by Nancy Warren
“Please,” she whispered as she ran for the door.
It was locked.
“No!” she yelled. She bashed at the door handle with the fire extinguisher but it didn’t fly open like in the movies.
She was trapped.
Her gaze darted around the area. Amazingly, she bounced past it twice before she recognized a plain black phone attached to the wall. She leapt for it even as she heard Feckler getting closer.
“Hello? Hello?” She screeched into the phone.
“Housekeeping,” a voice said. A real live voice.
“Thank God. This is Toni Diamond. I’m trapped in the basement laundry area. Thomas Feckler has a knife. Tell Detective Marciano. Tell the cops.”
“Miss? Where are you?”
“The laundry room. Downstairs in the hotel. Get the cops!” she screamed.
She thought about diving under those towels and burrowing deep inside, the way she might have hidden in her bed clothes back when she was a kid and frightened of monsters. But this was a real life monster and she couldn’t stand the thought of cowering under there while he systematically worked his way through the towels until he found her.
Maybe she was going to die, but she was a woman in a sparkling dress and this princess was going to go down fighting.
She pulled the pin on the fire extinguisher as she ran back, pressing herself against the wall. He’d have to pass her. With luck he’d be past her before he saw her, and her pounding heart wouldn’t give her away.
The next few moments were the most terrifying of her life. She stayed pressed against the beige cinderblock wall, the extinguisher heavy in her hands, listening as the wheezing, grunting, muttering Feckler drew closer.
Hitchcock couldn’t have filmed anything more frightening than the way his shadow came into view before he did, a colossal figure, brandishing a long, sharp knife.
Then the real Feckler came into view. He was walking carefully through the slick soap, but sadly he hadn’t slipped on it and cracked his head. All she’d done was slow him down. He stared at the towels. “I know you’re in here,” he panted. “There’s no way out.” He limped forward. “Are you hiding? Shall we play hide and seek?”
She aimed the nozzle of the fire extinguisher and squeezed the handle, letting Feckler have it.
The blast wasn’t strong enough to do any damage, but at least it might disorient him enough that she could get back down the corridor, back to the elevator and freedom.
She might even be able to knock him out with the metal canister if she could get close enough to him without being stabbed.
“You are ruining everything,” he screamed. She kept the stream of fire retardant spewing into his face. As he lunged at her, she thought he’d let go of whatever sanity he’d clung to. Feckler’s howl echoed off the walls as he ran at Toni with the knife raised. The foam had matted his perfect hair and clung to his face so he looked like the loser in a pie throwing contest. She squirted him again as he came at her with that knife in murder mode.
Holding the fire extinguisher in front of her like a shield, she backed toward the corridor.
He was running blind. And he’d forgotten the soap.
Feckler’s feet hit the pool of liquid soap and his legs flipped out from under him. She heard the wet smack as the man’s body hit the soapy ground.
Any hopes she had that he’d knocked himself out were soon gone.
The mix of rage and bruised vanity that spewed forth from his mouth sounded like another language. Toni turned to run back the way they’d come, but she couldn’t move fast or she’d slip too. As she picked her way, Feckler scissored his legs out and tripped her, so she tumbled down to the soapy floor too.
He was rolling around, grabbing for her and he was hanging onto that knife a lot harder than he was holding onto sanity.
At that moment, she heard Luke yell, “Toni?”
“Luke!” she cried. “Down here by the laundry chute.” She pulled up to her hands and knees and crawled toward safety. In that second, as she thanked God, her lucky stars, the Corvallis Police Department and Detective Luke Marciano, Thomas Feckler grabbed her ankle and yanked.
With a muffled scream, she bounced toward him, but managed to toss herself away from that deadly blade, so her body dropped sideways across Feckler’s like something out of WWF.
He grunted when Toni fell on him, breaking her own fall and jabbing him in the solar plexis, but the man was beyond feeling pain. His teeth were bared and even as Toni grabbed the wrist holding the knife, he was flipping over, taking her with him.
She could hear the pounding of feet getting closer. Luke wasn’t alone.
She tried desperately to stop Feckler from rolling on top of her but she couldn’t get any traction in the pool of liquid soap. It was like they were Jell-o wrestling on a cement floor, except that this bout was in deadly earnest.
“Luke,” she yelled as loud as she could. “Here!”
Feckler grabbed her skirt and yanked Toni forward. She kicked at him with all her might, but all she did was slide. She was tiring fast, her arm trembling with the effort of holding off that knife.
Feckler bared his teeth and shoved, rolling over until he was on top of Toni, the knife poised above her throat where she could feel her pulse jangling.
She heard the stomp of feet and the abrupt stop of same. But she couldn’t see anything. Nothing but Thomas Feckler’s face, feral and mad above her.
“Drop the knife and back away,” Luke ordered in a calm, commanding voice.
She and Feckler were both sleekly, slippery, sticky with soap. Her eyes burned and her lashes felt gooey.
“If I’m going down, I’m taking this bitch with me,” Feckler snarled. He raised the knife and Toni knew this was it.
She wasn’t sure whether it was a memory from self-defense for women or instinct, but she heaved her knee up between Feckler’s legs with all the strength she could muster. It wasn’t much, but the impact was enough to make her attacker jerk his head back in pain.
“Aagh,” he said.
Followed immediately by the blast of a bullet. Feckler’s body jerked and blood rained down on Toni. She rolled her body to the side so that the knife clanked harmlessly to the cement.
She was smothering. She heard the grunts of effort coming from her throat as she heaved and pushed to get the body off.
Luke was there, rolling Feckler away. He kicked the knife to the side and dragged Toni to her feet.
“Don’t look,” he ordered, but it was too late. She’d already seen Feckler. Half his head had blown off.
Chapter Thirty
Be yourself. Everyone else is already taken. —Oscar Wilde
Luke grabbed her into his arms and held her. She was shaking so hard it was like trying to stand through an earthquake. But she didn’t think all the trembling was coming from her. Luke held her hard against him, his heart banging against hers. “You okay?”
She laughed weakly. “My hair’s a mess, my dress is ruined and my make up is a disaster.”
She kissed him, blood, soap and all. “But I’m alive.”
Frank Henderson stepped forward carefully, sliding once and catching his balance. “We’re going to need to ask you a few questions.”
“Later.” Luke said. “We’ll let her clean up first, and see her daughter.”
A look passed between them and Henderson nodded and went back to huddle with the rest of the cops, security guards and the housekeeper who’d led them to her.
“Thanks,” she said to the woman, touching her arm, as Luke led her away. They slid on sticky ribbons of soap a few times. It was like the first time she’d gone skating, hanging onto her partner for dear life.
“What is this stuff?”
“Laundry soap.”
“Good one.”
Luke led her back to the service elevator. She had as much enthusiasm about getting into that elevator again as a horse being pushed toward a burning barn.
“It’s okay,�
� he said. “I’m right here.”
She licked her lips and tasted soap. “I know it must seem crazy for me to get scared now, but –” She was shaking so hard her teeth were chattering.
“Perfectly normal,” he said. “It’s reaction setting in.”
“I don’t –”
“Your options are this service elevator, climbing twenty flights of stairs, or going out front to the regular elevators.”
Clinging to his arm, she stepped into the service elevator and tried not to freak out when the gate closed and it started to lurch upward.
His arm tightened around her and she concentrated only on that. The strength of his muscles, the heat from his body, the knowledge that he was here and they were fine. Everything else she forced away from her mind. Later she’d think about the horror of the evening. Not now.
“Almost there,” he said after a while. “It’s going to jerk when it stops.”
Then the gate opened and he hustled her out of the service door and down the corridor to her room.
“The key –” she said stupidly as they approached her door. She’d left it – somewhere.
“Got it.”
“Toni? Mom!” The two greatest women in the world were running toward her down the corridor.
“Don’t hug me, I’m a mess,” she protested. But they both flung themselves on her, and the three of them were hugging and crying together.
“You’re okay?”
“I’m fine.”
“Is that blood?”
“Most of it’s not mine.”
Linda touched her side and she winced. “A little cut. It’s nothing.”
“I’ll fix her up, Linda,” Luke said. “I’m first aid certified.”
Linda looked at him, long and steady. Then she turned to her daughter. “You get some sleep, honey. We’re right down the hall if you need us.”
“Thanks mama. I love you guys.” She hugged them both again.
“Love you, too, Mom. You won a ring.”
“I’ll collect it tomorrow.”
“The soap’s drying,” Linda said. “You better get in there and wash off. And let the detective look at that cut.”
And then her room door was open and she and Luke were stumbling inside. He held on to her all the way into the bathroom, where he jerked on the shower and let it run hot while he undressed her. Except that the thick, industrial soap glued the fabric of her dress with all its diamonds to her skin. He tried to drag it off but when it caught, she moaned.
“I’m usually smoother at this,” he assured her.
She kicked off her shoes and then wished she wasn’t such a fervent rule follower when she found her soapy nylons had turned her legs into glue sticks.
Her skin was starting to itch and at this point she could see only one solution. She stepped into the shower, clothes and all.
The pounding spray took all the hardness of the soap away but it also turned her into a slick, sliding, soapy mess. “Watch out,” said Luke, holding her when she started to slip.
She tilted her head back and let the water keep washing over her. He still kept a hand on her and when she felt that the worst of the soap slick was washed away, she took his tie in her hand – a blue one with a really bad squiggle pattern – and pulled on it, dragging him toward her. “That soap isn’t coming off you, either.”
He dragged off his jacket, let it fall to the white tiled floor and then kicked off his own shoes and got in with her.
It still wasn’t an easy task to get their clothes off, but it was a lot simpler once the soap was washed out of them.
Even though it seemed counter-intuitive, she took the bar of soap the hotel provided – and be damned to her three step cleansing routine for once in her life, a little soap wasn’t going to kill her. She scrubbed her face, washed her body, and then passed him the bar.
“How’s the cut?”
“The scratch has already stopped bleeding.”
He touched it. “I can’t believe it’s not deeper.”
“Know what saved me? My diamonds. The bodice was so stiff in order to hold all the diamonds that it was like armor.”
He chuckled, and touched her cheek. “Thank God for diamonds.”
He was staring at her with a distinctly un-policelike expression in his eyes.
“Aren’t you on duty?”
“Dinner break,” he snapped, pulling her against him, wet and warm and very naked. She looked up into his eyes, ringed with spiky wet lashes and suddenly laughed.
“What?”
“You have done what no other man has done in twenty years,” she told him.
“What’s that?” his voice was soft, sexy.
“Seen me without a snitch of makeup on.”
His hand came up and traced a water droplet down her nose. “I like what I see,” he said, and then, leaning forward, kissed her.
THE END
Solve the next Toni Diamond mystery in Book Two, Ultimate Concealer
Other Books by Nancy Warren
Ultimate Concealer
A Toni Diamond Mystery, Book 2
Makeup can't conceal evil.
Toni Diamond never believed she'd see her no-good ex-husband Dwayne Diamond again, not after he abandoned her and their baby sixteen years ago. But now she's a successful independent beauty consultant for Lady Bianca cosmetics, Dwayne suddenly wants back in her life -- or at least in her bank account. He convinces their daughter, Tiffany, to go to Vegas and visit the father she's never known. When Toni follows her runaway daughter, little does she know she's about to run smack into a murder. Dwayne Diamond is the chief suspect and it's up to Toni to prove Tiffany's dad didn't commit murder, by finding out who did.
This is the second instalment in the best selling Toni Diamond series, which began with Frosted Shadow, though the books can be read in any order. Sexy detective Luke Marciano is back, and of course Toni couldn't go to Vegas without her mother, the Dolly Parton-obsessed Linda Plotnik along for the ride. While Toni noses around Vegas she and her mother find plenty of scope for their talents as saleswoman and makeup artists in this humorous Las Vegas set mystery.
Purchase ULTIMATE CONCEALER on ARe
Midnight Shimmer
A Toni Diamond Mystery, Book 3
Toni Diamond wins a cruise. Will the real prize be murder?
Toni Diamond, makeup artist to middle America, boards a cruise ship planning to enjoy seven days of sun, sea and relaxation. She's taking her rebellious almost-seventeen year old daughter Tiffany and her Dolly Parton-crazed mother, Linda, along for the treat. Unfortunately, the cruise isn't all bliss. Between mysterious disappearances, an outbreak of Norovirus and her sense of impending doom, Toni's barely got a moment to relax in one of the striped lounge chairs. But is there really something sinister going on or is Toni imagining things?
Purchase MIDNIGHT SHIMMER on ARe
Kiss A Girl in the Rain
Take a Chance: Book 1
Evan's Amazing Life List
1.Ride a motorcycle across America
2.Kiss a girl in the rain
3.Swim in every ocean…
When Evan Chance gives up a successful corporate law career to tackle the bucket list he wrote when he was twelve, he has no idea where the road will lead him.
Caitlyn Sorenson is a happily settled small town doctor. When a sexy drifter rolls into town after a motorcycle accident leaves him stranded in Miller's Pond for a few days, she can smell trouble even as she's drawn to a man who is only passing through town.
But some scorching hot nights and a blooming tenderness mean two people will have to face up to the challenges of love.
From USA Today Bestselling Author Nancy Warren comes the first in an exciting new series of sexy romances about a family named Chance.
Purchase KISS A GIRL IN THE RAIN on ARe
Iris in Bloom
Take a Chance: Book 2
Iris Chance is turning 33. She’s an independent woman, the owner of the Sunflower Coffee
and Tea Company in Hidden Falls, Oregon. Hidden Falls boasts clean air, natural beauty, good neighbors. The only problem is that there are zero interesting single men and Iris wants a baby. She’d love the whole package -- the love story, the sexy romance with a hero who will sweep her off her feet, but she doesn’t have time to wait for Mr. Right. He may lose his way and never show up. She decides to start a family with the help of a sperm bank, knowing she’ll have her large family to support and encourage her as a single mom. When the new High School English teacher, Geoff McLeod, walks into her café and into her life he seems perfect.
There’s only one problem…
Geoff McLeod never imagined his wife would end their six- year marriage with a text message. Reeling from her betrayal, he moves to Hidden Falls to teach English and Creative Writing. He’s got zero interest in women or dating until he meets Iris Chance, the intriguing woman who bakes the best Morning Glory muffins he’s ever tasted. He can’t imagine starting his day without stopping in on his way to work for coffee and a muffin and to see the sexiest woman who ever donned an apron.
In this contemporary romantic comedy about a small town girl who longs for a family, but has never entirely trusted she deserved a happy ending, two lonely people learn that sometimes love comes when you least expect it.
A sexy, humorous, contemporary romance, Iris in Bloom is the perfect beach read, or a romance novel to while away a rainy afternoon.
Purchase IRIS IN BLOOM on ARe
Blueprint for a Kiss
Take a Chance: Book 3
You can design a perfect life, then a woman comes along and messes it all up!
Prescott Chance is the go-to architect for the wealthy and famous, which has made him more wealthy and famous than he's ever wanted to be. He turns down more commissions than he accepts and is extremely private. Holly Legere is barely making ends meet between rent and student loans. As an assistant to Alistair Rupert, the notoriously difficult industrialist, she works night and day for slave wages, hanging on in hopes of a promised promotion in his huge organization. When Alistair Rupert's wife decides she wants a Prescott Chance designed house, and Prescott turns her down, it's Holly's job to make the choosy architect change his mind. And Holly is a very determined woman. In this modern romantic comedy, she'll go to any lengths to get him to design her boss a house, in-cluding pulling in his huge family for support.