby palm branches in motion, reminding me of gentle rain. Move. Move. My mind ordered my body into motion. Taking care to avoid stepping in the blood that stained the carpet, I bent to touch it. Damp. I jerked my hand back. What had I expected? I wiped my finger on the leg of my jumpsuit, leaving a rust-colored stain.
Then I stepped closer to Margaux. I didn’t want to touch her. No. No. The idea repelled me, and my mind recoiled from the thought. But I had to touch her, didn’t I? Yes. I had to make sure she was beyond help.
My teeth chattered and my
whole body trembled as I reached for her left wrist that lay on the folds of her blood-stained robe. Maybe I’d feel a pulse. Maybe a rescue unit could save her if I acted quickly. Maybe her life at this very moment depended on my swift action, my clear thinking. Maybe. Maybe.
Murder? Suicide? Thoughts jumbled in my mind. Who would want to murder Margaux? I could think of nobody. Suicide? My mind screamed the word. No! Margaux Ashford had no reason to commit suicide. She had everything going for her. Everything. She had it all. When I touched her wrist, I thought her skin felt cold, but my own icy fingers made me doubt my sense of touch. I moved silently, carefully, gently as I pressed my fingers on the underside of her wrist, steadying her arm with my thumb on top of her wrist. No pulse beat. None. Or maybe my shaking had caused me to miss it.
Changing the position of my fingers, I tried again, waiting for the faint beat that would indicate life. Nothing. I straightened up and backed away from—the body. I felt sure Margaux was dead. She had been my customer, not a dear friend, but in that moment I felt a closeness to her and I felt horrified at her violent death. Although I was well practiced at holding back and hiding tears, I felt dampness on my cheeks. I wiped my face with the palms of my hands and the tears stopped as suddenly as they had started.
I backed off another step. What if someone had shot Margaux and fled from the scene? Or worse yet, what if a killer still lurked nearby? This old house offered a plethora of nook-and-cranny hiding places. I could be the next victim! Common sense jogged my fear and told me to get the heck away from this house, to run for my life.
Let someone else find Margaux’s body. Anyone else. Someone who knew how to deal with that sort of thing. I could gather my reflexology gear, stow it in my bike basket, and pedal back to Duval Street before anyone knew I had been here. This neighborhood still slept. Nobody would be the wiser. Then my shoulders slumped. I couldn’t live with myself if I ran away. Besides, too many people knew of my Sunday morning schedule, my appointments with Margaux. Gram. Beau’s kids. And Beau, of course. But more important, I knew. I’d have to live with my decision forever.
Pier Pressure Page 1