by Nancy Skopin
Table of Contents
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
About the author
Murder Over Cocktails: The Second Nicoli Hunter Mystery
Copyright © 2015 by Nancy Skopin
All rights reserved.
First E-Book Edition: July 2015
Also available in paperback.
Cover and Formatting: Streetlight Graphics
This eBook is licensed for the personal enjoyment of the original purchaser only. This eBook may not be resold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you are reading this eBook and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to locales, events, business establishments, or actual persons—living or dead—is entirely coincidental.
This book is for Juliann, Nicoli, and Jessica (my real-life heroes) and for the dogs in my life who have taught me how to love unconditionally.
Prologue
Jack “The Cat” McGuire carefully examined the exterior of the sliding glass doors looking for sensors and wires, and concluded that the alarm decal was a sham, as was often the case. He cut a perfect circle in the glass, reached through the hole to unlock the patio door, and quietly drew it open, listening to the silence for a full minute before stepping inside. He had already rung the doorbell and knocked despite the late hour, and there had been no response. He hadn’t expected one. The owner was supposed to be out of town for the weekend, but Jack didn’t take chances.
He partially opened the drapes so the family room was softly lit by the outdoor flood lights which illuminated the side-yard and driveway, allowing him to conduct his search without the use of a flashlight, leaving both of his hands free.
Jack let his skilled eyes drift over the contents of the room. Considering the value of the house and expensive furnishings, a surprisingly old-fashioned VCR rested on a shelf below the television set, its display showing the correct time. Beneath the shelf was a locked cabinet. He took out his lock picks and went to work. Inside the cabinet were five videocassettes in boxes labeled only with dates. Jack left the cabinet open, closed the curtains, and padded silently up the stairs.
He found what he was looking for in the master bedroom. The heavy antique mirror over the fireplace swung out on hinges, revealing a wall safe. He had it open in less than a minute.
In the safe were securities and an unexpected hoard of cash in a shoebox. Jack estimated the cash to be in the neighborhood of fifty thousand dollars. He would count it later. Stuffing the securities and cash into his backpack, he returned the empty shoebox to the safe, closed the heavy door, rotating the dial to its original position, and gently swung the mirror back against the wall.
Jack looked through the dresser drawers, night tables, and walk-in closet, and then searched the upstairs office. The Notebook computer was expensive, but he wasn’t interested in anything he had to fence. He booted up the computer and tried guessing the password, but gave up after a few minutes.
Gliding down the stairs like a ghost, Jack returned to the family room. He made sure the drapes were completely closed so no light from the television would be visible outside the house. Jack removed one of the videotapes from the cabinet, turned on the TV, and hit the mute button on the remote. Only then did he insert the cassette into the machine and press the play button. The monitor erupted in a jumble of static and jerky motion as the unseen operator focused the camera. When the picture cleared he saw a naked woman bound spread-eagle on a king-size bed. A second woman stared into the lens. Her pupils were dilated and her face was a mask of determination. She moved away from the camera and approached the bed.
Jack felt an all too familiar chill run down his spine as he recognized the owner of the house. She too was naked. She knelt beside the woman tied to the bed, leaned an arm on her forehead, and held a knife to her throat. The bound woman struggled, but was unable to defend herself, and was dead in a matter of seconds. What the killer did next took longer.
Jack rewound the tape and replaced it in its box, putting it back in the cabinet precisely where he had found it. After a moment’s hesitation, he chose a second cassette and slipped it into the VCR.
Chapter 1
My name is Nicoli Hunter. I’m a private investigator licensed in the state of California. My office is in a marina complex in Redwood City, where I also live aboard a forty-six foot Cheoy Lee sailboat. When I was in my twenties I worked for a department store; first in cosmetics, and later in security management, but at the age of thirty-one I went looking for a career change. I chose to become a PI because I’m naturally inquisitive and analytical, because I have a compulsion to see that justice is done, and because I wanted to be my own boss.
Prior to obtaining my license I spent twenty-four grueling months as an apprentice to a crusty old PI named Sam Pettigrew. Sam was ornery as hell, but he had integrity and he was obsessive about details, which made him an excellent teacher. Also, he was local. I’d done an internet search and called all the PIs within a 25-mile radius. Sam was the only one who agreed to meet with me. After a lengthy conversation that amounted to an in-depth interview he said I could come to work for him on a trial basis. He never actually committed to taking me on as a trainee, but he paid me a fair wage, and two years later I’d put in enough hours to take the exam and apply for my license.
The majority of my work as a PI involves bar and restaurant surveys. I’m paid by the owners or managers of these establishments to observe employee behavior, sample and rate cuisine, watch for multiple types of theft, and participate in termination interviews when I catch someone in the act and they need to be let go. The work is regular and keeps the wheels turning, but doesn’t really address my desire for justice. I also accept an occasional domestic surveillance or insurance fraud investigation, and once in a great while I get a case that challenges me.
Tonight I was doing a bar survey in downtown Palo Alto, cozying up to an obnoxious bartender who was known to hit on attractive female customers, and suspected of occasionally assaulting his less willing victims after hours. Th
e bartender in question was over six feet tall, lean but muscular, with dark hair and eyes, and sported a mustache and goatee. He was dressed in a nice pair of black wool gabardine slacks and a white silk short-sleeved shirt. His appearance did nothing to obscure his character, however, which was sleazy to the core.
I was wearing a low-cut red V-neck sweater, black stretchy jeans that fit like a second skin, and my black cowboy boots with the silver toe guards. I was, in effect, setting myself up as bait, and it was working exceptionally well. The letch in question had given me two free drinks and stroked my wrist when he served me the last one. I was totally creeped out by the guy, but this is part of my job.
I was covertly emptying the contents of my glass into the gallon-size zip lock bag tucked in my purse when I felt goose bumps erupt on my arms and the back of my neck in spite of the warm weather. I have a finely tuned internal alarm system. I glanced to my right and discovered a man seated on the stool next to mine. The stool had been empty a moment ago.
The man wasn’t tall, maybe five-ten, but there was an energy about him that gave him an undeniable presence and made him seem larger. He was about thirty, his compact muscular frame clothed in a neatly pressed pair of Dockers and a forest green polo shirt. He wore mirrored sunglasses over a slightly upturned nose. I’m always suspicious of people who wear sunglasses indoors, especially at night. They’re generally hiding something. His jaw was strong and clean-shaven, and the whole package was topped with wavy red hair sun-streaked with gold.
I reflexively sat up a little straighter. The goose bumps warned me that this guy might be dangerous. What type of danger he represented was yet to be determined.
The skanky bartender approached and nodded at my new companion. “What can I get you?” he asked.
“Guinness draft, please.”
His voice was mid-range tenor and there was a lilt to his diction. Maybe Irish? He took off his sunglasses and I leaned forward to get a better look. His eyes were green and slanted up at the corners. The bartender turned away to fill his drink order, and the newcomer met my gaze, a sad half-smile on his surprisingly feline face.
“My name is Jack,” he said, extending his hand.
“Nicoli Hunter.”
I clasped his hand, and offered a half-smile of my own. His grip was firm, but not aggressive, and his hand was warm and dry. I always shake hands with people I’m evaluating. Something about making physical contact causes my intuition to kick in. What I felt shaking this guy’s hand was akin to a mild electric shock that extended all the way from my palm to more private parts of my anatomy. I released his hand quickly.
“I hope you don’t mind me joining you,” Jack continued. “It’s been a hell of a week. I really need a drink, and perhaps someone objective who’ll listen to my troubles.”
“What’s the problem?” I asked, more than a little intrigued, in spite of the fact that I was supposed to be working.
“A friend of mine was someplace he shouldn’t have been,” he said, lowering his voice and leaning closer, “and the idiot stumbled on evidence of murder.”
“What?” I hissed quietly, scooting back on my stool. “Hold on a minute. Are we talking about a crime scene?”
“No. Nothing like that. Just evidence that murder had been committed at some time in the past.”
“What kind of evidence?” I asked. “Do you mind if I smoke?”
In spite of the ordinance against smoking in bars and restaurants in California, this establishment was willing to allow its patrons to indulge unless someone complained.
“No, go ahead. Videotapes,” he said, answering my question and taking a pack of Turkish Ovals from his breast pocket.
I held out my lighter and lit his cigarette and then mine.
“Videotapes that show what, exactly?”
“The murders,” he said, exhaling smoke.
“Holy shit,” I muttered. “Sorry.”
I reached into my purse and rested my hand on the Ruger nestled in a Velcro holster next to the baggie of booze.
“Is your friend sure about this? I mean, videotape can be altered. Did you say murders? As in, more than one?”
“Yes. There are five tapes. My friend watched two of them. And they were home movies. They didn’t appear to have been edited.”
I needed a minute to collect myself.
“Would you like another Guinness?” I asked.
“Please.”
I motioned to the bartender, who was more than happy to comply. He winked at me as he set fresh drinks in front of us. I placed a twenty on the bar and turned back to Jack.
I took a sip of my drink, watching him over the rim of the glass, and when he looked back at me I experienced the full impact of those cat’s eyes.
“Thank you,” he said.
Sitting this close to him I caught an almost imperceptible scent. Something citrusy and a little grassy, barely strong enough to be noticed.
“I like your cologne,” I said. “So what does your friend intend to do about these movies?”
“I don’t know exactly. I’m sure he’d be open to suggestions, if you have any.”
I thought about that for a moment. I’d only recently recovered from my first homicide investigation and, while I treasured my regular clients, bar and restaurant surveillance didn’t give me the rush, or the reward, of taking down a really bad guy. Should I offer to help Jack’s friend apprehend this killer? Do ducks copulate in the water?
“I might be able to help,” I said, and handed him one of my business cards below the level of the bar. “Tell your friend to meet me at my office in the morning.”
Jack glanced down at the card, apparently unsurprised to realize I was a PI. He locked eyes with me again, nodded, and finished his second Guinness in three large swallows.
“Thank you, Nicoli. It was lovely meeting you, but I’d best be on my way.”
He smiled slightly as he turned to leave. His eyes were still troubled, but perhaps with a glimmer of hope behind the worry now.
I spent the rest of the survey feigning moderate interest in the advances of the skeazy bartender. I stayed until closing, and allowed him to walk me to my car. Before I could get it unlocked he backed me up against the driver’s side door and made the expected pass, forcing his tongue into my mouth when I opened it to protest. Gross. I put a hand on his chest, pushing him away, and told him I wasn’t interested.
He smirked and shoved my hand aside, stepped back into my personal space, and grabbed me roughly around the waist. One hand slid down to my ass, and the other grabbed hold of my left breast. I closed my fist and punched him in the throat, not too hard, just enough to leave him immobilized and gasping for air long enough for me to flexi-cuff his hands behind his back. Then I called 911, reporting the assault and staying on the line until the uniforms arrived. This was the plan the bar owner and I had devised, and the only way I could keep my identity as a PI from being known by the other employees in the establishment. I’d had a taser in my back pocket just in case, but as it turned out I didn’t need it.
I went down to the station to file a formal complaint, and then headed back to my office where I typed up a full report for my client. I emailed him at home, attaching both the report and an invoice, then shuffled down to my boat feeling satisfied with a good night’s work, and more than a little keyed up about tomorrow’s appointment with Jack’s friend.
Chapter 2
The next morning I was sitting at my desk, struggling with my phone bill, when I heard a soft click from the front of the office. I glanced up and discovered Jack standing just inside my doors. I hadn’t heard him enter, although I’d been pretty focused on the increase to my monthly internet charge. Once again he was sporting those mirrored sunglasses, but he promptly removed them, smiling sheepishly at me.
“
May I come in?”
“You’re already in. Will your friend be joining us?”
“Not today,” he said. “He was hoping I could discuss the possibilities with you on his behalf.”
“I see.”
“I have a few questions.”
“Shoot,” I said, and motioned to one of my visitors’ chairs.
He took a seat opposite my desk and I eased back in my ergonomic swivel chair, never taking my eyes off his.
“What are the parameters of confidentiality between a licensed PI and her clients?” he began.
I raised an eyebrow. “They’re not the same as with an attorney or a priest,” I said. “It depends on what you want kept confidential. If you want someone watched and you don’t want anyone to know about it, no problem. If you want to confess to the commission of a felony, then there might be a problem. My records can be subpoenaed, but I don’t have to document everything and I have a conveniently selective memory. Apart from the identity of your friend, what kind of secrets would you like me to keep?”
Jack shifted in his chair. “Suppose I offer you a hypothetical situation,” he said, “in which there lies the possibility that the law has been broken. Are you obligated to inform the authorities?”
“Not necessarily,” I hedged. “It depends on the details.”
“Of course,” he sighed. “It’s about those tapes I mentioned last night. My friend had gained illegal entry to the killer’s property when he found them, so, you see, he can’t possibly go to the police.”
“What is your friend’s objective, exactly?”
“I guess he wants to know if you could arrange to bring the tapes to the attention of the authorities, without implicating him in the process.”